cthia wrote:Would Honor's assassin need to be in uniform? Was the attempt on her life in the restaurant by Maccabeus legal, since she was an enemy of Masada? Can three piece suits be considered uniforms if that's the prescribed attire?
Although she isn't a head of state, Steadholders may also enjoy some sort of interstellar protection from assassination.
To be technically legal by the laws of war, Honor's killer would have in the uniform of an enemy power. The attempt to kill Honor in a restaurant was by criminals hired by Pavel Young. The attempt to kill her (and the Protector) in the meal at the palace was illegal because it was performed by agents of Maccabeus disguised as palace guards.
Protocol I of the Geneval Conventions states that it is prohibited to make use of the flags or military emblems, insignia or uniforms of adverse Parties while engaging in attacks or in order to shield, favor, protect or impede military operations.
It is permitted to use a false flag or uniform leading up to an action, but those items must be discarded before fighting begins.
A three piece suit could be a uniform, but only if was not what civilians wore; there should be something that distinguished a person in uniform from everyone else.
PS. There are some very formal dress uniforms that could be 3 piece. The USAF had one for a few years after WWII that would be required wear at state or diplomatic dinners in Washington DC. It is described like this:
The Formal Evening Dress uniform was the popular civilian tailed coat with trousers, white vest and tie altered to US Air Force specifications. Ornamentation was added to the sleeve to indicate military character together with USAF gold buttons in place of the usual civilian buttons. The uniform was to be of black or blue-black commercial type evening dress cloth. It was nothing more than a conventional civilian tailed coat converted into a military garment.
PPS. It is not a given that even heads of state have any sort of interstellar protection from assassination. Certainly nothing protected Elizabeth's father from an engineered grav-skiing accident nor her from a stealth missile (except Honor's presence). It is an act of war (but in the second case the war was ongoing) and there are reasons why governments might disavow all knowledge of someone's activities.