Technology and the Law on the Use of Force. New Security Challenges in the Twenty-First Century
Jackson Maogoto - Routledge, 2015
As governmental and non-governmental operations become progressively supported by vast automated systems and electronic data flows, attacks of government information infrastructure, operations and processes pose a serious threat to economic and military interests. In 2007 Estonia suffered a month long cyber assault to its digital infrastructure, described in cyberspace as ‘Web War I’. In 2010, a worm—Stuxnet—was identified as supervisory control and data acquisition systems at Iran’s uranium enrichment plant, presumably in an attempt to set back Iran’s nuclear programme. The dependence upon telecommunications and information infrastructures puts at risk Critical National Infrastructure, and is now at the core of national security interests.
This book takes a detailed look at these new theatres of war and
considers their relation to international law on the use of force.
Except in cases of self-defence or with the authorisation of a Security
Council Resolution, the use of force is prohibited under the UN charter
and customary international law. However, the law of jus ad bellum was
developed in a pre-digital era where current technological capabilities
could not be conceived. Jackson Maogoto asks whether the law on the use
of force is able to deal with legal disputes likely to arise from
modern warfare. Key queries include how one defines an armed attack in
an age of anti-satellite weaponry, whether the destruction of a State’s
vital digital eco-system or the "blinding" of military communication
satellites constitutes a threat, and how one delimits the threshold that
would enliven the right of self-defence or retaliatory action. The book
argues that while technology has leapt ahead, the legal framework has
failed to adapt, rendering States unable to legally defend themselves
effectively.
The book will be of great interest and use to researchers and
students of international law, the law of armed conflict, Information
Technology and the law, and counter-terrorism.