Startseite Rechtswissenschaften A Report on the Conclusion of the Cambodian Operation Statement of President Nixon, June 30, 1970
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

A Report on the Conclusion of the Cambodian Operation Statement of President Nixon, June 30, 1970

Weitere Titel anzeigen von Princeton University Press

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Acknowledgments v
  3. Contents vii
  4. Introduction 1
  5. I. THE CAMBODIAN INCURSION OF 1970
  6. A. The Expanded Zone of Combat
  7. From the Vietnam War to an Indochina War 9
  8. B. International Law Aspects
  9. United States Military Action in Cambodia: Questions of International Law 23
  10. The Cambodian Operation and International Law 33
  11. Legal Dimensions of the Decision to Intercede in Cambodia 58
  12. Comments on the Articles on the Legality of the United States Action in Cambodia 96
  13. United States Military Intervention in Cambodia in the Light of International Law 100
  14. Self-Defense and Cambodia: A Critical Appraisal 138
  15. United States Recognition Policy and Cambodia 148
  16. C. Constitutional Aspects
  17. The Constitutional Issues–Administration Position 163
  18. The Constitutionality of the Cambodian Incursion 175
  19. Commentary 187
  20. II. WAR CRIMES
  21. A. General Considerations
  22. The Nuremberg Principles 193
  23. The Hostage Case (excerpts) 249
  24. The High Command Case (excerpts) 256
  25. The Matter of Yamashita (excerpts) 264
  26. Targets in War: Legal Considerations 281
  27. Son My: War Crimes and Individual Responsibility 327
  28. Legal Aspects of the My Lai Incident 346
  29. Legal Aspects of the My Lai Incident–A Response to Professor Rubin 359
  30. Nuremberg and Vietnam: Who is Responsible for War Crimes? 379
  31. Β. Judicial Applications
  32. The Nuremberg Trials and Conscientious Objection to War: Justiciability under United States Municipal Law 399
  33. War Crimes and Vietnam: The “Nuremberg Defense” and the Military Service Resister 407
  34. Conscience and Anarchy: the Prosecution of War Resisters 463
  35. Nuremberg Law and U.S. Courts 477
  36. III. THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEBATE ON THE VIETNAM WAR
  37. A. Matters of Executive Prerogative
  38. The President, the People, and the Power to Make War 489
  39. The Power of the Executive to Use Military Forces Abroad 506
  40. Presidential War-Making: Constitutional Prerogative or Usurpation? 521
  41. Committee on Foreign Relations, Comments on the National Commitments Resolution 584
  42. B. Matters of Legislative Prerogative
  43. Congress and Foreign Policy 595
  44. The Appropriations Power as a Tool of Congressional Foreign Policy Making 606
  45. C. Matters of Judicial Prerogative
  46. Viet-Nam in the Courts of the United States: “Political Questions” 625
  47. The Justiciability of Challenges to the Use of Military Forces Abroad 631
  48. Judicial Power, the “Political Question Doctrine,” and Foreign Relations 654
  49. The Justiciability of Legal Objections to the American Military Effort in Vietnam 699
  50. IV. SPECIAL QUESTIONS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
  51. Legitimacy and Legal Rights of Revolutionary Movements With Special Reference to the Peoples’ evolutionary Government of South Viet Nam 723
  52. V. PROSPECTS FOR SETTLEMENT
  53. The Viet Nam Negotiations 741
  54. The International Control Commission Experience and the Role of an Improved International Supervisory Body in the Vietnamese Settlement 765
  55. The Neutralization of South Vietnam: Pros and Cons 811
  56. VI. WORLD ORDER PERSPECTIVES
  57. What We Should Learn from Vietnam 827
  58. Controlling Local Conflicts 840
  59. The Causes of Peace and Conditions of War 847
  60. VII. DOCUMENTARY APPENDICES
  61. President Nixon’s Address to the Nation on “Military Action in Cambodia,” April 30, 1970 865
  62. Ambassador Charles Yost’s Letter of May 5, 1970 to the United Nations Security Council 873
  63. A Report on the Conclusion of the Cambodian Operation Statement of President Nixon, June 30, 1970 875
  64. The Nuremberg Principles 893
  65. Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War, 1949 895
  66. President Nixon’s Address to the Nation on “A New Peace Initiative for All Indochina,” October 7, 1970 904
  67. The National Commitments Resolution Senate Resolution 85, 91st Congress, 1st Session, Adopted June 25, 1969 909
  68. Amendment to the Foreign Military Sales Act (Cooper-Church Amendment) 910
  69. Civil War Panel 921
  70. Contributors 922
  71. Permissions 925
  72. Index 929
Heruntergeladen am 21.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781400868247-046/html
Button zum nach oben scrollen