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International
Law at the Vanishing Point
Richard
Falk and Aslı Ü.
Bâli
Richard
Falk, professor emeritus of international law
and practice at Princeton University, is a
visiting professor at the University of California-Santa
Barbara. Aslı Ü. Bâli is the
Irving S. Ribicoff Fellow at Yale Law School.

The
bridge over Wadi Gaza remains impassable
for motorists seeking to use Gaza’s
coastal road. Israeli aircraft blew
out the bridge in June 2006. (George
Azar) |
In
the summer of 2006, two border incidents were
invoked by Israel, with strong US diplomatic
support and material assistance, to justify
a prolonged military offensive in Gaza and
a crushing “shock and awe” assault
on Lebanon. The main international response,
effectively orchestrated by Washington, was
built around the bland assertion that Israel
has the “right to defend itself.”
Of
course, it does. But in the summer the unasked
questions were “how,” “with
what limits” and “by what means”?
It is the role of international law to provide
answers to such questions, sometimes not very
precise answers, but at least guidelines, which
commanders and sovereign governments have considerable
latitude to interpret with reference to considerations
of “military necessity.” What this
means in practice is a rather broad margin
of discretion in the international law of war
that makes unlawful only clearly outrageous
and unreasonable behavior, whether by states
or by non-state actors engaged in armed struggle.
In
the case of Israel’s summertime conflicts
on its southern and northern borders, the international
community, again led by Washington, swiftly
condemned the actions of Israel’s “extremist”
adversaries, and acquiesced in the tightening
of existing sanctions upon them by legal and
other means. Yet although Israel’s actions
in both Gaza and Lebanon were plainly unlawful
by international legal standards, there was less
condemnation and no material sanction imposed
upon Israel, least of all by the chief arbiter
of international peace and security, the UN Security
Council. The imbalance in the international response
has gravely undermined the credibility and, ultimately,
the enforceability of international legal norms,
which are only norms to the degree that they
are enforced without fear or favor.
Lawful
Limits of Self-Defense
On
June 25, 2006, fighters belonging to three
Palestinian factions, including Hamas, tunneled
under the fence separating the Gaza Strip from
Israel at the Kerem Shalom border crossing
and attacked the army post on the Israeli side.
The Palestinians killed two soldiers and snatched
a third, whom they spirited back into Gaza,
where he presumably remains captive. In an
announced attempt to retrieve the soldier,
Israel has bombed bridges and a power plant
in Gaza, stepped up artillery and aerial bombardment
of sites believed to house the ineffective
rocketeers of Hamas, launched multiple tank
incursions into Gaza, arrested tens of Hamas
parliamentarians without charge and locked
down the sole point of transit for people and
goods between Gaza and the outside world. According
to the UN, over 300 Palestinians have been
killed in the ongoing Israeli offensive.
Global
media attention shifted northward on July 12,
when Hizballah militants crossed into undisputed
Israeli territory, killing three Israeli soldiers
and abducting two others, with five additional
soldiers being killed on Lebanese territory
in the course of an attempted rescue operation.
In the ensuing month-long war, Israel bombed
bridges, roads, power plants and other civilian
infrastructure in Lebanon, and conducted multiple
strikes on Beirut neighborhoods and southern
villages it dubbed “Hizballah strongholds.”
Israel also imposed a comprehensive land, sea
and air blockade upon Lebanon. Upwards of 1,000
Lebanese were killed, and nearly one million
displaced, in the course of the bombardment,
while 39 Israeli civilians were killed, and hundreds
of thousands compelled to flee their homes, by
Hizballah’s retaliatory rocket fire. The
UN Security Council brokered a “cessation
of hostilities”
between Israel and Hizballah in mid-August, but
not between Israel and the fighters in Gaza,
where a low-level war continues to rage.
Against
the background of these events, a nasty mind
game emerged: Israel’s right to defend
itself was improperly merged with Israel’s
supposed right to act in “self-defense” as
generally understood in international law.
The trouble here was that the UN Charter and
international law have restricted valid claims
of self-defense to situations where a major “armed
attack” has occurred, precisely to avoid
authorizing wars or excessive force as legal
responses to border incidents. Indeed, the
World Court found US claims of collective self-defense
unlawful in the important 1986 case of Nicaragua
v. the United States, on the grounds that
Nicaraguan assistance to the armed insurgency
in El Salvador fell short of an “armed
attack.” Understood in this context,
Israel’s claimed right to large-scale
attacks on Gaza and Lebanon in response to
border skirmishes involving the capture of
three soldiers is certainly invalid under the
international law of self-defense.
