I know of certain ammunition where the mid section of the round is designed to expand and not fragment. What context of expanding are we tlaking about here fragmenting or non fragmenting?
This is a tricky subject. There have been various international agreements limiting the type of ammunition used in warfare. They vary in what they proscribe, and also in who signed up to them and in what circumstances they apply.
Generally speaking, however, bullets which are designed to expand on impact are considered to be illegal. This dates from Hague 1899 which prohibits the use, in international armed conflict, of bullets "which expand or flatten easily in the human body, such as bullets with a hard envelope which does not entirely cover the core or is pierced with incisions". This was extended by a more general provision in Hague 1907, clarified as recently in Geneva 1977, which states "It is prohibited to employ weapons (and) projectiles of a nature to cause superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering". This definition could of course provide a field day for lawyers, but it is usually taken to mean that the degree of "superflous" injury must not be disproportionate to military necessity in meeting legitimate objectives.
A key point in all this seems to be "designed" - the intended purpose of the weapon. For example, some modern sniper bullets have a small hollow point, which technically infringes Hague 1899, but that is considered OK because it is only there as a side-effect of the method of bullet construction, not to aid expansion. I also suspect that any bullet
designed to fragment on impact would fall foul of Geneva 1977; the fact that some bullets do fragment in some circumstances is an accident of construction, not an intended design feature or a requirement in the production standards.
All very odd, I know - but I'm not trying to defend the law, just to explain it!
Tony Williams: Military gun and ammunition
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