International Law Part 50
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A NAVAL WAR CODE
+General Orders+, } NAVY DEPARTMENT, No. 551. } _Was.h.i.+ngton, June 27, 1900_.
The following code of naval warfare, prepared for the guidance and use of the naval service by Capt. Charles H. Stockton, United States Navy, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, having been approved by the President of the United States, is published for the use of the Navy and for the information of all concerned.
JOHN D. LONG, _Secretary_.
THE LAWS AND USAGES OF WAR AT SEA
SECTION I
+Hostilities+
+Article 1.+ The general object of war is to procure the complete submission of the enemy at the earliest possible period, with the least expenditure of life and property.
The special objects of maritime war are: The capture or destruction of the military and naval forces of the enemy; of his fortifications, a.r.s.enals, dry docks, and dockyards; of his various military and naval establishments, and of his maritime commerce; to prevent his procuring war material from neutral sources; to aid and a.s.sist military operations on land, and to protect and defend the national territory, property, and sea-borne commerce.
+Art. 2.+ The area of maritime warfare comprises the high seas or other waters that are under no jurisdiction, and the territorial waters of belligerents. Neither hostilities nor any belligerent right, such as that of visitation and search, shall be exercised in the territorial waters of neutral States.
The territorial waters of a State extend seaward to the distance of a marine league from the low-water mark of its coast line. They also include, to a reasonable extent, which is in many cases determined by usage, adjacent parts of the sea, such as bays, gulfs, and estuaries inclosed within headlands; and where the territory by which they are inclosed belongs to two or more States, the marine limits of such States are usually defined by conventional lines.
+Art. 3.+ Military necessity permits measures that are indispensable for securing the ends of the war and that are in accordance with modern laws and usages of war.
It does not permit wanton devastation, the use of poison, or the doing of any hostile act that would make the return of peace unnecessarily difficult.
Noncombatants are to be spared in person and property during hostilities, as much as the necessities of war and the conduct of such noncombatants will permit.
The launching of projectiles and explosives from balloons, or by other new methods of a similar nature, is prohibited for a term of five years by the Declaration of the Hague, to which the United States became a party. This rule does not apply when at war with a noncontracting power.
+Art. 4.+ The bombardment, by a naval force, of unfortified and undefended towns, villages, or buildings is forbidden, except when such bombardment is incidental to the destruction of military or naval establishments, public depots of munitions of war, or vessels of war in port, or unless reasonable requisitions for provisions and supplies essential, at the time, to such naval vessel or vessels are forcibly withheld, in which case due notice of bombardment shall be given.
The bombardment of unfortified and undefended towns and places for the nonpayment of ransom is forbidden.
+Art. 5.+ The following rules are to be followed with regard to submarine telegraphic cables in time of war, irrespective of their owners.h.i.+p:
(_a_) Submarine telegraphic cables between points in the territory of an enemy, or between the territory of the United States and that of an enemy, are subject to such treatment as the necessities of war may require.
(_b_) Submarine telegraphic cables between the territory of an enemy and neutral territory may be interrupted within the territorial jurisdiction of the enemy.
(_c_) Submarine telegraphic cables between two neutral territories shall be held inviolable and free from interruption.
+Art. 6.+ If military necessity should require it, neutral vessels found within the limits of belligerent authority may be seized and destroyed or otherwise utilized for military purposes, but in such cases the owners of neutral vessels must be fully recompensed. The amount of the indemnity should, if practicable, be agreed on in advance with the owner or master of the vessel. Due regard must be had to treaty stipulations upon these matters.
+Art. 7.+ The use of false colors in war is forbidden, and when summoning a vessel to lie to, or before firing a gun in action, the national colors should be displayed by vessels of the United States.
+Art. 8.+ In the event of an enemy failing to observe the laws and usages of war, if the offender is beyond reach, resort may be had to reprisals, if such action should be considered a necessity; but due regard must always be had to the duties of humanity. Reprisals should not exceed in severity the offense committed, and must not be resorted to when the injury complained of has been repaired.