But
there is a second layer of concern. It is assumed
in diplomatic discourse and the media that
once Israel invokes its right of self-defense,
then anything goes. This negates the role of
the law of war and international humanitarian
law, the function of which is to set limits
and provide guidelines for belligerents in
wartime situations. That is, even if Israel
had a valid basis for declaring war on Lebanon,
its conduct of that war would have to be constrained
by the requirements of the laws of war.

Firefighter
in a house damaged by a Hizballah rocket
in Kiryat Shimona, July 23, 2006. (Nir
Kafri) |
More
than international law is at stake here. To
validate the Israeli responses to the Palestinian
and Hizballah raids is to defy the rule of
reason, which underpins world order and international
law in crucial respects. It takes only a modest
imagination to envision regions in flames if
incidents of this, or even greater magnitude,
were to be seized upon by the targeted country
as occasions for general war.
If,
then, Israel has a legal right to defend itself,
but not a right of self-defense to justify
acts of war, what was it entitled to do? A
truly satisfactory answer to this question
requires a consideration of the context, including
the degree to which the Palestinian and Hizballah
raids were unprovoked rather than being part
of a prolonged series of border incidents.
But leaving aside context, Israel’s right
to defend itself clearly encompassed steps,
including border crossing, to catch and punish
the perpetrators, and quite possibly to destroy
their immediate base of operations. As Israel
exceeded these measures within a day in both
Gaza and Lebanon, the actual Israeli responses
to the raids were grossly excessive, even if
Israel is given the benefit of every doubt,
by excluding context.
Mind
games also emerged surrounding the proper body
of applicable law. Israel has always maintained
that Articles 47-78 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention, laying out the duties of an occupying
power, do not apply to its actions in the territories
taken in the 1967 war. Though Israel is alone
in this interpretation, it considers its legal
argument greatly strengthened, with regard
to Gaza, following its summer 2005 withdrawal
of settlers and soldiers from the strip. Further,
it is Israel’s claim that in both Gaza
and Lebanon its enemy is not a state, but a
non-state actor who is not a party to the four
Geneva Conventions that constitute the body
of international humanitarian law (IHL).
The
First Geneva Protocol on the Protection of
Victims of International Armed Conflict (1977)
supplements IHL by extending legal coverage
to conflicts between a state and a non-state
actor. Israel has not signed this widely ratified
treaty, and so is not directly bound by it.
But here also most of these obligations are
now regarded as customary international law,
which, like IHL itself, binds a state whether
or not it has accepted a particular treaty.
The 1977 protocol also binds non-state entities
such as Hamas and Hizballah whenever they become
participants in international conflicts. Therefore,
if the conflicts are understood as being between
Israel and Hamas on one front, and Israel and
Hizballah on the other, then both sides in
both settings are bound at least by IHL recognized
as customary.
Israel
also insisted that the failure of Lebanon,
as distinct from Hizballah, to deploy its army
against the Israeli attack confirmed its claim
that the Geneva Conventions were not applicable.
This line of argument is contrary to international
law as embodied in Common Article 3 of
these treaties, which declares that the conventions
shall apply in “any armed conflict…even
if the state of war is not recognized by one
of them,” and that parties to the conventions
remain bound “even if the…occupation
meets with no armed resistance.”
The
behavior of the various parties is all subject
to customary international law of war (CILW),
which has evolved over the centuries from its
origins in the just war tradition, and has
long been a recognized part of international
law alongside treaties and conventions. There
are four principles of CILW: the principle
of proportionality, by which a legally valid
military response must be proportional to the
provoking occasion; the principle of necessity,
by which a legally valid use of force must
be necessary to achieve a lawful goal; the
principle of discrimination, by which a legally
valid use of force must discriminate between
military and civilian targets; and the principle
of humanity, by which a legally valid use of
force must not rely on tactics that are cruel
or widely perceived as inhumane. Obviously,
these principles offer only very general guidelines
that must be adjudged in specific circumstances,
and whose proper application depends on a judicious
application of the rule of reason.
