Posted by
besqaured on Sunday, March 01, 2009 12:00:00 AM
Historical and Legal Issues: surrounding
the U.S. Led invasion of Iraq, March 19, 2003
Controversy
continues to surround the legality of the March 19, 2003 invasion of Iraq by
the United States and its coalition allies. U.S. President Bush and some
members of the United Nations hold different views concerning the legality of
the invasion. The disagreements over legal authority provide for a worthwhile
review. Implications of the U.S.
foreign policy concerning Iraq may provide precedence for future legal order
internationally. The War on Terror and the War on Iraq challenge
international lawyers and the legal framework.
Varying
statements address the question of legal authority. The current U.N. Secretary
General, Kofi Annan (in discussing the invasion of Iraq in 2003), remarked,
“from our point of view and the U.N. Charter point of view, it was illegal.”[i] Former Permanent U.S.
Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador John Danforth responded to
Secretary General Kofi Annan’s 2003 statement “We don’t agree with the
Secretary General on this point. And I say that very, very
respectfully. I personally have the very highest regard for the Secretary
General, but when you consider there were 16 Security Council Resolutions (concerning
Iraq) and Resolution 1441 held that the then government of Iraq was not in
compliance with the previous resolutions, which is clearly the case, and [the
resolutions] promised that there would be serious consequences if they (Iraq)
were not in compliance, then the questions for those countries that were part
of the coalition was, well, do all these U.N. resolutions mean nothing, does
the Security Council mean nothing, is it totally ineffectual, when it says
there are going to be consequences, is that really meaningless? So it
seems to me that it would undercut the rule of law had there been no action,
had we just said: ‘Well, so we had passed resolutions, but they’re so much
waste[d] paper.’ So I think that the action we took with respect to Iraq
was something that was required if were going to maintain a rule of
law. Just a different interpretation.”[ii]
Iraq’s
President Saddam Hussein proved politically astute and manipulative of the U.N.
and other international key players. Saddam put U.S. policy makers in
unenviable positions. They had to make decisions to defend against terrorism in
the repeated dichotomy of diplomatic negotiation versus use of military force
to execute national policy. Decades of negotiation with Iraq did not
work. President Bush remarked prior to the invasion, “I have a choice to make
at this time. Diplomacy isn't working. Do I forget the lessons of September the
11th and trust a madman, or do I take action to defend this country?”[iii] That very question creates worthy
international debate.
This
review discusses the historical background in context that led to the Iraq war.
To assist understanding of the U.S. position, the analysis discusses numerous
U.N. Security Council Resolutions in relation to Iraq. The paper
incorporates a review of the U.N. Charter and other matters surrounding the
inherent right of self-defense. That review sets the factual basis for
the legal authority for the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
I. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND TO THE CONFLICT WITH
IRAQ
From
the time when Saddam Hussein took Iraqi power, “one Iraqi in ten has been
killed or forced to leave the country. Most Iraqis who remain have suffered a
decline in living standards as well as a loss in freedom and dignity. This
gives a certain plausibility to the INC [Iraqi National Congress] claim that
the great majority of Iraqis will support almost any alternative to the current
regime whenever it is safe enough to do so.”[iv]
Saddam
Hussein, the dictator in Iraq, seized power in 1979. Saddam wanted to make Iraq
the principal national power in the oil-rich Persian Gulf. Saddam “fired
ballistic missiles at Iran and Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Israel.”[v]
Saddam, once he consolidated power in Iraq, started a war with his neighbor,
Iran, in 1980. In that conflict, Saddam committed international war crimes
including the use of chemical weapons against the Iranians. He eventually
used those same chemical weapons against his own people in Iraq. In 1990,
he invaded another sovereign neighbor, Kuwait. “It is easy to forget the
wantonness of Iraq’s invasion, which was unprovoked and carried out with
particular cruelty, and the horror with which the world received news of
it. That invasion rightly shaped, forever after, the way the world would
look at Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.”[vi] The Kuwait invasion shocked and
aggravated the International community and led to a military response from the
U.N. Led by the U.S., Operation Desert Storm drove Iraqi forces from
Kuwait in 1991.
