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APV
Rogers, OBE Author, Law on the Battlefield, Fellow,
Lauterpacht Research Centre for International Law, University
of Cambridge |
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Eyal
Benvenisti
Professor of International Law, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
Visiting Professor, Columbia Law School |
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Michael
Matheson
Senior Fellow
U.S. Institute of Peace |
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H.
Wayne Elliott, S.J.D.
Lt. Col. (Ret.) U.S. Army Former Chief, International Law Division;
Judge Advocates General School, U.S. Army |
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Robert
Kogod Goldman
Professor, Washington College of Law
American University |
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Steven
R. Ratner
Albert Sidney Burleson Professor in Law University of Texas
Law School |
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David
Turns, LL.M (London), Barrister
Lecturer in Law
The Liverpool Law School |
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Marc
Cogen
Professor of International Law, Ghent University |
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Surya
Narayan Sinha, Former UN
Legal Adviser in Kosovo, Zagreb, and for UN Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees, International Lawyer based in
Chennai, India. |
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September
21, 2001
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Why
not simply say it was murder? No term is stronger, no definition more
accurate. In peacetime, murder is murder is murder. Im speaking
here in moral rather than legal terms, but I think it is important
to assert.
Should the events of September 11 be considered an act of war?
It depends on whether a government was involved. Such involvement
need not be direct. By even allowing individuals in its territory
to prepare and carry out the attacks, that state would be an accomplice.
Of course, hard evidence is required to make this determination.
I agree with those who have characterized the World Trade Center attack
as a crime against humanity. It targeted civilians and certainly meets
the threshold of horror. And because there is universal
jurisdiction for crimes
against humanity, every state has jurisdiction to prosecute this
offense.
The attack on the Pentagon is a crime
of war. Military bases are protected from attack during peacetime
under the laws of war.
A basic idea in international law is that every state has sovereignty,
which carries with it certain rights and duties. Every state has the
right to protect its citizens and its territory and to direct its
own internal affairs (unless it breaches international laws in doing
so). Every state also has the duty to prevent its nationals from harming
other states. When a state breaches this duty, then the victimized
state has resort to the basic principle of self-defense, which includes
the right to react in order to prevent recurring or imminent attacks.
Now a question arises. Do we act in under a `law and order framework,
according to which we arrest Osama bin Laden and his aides, try them,
and if there is no `reasonable doubt, convict them? Or do we
act the framework of `international armed conflict. I believe
that events have put us in the second scenario.
States have the opportunity to petition the United Nations Security
Council to approve the use of force for self-defense. The international
consensus and support of such a vote has obvious advantages. But urgency
and the political difficulties of getting the vote also come into
play.
Some will dispute what Im about to say, but I believe that Article
51 of the United Nations Charter would justify an immediate military
response from the United States, acting alone or with the aid of its
allies. Although we are not yet certain, the evidence suggests that
Osama bin Laden is both behind this attack and planning future ones.
There is also evidence that Afghanistan has harbored him in the past,
and may well be doing so now. It could be argued that there is no
time for Security Council deliberations and that the United States
must respond swiftly to do whatever is necessary to restore
peace, i.e. to end a climate of threat and terror. The U.S.
must provide evidence for its decision, demonstrate necessity, and
clearly identify its targets.
The laws and customs of war then apply. The United States must use
proportional force, and observe distinctions between legitimate and
illegitimate targets. International law provides for what may at first
seem cruel: in war, it is not murder if you kill a soldier. It is
illegal to target civilians. The difficulty in this case is that the
combatants wear no identifying uniforms or insignia and instead disguise,
shield themselves by blending in with the civilian population. If
you cannot distinguish the combatants, then collateral damage is likely
to be high.
Im very concerned. We have seen in the Middle East over the
last ten, fifteen, perhaps fifty years, how a cycle of terrorism and
counter-terrorism only serves to perpetuate and escalate the violence.
International cooperation will be essential here. The principle of
necessity is, as I said earlier, extremely important. If threats work,
so much the better, if they encourage cooperation from factions who
have harbored bin Laden (again, assuming he is responsible).
Under UN law, there is no right to unilateral reprisal; states may
use force only in self-defense. However, an argument can be made that
if a nation has sufficient indication of imminent attack, it can resort
to force as a preventive measure. During the Cuban missile crisis,
a prominent law professor in the U.S. was widely quoted as saying
that a state need not wait like a sitting duck to be attacked.
I must say that international law is not sufficiently clear on how
much evidence is required to indicate the probability of imminent
attack, and so justify the resort to force.
Let me also say that if these are crimes against humanity, and there
are leaders of governments who aided, abetted, or even just tolerated
their preparation and execution, then they could be brought to justice
as accomplices to the act. With the arrest of Pinochet, the ICTY and
ICTR, and the movement to establish the International Criminal Court
(ICC), the international community has shown its resolve to confront
and prosecute the perpetrators of heinous crimes. I would not wipe
out an accomplice government, but I certainly believe there must be
accountability.
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