The
Gaza Offensive
Since
its 2005 “disengagement” from Gaza,
Israel has retained complete border control,
including rigid regulation of entry and exit
from the strip, and control over Gazan airspace
and offshore waters. It has also mounted frequent
armed incursions into Gaza and launched air
strikes at will. Given these realities, it
would seem appropriate to consider Gaza as
still subject to Israeli occupation until a
withdrawal occurs that is fully respectful
of Gaza’s autonomy.
This
conclusion bears upon the legal treatment of
the border incident that Israel relied upon
to launch its sustained Gaza offensive. The
narrow legal issue is whether the Kerem Shalom
raid was an act of terrorism or not. There
is a strong basis in international law for
affirming a Palestinian right of resistance,
given the prolonged occupation by Israel, the
refusal by Israel to respect UN resolutions
calling for withdrawal to the 1967 borders,
and Israel’s persistent violation of
IHL inflicting great hardship on the Palestinians
subject to the occupation.[1] Such a right of resistance does not accord impunity
to Palestinian militants who use violence directly
against Israeli civilian targets, of course.
Such methods of resistance are criminal violations
of the law of war. Since the targets on June
28 were military personnel, this incident does
not qualify as an act of terrorism or a violation
of the law of war.
At
the same time, it is a violation of IHL and
CILW to use the abducted Israeli soldier as
a “bargaining chip,” held illegally
as a
“hostage” for the sake of negotiating
a prisoner release, especially if combined with
a threat to his life. The severity of this violation
by the Palestinian militant groups is somewhat
diminished by their reiterated willingness to
negotiate his release, the refusal of Israel
to engage in diplomatic discussion with elected
Palestinian leaders and the fact that Israel
has itself frequently abducted Palestinians whom
it continues to detain without charge.
The
big legal issue arises from the disproportion,
excessiveness and indiscriminate character
of the Gaza offensive. Even if the Israeli
interpretation of the abduction incident is
fully accepted, there is scant legal justification
for the Israeli response, either from the perspective
of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions
requiring respect for the sanctity of civilian
life or by the wider standards of CILW. There
are two relevant norms set forth in the Hague
Conventions that provide a basic standard against
which to judge belligerents. First, Article 22
of Hague Convention IV on Land Warfare states
that “the right of belligerents to adopt
means of injuring the enemy is not unlimited.” This
norm incorporates a measure of proportionality
between the scale of provocation and response
that was clearly absent from Israeli actions.
Second, the so-called Martens clause in the
preamble of the Hague Convention declares that “[u]ntil
a more complete code of the laws of war has
been issued…the inhabitants and belligerents
remain under the protection and the rule of
the principles of the law of nations, as they
result from the usages established among civilized
peoples, from the laws of humanity, and the
dictates of public conscience.” On this
basis, responding to the following questions
provides a legal assessment until, if ever,
a duly constituted tribunal assesses the situation:
Was the Gaza offensive a reasonable response,
given the surrounding circumstances? Did its
particular uses of force violate the limits
imposed by IHL and CILW? The logical assessment
is that it was unreasonable with respect to
scale, scope, duration and impact on the civilian
population of Gaza, as well as with respect
to targets and methods.
Such
an assessment is reinforced by several other
considerations. Treating the Kerem Shalom incident
as “the cause” of Israel’s
offensive ignores prior and frequent Israeli
provocations in the form of unlawful uses of
force in Gaza. For instance, on June 9, 2006,
Israel fired artillery shells that struck Palestinian
civilians on the beach, killing eight and wounding
32; on June 13, Israeli aircraft fired missiles
at an ordinary van, in a supposed targeted
assassination of a Hamas leader, killing nine
Palestinian civilians; on June 20, in another
assassination attempt that misfired, three
Palestinian children were killed and 15 wounded.
Even aside from the civilian casualties, these
Israeli tactics are violations of Article 10
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
that categorically prohibits extrajudicial
executions and punishments. Moreover, with
the Gazan population already beleaguered by
denial of humanitarian foreign assistance for
several months, the offensive is most convincingly
regarded as an extreme form of collective punishment
endangering civilian health and life. Article 33
of Geneva IV categorically prohibits collective
punishments inflicted on civilians under occupation.
The conclusion that Israel knowingly engaged
in collective punishment is strongly reinforced
by the deliberate bombardment of Gaza’s
only power plant, which provided an estimated
60 percent of Gaza’s electricity and
was crucial for the maintenance of the water
purification system. Surely, this strike was
a flagrantly unlawful act of war that could
also be considered a crime against humanity.