Saddam
Hussein's brutality and deceitfulness became well known internationally. Saddam
ruthlessly suppressed Shi'ite Muslims in the South of Iraq. He
coldheartedly dealt with the Kurds in Northern Iraq, including 1987 and 1988
poisonous gas attacks on Kurdish villages. Using chemical weapons against
Iraqi Kurdish civilian opponents in the town of Halabja, an estimated 5,000
Kurds were killed and those chemical agents have caused numerous birth defects
that continue to affect the town today.[vii]
Saddam “once ordered the killing of every person between the ages of 15 and 70
in certain Kurdish villages in northern Iraq. He has gassed many
Iranians, and 40 Iraqi villages.”[viii]
Human Rights Watch published a report, “painstakingly compiled over eighteen
months . . . that demonstrate(s) convincingly a deliberate intent on the part
of the government of Saddam Hussein to destroy, through mass murder, part of
Iraq's Kurdish minority.”[ix]
In the Anfal campaign, Iraq forcibly relocated Kurdish civilians from their
homes and killed an estimated 50,000 to 180,000 Kurds.[x]
Further,
Human Rights Watch implored the international community to acknowledge that
genocide occurred in Iraq in 1988 and that the international community should
punish Iraq to the fullest extent of the law. The Genocide Convention requires
the Security Council to prevent genocidal action. The U.S. did not prove
complacent with regards to those abuses. In July of 1993, the Security Council
received a draft U.S. proposal to create a commission of enquiry into Iraqi war
crimes and genocide in order to prosecute all those involved.[xi]
Analysis
of legal implications of the Iraq invasion starts with a look at the first
through the seventeenth resolutions passed by the Security Council. On August 2, 1990, Iraq invaded
Kuwait. Tremendous international response followed. A day later, the
Security Council adopted Resolution 660. That became the first of many
resolutions stating Iraq had violated International Peace and Security.
Resolution 660 condemned Iraq’s actions and demanded withdrawal from Kuwait.[xii]
On
August 6, 1990, the Security Council passed Resolution 661 affirming the
“inherent right of individual and collective self defense”[xiii]
and placed economic sanctions on Iraq. On August 7, 1990 President George
H. W. Bush announced that the U.S. would launch a “wholly defensive” mission to
prevent Iraq from invading Saudi Arabia. This mission was called
Operation Desert Shield/Storm. U.S. troops were deployed quickly to Saudi
Arabia.
On
November 29, 1990 the U.N. Security Council adopted Resolution 678, which
authorized member states to use “all necessary means to uphold and implement
Resolution 660 and all subsequent relevant resolutions (including 661 662, 664,
665, 666, 667, 669, 670, and 674) and to restore international peace and
security in the area.” Resolution 678, gave Iraq until January 15, 1991
to implement Resolution 660 fully.[xiv]
Saddam
refused to withdraw from Kuwait before the January 15th deadline. Operation
Desert Storm commenced the next day, with the U.S. Congress authorizing the use
of military force to drive Iraq out of Kuwait. U.N. coalition forces launched
massive air campaigns with more than 1,000 operational military flights
daily. Five hours after the first attacks, an Iraqi radio station in
Baghdad broadcast a voice identified as Saddam Hussein declaring, "The
great duel, the mother of all battles has begun. The dawn of victory nears as
this great showdown begins."[xv]
Iraq
launched missile attacks on coalition bases in Saudi Arabia. Iraq also
launched missile attacks on Israel. Iraq had hopes of enticing Israel into the
war, a strategy that proved ineffective.[xvi]
Israeli Air Force Colonel Menachem Eynan told a radio reporter two hours after
the air strikes began that "We're completely out of the picture. We're not
involved, and we're not acting."[xvii]
Saddam
also had hopes that by bombing Israel, he would gain approval of Arab States in
the coalition and withdraw them from the war. Again his hope created a gross
miscalculation as Arab states stayed in the coalition with the exception of
Jordan, which remained officially neutral throughout the war.
On
February 27th, one hundred hours after the ground campaign started, President
G. H. Bush declared a ceasefire and established Kuwait to have been liberated.
Approximately
a month later, the Security Council adopted Resolution 687, which established
the conditions for a formal cease-fire suspending hostilities in the Persian
Gulf. Resolution 687 required Iraq to:
1)
Destroy its chemical and biological weapons and ballistic missiles and agree to
on-site inspections;
2)
Not use, develop, construct, or acquire such WMD and their delivery systems;
3)
Not acquire or develop nuclear weapons or nuclear-weapons-usable material or
components; and
4)
Accept on–site inspections and destroy nuclear-related weapons or nuclear
materials.[xviii]
Saddam
Hussein officially accepted the terms of Resolution 687. The official
cease-fire included Iraq, Kuwait, the U.S., and the coalition nations that had
supported Kuwait. Any violation of
cease-fire provisions would suspend the agreement.
