SECTION X
Article 149. Insurrection is the rising of people in arms against their
government, or a portion of it, or against one or more of its laws, or
against an officer or officers of the government. It may be confined to
mere armed resistance, or it may have greater ends in view.
Article 150. Civil war is war between two or more portions of a country or
state, each contending for the mastery of the whole, and each claiming to
be the legitimate government. The term is also sometimes applied to war of
rebellion, when the rebellious provinces or portions of the state are
contiguous to those containing the seat of government.
Article 151. The term rebellion is applied to an insurrection of large extent,
and is usually a war between the legitimate government of a country and
portions of provinces of the same who seek to throw off their allegiance to
it and set up a government of their own.
Article 152. When humanity induces the adoption of the rules of regular war to
ward rebels, whether the adoption is partial or entire, it does in no way
whatever imply a partial or complete acknowledgement of their government,
if they have set up one, or of them, as an independent and sovereign power.
Neutrals have no right to make the adoption of the rules of war by the
assailed government toward rebels the ground of their own acknowledgment of
the revolted people as an independent power.
Article 153. Treating captured rebels as prisoners of war, exchanging them,
concluding of cartels, capitulations, or other warlike agreements with
them; addressing officers of a rebel army by the rank they may have in the
same; accepting flags of truce; or, on the other hand, proclaiming Martial
Law in their territory, or levying war-taxes or forced loans, or doing any
other act sanctioned or demanded by the law and usages of public war
between sovereign belligerents, neither proves nor establishes an
acknowledgment of the rebellious people, or of the government which they
may have erected, as a public or sovereign power. Nor does the adoption of
the rules of war toward rebels imply an engagement with them extending
beyond the limits of these rules. It is victory in the field that ends the
strife and settles the future relations between the contending parties.
Article 154. Treating, in the field, the rebellious enemy according to the law
and usages of war has never prevented the legitimate government from trying
the leaders of the rebellion or chief rebels for high treason, and from
treating them accordingly, unless they are included in a general amnesty.
Article 155. All enemies in regular war are divided into two general classes -
that is to say, into combatants and noncombatants, or unarmed citizens of
the hostile government.
The military commander of the legitimate government, in a war of rebellion,
distinguishes between the loyal citizen in the revolted portion of the
country and the disloyal citizen. The disloyal citizens may further be
classified into those citizens known to sympathize with the rebellion
without positively aiding it, and those who, without taking up arms, give
positive aid and comfort to the rebellious enemy without being bodily
forced thereto.
Article 156. Common justice and plain expediency require that the military
commander protect the manifestly loyal citizens, in revolted territories,
against the hardships of the war as much as the common misfortune of all
war admits.
The commander will throw the burden of the war, as much as lies within his
power, on the disloyal citizens, of the revolted portion or province,
subjecting them to a stricter police than the noncombatant enemies have to
suffer in regular war; and if he deems it appropriate, or if his government
demands of him that every citizen shall, by an oath of allegiance, or by
some other manifest act, declare his fidelity to the legitimate government,
he may expel, transfer, imprison, or fine the revolted citizens who refuse
to pledge themselves anew as citizens obedient to the law and loyal to the
government.
Whether it is expedient to do so, and whether reliance can be placed upon
such oaths, the commander or his government have the right to decide.
Article 157. Armed or unarmed resistance by citizens of the United States
against the lawful movements of their troops is levying war against the
United States, and is therefore treason.