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Column by David Alton
George Bernard Shaw once said of economists that “if you laid
them all, end to end, they would never reach a conclusion.” You
could say the same about lawyers – with the notable difference that
when economists disagree we laugh, and when lawyers disagree, we
pay.
But the fundamental disagreement between international lawyers
about the legitimacy of war is Iraq is no laughing matter. It
illustrates how complex these issues are and that good men and women
can honourably disagree. International law is itself notoriously plastic and different States have differing treaty obligations. As Alice
might have said to the Mad Hatter, only one thing is clear, that the
law is unclear. Calling Card Europe
In a written statement to the House of Lords the Attorney
General, Lord Goldsmith, set out the legal basis for the use of
force. The crux of his argument is that the combined effect of
resolutions 678, 687, and 1441, all adopted under Chapter VII of the
UN Charter, allow the use of force. Lord Goldsmith maintains that
Iraq’s failure to disarm revives the express authorisation of force
contained in resolution 678: “whatever other differences there may
have been in the Security Council, no member of the Council has
questioned this conclusion.” Article 678 allowed for “all necessary
means” to be used. Phrases like “material breach” and “serious
consequences” have been the historic formula used in permitting
force. webbureau
Throughout the 1990s, Saddam’s regime issued endless bogus
statements but evaded obligations of full disclosure of chemical and
biological weapons, and it failed to destroy them. Meanwhile, the
regime carried out acts of brutality and genocide against its own
people. These two issues have been at the heart of the Prime
Minister’s case for the use of force and is the justification of the
revival of the authority contained in Resolution 678 – which is not
a historical document and has never been repealed. Гинекология ведение беременности Царицыно.
As far as Resolution 1441 is concerned – and the failure for a
second, or more precisely an eighteenth resolution – to be agreed,
the Government’s legal advice is that when the Council is
deadlocked, preceding and existing resolutions are the ones that
continue to apply. Simply trying to get a second resolution doesn’t
undermine your legal case.
Only if France had tabled a Resolution prohibiting the use of
force, and had carried this with nine votes, and no veto being
applied, would that alone have nullified the previous body of
resolutions.
Many people have said their minds would have been changed if a
“second” resolution had been carried. The hard truth is that
although this was desirable political reasons, it doesn’t add one
iota to the moral or ethical arguments.
Nor should we attach too much significance to vetoes threatened
by the former head of the KGB, by the Chinese (with their deplorable
human rights record) or by the French (with their extraordinary statement that
they would veto any new resolution, whatever it said).
The international law that I would like to see applied is the law
against genocide. I should like to see those responsible for torture
and ethnic cleansing and the forced exodus of millions of frightened
people, for the use of poison gas against the Kurds, for the
massacre of tens of thousands of Marsh Arabs, for the assassination
of opponents, and for the subsidising of suicide bombers and
terrorists, brought to justice. Interpretation of the law should not
always be the last word in international affairs – justice is more
important.
Ends.
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