Democratic lawmaker condemns Hegseth's call for 'no quarter' for US enemies
Source: The Guardian
Democratic lawmaker condemns Hegseths call for no quarter for US enemies
Defense secretary appeared to endorse killing prisoners, a violation of international law, during press briefing
Edward Helmore
Sat 14 Mar 2026 15.46 GMT
Last modified on Sat 14 Mar 2026 18.22 GMT
A top Democratic lawmaker with a military background has reacted strongly to US defense secretary Pete Hegseths call for no quarter for US enemies during a Friday press briefing at the Pentagon, calling such an order if followed by troops a potential violation of international law.
The US senator Mark Kelly, of Arizona, posted on Friday on X that No quarter isnt some wanna be tough guy line it means something. An order to give no quarter would mean to take no prisoners and kill them instead.
Kelly added: That would violate the law of armed conflict. It would be an illegal order. It would also put American service members at greater risk. Pete Hegseth should know better than to throw around terms like this.
According to a transcript of the briefing, Hegseth said: We will keep pressing, keep pushing, keep advancing no quarter, no mercy for our enemy.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/14/democratic-lawmaker-condemns-hegseth-no-quarter
pfitz59
(12,660 posts)and the Geneva Convention. Tough guy Hegseth is a moron.
Biophilic
(6,535 posts)Seriously, do these idiots even think about what they are saying once, let alone twice. They have a certain responsibility to the soldiers they are sending into harm's way....ok, never, mind, they have no sense of responsibility to anyone but themselves.
Norrrm
(4,945 posts)Hegseth (and Trump) approving it when done to our own troops.
LetMyPeopleVote
(179,451 posts)Hegseth is firing JAG officers and reorganizing the JAG office because he wants to commit war crimes. Hegseth just committed a war crime by promising that "No Quarter" will be given to any enemy of the trump administration
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's offhand remark that the U.S. would show "no quarter, no mercy for our enemies," in Iran.
— Raw Story (@rawstory.com) 2026-03-14T03:00:29Z
https://www.rawstory.com/pete-hegseth-2676101135
This alarmed legal experts, who warned the statement could constitute a war crime. Even just saying it could count as a violation of international law and U.S. military code, they added.
Wall Street Journal national security reporter Alex Ward flagged the comment as violating international humanitarian law under the Geneva Convention.
Claremont McKenna College professor Jack Pitney cited the Defense Department's own Law of War Manual, which explicitly forbids declaring no quarter will be given. International Crisis Group senior adviser Brian Finucane, a former U.S. government war crimes lawyer, stated that even declaring no quarter constitutes a war crime punishable by up to life imprisonment under the DoD Manual for Military Commissions.
Stanford law professor Tom Dannenbaum confirmed declaring no quarter is prohibited under international humanitarian law and itself amounts to a war crime.
LetMyPeopleVote
(179,451 posts)The defense secretarys disdain for rules of engagement and the laws of war is apparent. And it could lead to war crimes by Americans and against Americans.
The dangerous significance of Pete Hegsethâs âno quarterâ Iran war pledge -
— Susan Cooper aka Buzzedition (@buzzedition.bsky.social) 2026-03-15T03:45:22.636Z
The defense secretaryâs disdain for rules of engagement and the laws of war is apparent. And it could lead to war crimes â by Americans and against Americans.
www.ms.now/opinion/hegs...
https://www.ms.now/opinion/hegseth-war-crimes-iran-no-quarter
As MS NOWs Julia Jester rightly noted, Fridays comments from Hegseth calling for no quarter stand out for even more implicitly greenlighting the military to violate the broader laws of war as well as the militarys own longstanding rules of engagement:
Orders or threats of no quarter a term used for killing enemies who surrender or are rendered unable to fight have been considered violations of international law since the Hague Convention of 1899, with directions to give no quarter listed as a war crime following World War II. [ ]
And its not just global rules that are being flouted. Not only does the term no quarter violate the Geneva Convention, it defies the U.S. Marine Corps own rules of engagement: Do not engage anyone who has surrendered or is out of battle due to sickness or wounds.
.....That seems unlikely given a new effort from Hegseth to undertake a ruthless overhaul of the militarys judge advocate general corps and their fellow civilian lawyers at the Pentagon. As The Atlantic reported, the concern with this review is that it provides cover for an attempt to reduce the ranks of lawyers, purge internal dissent, and eliminate guardrails designed to restrict the military from carrying out legally dubious orders. And while operations like the sinking of an Iranian warship returning from a multinational training exercise are technically allowed under the laws of war, its hard to say they were fully legal under American law, given the administrations lack of a clear legal rationale for the war effort.
Despite what Hegseth may think, words matter in times of war. Beyond conveying the message of what is gained through fighting, it is only through clear communication that the orders from the top can be carried out by the servicemembers whove sworn an oath to obey them. His refusal to acknowledge that there are times where things other than body count should factor into combat decisions threatens the cohesion and professionalism of the military.
Likewise, its the global commitment to the established laws of war that keeps American civilians safe and untargeted. In rejecting them with his statements, he is incentivizing those who serve under his command to not only discard their humanity but destroy a shield protecting their fellow Americans from having the same standard of maximum lethality carried out against them.
LetMyPeopleVote
(179,451 posts)The secretary of defense is a military leader in the chain of command. Whether Hegseth appreciates it or not, his words alone have legal significance.
Why Pete Hegsethâs talk about âno quarterâ could itself be against U.S. and international law
— Mike Walker (@newnarrative.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T11:23:17.383Z
www.ms.now/opinion/pete...
https://www.ms.now/opinion/pete-hegseth-no-quarter-war-crime
These words in themselves could be a violation of both U.S. and international law.
Hegseths declaration of no quarter implicates a foundational prohibition under the law of war. These are the binding rules agreed to by states that seek to mitigate the horrors and bloodshed of conflict through pragmatic balancing of humanitarian and military considerations. The prohibition of the denial of quarter is a paradigmatic illustration of the law of war advancing both sets of considerations.
Dating back to at least the Civil War, the denial of quarter has been forbidden. As articulated in the 1863 Lieber Code (Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field, General Order No. 100), It is against the usage of modern war to resolve, in hatred and revenge, to give no quarter. No body of troops has the right to declare that it will not give, and therefore will not expect, quarter. (emphasis added) This rule would subsequently be incorporated into treaties to which the United States is a party, including in the regulations annexed to the 1907 Hague Convention IV, and as customary law binding on all states. Importantly, this law of war rule applies to air, land and sea warfare.
As reflected in the Lieber Code (and the Department of Defenses own Law of War Manual), the ban on denial of quarter includes both: 1) a prohibition on conducting hostilities on the basis that legitimate offers of surrender by enemy personnel will not be accepted, but instead that there should be no survivors, and 2) a prohibition on simply declaring no quarter itself.
In other words, the law of war prohibits military leaders from the speech act of announcing no quarter alone.....
Denial of quarter is also a war crime under U.S. law. The War Crimes Act criminalizes violations of the following rule: it is especially forbidden [t]o declare that no quarter will be given. Thus U.S. criminal law, like the international law of war, imposes individual liability for the speech act of declaring no quarter itself regardless of whether the declaration is ever implemented.
A declaration of no quarter by a military leader is not only an unlawful order (the subject of a now famous video message from a number of Democratic lawmakers), but one that a court would likely find to be manifestly or patently unlawful. This means that if military subordinates were to execute a directive of no quarter, they would have no viable defense of following superior orders.
Hegseth is a pompous idiot who wants to be macho. Hegseth is endangering our troops with his pronouncements. Our troops will face additional risks is our countries follow Hegseth's example