To
execute inspections under Resolution 687, the U.N. organized a United Nations
Special Commission (UNSCOM). That
Commission would assist the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to assess
Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) programs and investigate compliance
issues. The IAEA, under the stipulations negotiated, would acquire
custody of all of Iraq’s nuclear-weapons materials. Resolution 687
further required Iraq to renounce international terrorism. Those latter two
provisions held great importance to improved conduct by Iraq
The
many refugees who fled Northern Iraq during Operation Desert Storm caused the
coalition to establish a no-fly zone prohibiting Iraqi military aircraft to fly
north of the 36th parallel. In 1992, continued internal repression of Iraqi’s
civilian population, resulted in a U.S., British, and French coalition forces
establishing an additional no-fly zone south of the 32nd parallel.
Barely
four months after the agreement of terms of the cease-fire, the Security
Council was forced to pass additional resolutions due to Saddam’s lack of
compliance of previous resolutions. Saddam Hussein played dangerous games with
the U.N. and the international community. Saddam failed to cooperate with
UNSCOM. He would accept some weapons inspections under special terms, then
decline other UNSCOM overtures.
UNSCOM
teams sought certain evidence of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons
capabilities and ballistic missiles legitimacy. Saddam’s lack of
cooperation and submission and equivocation led UNSCOM to suspicions about
Iraqi activities. My interview with Timothy V. McCarthy, former Chief U.N.
Inspector for missiles in Iraq for thirteen years, clearly addressed the Iraqi
WMD. McCarthy personally conducted and led repeated inspections on the
ground in Iraq. He had worked
previously with the Center For Nuclear Studies (CNS) at the Monterey Institute
for International Studies (MIIS).
Based on his broad expertise of Iraqi personalities and weapons systems,
CBS News later employed McCarthy as a network television and radio analyst and
commentator. He virtually had traveled the world in comprehensive and
exhaustive search for Iraqi WMD. McCarthy stated, “It is fair to say the report
[Duelfer] concluded that Saddam never abandoned his WMD ambitions. Hussein
aides knew of his tenacity in that regard and related explicit and implicit WMD
discussions with their President at various times. The U.N. banned Iraqi
missile programs and activities related to delivery systems with a range
greater than 150 kilometers specifically. Nonetheless, Iraq pursued missile
programs actively on a variety of fronts. Activities in the nuclear,
biological and chemical areas were much more ambiguous. The interpretation of
that work evolves into some fairly detailed technical arguments. Nevertheless,
it is fair to say that Iraqi research and other efforts would have supported
resumption of nuclear, biological and chemical programs at the appropriate
political moment. In the final analysis, one can conclude that Saddam would
have pursued WMD continually given the right opportunity. However, evidence
that he was actively doing so in a comprehensive manner before Operation Iraqi
Freedom is much more sketchy and ambiguous.”[xix]
McCarthy
further stated that Iraq had continuously made “material omissions” in their
declarations to the United Nations. It was difficult to compare what
UNSCOM was finding versus what Iraq did not declare. McCarthy went on to
say that there was no “falsified intelligence information” on the part of
UNSCOM. The intelligence assessment made at the time could be considered “poor
trade craft” within the intelligence community. Although serious
fundamental errors existed within the U.S. Central and Defense Intelligence
Agencies, Vice President Dick Cheney and President Bush were by know means at
fault implicitly.
There
further may be more to consider in the WMD area with regard to biological
laboratories that awaiting the outcome of more analysis. The current U. S.
