Unconditional surrender (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Unconditional surrender" in English language version.

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  • Baines, Edward (1818). History of the Wars of the French Revolution, from the breaking out of the wars in 1792, to, the restoration of general peace in 1815 (of II). Vol. II. Longman, Rees, Orme and Brown. p. 433.
  • MacDonald, John (1823). "Character of Bonaparte". In Urban, Sylvanus (ed.). The Gentleman's magazine (part 1). 16th of the New Series. Vol. 93. F. Jefferies. p. 569.
  • Bradbury, Jim (1992), The Medieval Siege, Boydell & Brewer, p. 325, ISBN 978-0-85115-357-5
  • Afflerbach, Holger; Strachan, Hew (2012), How Fighting Ends: A History of Surrender, Oxford University Press, p. 107, ISBN 978-0-19-969362-7
  • Lord, Walter (1978), A Time to Stand: The Epic of the Alamo, U of Nebraska Press, p. 14, ISBN 978-0-8032-7902-5

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  • Whitlock, Craig (16 August 2021). "Afghan security forces' wholesale collapse was years in the making". Washington Post. Those fears, rarely expressed in public, were ultimately borne out by the sudden collapse this month of the Afghan security forces, whose wholesale and unconditional surrender to the Taliban will go down as perhaps the worst debacle in the history

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  • The Nuremberg War Trial judgment on The Law Relating to War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity held, "The rules of land warfare expressed in the [Hague Convention of 1907] undoubtedly represented an advance over existing international law at the time of their adoption. But the Convention expressly stated that it was an attempt 'to revise the general laws and customs of war,' which it thus recognised to be then existing, but by 1939 these rules laid down in the Convention were recognised by all civilised nations, and were regarded as being declaratory of the laws and customs of war....", (Judgement: The Law Relating to War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity contained in the Avalon Project archive at Yale Law School).