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Diluting
International Law?
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Sanctions on
Iraq have so far killed 1.5 million Iraqi civilians – Iraq
Resource Information Site (IRIS)
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With
each passing moment, the likelihood of a unilateral, multifaceted
military campaign against Iraq becomes more imminent. Despite this,
members of the United Nations Security Council and the Arab World
have voiced their objections to such a campaign affirming that any
attack on Iraq would violate international peace.
Much
of the internal debate concerning the impending conflict between the
United States and Iraq has been how the United States will
effectuate a regime change. The question that has largely been
ignored (by the United States and to some extent Great Britain) is:
can the United States, legally and unilaterally, effectuate a regime
change in Iraq? In other words, what imposed constraints are there
by international law and institutions upon a United States military
campaign against a sovereign nation, Iraq? Perhaps a subsequent
question is of equal significance: does it matter or has it ever
mattered? A cursory answer to these questions is negative.
During
his May commencement speech at the West Point Academy, President
George Bush announced a new policy in the “war against terror”;
that of pre-emptive attacks against nations and/or entities to
protect the United States: “Our security will require all
Americans to be forward-looking and resolute, to be ready for
pre-emptive action, when necessary, to defend our liberty and to
defend our lives.”
Although
President Bush failed to specifically mention Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein or Iraq, it is self-evident that the message was being sent
to Iraq. Vice-President Dick Cheney echoed these statements in an
August 27, 2002 speech before a veteran convention. This strategy of
preemption is one of two “justifications” that have been
articulated by the United States and their campaign(s) against Iraq.
The perennial justification for military aggression against Iraq has
been the recitation of United Nations Security Resolution 678, which
laid the groundwork for the highly questionable, unilateralist
“Gulf War.” Both strategies of circumventing international law
are transparent.
The
American Doctrine of Preemption as applied to Iraq contravenes
International Law
The
use of pre-emptive strikes is certainly not a novel concept. Such an
insidious technique was employed by Israel prior to the commencement
of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and employed by Israel again in 1981
when Israeli jets struck an Iraqi nuclear reactor. Pre-emptive
strikes, however, generally contravene international law and are
only acceptable under the strictest of circumstances. In fact
pre-emptive strikes are only legitimate in cases of anticipatory
self-defense.
Furthermore,
the standard under international law for whether a particular use of
force constitutes anticipatory self-defense comes from an incident
in 1837 where British soldiers decimated an American ship, the
Caroline, in a US port, after the Caroline had been used in American
raids into Canadian territory. The British justified the attack on
the argument of self-defense. Through an exchange of diplomatic
correspondence, the dispute was resolved in favor of the Americans.
US Secretary of State Daniel Webster urged the following definition
of self-defense, which the British accepted, and has been the
accepted rule in international law ever since:
…
necessity of that self-defence is instant, overwhelming, leaving no
choice of means, and no moment for deliberation…[The means of
self-defense must involve] nothing unreasonable or excessive; since
the act, justified by the necessity of self-defence, must be limited
by that necessity, and kept clearly within it.1
When
Israel launched its air strike against an Iraqi nuclear reactor in
1981 it received a rash of criticism from the international
community culminating in the passage of a United Nations Security
Council resolution that condemned Israel for its pre-emptive attack.
Under the current conditions, a unilateral attack against Iraq will
be no different. The necessity of an attack against Iraq is not
“instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of means and no moment
for deliberation.” There has been almost a decade long of
posturing and brinksmanship without a full-scale military offensive
by the United States. The point of contention has been the lack of
Iraqi consent to allow nuclear facility inspectors. Iraq has shown
no aggression that would render a necessity for anticipatory
self-defense in terms of an imminent presence.
Similarly
the necessity for an attack is not overwhelming, leaving no choice
of means and no moment for deliberation, from an objective
standpoint. The United States has not pursued other avenues – such
as direct negotiation with the Iraqis – largely due to the
arrogance of US government officials who believe that there is no
need for discussion and that “Iraq knows what it needs to do.”