President and the Vice President put good faith in the evidence being procured,
the same evidence former President Clinton advanced. “At the time in
2003, there was no other way to act, than the way those officials did. Further,
it would have been irresponsible for the U. S. not to act, under the
perspective at that moment in time.”[xx]
Saddam’s
intransigence remained unrelenting for years. Despite the numerous Security
Council resolutions and economic sanctions. Saddam used the Oil For Food (OFF)
program to his benefit. “Sanctions cannot be imposed indefinitely, since
the regime diverts the ‘oil for food’ monies and smuggles three billion dollars
in oil a year.”[xxi] The Oil
For Food program that was supposed to help the Iraqi people was actually used
by Saddam Hussein for his personal causes and benefit. “The introduction
of OFF in late 1996 represented a key turning point for the Iraqi Regime. OFF
rescued Baghdad’s economy from a terminal decline created by sanctions. The
Regime quickly came to see that OFF could be corrupted to acquire foreign
exchange both to further undermine sanctions and to provide the means to
enhance dual-use infrastructure and potential WMD-related development.”[xxii]
For
the balance of the decade Saddam continuously refused to allow UNSCOM
inspectors to do their agreed job. The Security Council continued to pass
resolutions. On November 12, 1997, the U.N. Security Council approved
Resolution 1137 which “condemn(ed)…the continued violations by Iraq of its
obligations under the relevant resolutions to cooperate fully and
unconditionally with (UNSCOM), ” found that the situation continued to
constitute a threat to international peace and security, and warned that
‘serious consequences’ would result if Iraq failed to comply with its
international obligations.”[xxiii]
A
few months after the signing of Resolution 1137, U.N. Secretary-General Annan
secured a memorandum of understanding confirming Iraq’s acceptance of all
relevant Security Council Resolutions and its avowal to cooperate fully with
UNSCOM and the IAEA. In October of 1998, after making an agreement to
accept all Security Council resolutions, Saddam formally brought to a halt to
everything to do with UNSCOM. The Security Council, in response to Iraq’s
continued violations, adopted Security Council Resolution 1205 which condemned
Iraq’s decision to oust UNSCOM as a “flagrant violation of resolution 687…and
other relevant resolutions.”[xxiv]
UNSCOM
could not continue its mandate because of Saddam’s obstructionism, On December
16, 1998, the United States and Britain jointly conducted a 70-hour missile and
aircraft bombing campaign against approximately one hundred targets in Iraq.
During the next four years, Iraq refused to permit UNSCOM inspections. On
December 17, 1999 the Security Council decided to disband UNSCOM and replace it
with the United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission
(UNMOVIC).[xxv]
On
September 11, 2001, the security posture of the U.S. changed abruptly.
Terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon used civilian
aircraft as weapons. Al Qaeda operatives, trained and led from bases in
Afghanistan, demonstrated the threat posed by terrorists who could seek safe
haven in rogue nations with potential access to the capabilities WMD.[xxvi]
Throughout
the following year President George W. Bush focused on the need to confront
Iraq. “States like these, and their terrorist allies, constitute an axis
of evil, arming to threaten the peace of the world. By seeking weapons of
mass destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger. They
could provide these arms to terrorists, giving them the means to match their
hatred. They could attack our allies or attempt to blackmail the United
States. In any of the cases, the price of indifference would be catastrophic.”[xxvii] President Bush addressed the U.N. and
spoke of the possible ‘use of force’ in Iraq to enforce existing U.N. Security
Council Resolutions and to eliminate dangerous threats to international peace
and security. President Bush challenged the U.N. to face the threat posed
by Iraq as evidenced by its continuing defiance of the Security Council
Resolutions.[xxviii]
The
Security Council unanimously adopted Security Council Resolution 1441 finding
Iraq in material breach of its previous resolutions and threatened “serious
consequences” for further intransigence. “The threat(s) [of] Iraq’s
non-compliance with council resolutions, proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction and long-range missiles harms international peace and security”.