The
Attack on Lebanon

Sausan
Qasim and her daughters stand on what
is left of the terrace of their apartment
in Haret Hreik, August 21, 2006. The
view from a downstairs
neighbor’s apartment. (Rita Leistner/Redux) |
Unlike
in the Palestinian case, Hizballah’s
raid was not immediately preceded by Israeli
provocations, although Israel has repeatedly
engaged in military operations inside Lebanon
in alleged retaliation for Hizballah actions
and hundreds of Israeli violations of Lebanese
sovereignty have been documented by the UN
Forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) since the Israeli
withdrawal from southern Lebanon in 2000. Under
the terms of Security Council Resolution 1559
(2004), the Lebanese government was under an
international obligation to disarm militias
operating within its territory—which
it had failed to do. As the hostilities in
Lebanon confirmed, Hizballah possessed an extensive
stockpile of weaponry as well as the skill
needed to inflict considerable harm on Israeli
civilian society and military capabilities.
So, the security threat posed to Israel was
more substantial and more closely linked to
the Hizballah initiating attack than in Gaza.
With these conditions in mind, Israel could
present a strong case under international law
for a significant cross-border response designed
to redress the July 12 raid and address the
longer-term Hizballah threat.
And
yet, the magnitude and scope of the Israeli
response constituted clear violations of principles
of proportionality and discrimination, and
raised major concerns about the principle of
humanity. Israel carried out heavy bombings
and shelling to hobble the overall infrastructure
of Lebanon, inflicted indiscriminate damage
on villages and southern residential sections
of Beirut where the Shi‘i population
was concentrated, and imposed a massive air,
land and sea blockade on the entire country.
To claim, as Israel did, that such targets
were linked to the border incident because
Hizballah had to be stopped from transporting
the two abducted Israeli soldiers northward
or outside Lebanon seems fatuous given the
scale of destruction and the level of civilian
suffering.
There
were also credible reports of deliberate targeting
of civilians, including people warned to leave
villages who were later attacked from the air
while fleeing in northbound convoys. The Israeli
military’s chief of staff, Gen. Dan Halutz,
reportedly ordered ten multi-story buildings
in Beirut bombed for every rocket fired on
Haifa.[2] This reported (and officially denied) order
is a vengeful tactic that qualifies as terrorism,
a collective punishment of intentionally disproportional
character that deliberately targets civilians
in an urban setting. Finally, Israel used weapons—including
cluster bombs and phosphorus bombs—that
inflict cruel injuries, raising serious questions
about legality under the principle of humanity.
According to the head of an Israeli rocket
unit, Israeli forces fired projectiles containing
over 1.2 million cluster bomblets at southern
Lebanon. “What we did was insane and
monstrous,” he said. “We covered
entire towns in cluster bombs.”[3] UN officials believe that 90 percent of the
bomblets fell in the last 72 hours before the
war ended, meaning that many were fired in
the two days between the passage of the UN
ceasefire resolution and its implementation.[4] Possibly
hundreds of thousands of the bomblets failed
to detonate on impact, and lie unexploded in
Lebanon.
Israel
claimed that the government and the people
of Lebanon were legally responsible for the
Hizballah attacks because, without their militia
having been disarmed in accordance with Resolution
1559, Hizballah members hold seats in the Lebanese
parliament and two cabinet positions. The Lebanese
government clearly lacked the capacity to disarm
Hizballah, and the departure of Syrian forces
in 2005 removed what had been an effective
control over its military operations. It is
a notable fact that, after Israeli soldiers
left Lebanon in 2000, not a single Israeli
civilian was killed by Hizballah rockets, and
only one by indirect Hizballah fire (an anti-aircraft
round loosed at an Israeli jet in Lebanese
airspace), until the summer 2006 hostilities
commenced.[5] Beyond this, there is evidence that a major military attack
on Lebanon was long in the works, and that
the July 12 incident provided a pretext.[6] In any event, the World Court in the Nicaragua
case set the bar very high in attributing to
a state and its government responsibility for
an armed movement, even when it has been financed,
trained and otherwise supported by the accused
state, which is manifestly not the case with
regard to Hizballah and Lebanon. From this
perspective, the Israeli insistence on attributing
accountability to Lebanon and its people seems
completely without legal foundation, especially
in view of the disproportionate response to
the provoking July 12 incident.
