Connect with us

Global Issues

Infrastructure Under Fire: How Modern Warfare Destroys Civilian Life While Law Watches in Silence -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

No law without enforcement is not protection; it is a performance. If we let such intentional devastation of civilian infrastructure go unimpeded, we must acknowledge an uncomfortable truth modern warfare has outgrown everything we preach about protecting it. The rules still apply, but they no longer restrain. They legitimize. This cannot continue.

Published

on

small-banner-election-law-Nigeria-US-UK-Legal

No longer does modern warfare start with soldiers. It begins with darkness. The lights go out. Water stops running. Hospitals fall silent. And somewhere far, far away from the frontlines a child dies not of a bullet, but of the slow suffocation of a system deliberately dismantled. This isn’t collateral damage. It is strategy. Civilian infrastructure destruction is now a deliberate strategy of war in modern conflict. Power grids are bombed not to weaken armies, but to paralyze societies. Water systems are targeted not to win battles, but to manufacture desperation. Hospitals have not been struck accidentally but because the very act of healing has become a threat to military objectives. What we are watching isn’t the gradual disintegration of humanitarian norms.

It’s their systematic inversion. International humanitarian law (based on the Geneva Conventions) is clear: civilians and civilian objects must be protected. The principle of distinction is not a suggestion, it is a cornerstone. The principle of proportionality is not discretionary; it is binding. But in practice, these truths are becoming rhetorical flourishes, used in press statements and disregarded in targeting rulings. The legal language still exists. The reality it aims to govern has crumpled.

What makes this moment so uniquely dangerous, however, is not simply the scale of destruction, but the normalization of that destruction. Every strike on a power plant is understood to be a “dual-use” target. Every water facility that is destroyed is recast as a “necessary” consequence. Every hospital reduced to rubble is rationalized away as an “operational error.” A legal vocabulary has been weaponized to sanitize the architecture of suffering. This is how law dies not with open defiance, but with strategic reinterpretation.

The doctrine of “military necessity” was once only allowed so far on humanitarian grounds, but the boundaries of such “necessity” are being blown away. If all that supports civilian life can be reframed as serving indirectly the enemy, then nothing stays protected. Electricity powers communication; communication supports coordination; coordination supports resistance. Under this logic, you get to make every civilian object a target. The exception swallows the rule. And so, the battlefield thickens not geographically, but existentially.

The war is no longer waged between enemies. It’s fought on the terms that make civilian life possible. The results are devastating, calculated. Structurally, destroying infrastructure doesn’t just interrupt services, it dismantles survival. Hospitals can’t be functional without electricity. And without water, disease spreads. Food supply chains collapse in the absence of fuel. The result is a slow violence less visible than airstrikes, but much more pervasive. It is death by design. Yet accountability is elusive. International institutions issue statements.

Advertisement

Investigations are announced. Legal frameworks are cited. But enforcement, the very mechanism that makes law meaningful is conspicuously absent. States that regularly hit civilian infrastructure face no immediate consequence. Commanders who authorize such strikes lack any deterrents. Instead, you’ve got a tacit understanding: The cost of running afoul of the law is lower than the opportunity to break it. This is not a failure of law. It is a failure of the will. The international community has erected an elaborate legal structure to regulate war, but it has failed to equip it with teeth. Courts are slow moving, and legal responsibility is contested or displaced by political interests. This often leads to a situation in which laws have to be carried out but do not yet provide any real legal force. This is where impunity has its roots. And in areas of impunity, norms deteriorate. Instead, what we have left behind is a dangerous illusion: a faith that the mere presence of law guarantees its effect. It is not. No law without enforcement is not protection; it is a performance. If we let such intentional devastation of civilian infrastructure go unimpeded, we must acknowledge an uncomfortable truth modern warfare has outgrown everything we preach about protecting it. The rules still apply, but they no longer restrain. They legitimize. This cannot continue.

The defense of civilian infrastructure must be re-emphasized not as an abstract principle but as a binding red line. This demands more than critique. It requires consequences immediate, certain and inevitable. Enforcement of the criminal charges against any and all decisions that lead to the systematic destruction of life support systems for civilians must thus evoke a sort of automatic judicial examination, independent investigation and if needed, prosecution. Not years later, but now. Because the law is being tested every time the lights go off. And every time the world is silent, it fails. It is not that a system that professes to defend civilians while allowing a country to obliterate everything they rely on fails to deliver on promises will. It deceives.

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Tinubu-and-Atiku- Tinubu-and-Atiku-
Breaking News4 hours ago

Atiku Tackles Tinubu Over Fresh $516m Loan, Warns on Debt Burden

Nigeria’s public debt has continued to rise in recent years, sparking debates among economists and policy experts over the country’s...

Osun 2026 - Adeleke, Oyebamiji and others Osun 2026 - Adeleke, Oyebamiji and others
Politics4 hours ago

Osun 2026: Odds Against Governor Adeleke’s Re-election -By Oluwatise Oyekanmi

The party’s boat-rocking, net-cracking achievements during its twelve years in the saddle in the state serve as a nostalgic reminder...

Iran and America Iran and America
Forgotten Dairies5 hours ago

Poking the Bear: How Iran Risks Triggering a Unified America -By Vitus Ozoke, PhD

For Tehran, this should sharpen, not dull, its sense of caution. A leader who frames outcomes in absolute, almost existential...

Monday Okpebholo Monday Okpebholo
Breaking News7 hours ago

Edo Governor Okpebholo Receives Seyi Tinubu-Led City Boy Movement Delegation

The City Boy Movement begins its South-South tour with a visit to Edo State, where Governor Okpebholo hosts its delegation...

Trump Trump
Breaking News7 hours ago

Trump Extends Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire by Three Weeks

Trump announces a three-week extension of the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire during meetings with diplomatic envoys from both sides.

Deji Adeleke - Davido Deji Adeleke - Davido
Breaking News8 hours ago

Osun Security Trust Fund Gets N500m Boost From Davido’s Father

Osun Security Trust Fund receives N500m boost from businessman Adedeji Adeleke as Governor Adeleke unveils security plans for the state.

Breaking News8 hours ago

US Has No Plan to Exclude Iran From World Cup — Rubio

Marco Rubio denies claims that the US plans to block Iran’s participation in the World Cup, saying players are not...

Breaking News8 hours ago

Nenadi Usman Flags Off Labour Party Ward Congresses, Commends INEC Conduct

Labour Party says ward congresses were peaceful nationwide as it begins internal elections ahead of its 2026 national convention.

Breaking News9 hours ago

Hayatu-Deen Says Nigerians Poorer, Insecurity Worse Than Three Years Ago

ADC presidential hopeful Hayatu-Deen warns that rising costs and insecurity have worsened living conditions for Nigerians across the country.

Breaking News9 hours ago

Bauchi Governor Bala Mohammed Speaks on Talks With Peter Obi

Bala Mohammed shares what he discussed with Peter Obi during their Bauchi meeting, including economy, politics, and institutional reforms.