Negotiation
and alternative dispute resolution have been ignored as a means to
resolve the Iraqi problem, as has the United Nations system for
pacific conflict resolution. In short, by violating the Caroline
precept, which is a continuing and thriving doctrine of
international law, the United States is moving towards the status of
an isolationist rogue state.
Furthermore,
anticipatory self-defense is limited by the principle of
proportionality. This is the second component of the viable Caroline
precept. Hypothetically if the necessity for an attack on Iraq met
the first component (“instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of
means and no moment for deliberation”), that attack would be
strictly limited to the threat. In other words, the only possible
viable subjects of an attack could be nuclear sites. An attempt to
effectuate a regime change through military force defies
proportionality and grossly exceeds it. However, because the
necessity of an attack on Iraq is not instant, etc. that ends the
inquiry. The United States cannot legally rely on the argument of
preemptive action or anticipatory self-defense.
The
United States Cannot Rely on Security Council Resolution 678 to
justify a military campaign against Iraq
On
November 29, 1990, the United Nations Security Council passed
resolution 678 which offered Iraq the final opportunity to withdraw
from Kuwait and abide by other obligations pursuant to previous
resolutions. Iraq did not comply with Resolution 678: “authorizes
Member States… to use all necessary means to uphold and implement
resolution 660 and all subsequent resolutions and to restore
international peace and security in the region.”2
The
“legislative” intent behind this resolution is clear; it
sanctions the possible use of force to end the military occupation
of Kuwait, period. The intent was certainly not that it could be
later used as a way to effectuate a regime change in Iraq.
Several
US government circles have argued that resolution 678 is a source of
authority upon which the United States can justify a military
attack. This particular interpretation is an extremely broad
contextual argument. However, because those Security Council members
who consented at that time do not consent to a new initiative that
argument is fallible. Furthermore the regional ceasefire that took
place in 1991 for all intents and purposes ended the conflict. To be
sure, resolution 678 had a narrowly tailored purpose to which
members of the Security Council achieved a consensus. Such a
consensus in today’s climate does not exist.
The
United States’ failed attempt at consensus building indicates that
an armed attack on Iraq cannot be based on resolution 678. The
United States must pursue legal recourse in the United Nations
Security Council as a method of resolving disputes with Iraq.
However, because the majority of states on the Security Council do
not support a military offensive the United States cannot attack
Iraq.
Currently
there is a popular global phenomenon of criticizing the United
States for its stance on Iraq. International scholars, governments,
and NGO’s have vocalized their opposition to unilateralist action
against Iraq. What is clear, however is that the United States is
setting a dangerous precedent leading down a slippery slope. The
United States, through its recent policies of creating new doctrines
of international law that contravene well-established principles,
has diluted the vibrancy and vitality of international law.
An
offensive on Iraq to effectuate a regime change will undoubtedly
change the face of international law. Such an offensive will damage
significant gains and influence what international law and
jurisprudence have had on international peace and harmonization.
Indeed if such an illegal offensive on Iraq is launched, states may
not feel compelled to follow rules of international law, including
areas of human rights and international humanitarian law. The very
future of how nations and regions view the use of force in
international conflicts will change if Iraq is subject to
unilateralist action by the United States.
Thomas
J. Haidon is an American attorney and activist residing
in Wellington, New Zealand. He received a Jurisdoctorate (J.D.) with
a certificate of international law from the University at Buffalo
School of Law and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from
Niagara University. He has studied at the American University in
Cairo and Birzeit University, Palestine. He is currently pursuing an
L.L.M. in international law. You can reach him at thaidon@justice.com
1-
Damrosch, Lori, Henkin, Louis. The Caroline. International Law
Cases and Materials. West Group. 2001. p. 923.
2-
United Nations Security Council
Resolution 678 of 29 November 199
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