Some
analysts have suggested that among Israel’s
objectives in attacking Lebanon was the completion
of the “unfinished business” from
the May 2000 withdrawal from Lebanon, namely
the weakening of Hizballah on the domestic
Lebanese political scene.[7] The goal of altering the domestic political balance of a sovereign
country as a corollary to a military engagement
is, in effect, a policy of regime change by
another name. To the extent that such contentions
concerning Israeli objectives are correct,
they would support the claim that the Israeli
attacks on Lebanon were an aggressive war in
violation of Article 2(4) of the UN Charter.
In addition, Israel’s wartime tactics
violated fundamental rules of IHL, as well
as infringing severely on CILW.
Resolution
1701
After
a month of Israeli aerial bombardment and shelling
of Lebanon, and the introduction of Israeli
ground forces on Lebanese soil, there appeared
to be little prospect for Israel achieving
its goals, namely the military defeat of Hizballah
and the weakening of the party’s political
position within Lebanon. Contrary to repeated
Israeli assertions, there was little evidence
that Hizballah had either depleted its weapons
stock or been significantly hampered in its
operations. Further, the outrage provoked by
the Israeli assault among the Lebanese civilian
population had actually strengthened Hizballah’s
domestic stature and support. Having failed
to secure its objectives through “shock
and awe,” Israel was left with two options:
a protracted military campaign in Lebanon,
for which the Israeli public appeared to have
little appetite, particularly in light of Hizballah’s
retaliatory rocket attacks on northern Israel,
or a negotiated ceasefire. Accordingly, Israel
and the United States were forced to turn to
the UN to generate a diplomatic exit strategy.
The Israeli objectives were, however, unchanged.
The idea was now to accomplish through diplomacy
and US leverage at the UN what Israel had been
unable to accomplish with the gun.
An
initial draft ceasefire resolution was presented
to the Security Council on August 5, following
negotiations between the US, acting as Israel’s
proxy, and France, apparently acting on behalf
of the Lebanese.[8] The key features of the draft
were that it did not call for an immediate
withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanese
territory, that it demanded the cessation of
all attacks by Hizballah but permitted Israel
to continue military operations deemed to be “defensive,” and
that it deferred to a second resolution the
authorization to deploy, under Chapter VII
of the UN Charter, an international force on
Lebanese territory to implement the ceasefire.
By August 6, the Lebanese government had rejected
the resolution as a capitulation document.
By contrast, the Israelis indicated that they
were very pleased with the terms of the resolution.
In what was seen as a clear attempt to position
the Lebanese government as the rejectionist
party, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
commented upon the release of the draft that
reactions would demonstrate “who is for
peace and who isn’t.” Following
strong protest from the Arab League, the French
withdrew their support for the maximalist Israeli
position contained in the original draft and
negotiations resumed. The modifications to
the resolution over the next week were, however,
more a reflection of Israel’s ongoing
failure to achieve military victory than any
diplomatic dynamism.
The
process that ultimately yielded UN Security
Council Resolution 1701, passed on August 11,
reflects the failure of the international legal
order. First, the 34-day delay in calling for
an immediate ceasefire, despite pleas from
the Lebanese government, represents the Security
Council’s complicity in permitting an
aggressor to wage a military campaign unfettered
by the obligations of the UN Charter and the
prohibition on aggressive war. Indeed, even
after the resolution was passed, Israel was
afforded another 48 hours to accomplish further
military objectives in Lebanon, enabling it
to greatly increase its ground forces in Lebanon
prior to putting the ceasefire into effect.
This 48-hour window was contrary to Security
Council practice, whereby resolutions come
into effect immediately unless a specific timeframe
is contained in the text of the resolution.
No such timeframe is mentioned, suggesting
that the 48-hour window was simply a final
effort by the US to provide political cover
for Israel to attempt to seize some vestige
of military victory from the jaws of its defeat.
Israel was not censured in any way for using
the runup to the ceasefire to further escalate
its military presence in Lebanon. In this sense,
the UN proved not only unable to restrain Security
Council permanent members and their allies
from violating the Charter, but actually seemed
to collaborate with the violations. The circumstances
of the passage of Resolution 1701 reflect
the reality, especially acute in the post-September
11 era, that the UN is all too frequently a
geopolitical tool for powerful states rather
than an instrument for the enforcement of international
law.
