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Re: Self-defence?
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Posted by Lewis B. Sckolnick
on August 20, 2002 at 09:53:23:
In Reply to: Self-defence? posted by Dr.
Tarcisio Gazzini on October 28, 2001 at 07:06:45:
: If you want the UN we can send it to Padova. USA failed to attack
main targets: SA,Iraq,Iran,Syria. There are no laws for war.
: SELF DEFENCE? :
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: The debate on the legal grounds of the military operations currently
under way in Afghanistan focuses on the notion of self-defence. :
Self-defence has been described by Kelsen as "an exceptional and provisional
interlude between an act of illegal use of force, an act of aggression, and the
collective enforcement action which the community, through its central organ,
is to take as a sanction against the illegal use of force". : It presupposes
a general ban on the use of force AND an effective mechanism of collective
security. : During the Cold war this hardly corresponded to reality. :
After the fall of the Berlin wall, we had the illusion that the Security
Council would eventually meet its primary responsibility in maintaining
international peace and security. : The so-called authorisation practice
stretched beyond any limit the relevant Charter provisions, but was generally
accepted as the highest degree of control over the use of force that the United
Nations could, under the circumstances, exercise. : Brownlie reminds us that
"the whole object of the Charter was to render unilateral use of force, even in
self-defence, subject to the control of the Organisation". : Far from
leading to any real collective security system, the authorisation essentially
amounted to a mere procedural guarantee as States decided when, how and until
when intervene (the only possibile exception being the coercive military
activities carried out in Bosnia up to August 1995 in support to the
peacekeeping operation). : Even this small improvement, which had already
shown its limits during the Somalian and Bosnian conflicts, was deliberately
despised in 1999 when NATO members forces intervened in Kosovo without any
authorisation by the Security Council. : In the current crisis, the Security
Council renounced from the very beginning to play any significant role with
regard to military enforcement measures. : The virtually universal support
the United States received immediately after the terrorist attacks could have
paved the way to a substantial involvement of the Security Council in the
decision-making process and the political control over the military
operations. : Yet, the United States decided to react in the most unilateral
possible way. : It unilaterally decided who was to be held responsible for
the attacks, what kind of measures needed to be taken, what objectives pursued.
Equally unilaterally, it will decide when these objectives have been attained,
which conditions the Taliban government has to accept, when to suspend or
terminate the operations. : The discussion whether Resolution 1373
authorised the use of force - which in any case appears doubtful since it would
allow the United States to take, upon its own judgement, any military measures
against any State or entities other than States - largely misses the main
point. : The message sent by Washington, apparently accepted or acquiesced
to by all other States, is quite clear: a State victim of an attack may resort
to self-help, if necessary by military measures, without any obligation to seek
a centralised reaction. : We can certainly continue to treat unilateral,
non-temporary and uncontrolled use of force as self-defence. We must however be
aware that this has nothing to do with the notion of self-defence embodied in
Article 51 of the UN Charter. : It will rather bring us back to the notion
of self-defence as referred to in the Caroline case. At the time, no general
prohibition of the use of force existed, and self-defence, self-help and
self-preservation meant basically the same thing. : Subsequent attempts to
regulate the use of force must be fully appreciated. The Kellogg-Brian Pact, in
particular, was : interpreted as leaving intact States' freedom to decide
whether circumstances required recourse to war in self-defence. : Since the
creation of the United Nations, investigation and adjudication on self-defence
claims - which the Nuremberg : Tribunal considered essential if
international law was ever to be enforced - were far from satisfactory. :
More importantly, it may be argued that since 1945 self-defence has been - and
apparently still is - the rule rather than the exception envisaged in Art. 51
of the Charter. : Time has come to rethink the whole legal regulation of
the use of force. : What we should do is to avoid to profess blindly our
faith in the UN Charter provisions, which were stillborn and never truly
revived since, and to work on the definition of limitations on the unilateral
use of force through the analysis of State practice.
: : 25 October 2001
: Dr. Tarcisio Gazzini : Dept. International Studies : University
of Padova
: Gazzini@dsi.unipd.it
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