Seburiel wrote:I've often wondered (and I fully realize that I am woefully uneducated about these sorts of things) why, if something is banned in war, why it would be acceptable used upon a civilian population?
The same question might be asked with respect to the use of expanding bullets, which are commonly used by police, and are even by some jurisdictions
required to be used under certain circumstance, such as when hunting.
It is not clear that the use of "blinding lasers," the term used in the above-referenced CNET article, is prohibited in warfare, as it is not clear from the article that the described lasers are intended to cause
permanent blindness. Indeed, the article itself says that their purpose is to "disorientate victims...." Nit-picking? Possibly, but that is the nature of things, particularly when technology overtakes otherwise well-meaning rules.
For example, it is generally known that the U. S. military has tested, and may still be testing, laser weapons which can kill an enemy. This can be justified under the law of war because while it may be illegal to intentionally permanently blind an enemy with a laser it is not illegal to kill him with one. Sort that one out for us.
Jim