WHY A WAR AGAINST IRAQ WOULD BE
ILLEGAL UNDER
INTERNATIONAL LAW
- Moana Cole
Moana Cole is currently completing a
Masters of Law research paper at the University of Canterbury on the legality
of the war against Afghanistan.
“To initiate a war of aggression… is not only an international crime; it is the
supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it
contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole” (Robert Jackson, US
representative at the Nuremberg trials).
New Zealand must urge General Assembly and Security Council members and all
Heads of State to denounce US unilateral action of planning and preparation for
warfare against Iraq as contrary to its Charter and Customary International
Law. As the judgment of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg noted,
“resort to a war of aggression is not merely illegal, but is criminal”.
The principle of renunciation of the use or threat of force is now one of the
fundamental principles of international law and, as such, is stated with the
utmost clarity in Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter, which imposes
definite obligations on states participating in international affairs. States
are bound in their international relations to renounce “the threat or use of
force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state,
or in any other manner inconsistent with the purposes of the UN”. Thus, any use
of force by a state must be regarded as unlawful if it is not subject to an
armed attack.
The US seeks to justify a pre-emptive strike on Iraq on the basis of
self-defence. Self-defence presupposes an attack in which the permissible force
must “be immediately subsequent to and proportional to the armed attack to
which it was an answer”. The legality of pre-emptive self-defence has been
rejected on the basis that use of force used to deter future use of force
constitutes punitive rather than defensive action.
The UK seeks to justify a war with Iraq based on Iraq’s failure to comply with
weapons inspectors and thus breaching Security Council Resolution 678 (1990).
The Security Council has not identified Iraq as in material breach of the
ceasefire resolution for its current failure to comply with the weapons
inspectorate; therefore the Security Council cannot condone a pre-emptive
military strike as a proportional response to non-compliance with weapons
inspectors.
The US and UK claim they are motivated by a concern over Iraq's potential
possession of non-conventional weapons. However, Scott Ritter, who personally
led the inspections, investigations and destruction of Iraq's chemical and
biological weapons programmes said on July 23 2002: "There is no case for
war. The UN weapons inspectors enjoyed tremendous success in Iraq. By the end
of our job, we ascertained a 90-95% level of disarmament. Not because we took
at face value what the Iraqis said. We went to Europe and scoured the countries
that sold technology to Iraq until we found the company that had an invoice
signed by an Iraqi official. We cross-checked every piece of equipment with
serial numbers. That's why I can say that Iraq was 90-95% disarmed. We
confirmed that 96% of Iraq's 98 missiles were destroyed” (“A War Based On
Lies”, 27/8/02; John Pilger). The International Atomic Energy Agency reported
that it had eliminated Iraq's nuclear weapons programme "efficiently and
effectively".
The Security Council’s significant power to act in international affairs must
be delimited by accepted principles of international law. It is precisely the
aim of an international rule of law to restrain the arbitrary use of power in
international society. Equally, the legitimisation of power via dubious legal
processes must not be permitted.
New Zealand should also be
concerned about the humanitarian implications of any further military action
against Iraq. Article 24 of the Charter directs the Security Council “to act in
accordance with the Purposes and Principles of the United Nations” when acting
to maintain peace and security. The promotion of human rights is one of these
fundamental “Purposes and Principles.” The Security Council remains always
obligated by the UN Charter to “promote and encourage respect for human
rights”. Thus, the Security Council may not violate human rights, even when
acting to maintain peace and security. Iraq has been subject to numerous
violations since January 16, 1991.
The Gulf War
The basic principles of the laws of war are those of
distinction and proportionality. Under the principle of distinction, belligerents
are required to distinguish between civilians and combatants at all times and
to direct attacks only against military targets. This is the fundamental
principle of the laws of war. The corollary principle of proportionality is
designed to ensure that attacks against military targets do not cause excessive
civilian damage. The Geneva Conventions define the principle of proportionality
as prohibiting any “attack which may be expected to cause incidental loss of
civilian life, injury to civilians, damage to civilian objects ... which would
be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage
anticipated”. Indiscriminate weapons, which cannot be directed solely against
military targets, by their very nature, violate the principle of distinction.
The 1991Gulf War subjected Iraq to the most concentrated
bombing campaign in history, the Pentagon announcing it conducted 110,000
aerial sorties dropping 88,500 tons of bombs. The war resulted in 67,000 Iraqi
deaths as well as grave damage to Iraq’s infrastructure with losses estimated
at $US170 billion. Deliberate bombing of water treatment facilities
during the Gulf War originally degraded the water quality leading to the
outbreak of diseases such as cholera and typhoid. The Security Council is under
a legal obligation to prevent such flagrant violations.
Sanctions
According to the report,
“Iraq Sanctions: Humanitarian Implications and Options for the Future”,
sanctions-based “holds” have blocked the rebuilding of much of Iraq’s water
treatment infrastructure. Additionally, sanctions have blocked the rebuilding
of the electricity sector that powers pumps and other vital water treatment
equipment. This has resulted in 800,000 Iraqi children “chronically
malnourished.” Even with conservative assumptions, the total of all
excess deaths of the population under the age of five exceeds 400,000. Combined
with the deaths of older children and adults, this adds up to a great and
unjustifiable humanitarian tragedy.
Continuing
Military Strikes
Since the 1991 Gulf War, further military operations have been launched against
Iraq, by aircraft and Cruise missiles at a rate of one strike per week. Some of
these attacks targeted sites in Baghdad or other populated areas and resulted
in civilian casualties.
The
Security Council’s failure to address the human rights and humanitarian impact
of the war and subsequent sanctions has prompted regular expressions of concern
from UN agencies, commissions, panels and other bodies. The Security Council is
bound to respect the full range of human rights standards in the major
international legal instruments as an extension of its underlying obligations
under the UN Charter. It must ensure that its actions comply with these
standards.
New Zealand must urge the Security Council to resist recent
trends in becoming an important political aid in constituting an integrated
strategy designed to overthrow the government in Iraq in order to dominate this
strategic and oil-rich region by justifying the use of force.
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