If the offender is within the power of the United States he can be punished, after due trial, by a properly const.i.tuted military or naval tribunal. Such offenders are liable to the punishments specified by the criminal law.
SECTION II
+Belligerents+
+Art. 9.+ In addition to the armed forces duly const.i.tuted for land warfare, the following are recognized as armed forces of the State.
(1) The officers and men of the Navy, Naval Reserve, Naval Militia, and their auxiliaries.
(2) The officers and men of all other armed vessels cruising under lawful authority.
+Art. 10.+ In case of capture, the personnel of the armed forces or armed vessels of the enemy, whether combatants or noncombatants, are ent.i.tled to receive the humane treatment due to prisoners of war.
The personnel of all public unarmed vessels of the enemy, either owned or in his service as auxiliaries, are liable, upon capture, to detention as prisoners of war.
The personnel of merchant vessels of an enemy who, in self-defense and in protection of the vessel placed in their charge, resist an attack, are ent.i.tled, if captured, to the status of prisoners of war.
+Art. 11.+ The personnel of a merchant vessel of an enemy captured as a prize can be held, at the discretion of the captor, as witnesses, or as prisoners of war when by training or enrollment they are immediately available for the naval service of the enemy, or they may be released from detention or confinement. They are ent.i.tled to their personal effects and to such individual property, not contraband of war, as is not held as part of the vessel, its equipment, or as money, plate, or cargo contained therein.
All pa.s.sengers not in the service of the enemy, and all women and children on board such vessels should be released and landed at a convenient port, at the first opportunity.
Any person in the naval service of the United States who pillages or maltreats, in any manner, any person found on board a merchant vessel captured as a prize, shall be severely punished.
+Art. 12.+ The United States of America acknowledge and protect, in hostile countries occupied by their forces, religion and morality; the persons of the inhabitants, especially those of women; and the sacredness of domestic relations. Offenses to the contrary shall be rigorously punished.
SECTION III
+Belligerent and Neutral Vessels+
+Art. 13.+ All public vessels of the enemy are subject to capture, except those engaged in purely charitable or scientific pursuits, in voyages of discovery, or as hospital s.h.i.+ps under the regulations hereinafter mentioned.
Cartel and other vessels of the enemy, furnished with a proper safe-conduct, are exempt from capture, unless engaged in trade or belligerent operations.
+Art. 14.+ All merchant vessels of the enemy, except coast fis.h.i.+ng vessels innocently employed, are subject to capture, unless exempt by treaty stipulations.
In case of military or other necessity, merchant vessels of an enemy may be destroyed, or they may be retained for the service of the government.
Whenever captured vessels, arms, munitions of war, or other material are destroyed or taken for the use of the United States before coming into the custody of a prize court, they shall be surveyed, appraised, and inventoried by persons as competent and impartial as can be obtained; and the survey, apprais.e.m.e.nt, and inventory shall be sent to the prize court where proceedings are to be held.
+Art. 15.+ Merchant vessels of the enemy that have sailed from a port within the jurisdiction of the United States, prior to the declaration of war, shall be allowed to proceed to their destination, unless they are engaged in carrying contraband of war or are in the military service of the enemy.
Merchant vessels of the enemy, in ports within the jurisdiction of the United States at the outbreak of war, shall be allowed thirty days after war has begun to load their cargoes and depart, and shall thereafter be permitted to proceed to their destination, unless they are engaged in carrying contraband of war or are in the military service of the enemy.
Merchant vessels of the enemy, which shall have sailed from any foreign port for any port within the jurisdiction of the United States before the declaration of war, shall be permitted to enter and discharge their cargo and thereafter to proceed to any port not blockaded.
+Art. 16.+ Neutral vessels in the military or naval service of the enemy, or under the control of the enemy for military or naval purposes, are subject to capture or destruction.
International Law Part 50
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International Law Part 50 summary
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