From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Wed Jul 31 2002 - 20:04:08 MDT
On 31 Jul 2002 at 8:27, kharin wrote:
> 
> 
> http://www.lrb.co.uk/v24/n14/byer2414.htm
> 
> Jumping the Gun
> Michael Byers
> 
> 'We must take the battle to the enemy, disrupt his plans, and confront 
the worst threats before they emerge.' Last month, in a commencement 
speech at West Point, George W. Bush announced an expansive new 
policy of pre-emptive military action. The graduating students greeted 
the 
announcement with enthusiastic applause, thus demonstrating not only 
their patriotism, but also a certain lack of historic awareness.
> 
> In 1837, the British were crushing a rebellion in Upper Canada. The 
United States, while unwilling to antagonise a superpower by 
supporting 
the rebels directly, failed to prevent a private militia being formed. The 
volunteers used a steamboat, the Caroline, to transport arms and men 
to 
an island on the Canadian side of the Niagara River. The British 
responded with a night raid: capturing the vessel as it was docked at 
Fort 
Schlosser, New York, they set it on fire and sent it over Niagara Falls.
> 
> The incident caused disquiet in Washington. British forces, having 
torched the White House and Capitol in 1814, were again intervening 
on 
US territory. Diplomatic representations culminated in an exchange of 
letters between Lord Ashburton, special minister for the negotiations, 
and 
Daniel Webster, the US Secretary of State. They agreed that such raids 
could be justified only if there was a 'necessity of self-defence, instant, 
overwhelming, leaving no choice of means, and no moment of 
deliberation' - and if nothing 'unreasonable or excessive' was done.
> 
> Until the Caroline case, self-defence was a political justification for 
what, from a legal perspective, were ordinary acts of war. The positivist 
international law of the 19th century rejected natural law distinctions 
between just and unjust wars. Military aggression was unregulated and 
conquest gave good title to territory, as demonstrated by the British 
acquisition of the Falklands in 1833. The Caroline case did nothing to 
prevent aggression, but it did draw a legal distinction between war and 
self-defence. As long as the act being defended against was not itself 
an 
act of war, peace would be maintained - a matter of considerable 
importance to relatively weak countries, as the United States then was.
> 
> The Caroline criteria of necessity and proportionality became widely 
accepted as customary international law - an unwritten body of rules 
formed from the behaviour and opinions of states. But it took another 
century, and the First World War, to convince statesmen of the need for 
constraints on military aggression. A first effort was made in 1919, when 
the League of Nations Covenant was adopted at Versailles. Under the 
Covenant the Council of the League could issue recommendations to 
states in danger of going to war. If the Council failed to agree, however, 
the disputing parties were free to take whatever action they considered 
'necessary for the maintenance of right and justice'. The League also 
lacked the capacity to enforce decisions, while any hope that it would 
co-ordinate enforcement action by its members disappeared when the 
US Senate rejected the Covenant in 1920.
> 
> The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 prohibited 'recourse to war for the 
solution of international controversies'. The Pact, which was eventually 
ratified by 62 states, made an exception for self-defence, but failed to 
define it - with the result that the customary criteria set out in the 
Caroline 
case remained the only legal bases for the use of force in international 
affairs. Strong on principle but again lacking an enforcement 
mechanism, 
the Pact had little practical effect. Some countries evaded it by avoiding 
formal declarations of war.
> 
> In 1945, the UN Charter required all states to 'refrain . . . from the threat 
or use of force'. It thus extended the prohibition on war to include 
undeclared conflicts. Most important, the Charter provided an 
enforcement 
mechanism. The Security Council - an 11 (now 15) member body - was 
given authority to determine 'the existence of any threat to the peace, 
breach of the peace or act of aggression', to impose sanctions, and to 
'take such action by air, sea or land forces as may be necessary'. This 
was a constitutional moment in international affairs: an anarchic world 
of 
self-help and temporary alliances was transformed into a nascent 
system 
of governance.
