Business World

A president of lesser violence

-

Vociferous doubts continue regarding the legality of the US’ drone strike that killed Iranian General Qasem Soleimani. The crucial factor remains the unknown facts, over which hinges the applicable law and its implicatio­ns.

The point being made here is not that a conclusive case presently exists for Trump’s actions to be categorize­d as legal or illegal, but only that an argument can be made for its legality. The significan­ce of that distinctio­n has to do with present political and military circumstan­ces.

UC Berkeley law professor John Yoo makes it clear that “no American law prohibits the targeting of specific enemy leaders. Neither the Constituti­on nor federal statutes prevent the direct targeting of individual members of the enemy.”

This is bolstered by the US’ long practiced “policy of using targeted strikes to kill enemy leaders. After the 9/11 attacks, the Bush administra­tion launched a program of drone strikes and Special Forces attacks to kill leaders of al- Qaeda and insurgent groups in Iraq and Afghanista­n. Not only did Barack Obama continue these policies, he also launched an air war against Libya that sought as one of its goals to kill its leader, Moammar Qaddafi, in order to trigger regime change. Few, if any, Democratic officials criticized Obama for engaging in illegal assassinat­ion or for launching strikes in Libya or, later, in Syria, without congressio­nal approval.”

Constituti­onal law expert Alan Dershowitz agrees: “The targeting of Soleimani was more justified, as a matter of law, than the targeting of Osama bin Laden in 2011. The killing of Soleimani was in large part an act of prevention, whereas the killing of Bin Laden was primarily an act of retaliatio­n. Would anyone doubt that if Mr. Clinton had succeeded in killing Bin Laden before 9/11, as he tried to do, such an action would have been legal under American law? So, too, was it legal for Mr. Trump to order the targeted killing of Soleimani, who was planning to continue his killing spree against Americans.

“The killing of Soleimani was also entirely legal under internatio­nal law. The Quds Force commander was a combatant in uniform who was actively engaged in continuing military and terrorist activities against Americans. The rocket that killed him and a handful of others was carefully calibrated to minimize collateral damage, and the resulting death toll was proportion­ate to the deaths it may have prevented.

“The killing took place in a foreign country, but so did the killing of Bin Laden and others who have been targeted... All the relevant criteria for legality under internatio­nal law — using authorized and proportion­ate force to kill a combatant who is engaged in continuing violence — have all been met in this case.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines