The Americas | Hard rules for rotten wars

When is it OK to shoot a child soldier?

Canada writes rules for troops who face armed nine-year-olds

|OTTAWA

ONE of the worst dilemmas soldiers face is what to do when they confront armed children. International law and most military codes treat underage combatants mainly as innocent victims. They offer guidance on their legal rights and on how to interrogate and demobilise them. They have little to say about a soul-destroying question, which must typically be answered in a split second: when a kid points a Kalashnikov at you, do you shoot him? Last month Canada became the first country to incorporate a detailed answer into its military doctrine. If you must, it says, shoot first.

This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “When to shoot a child soldier”

The Trump presidency so far

From the April 1st 2017 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Images show uncontacted tribe of Mashco Piro dangerously close to logging concessions.

Peruvians are debating how to protect isolated tribes

Deaths in the Amazon are bringing matters to a head

Fans of Nacional, during the Torneo Intermedio 2024 final match.

Why is football in Latin America so complex?

Money-grubbing and regulatory capture explain its Byzantine leagues


Brazil's former president Jair Bolsonaro greets supporters.

Jair Bolsonaro still shapes Brazil’s political right

Would-be successors are pandering to his fans


Digital nomads are a force for good in Latin America

It is unfair to blame remote workers for gentrifying neighbourhoods and raising rents

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is militarising public security

The latest constitutional reform will complicate the fight against drug gangs

The woman who will lead Chile’s counter-revolution

Chileans tried youthful utopianism. Now they crave maturity and moderation