> 
> The drafters of the Charter were hardly naive. Recognising that the UN 
could be imperilled if powerful states were threatened with collective 
action, they granted permanent membership of the Security Council and 
a veto on its actions to Britain, China, France, the Soviet Union and the 
US. Knowing that the Council could never respond promptly to every 
act 
of aggression, they also included an exception for self-defence. But in 
addition to necessity and proportionality, three new restrictions were 
introduced: a state could act in self-defence only if subject to an 'armed 
attack', acts of self- defence had to be reported immediately to the 
Council, and the right to respond ended as soon as the Council took 
action.
> 
> The 'armed attack' requirement superseded any pre-existing right of 
anticipatory action. In recognition of this, since 1945 most states have 
refrained from claiming pre-emptive self-defence. Israel justified the 
strikes that initiated the 1967 Six-Day War on the basis that Egypt's 
blocking of the Straits of Tiran was a prior act of aggression. The United 
States justified its 1962 blockade of Cuba as regional peacekeeping, 
and 
its shooting down in 1988 of an Iranian civilian Airbus as a response to 
an 
ongoing attack. International opinion on this issue was never clearer 
than 
when Israel destroyed an Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981, and claimed 
anticipatory self-defence. The then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher 
said: 'Armed attack in such circumstances cannot be justified. It 
represents a grave breach of international law.' The Security Council 
unanimously passed a Resolution damning the Israeli action as illegal - 
strong condemnation indeed, especially given that the US was 
party to it.
> 
> In the context of the Cold War, the dangers of anticipatory self-defence 
were easily understood. Even the most hawkish leaders baulked at 
countenancing a right of pre-emptive action when the world's principal 
disputants both had nuclear missile submarines designed to evade a 
surprise attack. Today, as seen from the Oval Office, the situation looks 
quite different. Russia has become an ally, no other potential enemy 
has 
submarine-based nuclear missiles, and construction of a missile 
defence 
system designed to ward off limited attacks has already begun. This 
President does not feel deterred by the prospect of Armageddon.
> 
> Domestic considerations often determine US foreign policy. It therefore 
comes as no surprise that the President has seized on pre-emptive 
action 
abroad as a means of advancing his political agenda at home. A top 
domestic priority is gaining control of the confirmation process for 
Federal 
judges, who play an inordinately powerful role in US politics - as Bush's 
occupation of the White House demonstrates. A strong Republican 
showing in November's mid-term elections would provide the President 
with the opportunity to shift the entire US legal system dramatically and 
more or less permanently to the right. Nearly eight years of deadlock 
between the White House and Senate have left numerous openings in 
the 
district and appeals courts, while in the Supreme Court several aged 
conservatives are unlikely to survive - literally - for much longer. Tariffs 
on steel and lumber, massive agricultural subsidies, and staunch 
support 
for Ariel Sharon are all directed at maintaining support for Bush's allies 
in 
the swing states of Florida, Ohio and the Mid-West, with little regard for 
the global consequences. But even then, the prospects are not good. 
The 
economy has been weakening ever since Bush was elected and 
nobody 
knows quite how far the rot in Enron, WorldCom and Xerox, aided and 
abetted by Arthur Andersen, has spread. Furthermore, suspicions are 
growing that the 11 September attacks could have been prevented. Add 
to 
this the fact that, even in normal circumstances, the mid-term elections 
tend to go against the party that controls the White House, and 
Republican prospects might appear more than a little iffy.
> 
> But patriotism could provide a refuge: a major military action would, at 
least initially, elicit considerable support at the polls. Unfortunately, 
al-Qaida has dispersed into the villages of Afghanistan and Pakistan, 
leading the United States to conduct a series of small, messy 
operations 
that do not play well on TV. It is the need for more dramatic targets that 
has led to the new and somewhat exaggerated emphasis on biological, 
chemical and nuclear weapons. Saddam Hussein's use of poison gas 
against Kurdish villagers in 1988 is advanced as proof that he would 
use 
such weapons against the US today, even though doing so would 
ensure 
his own destruction. Iran's desire to acquire a credible deterrent within 
a 
nuclear neighbourhood is considered threatening to a country six 
thousand miles away. Cuba's healthcare system (perhaps thought 
suspicious because it is publicly operated) is singled out as a possible 
source of biological weapons. None of these threats is imminent, but, 
as the President explains, 'if we wait for threats to fully materialise, we 
will
 have waited too long.'
