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27 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 843 (2003-2004)
Factors in War to Peace Transitions

handle is hein.journals/hjlpp27 and id is 853 raw text is: FACTORS IN WAR TO
PEACE TRANSITIONS
WOLFF HEINTSCHEL VON HEINEGG
Situations of international armed conflict regularly give rise to
some misunderstandings with regard to the applicable law and its
interpretation. This especially holds true if these misunderstandings
are reinforced by statements of a purely political character. All too
often some commentators, obviously considering such statements to
be of higher relevance than the law, prefer to rely upon these
statements rather than on a proper analysis of the relevant treaties.
The situation in Iraq gives ample proof of legal evaluations that are,
to say the least, based on an erroneous interpretation.
It is the aim of the present paper to clarify what law applies as the
transition from war to peace occurs. To do this, it must first be
determined which situations qualify as wars or as international armed
conflicts,2 as distinguished from   peace. Closely related to this
determination are the different forms of terminating and of
suspending an international armed conflict. Clarifications of such
forms are prerequisites for the identification of the point in time at
which the law of armed conflict ceases to apply. After these necessary
preliminaries, it will be possible to deal with the rights and duties of
an occupying power and with the legal validity of the measures taken
by that power. Thus, the ground will be paved for a final
determination of what law applies during the different phases marking
the transition from war to peace.
I. WAR AND PEACE DISTINGUISHED
While a state of war may still be brought into existence by a
* Prof. Dr. iur., Europa-Universit~t Frankfurt (Oder); Charles H. Stockton Professor of
International Law, U.S. Naval War College, Newport, R.I.
1. For example, the claim by the U.S. of having accomplished the mission in Iraq has
led to the misperception that the war in Iraq had been terminated. Accordingly, some
international lawyers have stated that the law of armed conflict was not applicable to the
situation in Iraq and that Saddam Hussein could not be made a prisoner of war.
2. The terms war and international armed conflict are used interchangeably,
although the latter term has become more common.

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