The Council condemned the absence of international inspections in Iraq since
December 1998 and Iraq’s continued failure to renounce international terrorism
and cease the repression of its civilian population. The UN gave Iraq a final
opportunity to comply with its disarmament obligations under relevant
resolutions of the Council. ”[xxix]
In
its defense, Iraq submitted an incomplete and inaccurate declaration to the
U.N. composed principally of recycled information. The declaration
clearly failed to address any of the outstanding disarmament questions that
previous inspectors had publicly documented. The reports submitted by UNMOVIC
to the Council confirmed these shortcomings. On February 28, 2003, UNMOVIC
Executive Chairman Dr. Hans Blix stated that the declaration contained “little
new significant information . . . relating to proscribed weapons systems.” On January 27, 2003, Dr. Blix stated
that the Iraqi declaration did not contain “any new evidence that would
eliminate” the “many open disarmament issues.” Blix further indicated that Iraq
had not come “to a genuine acceptance, not even today, of the disarmament,
which was demanded of it. Dr. Blix repeated his conclusion that, “It was
a disappointment that Iraq’s declaration of December 7, 2002 did not bring new
documentary evidence.”[xxx]
On March 19, 2003, the United States led an ad hoc ‘coalition of
the willing’ invasion of Iraq ending regime of Saddam Hussein and its Ba’athist
party. On May 1, 2003, President Bush announced cessation of major combat
operations in Iraq and, under Security Council Resolution 1483, assumption by
the United States as an occupying power responsible to rebuild Iraq.
When the U.S. invaded of Iraq, Saddam Hussein had no intention to
comply with disarmament requirements. Iraq was in “material breach” of Security
Council Resolution 1441 and Security Council Resolution 687. No Security
Council member had or has stated that Iraq had met obligations under the
seventeen U.N. resolutions. Saddam
disregarded these resolutions which “required him to cease the torture and
unnecessary imprisonment of opposition groups; to provide for the immediate
repatriation of prisoners of war and other political detainees; to cease
amassing and destroy all chemical, biological, nuclear, and ballistic missile
programs and associated infrastructure; to cease sheltering terrorists and
terrorist groups; and to allow for monitoring and inspection to verify Iraqi
compliance. He had complied with none of these resolutions.”[xxxi]
Coalition forces in Iraq continued to search for WMD sites. Future
years may yield the precise fate of Iraq’s weaponry. Although “We did not find
the stockpiles we thought were there… I want to remind you what the Duelfer
report said: ‘Saddam Hussein was gaming the oil-for-food program to get rid of
sanctions’. And why? Because he had the capability and knowledge to
rebuild his weapon programs. And the great danger we face in the world
today is that a terrorist organization could end up with weapons of mass
destruction. Knowing what I know today, I would have made the same
decision. The world is safe with Saddam in a prison cell.”[xxxii]
II. DISCUSSION OF THE SECURITY
COUNCIL RESOLUTIONS
Many U.N. watchers argue that America needed an additional
“eighteenth” resolution to go to war. On March 10th, 2003 French President
Jacques Chirac declared preemptly that France would veto any such resolution.
Thus diplomats abandoned efforts at additional resolutions. French
motives need continued examination. In what became their new zeal for
multilateral U.N. authority France
“did not request a Security Council resolutions to authorize its interventions
in Chad, the Ivory Coast, or other former French colonies”.[xxxiii]
On September 12, 2002, President Bush spoke to the U.N. the
General Assembly. He outlined U. S complaints against the Iraq. He
detailed Iraq’s 12-year noncompliance with the terms of the previous
resolutions.[xxxiv]
Much invasion debate assumes that the Security Council did not
endorse the use of force. That assumption pales in the repeated
resolution wording, deliberately framed to allow U.N. members to use all
necessary means to uphold and implement resolutions. The resolutions authorize
the use of force and require restoration of international peace and security.
Resolutions allow action against aggression. The Security Council
authorized a U.S. led coalition to wage war on Iraq in 1991, a significant
legal precedent.
On October 31, 1998, Saddam denied UNSCOM inspectors access within
Iraq. At that time, all Coalition intelligence services agreed that Saddam
possessed WMD capabilities across a range of categories including chemical,
biological, and nuclear programs, and missile delivery systems.[xxxv] The international community, even with
the new UNMOVIC, seemed powerless to monitor and deal with Saddam rule of Iraq
as a rogue state.
The attacks on the United States of September 11, 2001 raised
questions of preemption. The combination of weapons of mass destruction,
rogue state actions, and actual terrorism posed an imminent threat to the
international security.[xxxvi]
Iraq’s “material breach” of its disarmament obligations by failing
to disclose, discontinue, and destroy WMD programs, caused unanimous Security
Council passage of Resolution 1441 on November 8, 2002. Resolution 1441
gave Iraq “a final opportunity to comply with its disarmament
obligations” and warned Iraq of “serious consequences” if it failed to do so.[xxxvii]
In both the 1980’s and 1990s, Saddam used chemical weapons against
the people of Iran. He fired missiles against Iran, Saudi Arabia and
Israel. He actively pursued nuclear weapons.”[xxxviii] Those actions provide objective
evidence of Iraqi possession of WMD and sponsorship of nuclear programs.