Beyond
the process by which Resolution 1701 was negotiated,
the terms of the resolution itself serve to
undermine the UN’s own authority. The
very one-sidedness of the resolution is detrimental
to the foundational principle of the UN Charter,
which prohibits the waging of aggressive war.
Resolution 1701 favors the country that blew
up a border incident into an all-out war and
attacked civilian targets in Lebanon in flagrant
violation of the laws of war. The qualitatively
discriminatory nature of the resolution, particularly
when coupled with the failure to criticize
Israel’s tactics, appears to repudiate
the central tenet of the international security
system the UN was established to uphold.
Imbalances
Resolution
1701 adopts the Israeli narrative by singling
out Hizballah as having initiated hostilities
through a border attack on a single Israeli
military patrol, while failing to criticize
the disproportionate aerial bombardment and
artillery campaign directed at all of Lebanon
by the Israeli military. By identifying Hizballah
as responsible for the initiation of the conflict,
the resolution, which designates the conflict
as a “threat to international peace and
security,” suggests that the Chapter
VII authorization of UNIFIL to assist the Lebanese
army in implementing the terms of the ceasefire
might include a mandate to deal forcibly with
Hizballah as the source of the threat to international
security. This formulation not only fails to
censure the party principally responsible for
escalating the conflict, it actually rewards
Israeli use of force by suggesting that the
Israeli response may have been within the bounds
of legitimate military action. Whereas Resolution
1559 made reference to the disarming and disbanding
of militias operating in Lebanon, the relevant
provision was not governed by the Council’s
Chapter VII powers and could not be interpreted
as permitting the use of force to accomplish
such disarmament. By contrast, Resolution 1701
authorizes a peace enforcement operation that
is, by its nature, an exercise of the Council’s
Chapter VII powers. Despite subsequent indications
by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan that the
resolution does not place the disarmament of
Hizballah under a UN mandate,[9] the
reference to disarmament in a resolution which
itself is at least partially under Chapter
VII authority provides fresh ammunition for
the Israeli argument that intervention to disarm
Hizballah might be authorized. Further, by
failing to acknowledge the distinction between
Israel’s “right to defend itself”
against border raids and the Israeli escalation
of the July 12 skirmish into an all-out assault
on Lebanon, the resolution comes dangerously
close to turning an invocation of the right of
self-defense into a license to use force aggressively
and indiscriminately.
Another
respect in which the resolution favors Israel
is by prohibiting all attacks by Hizballah
while requiring Israel only to stop
“offensive military operations.” A
holdover from the previous draft, this imbalance
permitted the Israelis to not only leave their
troops on Lebanese soil despite the ceasefire
but to also continue engaging in military activities
in Lebanon, such as the “commando operation” conducted
in the Baalbek valley a week after the ceasefire
went into effect. Annan has identified this raid
as a violation of the cessation of hostilities,
along with the numerous airspace violations by
Israeli military aircraft that have been documented
by UNIFIL. The Israeli response, however, has
been that these actions are in compliance with
Resolution 1701 because Israel deems them to
be “defensive” operations. By failing
to provide a definition of “offensive military
operations,” the resolution invites this
kind of expedient self-justification.
Indeed,
Resolution 1701 further favors the Israelis
by imposing a disarmament obligation on Hizballah
with no restriction of any kind on Israeli
military policies. Arguably, with its Chapter
VII authority and inclusion of an obligation
to disarm Hizballah, this resolution is designed
to be an implementation mechanism for Resolution
1559. The Lebanese domestic context that led
to the passage of 1559 in 2004 has changed
dramatically since then, not least as a result
of Israel’s war on Lebanon. Any attempt
to forcibly disarm Hizballah today using the
Lebanese army would risk a civil war by driving
a wedge between the Lebanese government and
the Shi‘i community, which represents
over 40 percent of the Lebanese population.
Attempts to disarm Hizballah are doomed unless
the party itself, together with its supporters,
consents. But in the wake of a war that demonstrated
that an armed Hizballah may be the only force
in Lebanon capable of deterring Israeli aggression,
such consent is hardly likely. Further, to
the extent that it could be secured, it would
be through a process of national dialogue and
not by deploying the Lebanese army or an international
force to complete Israel’s mission.
