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© Reuters/Maurice McDonaldSoldiers from A company of Britain's 1st Battalion Black Watch take part in a patrol through the area of Ahmed Al Ahamadi near their base Camp Dogwood, 30 miles south west of Baghdad November 5, 2004.
Britain must scrap the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) in times of warfare because British soldiers cannot fight under the restraints of "judicial imperialism," a right-wing think tank has claimed.

Offering enemy combatants the right to sue the British government and expecting soldiers on the battlefield to operate with the same level of caution as police patrolling London streets will render future foreign combat operations unworkable, a report by Policy Exchange said.

The study, Clearing the Fog of Law, has placed human rights back on Britain's general election agenda. It was authored by two academic lawyers and a Tory general election candidate.

The report conceded that UK soldiers fighting abroad should not act with impunity. But it argued international oversight of conflict should fall under the Geneva Conventions rather than the European Convention on Human Rights.

The Conservative Party has long made clear its intentions to withdraw from Strasbourg's European Court of Human Rights should it be reelected in May 2015. It has also proposed plans to repeal Britain's Human Rights Act, and create a self-styled "British Bill of Rights."

Under such reforms, the European Court of Justice would hold no power in Britain and final judicial authority would rest with the Supreme Court.

'Judicialization of war'

Policy Exchange's report says the "judicialization of war" has increased markedly since Tony Blair's New Labour introduced the Human Rights Act in 1998.

At present, an estimated 1,230 lawsuits have been filed against the Ministry of Defense by grieving families of Iraqis gunned down by British soldiers.

Iraqi claimants seeking justice for their deceased loved ones argue Article 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) should also apply to those shot by UK armed forces during Britain's 8-year occupation of Iraq.

The legislation compels states to respect basic human rights in the jurisdictions they govern, including the right to life, the right to freedom from torture, and the right to a fair trial.

While the MoD rejected the argument that Iraqis killed during UK security operations fall under Britain's jurisdiction, the High Court ruled against the British government.

Commenting on the ruling, the MoD told RT earlier this month it is "concerned" that the High Court has adopted such an "expansive view of ECHR jurisdiction."

The MoD warned the landmark ruling would open up a tidal wave of "opportunistic" lawsuits against the government that would have to be "investigated and litigated at heavy cost to taxpayers."

In addition to the lawsuits filed by families of grieving Iraqis, a further 1,000 private law claims are also making their way through British courts, Policy Exchange says.

The think tank's report warns of the rise of "judicial imperialism" in Britain. It claims this trend is particularly in evident in the application of the ECHR to UK forces on the battlefield.

The report's authors claim this development is not supported by reliable legal evidence. They argue it undermines Commanders' capacity to make rapid and possibly "life or death decisions."

"British armed forces remain the most accomplished in Europe; but they suffer courtroom defeat after courtroom defeat in London and Strasbourg," Policy Exchange's report said.

The tipping point, it suggested, was the landmark case of Smith v Ministry of Defense in 2013.

The court's ruling, given at Britain's Supreme Court, said that soldiers injured in battle or the families of those who died on the battlefield were entitled to sue the British government on two counts: for negligence and for violations of "the right to life" under Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).

Policy Exchange called for the primacy of the Geneva Conventions in armed combat to be reinstated. Comprised of four treaties and three protocols, the Conventions set the international law standards for a humanitarian approach to war. Under the legislation, soldiers may use lethal force against enemy soldiers "as a matter of first resort."

By contrast, the ECHR permits combatants to use lethal force only in exceptional circumstances or where there is no other option. It also says the UK has a duty to investigate claims of wrongdoing committed on its behalf.

Policy Exchange's report called upon the government to reintroduce immunity for soldiers on the battlefield to stave off "claims of negligence being brought against the government."

"Negligence as a concept has no place on the battlefield as it leads to a 'safety first' approach by commanders on the ground," the report said.

"All injured personnel should be paid compensation in full on a no-fault basis. The money would go to injured soldiers and their families rather than to personal injury lawyers and the public costs of trial," it added.

Policy Exchange's call for an end to "judicial imperialism" and wide scale human rights reforms in Britain will be welcomed by certain pockets of the Conservative Party. But human rights NGOs and those committed to preserving Britain's human rights framework will likely dismiss the proposals as hawkish and misguided murmurings from the right.