--humanitarian law and human rights law. I have not written about the arrangement, so I may have just misunderstood the way you phrased the question.
This is a very complex environment, and there is much that you've put forward that I want to clarify in terms of the issue of putting Canadian troops...as to what their legal obligations are.
We are operating, as you can just see on TV, in a very complex security environment. We are also operating in an exceedingly complex legal environment.
When our troops deploy overseas on any type of operation, whether it's to Afghanistan for engagement in armed conflict or on a peacekeeping mission, we traditionally deal with four different bodies of law: international humanitarian law, or the law of armed conflict as we would call it in the military; international human rights law; Canada's own domestic laws; and the domestic laws of the state within which we're operating. So in that context it's an exceedingly complex environment.
And I have no doubt there are a number of learned lawyers in the room, and I note the Honourable Irwin Cotler at the far end of the table.
In that sense it's complicated, but in some senses it's very simple in terms of what we require our soldiers to do.
For example, there has been much in the media about the issue of torture and the question of torture as prescribed not only by human rights treaties, not only by international humanitarian law, Canadian domestic law...it's also in the constitution of Afghanistan. And the question is even much broader than that, because we're not simply limited to torture. We're talking about inhumane treatment, abuse, and all of those issues.
The Canadian Forces have taken tremendous strides in the past decade, and the leadership of the Canadian Forces have taken tremendous strikes--and hopefully my office has been able to help them--in setting out the rules and regulations that govern the conduct of the Canadian Forces.
In every pocket of every deployed soldier is a prescription against torture and against the abuse of people who come in their care. In the pocket of every soldier who deploys is a requirement that they report war crimes and abuses.
I think we've seen in the past week, in terms of what's in the media, the extent to which that effort by the leadership within the Canadian Forces has gone--the tremendous steps--to ensure that Canadian Forces members are not exposed to the liabilities and the Government of Canada is not exposed to those liabilities.