These
considerations point toward another significant
failure of Resolution 1701, namely the ill-defined
mandate given to the more “robust”
UNIFIL authorized by the resolution. The new
authorization for UNIFIL appears to have been
issued under the Security Council’s Chapter
VII authority, and as such may require the force
to become involved in the disarming of Hizballah,
designated by the resolution as the responsible
party for the “threat to international
peace and security” that arose from the
war. The ambiguous mandate and the possibility
that the force would be drawn into conflict with
Hizballah or fired upon by Israel made it very
difficult to persuade countries to participate
in the mission. The French, who were initially
expected to lead the force, were reluctant to
commit a large contingent, and Israel vetoed
the participation of contingents drawn from countries
with which it does not have diplomatic relations,
such as Indonesia, Malaysia and Bangladesh, all
traditionally strong contributors to UN peacekeeping
operations. The Israeli conditions on peacekeepers,
coupled with the European desire for clear ground
rules, led to significant delays in the deployment
of an international force.
The
corollary to the failure to deploy a strengthened
UNIFIL force rapidly was the Israeli refusal,
until September, to lift the embargo it imposed
on Lebanon, prolonging the war’s burdens
on Lebanon’s civilian population. Indeed,
arguably, the ceasefire was mainly designed
to spare Israeli civilians the costs of war.
Since the only threat Israeli civilians faced
during the war was Hizballah rocket attacks,
the danger to them has been eliminated. While
the implementation of the ceasefire brought
aerial attacks by all sides to an end, the
presence of Israeli troops on Lebanese soil
left Lebanese civilians vulnerable to shelling
from ground forces, particularly since Israel
interprets the resolution as permitting
“commando operations” in residential
areas. The unexploded munitions scattered across
the southern Lebanese landscape also imperil
civilians there.
Indeed,
Resolution 1701 did not address the use of
prohibited weapons by Israel, or the use of
certain permitted weapons in unlawful ways.
Human Rights Watch and other human rights organizations
have been able to document the use by Israel
of white phosphorus, not as an illumination
device, but as an offensive chemical weapon.
Israel has subsequently conceded that it deliberately
used phosphorus shells offensively during its
2006 attack on Lebanon.[10] The Israeli use of cluster munitions in densely populated residential
areas is another example of a prohibited usage
of a weapon in violation of the laws of war.
Indeed, the use of so many cluster bombs was
equivalent to mining those civilian areas,
because so many munitions normally do not explode
on impact. As of September 28, Human Rights
Watch had documented 18 deaths and 108 injuries
from unexploded munitions in Lebanon after
the cessation of hostilities. UN humanitarian
chief Jan Egeland described the Israeli use
of cluster munitions in Lebanon as “shocking
and completely immoral.” Despite these
post-conflict denunciations of Israeli use
of cluster munitions, the deafening silence
of the Security Council about Israeli attacks
on civilian infrastructure and residential
areas in violation of the laws of war and using
prohibited weapons remains a deep indictment
of the organization. Whether subsequent efforts,
such as Amnesty International’s call
for a comprehensive and independent UN investigation
of possible war crimes committed during the
conflict, will correct this failure is yet
to be seen.[11]
The
remaining imbalances embedded in Resolution
1701 relate to the treatment of prisoners held
on both sides and the failure to address the
root causes of the conflict. First, the resolution
demands the unconditional release of two Israeli
soldiers held by Hizballah but only “encourages
efforts at settling the issue of Lebanese prisoners
detained in Israel.” These prisoners
include four whose release Hizballah negotiated
in 2004 only to have the Israelis renege at
the last minute, and the numerous Lebanese
who were captured by the Israelis during the
2006 war. While no precise number is yet available
for the latter category, at least a half dozen
were abducted during an Israeli commando raid
on a hospital in Baalbek on August 1. Those
seized included the unfortunately named Lebanese
grocer, Hassan Dib Nasrallah, and his son,
Bilal, who were quietly released by Israel
after their interrogation revealed that the
resemblance of the grocer’s name to that
of the Hizballah leader was purely coincidental.
The others abducted in that raid have joined
the ranks of Lebanese detainees held in Israel.
(The Khiam Rehabilitation Center for the Victims
of Torture, a Lebanese NGO, has a list of another
two dozen Lebanese who “disappeared”
during the 1982–2000 Israeli occupation
of southern Lebanon and may also still be in
Israeli custody.) The failure to impose symmetrical
obligations with respect to prisoners and the
failure to note that the Israelis being held
are soldiers, while Israel abducted Lebanese
civilians prior to and during the war, make a
mockery of the Geneva Conventions’ rules
of detention. Taken together, the failures of
Resolution 1701 reflect the UN’s inability
to protect a state that is the victim of aggressive
war waged by the US or its close allies. In effect,
Resolution 1701 demonstrates that where the permanent
members and their allies are concerned, the Security
Council will collaborate with the aggressor in
the post-conflict situation to ratify the effects
of the aggression.
