HELICON DEFENSE
Field Guide · Rule of Law & Democratic Defense

Source Library & Download Center

These documents are not museum pieces. They are the legal and moral architecture behind democratic defense: limited power, lawful conduct in war, protection of civilians, accountability for war crimes, and the rights of human beings against arbitrary force.

Why Helicon includes them

What the technology is meant to protect.

Helicon includes these sources because defense technology is not only about systems, payloads, sensors, drones, AI, or manufacturing. It is about what those capabilities protect.

Helicon works at the intersection of Ukrainian defense innovation, allied manufacturing, and lawful democratic defense. We include these sources so visitors can understand not only what technology does, but what it is meant to protect.

Foundational U.S. documents

Public-domain founding texts. The National Archives is the official source and the authoritative version; Helicon also offers a courtesy reading copy you can read on this page or print.

Rule of Law Source Library

The U.S. Constitution

The constitutional foundation for limited government, the rule of law, the common defense, civil authority over the military, and protected liberty. It is the legal architecture a free society builds its defense upon.

Official source: National Archives transcript (public domain). The reading copy on this site is a Helicon courtesy copy for public education; the National Archives remains the authoritative version.

Official source: U.S. National Archives. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Open the reading copy (PDF) — best on mobile

Helicon courtesy reading copy of the public-domain text. The official source (U.S. National Archives) remains the authoritative version.

Rule of Law Source Library

The Bill of Rights

The first ten amendments anchor the rights that democratic defense exists to preserve: speech, conscience, due process, jury trial, and protection from arbitrary power.

Official source: National Archives transcript (public domain). The reading copy on this site is a Helicon courtesy copy for public education; the National Archives remains the authoritative version.

Official source: U.S. National Archives. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Open the reading copy (PDF) — best on mobile

Helicon courtesy reading copy of the public-domain text. The official source (U.S. National Archives) remains the authoritative version.

International humanitarian law

The treaty framework for lawful conduct in war and the protection of civilians. Linked to the official publishers as the source of truth.

Rule of Law Source Library

The Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949

The core treaty framework of international humanitarian law: protection of the wounded and sick, the shipwrecked, prisoners of war, and civilians. The legal floor beneath how force may be used against people who are not, or are no longer, fighting.

Publisher: ICRC. Verify the current version at the source.

Official source: International Committee of the Red Cross. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

International Committee of the Red Cross

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Rule of Law Source Library

Additional Protocol I

Extends civilian protection and the conduct-of-hostilities rules for international armed conflict, including the principles of distinction, proportionality, and precaution.

Publisher: ICRC IHL Database.

Official source: ICRC IHL Database. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

ICRC IHL Database

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Rule of Law Source Library

Additional Protocol II

Sets out protections in certain non-international armed conflicts — the kinds of internal conflicts that fall outside the core Geneva framework.

Publisher: ICRC IHL Database.

Official source: ICRC IHL Database. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

ICRC IHL Database

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Sovereignty & accountability

The instruments behind sovereignty, the prohibition on unlawful force, and accountability for the gravest crimes.

Rule of Law Source Library

UN Charter and Statute of the International Court of Justice

The legal foundation for sovereignty, the peaceful settlement of disputes, and the prohibition on the unlawful use of force. The instrument against which an invasion of a sovereign state is measured.

Publisher: United Nations. Keep the current UN version.

Official source: United Nations Treaty Collection. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

United Nations Treaty Collection

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Rule of Law Source Library

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

A universal human-rights baseline: dignity, liberty, equality, due process, and protection against arbitrary power. The bridge from law to human stakes.

Publisher: United Nations.

Official source: United Nations. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

United Nations

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Rule of Law Source Library

Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court

The treaty framework for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression — and the court that adjudicates them.

Publisher: International Criminal Court.

Official source: International Criminal Court. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

International Criminal Court

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Rule of Law Source Library

18 U.S.C. §2441 — War Crimes

Shows how U.S. federal law connects war crimes to grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions and to Common Article 3 violations. The U.S. legal bridge for war-crimes discussion.

Publisher: Office of the Law Revision Counsel. Do not treat as legal advice.

Official source: U.S. Code / Office of the Law Revision Counsel. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

U.S. Code / Office of the Law Revision Counsel

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

European rule of law

Core European rights and rule-of-law sources for allied audiences.

Rule of Law Source Library

European Convention on Human Rights

A core European rights instrument for democratic societies and rule-of-law framing — central to how European partners read lawful defense and accountability.

Publisher: European Court of Human Rights.

Official source: European Court of Human Rights. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

European Court of Human Rights

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

AI, human judgment & responsible technology

Policy and governance sources behind human-centered, human-in-the-loop technology.

Rule of Law Source Library

DoD Directive 3000.09 — Autonomy in Weapon Systems

Requires that autonomous and semi-autonomous weapon systems allow appropriate human judgment over the use of force, with emphasis on verification, validation, testing, transparency, auditability, and human-machine interface controls. It anchors Helicon’s human-in-the-loop AI position.

Publisher: U.S. Department of Defense (PDF). The source PDF may block automated readers; open it directly.

Official source: U.S. Department of Defense. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

U.S. Department of Defense

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Rule of Law Source Library

NIST AI Risk Management Framework

Neutral, widely referenced risk-management language for trustworthy AI beyond the weapons context — useful for AI governance and civilian trust.

Publisher: NIST. Link to the current framework documents.

Official source: National Institute of Standards and Technology. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

National Institute of Standards and Technology

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

Rule of Law Source Library

DoD Law of War Manual

The official U.S. military law-of-war reference for serious readers — how the United States interprets and applies the law of armed conflict.

Publisher: U.S. Department of Defense (PDF, June 2015, updated July 2023).

Official source: U.S. Department of Defense. The official source remains the authoritative version. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents.

Provided for public education. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Official document

U.S. Department of Defense

Helicon links to the official publisher’s copy as the source of truth. We do not re-host this document.

How to use this library

Official sources first. Helicon does not modify, replace, or republish official legal sources as authoritative documents. We link readers to current official sources and provide educational context explaining why these documents matter today.

Reader note. Documents are provided for public education. Official sources remain the source of truth. Helicon Defense is not a court, law firm, government agency, or treaty depository.

Download note. You may read, download, or print these materials for educational use. For legal or citation purposes, always use the official publisher’s version.

Reading copies. Only the U.S. founding documents (public domain) are offered here as Helicon courtesy reading copies, generated from the National Archives transcripts with credit. International treaty instruments are linked to their official publishers only.