> 
> What is most striking about the new policy is that it portrays weapons of 
mass destruction as a new problem, and unilateral action as the only 
way 
of dealing with them. In fact, the first treaty on poison gas dates from 
1899. 
For decades, the UN has led efforts to control the development and 
spread of such weapons. Now, with stunning hypocrisy, the Bush 
Administration has refused to ratify enforcement protocols to the 
Chemical and Biological Weapons Conventions. It has pressured 139 
countries into dismissing José Bustani, the highly regarded director-
general of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, in 
the middle of his term. And, in violation of its obligations under the 
Nuclear 
Non-Proliferation Treaty, it has accelerated efforts to develop battlefield 
nuclear weapons that can penetrate deep bunkers and destroy 
dangerous 
chemicals and pathogens.
> 
> The British Government was initially supportive of the new strategic 
position. In March Geoff Hoon, the Defence Secretary, said the 
Government 'reserved the right' to use nuclear weapons if Britain or 
British 
troops were threatened by biological or chemical weapons. Hoon was 
asserting an existing right of pre-emptive action - on the basis of an 
argument, supplied by Foreign Office lawyers, that the customary 
international law of the Caroline case was incorporated, in full, into the 
UN Charter as an 'inherent right'.
> 
> There are numerous problems with the argument. Most notably, 
international law requires that treaty terms be interpreted according to 
their ordinary meaning. The crucial passage on self-defence is in Article 
51: 'Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of 
individual or collective self-defence 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.' The 
term 'inherent' is thus clearly constrained by the phrase 'if an armed 
attack 
occurs' and the right of self-defence is seen merely as a limited 
exception 
within a system that prioritises Security Council action.
> 
> In any event, a profound unease has crept over Whitehall as the full 
extent of the US claim has become apparent. The Bush doctrine makes 
no 
attempt to satisfy the criteria of the Caroline case: there is no 
suggestion 
of waiting for a 'necessity of self-defence' that is 'instant, overwhelming, 
leaving no choice of means, and no moment of deliberation'. Unlike 
Geoff 
Hoon, the President is not 'reserving a right' to respond to imminent 
threats; he is seeking an extension of the right of self-defence to 
include 
action against potential future dangers.
> 
> Bush's advisers, though focused on the mid-term elections and more 
than willing to violate international law if necessary, are savvy enough 
to 
realise that a change in the law could provide long-term benefits for 
them, 
such as making it easier to secure support for future military actions. 
They 
are also fully aware that rules of customary international law and 
interpretations of the Charter can be modified by the changing 
behaviour 
of states - and that it is sometimes possible deliberately to provoke the 
necessary behaviour. In the aftermath of 11 September, the US 
successfully sought to extend the right of self-defence to include action 
against state-sponsors of terrorists when those terrorists have already 
attacked the responding state. It did so, first by claiming the right, and 
then 
by seeking the express or tacit support of other countries. Intense 
diplomatic pressure - including the 'with us or against us' threat - was 
brought to bear. Few were brave or principled enough to disagree. 
Military 
action in Afghanistan was then sufficient to secure the claim.
> 
> Today, the 'with us or against us' threat has been repeated. An attack on 
Iraq is planned, ideally for just before the mid-term elections. The only 
question is, will other countries support this latest initiative by the 
United 
States? Before Tony Blair decides, he should consider the negative 
consequences. A broad right of anticipatory self-defence would 
introduce 
dangerous uncertainties. Who would decide that a potential threat 
justifies 
pre-emptive action? How does one protect against opportunistic 
interventions justified as anticipatory self-defence? Do we wish to 
accord 
the same extended right to India and Pakistan, as the reciprocal 
character 
of customary international law would require? Might the development of 
such a right prompt potential targets into striking first, to use rather than 
lose their biological, chemical and nuclear weapons?
