The laws of war govern the initiation and conduct of armed conflict. What can be legitimately targeted? What constitutes a war crime? The laws of war provide answers to these questions and others. They apply everywhere, but there are unique considerations in certain environments—especially in cities. The hostilities in Gaza over the past several weeks offer a case in point. To examine the laws of war and their application in urban areas, and to specifically explore the case of Gaza, John Spencer is joined in this episode by General Charles Dunlap, a retired major general and former deputy judge advocate general of the US Air Force who is now a professor of the practice of law and executive director of the Center on Law, Ethics, and National Security at Duke Law School.
Defending Mariupol
Tanks in the Urban Battle of Suez City
Israeli Armor in the Yom Kippur War
Synthetic Training Environments and the Future of Urban Warfare
Artillery in the Urban Battles of Ukraine
Inside the World's Only Urban Warfare Planners Course
What Do We Actually Need for Urban Warfare Training?
The 2022 Battle of Kyiv: A Lecture
What Does it Take to Rebuild a City Destroyed by War?
The Battle of Bakhmut
Twenty-First-Century Urban Warfare
Russian Military Technology and Urban Warfare
The Italian Stalingrad
Hostage Rescue: Understanding the Significance of the Mother's Bus Attack
A Firsthand Account of the Battle of Mariupol
The Battle of Jenin
Russia, Ukraine, And Urban Warfare
Round 2 of the World’s Only Urban Warfare Planners Course
Studying the Battle of Kyiv, Part 1
Why Urban Warfare is the Hardest
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