A system and method for determining whether an action is a use of fore or an armed attack under international law comprising determining the action's Severity, Immediacy, Directness, Invasiveness, Measurability, Presumptive Legitimacy, and Responsibility. Individual legal weights may also be assigned to the Severity magnitude, the Immediacy magnitude, the Directness magnitude, the Invasiveness magnitude, the Measurability magnitude, the Presumptive Legitimacy magnitude, and the Responsibility magnitude in order to calculate a composite value quantifying the consequences of the action.
National Defense University
Acting Chancellor
National Defense University
Dean of Faculty and Academic Programs
National Defense University
Professor of Law
National Defense College of the U.a.e. Jan 2014 - Nov 2015
Professor of Law and Strategy
George C. Marshall Center Mar 2010 - Dec 2013
Professor of International Law
Education:
Georgetown University Law Center 1997 - 1999
Masters, Master of Laws
Skills:
National Security Dod International Security Military Foreign Policy Security Clearance Cyberlaw Intelligence Intelligence Analysis International Law Counterterrorism Nato Defense Special Operations Afghanistan Operational Planning Military Operations Homeland Security Command Army Top Secret Force Protection International Relations Government Counterinsurgency Counterintelligence Tactics Crisis Management Security Information Assurance Weapons Interagency Coordination Emergency Management Diplomacy Foreign Affairs Interdisciplinary Teaching Sigint Military Experience Air Force Reconnaissance Military Liaison C4Isr Vulnerability Assessment Electronic Warfare Security+ Government Contracting Organizational Leadership Navy Physical Security