But
perhaps the most glaring failure is the absence
of any consideration of the root causes of
the conflict between Israel and its neighbors
as part of any meaningful or tenable ceasefire.
By failing to address the ongoing and related
Israeli aggression in Gaza, the absence of
a framework for a comprehensive peace settlement
between Israel and Palestinians, and the continuing
occupation of Syrian Golan Heights (including
the Shebaa Farms), the ceasefire resolution
ensured that it could not be the basis for
anything more than a stalemate.
New
Avenues
The
implications of Resolution 1701, coupled with
the course of hostilities between Israel, Hizballah
and armed Palestinian groups in the summer
of 2006, suggest severe consequences not only
for the civilian populations caught up in the
conflicts but also for the enforceability of
the international laws of war. In addition
to the obvious need for a cessation of Israel’s
attacks in Gaza, further measures are required
to address the violations of the laws of war
that took place in these conflicts. The obvious
inability of the Security Council to take effective
steps to uphold the most basic norms of international
law must be addressed with creative international
proposals to supplement the Council when the
arbiters of geopolitics undermine its authority
to act.
Rather
than retreating cynically from the limits imposed
on the conduct of war by international law,
concerned parties should look for new avenues
for pursuing the implementation of international
humanitarian law and the international customary
laws of war. Three potential avenues are readily
identifiable. First, the parties to the Fourth
Geneva Convention should be convened to fulfill
their obligation under Article 1 to protect
the civilian populations of Lebanon and Gaza,
and explore the grounds under Article 147
for the criminal prosecution of grave breaches
of the convention. Second, a detailed request
should be submitted to the prosecutor’s
office of the International Criminal Court
to investigate all credible allegations of
violations of the laws of war and commission
of crimes against humanity during the Lebanon
war. Indeed, this call was forcefully issued
by the UN chief war crimes prosecutor for the
former Yugoslavia, Carla del Ponte, who complained
of international double standards in conflicts
where “according to credible reports,
serious violations of international humanitarian
law were committed, for instance during the
recent Israel-Lebanon conflict, but no independent
criminal investigation is taking place.”[12] Finally,
an emergency session of the UN General Assembly
should be called to explore these allegations
and establish an international commission of
eminent persons to assess the legality of Israel’s
response to border incidents, possibly including
reference to the World Court for a relevant
advisory opinion on the applicability of international
customary laws of war to the Gaza offensive
and the war in Lebanon.
Endnotes
[1] See
Richard Falk and Burns H. Weston, “The
Relevance of International Law to Palestinian
Rights in the West Bank and Gaza: In Legal
Defense of the Intifada,” Harvard
International Law Journal 32/1 (1991);
and Richard Falk, “International Law
and the al-Aqsa Intifada,” Middle
East Report 217 (Winter 2000).
[2] Jerusalem
Post, July 24, 2006.
[3] Ha’aretz,
September 12, 2006. Human Rights Watch has
documented two instances where Hizballah fired
cluster munitions, contained in Chinese-made
rockets, at the Israeli town of Maghar.
[4] Washington
Post, September 26, 2006.
[5] Augustus
Richard Norton, “The Peacekeeping Challenge
in Lebanon,” MIT Electronic Journal
of Middle East Studies 6 (Summer 2006),
p. 76.
[6] San
Francisco Chronicle, July 21, 2006.
[7] Patrick
Seale, “Why Is Israel Destroying Lebanon?” al-Hayat,
July 21, 2006. [Arabic]
[8] The
draft was printed in the New York Times,
August 5, 2006.
[9] Annan
stated explicitly that “disarming Hizballah
is not the direct mandate of the UN” in
an interview on Israel’s Channel 2 television
station. Jerusalem Post, August 16,
2006.
[10] Ha’aretz,
October 22, 2006.
[11] Amnesty
International, Deliberate Destruction or “Collateral
Damage”? Israeli Attacks on Civilian
Infrastructure (London, August 23, 2006).
[12] Agence
France Presse, October 6, 2006.

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