Command responsibility/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
{{r|Alien Torts Claims Act}} | {{r|Alien Torts Claims Act}} | ||
{{r|Filartiga v. Pena-Irala||**}} | {{r|Filartiga v. Pena-Irala||**}} | ||
{{r| | ==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | ||
{{r|Tetsuzan Nagata}} | |||
{{r|Tomiyuki Yamashita}} | |||
{{r|Battle of Khe Sanh}} |
Latest revision as of 06:00, 31 July 2024
- See also changes related to Command responsibility, or pages that link to Command responsibility or to this page or whose text contains "Command responsibility".
Parent topics
- Military law [r]: Statutes, codes, and common traditions relating to and executed by military courts for the discipline, trial, and punishment of military personnel. [e]
- Just war theory [r]: The branch of ethics concerned with the basis for starting, conducting, and terminating wars [e]
Subtopics
- International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg) [r]: Conducted by the four major Allied powers in Europe, this proceeding tried the designated Major War Criminals of Nazi Germany, as well as determining whether certain Nazi organizations were to be considered as criminal conspiracies to which membership was a crime [e]
- Nuremberg Military Tribunals [r]: A set of twelve trials of officials of Nazi Germany, conducted by the United States in its zone of occupation of Germany, following the International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg) [e]
- High Command Case (NMT) [r]: A trial of senior professional military officers of Nazi Germany, for which some were convicted of war crimes, crimes against humanity, or both; none were judged at the policy-making level to have plotted aggressive war [e]
- Hostages Case (NMT) [r]: A trial of senior Nazi Army officers for war crimes against civilians and prisoners of war in Yugoslavia and Greece [e]
- International Military Tribunal (Tokyo) [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Tomiyuki Yamashita [r]: Imperial Japanese Army general, member of the Imperial Way Faction, who led the capture of Malaya, fell into political disfavor with the high command, but later returned to command the defense of Luzon in the Philippines; executed after a controversial war crimes trial with an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States [e]
- International Criminal Court [r]: A permanent tribunal, established by treaty among over 120 nations but not part of the United Nations, for trying individuals for crimes against humanity; a number of major countries do not accept its authority [e]
- International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia [r]: Add brief definition or description
- International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda [r]: Created by the United Nations Security Council, an international humanitarian law tribunal established to try Rwandan citizens for 1994 violence in Rwanda and neighboring countries, principally between the Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups [e]
- Alien Torts Claims Act [r]: Originally introduced in 1789, a U.S. law that has become active in using the U.S. court to seek redress for actions committed outside the U.S., but in violation of U.S. or international law and where the defendants have a relationship to the U.S. [e]
- Filartiga v. Pena-Irala [r]: A 1984 decision by a U.S. appellate court, which supported universal jurisdiction over torture, and command responsibility for the superiors of torturers [e]
- Tetsuzan Nagata [r]: Imperial Japanese Army general, assassinated in 1935, who was one of the Three Crows who urged military modernization from 1921 onwards, and the key leader of the later Toseiha (Control Faction); these groups contributed to the military dominance that led to the Pacific War [e]
- Tomiyuki Yamashita [r]: Imperial Japanese Army general, member of the Imperial Way Faction, who led the capture of Malaya, fell into political disfavor with the high command, but later returned to command the defense of Luzon in the Philippines; executed after a controversial war crimes trial with an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States [e]
- Battle of Khe Sanh [r]: While there had been fighting at Khe Sanh as early as 1964, with U.S. forces arriving in 1966, the main Battle of Khe Sanh ran from January to April 1968, capturing attention before the start of the Tet offensive at the end of January [e]