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Iraq’s
Right of Self-Defense and Preemption: An Apology
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Deputy
Prime Minister of Iraq, Tareq Aziz, addressing the UN
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The
United States will preemptively and unilaterally engage in a
military offensive against Iraq within the next few weeks or months.
Discourse from the Bush administration has focused on the legality
of preemptive action stemming from the imminence of an Iraqi
nuclear, biological or chemical attack on the United States or its
allies, with minimal empirical evidence to support that assertion.
Much
of the focus of the international community has centered on the
potential illegality of unilateral and preemptive military action by
the United States. There has been minimal, if any, discourse on the
right(s) of Iraq, in the impending conflict.
The
doctrines of self-defense and preemption, and anticipatory
self-defense to a greater extent, are purposely limited doctrines in
international law, subject to rigorous constraints. However, a
meritorious argument can be made that Iraq could, and perhaps
should, justifiably engage in limited acts of self-defense pursuant
to the United Nations Charter, and/or preemptive military action
against United States military installations pursuant to customary
international law, in lieu of an imminent and impending United
States military campaign.
The
doctrine of self-defense in international law is a safeguarded one,
as evidenced by the United Nations Charter and the procedures set
forth to effectuate self-defense within the United Nations system.
The Charter has attempted to codify the doctrine of
“self-defense.” Article 51 of the United Nations Charter states:
Nothing
in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual
or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a
Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council has taken
measures necessary to maintain international peace and security.
Measures taken by Members in the exercise of this right of self-defence
shall be immediately reported to the Security Council and shall not
in any way affect the authority and responsibility of the Security
Council under the present Charter to take at any time such action as
it deems necessary in order to maintain or restore international
peace and security.1
A
consummate debate of Article 51 has often centered upon the question
of when an “armed attack” occurs for purposes of satisfying
Article 51. The United States and Israel have been perennial
proponents of the “cumulation of events” theory, which attempts
to define what constitutes an “armed attack.” The “cumulation
of events” theory asserts that: “a series of attacks should be
viewed as a whole, so that action taken to prevent future attacks in
the series can be seen not as anticipatory self defence, but as
self-defence against one attack that continues to occur.”2
The
United States justified a widely criticized air strike on Libya in
April of 1986 through an invocation of Article 51 and the
“cumulation of events” theory. The strike was in response to
alleged terror attacks against American and European civilians in
Europe, for which the United States determined that Libya was
responsible. Members of the Security Council denounced the air
strikes; however a resolution was vetoed by the United States and
Great Britain.
In
support of the United States position, Great Britain noted: “[t]he
right of self defence is not an entirely passive right. It plainly
includes the right to destroy or weaken the capacity of ones
assailant, to reduce his resources, and to weaken his will so as to
discourage and prevent further violence.” 3
As
of late, the United States has established a military occupation of
Afghanistan, preceded by a military offensive of large proportions.
Article 51 laid the bases for justification, and was arguably
supported by the “cumulation of events” theory. The United
States have attributed the attacks in September of 2001, as well as
the attacks on the United States embassies in Kenya and Tanzania to
the al-Qa’eda network. This cumulation of events, according to the
worldview of the United States, constituted an armed attack by
Afghanistan, thus justifying the invocation of Article 51.
In
applying the preceding principles, as articulated through the state
practice of the United States, Great Britain and Israel, Iraq could
make a similar argument that the consistent and debilitating
“coalition” air strikes upon Iraqi military and civilian
installations constitute an armed attack, pursuant to the
“cumulation of events” theory. To argue that Iraq does not have
the right to exercise self-defence in order to protect its own
territorial integrity would be grossly hypocritical in light of that
same right being exercised by the “power brokers” of the United
Nations. Iraqi interest in protecting its territorial and sovereign
integrity is no less vital than the United States or Great Britain
protecting their respective interests.
In
pragmatic and realistic terms, however, an Iraqi attempt to invoke
Article 51 as a justification for a strike against the United States
(military installations, bases in Kuwait and Israel) would encounter
severe difficulties, being that the United States and Great Britain
sit as permanent members of the Security Council, and would
certainly veto any attempt by Iraq to enlist the support of the
Security Council.
Article
51, in theory, requires that states inform the Security Council of
any measures they will take in self-defense, and that once the
Security Council has acted to resolve the matter, any measures taken
must cease. Having said that, however, the inner constraints of
Article 51 have not served as barriers to nations, such as the
United States and Israel, from an invocation of that provision. In
such an extreme case, as that which is faced by Iraq and the Iraqi
people, the inner constraints of Article 51 should not bar Iraq from
invoking and vindicating its right to defend itself. In other words,
Iraq should follow the path, which will be necessary, of the United
States and Israel, and run against the Security Council, which will
surely veto Iraqi attempts at self-defense.