When President Bush ordered U.S. forces into action, he stated
that he was doing so under previous resolutions and U.N. Security Council
Resolutions 678, 687 and 1441. The U. S. Congress passed a Joint Resolution 114
to authorize the use of United States Armed Forces against Iraq. That Resolution held no requirement for
the President to obtain U.N. Security Council authorization. The President
could act unilaterally.[xxxix]
In all Security Council debates, ‘all necessary means’ was
understood to mean ‘the use of force’. The ‘no fly zones’ in the North and South of Iraq reflect
that reality. The U.N. authorization for the use of force neither expired
nor terminated by subsequent resolution. U.N. history includes expiration
dates on many of its resolutions. In Bosnia, Resolution 1031 expressly
terminated the use of force.[xl]
In Somalia, Security Council Resolution 954 set a time limit for the use of
force.[xli]
III. DISCUSSION OF THE U.N. CHARTER AND THE SOVEREIGN RIGHT OF
SELF-DEFENSE
An additional legal right for the 2003 invasion of Iraq accrues
from the sovereign right of self-defense. Article 51 of the U.N. Charter recognizes
and affirms, but does not limit, that “inherent” right under international
law. Until the Security Council takes measures necessary to maintain
international peace and security, nothing in the present Charter impairs the
inherent right of individual or collective self-defense if an armed attack
occurs against a United Nations member.[xlii]
The U.N. Charter makes the legality of the use of force in
self-defense subject to the existence of certain circumstances. Preemptive use
of force covers the ability to strike first before enemy action and falls
within the legality of self-defense. Preemptive force characterized the 2003
invasion of Iraq.
Broad disagreement exists on whether ‘imminence’ of an attack
includes an element necessary for preemptive force. Whether an attack by
Saddam directly, or through his ability to support terrorists constituted
‘imminent’, remains questionable in the naysayers minds. The U.S. National
Security Strategy in 2002 included preemptive response to attack.[xliii]
A visible Iraqi mobilization posing to attack the U.S. in the most traditional
sense was lacking. Saddam held no
physically capability to send missiles against the U.S. Thus it may have
appeared to certain observers that there was no ‘imminent’ threat.
However, in the context of modern warfare and technology and state sponsored
terrorism ‘imminent’ takes a broader definition
Weapons of mass destruction increase the capabilities of today
terrorists as well as rogue states. Allowing Saddam to remain in power
could have resulted in devastating attacks internationally given Iraq’s
capabilities militarily. As a result, President Bush clearly faced a choice:
Either wait to see if Saddam struck first or enforce the many U.N. resolutions
and U.S. public law. “For if a regime that is animated by unlawful
ambitions against its neighbours continues to develop ABC [Atomic, Biological
and Chemical] weapons, and especially if it does so in violation of
international commitments, the deprivation of those weapons in a single instance
may only reinforce the regime’s intentions to try even harder the next time to
develop and deploy the weapons so that it can then paralyse subsequent efforts
to control it.”[xliv]
“The U.N. Charter can not and should not be read to restrict the
use of force in self-defense situations of “imminent” attack. Rather,
fundamental principles of international law and the values expressed in the
United Nations Charter establish that the standard for the use of force is
“necessity,” which is determined by four factors: (1) the nature and magnitude
of the threat involved; (2) the likelihood that the threat will be realized
unless preemptive action is taken; (3) the availability and exhaustion of
alternatives to using force; and (4) whether using preemptive force is consistent
with the terms and purposes of the U.N. Charter and other applicable
international agreements.”[xlv] The U. S. attack of Iraq proves
consistent with those four factors.
The Caroline Affair of 1837 reinforces and confirms the argument
for legal self-defense. The Caroline Affair established the principle of
"anticipatory self-defense" in international politics. It held
that military action may be justified by the mere threat of armed attack. “In 1837, the steamer Caroline had been
supplying armed insurgents against British rule in Canada with reinforcements
of men and materials from the United States. In response, a British force from
Canada entered U.S. territory at night, seized the Caroline, set the ship on
fire, and sent it down the Niagara River, killing two U.S. citizens in the
process. The British claimed that they were acted in self-defense. U. S.
