LAW, POLITICS,
AND THE USE OF
FORCE
Outline
I. Just war doctrine
II. War in the twentieth century and the
evolution of doctrines of use of force
III. Regulation of the right to resort to force
A. The League of Nations Covenant
B. The Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)
C. The Charter of the United Nations (1945)
1. Outlaws wars of aggression
2. Collective security
3. Recognizes the right of self-defense
4. What about anticipatory self-defense?
(Example: the invasion of Iraq)
IV. What influences norms regarding the use of
force?
I. Just War
Doctrine
Jus ad Bellum
Just War Doctrine/Theory
Legitimate authority
Elements
Just cause
Proportional response
Right intention
II. War in the 20th Century
Warsaw, September 1939.
War in the late
20th/21st Century
Reluctance to declare war
International versus civil war
Involvement of non-state entities
Evolution of the
Doctrine
Obvious difficulties with JWT for the 20th
century
From Just to Permissible
Toward a Ban on Offensive Wars
III. Legal Regulation of
the Right to Resort to
Force
Institutions
Principles
The League of Nations
Covenant
Art. 10: League
members to preserve
territorial integrity and
political independence
of all members from
external aggression.
Arts. 12-15: Restricted
the rights of members
to resort to war
Obligated the members
to avoid non-war
hostilities.
Muzzled from the Literary Digest
9/13/19
The Kellogg Briand
Pact (1928)
(The Paris General Treaty for
the Renunciation of War)
Kellogg, with
Prittwitz, and Keip.
August 27, 1928
The UN Charter
Article 2(4): members agree to...
refrain from the threat or use of
force against the territorial integrity
or political independence of any
state.
Article 33-38: obligate members to
seek peaceful solutions to disputes.
UN Charter Outlaws Wars of
Aggression
Chapter
VII, Article
39: empowers the
Security Council to
respond to acts of
aggression.
FIRST SESSION OF THE UN
SECURITY COUNCIL (London,
17/1/46).
What is Aggression?
FIRST SESSION OF THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY(London, 10/1/46).
Use of armed force by a
state
First use of force
Activities that constitute
aggression
Plus what the Security
Council may determine
State responsibility
The 2003 Use of Force Against Iraq: A
Continuation of Collective Security?
A Chapter VII action
stemming from Iraqs
1990 attack on Kuwait?
Justified by compulsory
Security Council
Resolutions adopted
between 1990-2003?
Some key SC resolutions:
660 (August 1990)
678 (November 1990)
687 (April 1991)
1441 (November 2002)
Exhaustion of Peaceful
Remedies
Negotiate
For
in good faith
how long?
How
to do this in the case of
terrorism?
The Right to Self-Defense
Article 51 of the UN
Charter: recognizes
an inherent right of
collective
selfdefense of member
states
against
armed attack.
1991 UN IRAQ-KUWAIT
OBSERVER MISSION. Burning oil
wells and a destroyed Iraqi tank.
Kuwait, 25/3/91.
Anticipatory Self-Defense
Clear
and present danger of
aggression.
No
alternatives
Anticipatory Self-Defense and
the Invasion of Iraq
New
conditions: the
problem of weapons of
Mass destruction
Customary
international law
Practice
Justifies
a
reformulated test
Proportionality of Means
to Ends
The states interest has
to be serious enough to
justify war as a means.
World Trade Towers, 2001
Must
apply force
proportionally
Baghdad, 2003
Summary
Current
rules are influenced by just war
doctrine, but with more emphasis on
limiting war than ensuring justice.
21st century wars are difficult to regulate
through traditional international law
The resort to force is no longer
considered an inherent aspect of state
sovereignty
Self-defense is the only legitimate reason
for going to war under the UN Charter.
Thank You