Main Justice

“Dishonorable and Inhumane”

29 snips
Dec 3, 2025
Todd Huntley, a former U.S. Navy judge advocate and director of Georgetown's National Security Law Program, shares his deep insights into the legality of military operations. He discusses a controversial 'kill them all' order linked to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, highlighting how it may violate international law protecting shipwrecked personnel. The conversation dives into the duty to refuse unlawful orders, military reporting obligations, and the repercussions of operational decisions on military trust and accountability.
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INSIGHT

Shipwrecked Personnel Are Protected

  • Todd Huntley says shipwrecked personnel are hors de combat and protected under customary law even in non-international conflicts.
  • Historic war crimes trials and the DoD Law of War Manual treat firing on shipwrecked survivors as dishonorable and inhumane.
ADVICE

Get Full Operational Facts First

  • Todd Huntley says legal advice requires more facts: rules of engagement, approval authority, and delegation limits.
  • He would start by requesting those facts before applying the law to any follow-on strike decision.
INSIGHT

DoD Manual Calls Attacking Shipwrecked Clearly Illegal

  • Andrew Weissmann read the DoD Law of War Manual which states orders to fire upon the shipwrecked would be clearly illegal.
  • The manual labels such attacks "dishonorable and inhumane," underscoring longstanding prohibitions.
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