Secretary of State Daniel Webster called upon the British to show that the:
necessity of self-defence [was] instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of
means, and no moment for deliberation . . . [and that the British force], even
supposing the necessity of the moment authorized them to enter the territories
of the United States at all, did 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.”[xlvi]
The British prevailed. The Caroline Affair decision became to be known as the
Webster’s formula. It holds reference frequently when making a legal claim to
self-defense. Further, the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg
endorsed the Webster formula, when it ruled that the German invasion of Norway
in 1940 was not defensive because it was unnecessary to prevent an “imminent”
Allied invasion.[xlvii]
IV. CONCLUSION
An objective analysis of evidence contained in this review fully
supports the legality of the United States invasion of Iraq in 2003. The
invasion followed twelve years of exhaustive diplomacy between the two primary
nations, the United States and Iraq. Military action by the United States and
its allies held logical and legal foundation within the terms of the cease-fire
suspending the hostilities of the 1991 Gulf War. Iraq’s continued breaches of
the cease-fire, established principles of international law, both treaty and
armistice, justified the application of force. Recognized United Nations
authorities previously sanctioned actions necessary to compel Iraqi compliance
with duly negotiated cease-fire agreements. International law permitted the use
of force against Iraq based on anticipatory self-defense against both Weapons
of Mass Destruction and Iraq’s potential cooperation with international
terrorist actions. The United Nations Charter contains language that clearly
authorizes preeminent use of force to nullify threats of attack. Arguments
against the legality of U.S. action remain specious, subjective, and lacking in
legal precedent.
Beverly Bica
December 7, 2005
University of
San Diego
Joan Kroc
Institute for Peace and Justice
Justice Richard
Goldstone – International Criminal Court
[i] Colum Lynch,
U.S., Allies Dispute Annan on Iraq War, Washington Post, September 17, 2004,
A18
[ii] USUN Press
Release No. 159 (04) (Sept. 16, 2004), www.un.int/usa/archives.html
[iii] USUN Press
Release No. 159 (04) (Sept. 16, 2004), www.un.int/usa/archives.html
[iv] Max Singer,
Overthrowing Saddam Hussein: The Policy Debate. Jerusalem Center for Public
Affairs. Jerusalem Letter, Viewpoints No. 423 25 Shevat 5760, February 1 2000.
[v] President
George W. Bush, Address to the General United Nations General Assembly, New
York, September 12, 2002
[vi] William
Taft and Todd Buchwald, Preemption, Iraq, and International Law, American
Journal of International Law, 2003
[vii] President
William Clinton on the “Iraqi Liberation Act of 1998” HR 4655 reference,
section 1
[viii] President
George W. Bush, Address to the General United Nations General Assembly, New
York, September 12, 2002
[ix] Genocide In
Iraq; The Anfal Campaign against the Kurds, Human Rights Watch, A Middle East
Watch Report, George Black and Andrew Whitley, Executive Director, Human Rights
Watch, July 1993
[x] President
William Clinton on the “Iraqi Liberation Act of 1998” HR 4655 reference,
section 1
[xi] Genocide In
Iraq; The Anfal Campaign against the Kurds, Human Rights Watch, A Middle East
Watch Report, George Black and Andrew Whitley, Executive Director, Human Rights
Watch, July 1993
[xii] United
Nations Security Council Resolution 660, August 2, 1990
[xiii] United
Nations Security Council Resolution 661, August 6, 1990
[xiv] United
Nations Security Council Resolution 678, November 29,1990
[xv] Rick
Atkinson and David S. Broder Washington
Post Staff Writers, January 17, 1991; A01
[xvi] Timothy V.
McCarthy, Chief U.N. Inspector on missiles, UNSCOM, interview, November 15,
2005 with Beverly Bica
[xvii] Rick
Atkinson and David S. Broder Washington Post Staff Writers, January 17, 1991; A01
[xviii] United
Nations Security Council Resolution 687, April 3, 1991
[xix] Timothy V.
McCarthy, Chief U.N. Inspector on missiles, UNSCOM, interview, November 13,
2005 with Beverly Bica
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[xxviii] John C.
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[xl] United
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Beverly Bica