In late March, after two years of withering attacks on Ukraine, Russia knocked out half of Ukraine’s power supply.
Up to that point, Russia’s missiles and kamikaze drones had mostly targeted the Ukrainian substations that push electricity from power plants to consumers.
But the global community must now draw bright lines for combatants in future conflicts — and strengthen the hand of future prosecutors — by codifying specific protections for power grids.
The international community already attempts to do that for select infrastructure, including hospitals, dams and nuclear power plants, via the Geneva Conventions.
It’s time to add power grids to that privileged roster.
Persons:
grinds, Viktor Nikolayevich Sokolov, Sergei Ivanovich Kobylash, —
Organizations:
Criminal
Locations:
Ukraine, Russia, The Hague, Russian, Geneva