Atrocious acts: Muddying the bloody waters of war
STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE
The rules of war exist to prevent atrocities, but war itself is an atrocity, so where does one draw the line?
Rules governing wartime conduct on the battlefield and beyond became a focus of discussion with the onset of the industrialized warfare of 1914-1918 and its mass killing capabilities—primarily the machine gun, poison gas, mobile artillery, tanks and airplanes.
Armies no longer lined up in open fields and commenced firing muskets and cannons at a mutually agreed-upon hour. The First World War was marked by unprecedented death and destruction, believed to be the first in which more civilians were killed than combatants—as many as 13 million to 9.7 million.
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