The
current situation in Iraq is an undeniably desperate one. Iraq faces
a Herculean task in taking on adversaries such as the United States
and Great Britain, both of whom have lodged allegations and threats
against Iraq. This being the situation, Iraq arguably could legally
strike United States military installations in Israel and Kuwait, in
the exercise of its right of “anticipatory self-defense.”
The
classical doctrine of anticipatory defense or preemption has its
origins in the Matter of the Caroline, in which the British
destroyed a United States ship at Niagara Falls in 1837. Out of this
debate came forth the doctrine that a state may anticipate further
attacks if the necessity is “instant, overwhelming, leaving no
choice of means, and no moment for deliberation.”4
In other words, further attacks must be imminent.
Anticipatory
self-defense or preemption is not, however, a thriving doctrine of
international jurisprudence. Indeed, some scholars such as Louis
Henkin have argued that a right of anticipatory self-defense does
not exist: “Nothing in… its drafting… suggests that the
framers of the Charter intended something broader than the language
implied… It is precisely in the age of the major deterrent that
nations should not be encouraged to strike first under pretext of
prevention or pre-emption.”5
Other scholars have argued, however, that anticipatory self-defense
is not limited by the United Nations Charter:
The
history of Article 51 suggests... that the article should safeguard
the right of self-defence, not restrict it... furthermore, it is a
restriction [no right of anticipation] which bears no relation to
the realities of a situation which may arise prior to an actual
attack and call for self-defense immediately if it is to be of any
avail at all. No state can be expected to await an initial attack
which, in the present state of armaments, may well destroy the
state’s capacity for further resistance and so jeopardise its very
existence.6
The
United States has articulated that it will base its justification
for an offensive on Iraq through the doctrine of anticipatory
self-defense:
For
centuries, international law recognized that nations need not suffer
an attack before they can legally take action to defend themselves
against forces that present an imminent danger of attack. Legal
scholars and international jurists often conditioned the legitimacy
of preemption on the existence of an imminent threat- most often
visible mobilisation of armies, navies and air force preparing to
attack.7
The
majority of the international community is convinced that the United
States has failed to show that Iraq poses an “imminent” threat
to the United States. The United States, to date, has failed to
provide tangible empirical evidence that Iraq poses such a threat.
On the other hand, Iraq is faced with a clear, self-evident and
imminent attack from the United States. There has been a significant
buildup of United States armed forces in the region, as well as open
and public threats of regime change in Iraq. One can argue that
there has not been a clearer case of “imminence” of an armed
attack since the cessation of the Cold War. Iraq is in a justifiable
position to use preemptive and anticipatory action to prevent an
attack on its sovereign and territorial integrity.
Although
Iraq may be justified in engaging in measures of self-defense, the
question follows: What targets could Iraq legally strike? Arguably,
to satisfy the requirements of international law, Iraq would be
required to use force proportionately, with discrimination.
Appropriate targets could be seen as military bases and outposts in
Kuwait and other areas of the Middle East where United States and
coalition forces are “lying in wait.” Furthermore, Israeli
military and intelligence centers could find themselves at the end
of legitimate Iraqi preemptive strikes, if it is found that they
pose an “imminent” threat to Iraq.
To
ignore Iraq’s self-evident rights to defend its territorial and
sovereign integrity is to ignore fundamental precepts of
international jurisprudence and the United Nations Charter. Yet, it
is these very precepts that have been ignored by the major “power
brokers” of the United Nations, namely the United States and Great
Britain. Iraq arguably has a significantly greater justification to
exercise its right of self-defense and anticipatory self-defense
than its antagonists do.
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-
United Nations Charter, Article 51.
2- Harris, D.J. Cases and Materials on International Law: The Use of Force By States (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1998) p. 898
3- S/PV. 2679, pp. 27-28, U.K.M.I.L. 1986 (1986) 57 B.Y.I.L. 641
4- The Caroline Case. 29 B.F.S.P. 1137-1138; 30 B.F.S.P. 195-196
5- Harris, p. 897
6- Bowett, E. Self-Defence in International Law (1958) pp 188-192
7- National Security Strategy. Bush Administration. 17 September 2002. V. Prevent Our Enemies from Threatening Us, Our Allies, and Our Friends with Weapons of Mass Destruction.
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