> 
> The UN Charter provides a clear answer to these questions: in the 
absence of an attack, the Security Council alone can act. And if 
provided 
with clear evidence of an imminent biological, chemical or nuclear 
attack, 
there is no doubt that it would act, since the effects of weapons of mass 
destruction can hardly be confined. In recent years, the Council has 
repeatedly authorised military action even in situations where there was 
no 
threat to its members - in Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Haiti and 
elsewhere. Last September, it took only one day before all 15 states 
affirmed the right of the US to engage in self-defence.
> 
> Only those who have no reason to fear military force can contemplate a 
world without the combined protections of the UN Charter and the 
customary law of the Caroline case. The President feels able to claim a 
broad right of pre-emptive action because other states do not currently 
have the capacity to retaliate. What Bush fails to realise is that his 
actions
 will encourage other states to acquire the very weapons that he 
purports 
to abhor.
> 
> US opposition to the International Criminal Court has attracted much 
attention, but the likely consequences of that opposition pale in 
comparison to the damage that could be caused to international affairs 
by 
a broad right of pre-emptive action. It would shift us away from the UN 
system and towards an anarchical world dominated by raw power, 
shifting 
alliances, and desperate attempts by vulnerable states to acquire the 
capacity to deter. In pursuit of his own parochial interests, George W. 
Bush would return us to the dark days before the Caroline tumbled over 
Niagara Falls. Had he been speaking to the West Point class of 1838, 
the 
students would have withheld their applause.
> 
There is a political dimension in Bush's calculations, and that is the 
calculation that the american electorate would be profoundly 
unforgiving if we once again suffered a massive attack during his watch 
which his administration failed to prevent, but this is in addition to the 
sincere desire to protect american citizens from such an attack, not 
instead of it.
We have a situation where a global terrorist organization is capable of 
thumbing its nose at some weaker countries and putting pressure on 
others to allow it to establish planning and preparations for such attacks 
in sparsely populated areas not under that government's control.  In 
such cases, as in the Phillipines and Yemen, our help has been 
requested to root such operations out and bring their members to 
ground, but we cannot guarantee that another government will not arise 
that falls in a fuzzy area (due to its own Islamic populace and 
politicians) between the blatant middle finger that the Taliban shot us 
when we demanded the handover of Bin Laden and the closure of the 
Al Quaeda camps and the request for, or acquiescence to, US 
assistance demonstrated by the Phillipines and Yemen.  It is 
conceivable that such a country might say 'we'll handle it for you', and 
then do little or nothing while appearing to do much, or else actively 
conceal/deny their presence.  In such a case, the US must reserve the 
right to eliminate the incipient threat to it from within the host country's 
borders, whether that host country acknowledges or approves of it or 
not.  Also, the nature of terrorist actions is to be surprises; as in 9/11, 
the attacks frequently occur with little or no conclusive warning.  One 
cannot wait for the approval of the Security Council before one acts to 
repel a terrorist attack that has not yet reached obne's borders, but will 
do so quickly; likewise, one cannot risk (with Islamic countries 
comprising some of the Security Council members - just not the 
permanent ones) having word get back to terrorists that the US is aware 
of such plans and preparing to obtain UN consensus to forfend them; 
such information would either cause them to regroup and launch the 
attack from another quarter or upon other targets, or else accelerate 
their plans.  Airplanes travel much faster than ships, and missiles even 
faster.  It's a different world, and different exigencies must be taken into 
account in navigating its different threats.
> 
> ----
> This message was posted by kharin to the Virus 2002 board on Church of Virus BBS.
> <http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=51;action=display;threadid=25901>
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