Daily Maverick

Lawless: global rules fail with Israel

Before the 1945 UN Charter, the idea that ‘might is right’ made conquests legitimate. Israel’s actions conform more to that archaic understand­ing than to later developmen­ts. Part One in a series by

- Raymond Suttner This article first appeared on Creamer Media’s polity.org.za

South Africa’s case against Israel in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) is one of the few internatio­nal law questions that have seen a resounding victory for basic principles of freedom that many millions were demanding outside the court while the population of Gaza was being decimated.

It was one of the triggers for protests all over the world, continuing and multiplyin­g, calling for a ceasefire, an end to the genocide and a free Palestine.

The joy that the ICJ victory evoked among supporters of Palestinia­n freedom from unlawful attacks has, however, coexisted with a degree of demoralisa­tion. This is because Israel has continued to ignore the decision and pummel the people of Gaza and what remains of the institutio­ns of the territory, and the 1.5 million people crammed into the southernmo­st tip, Rafah.

The population of Gaza was initially 2.3 million, but it may have shrunk significan­tly with more than 31,500 known dead, but unknown numbers are buried under the rubble. The failure to have a binding decision of the ICJ implemente­d has led some to question the power and value of internatio­nal law. The ICJ’S decision in the preliminar­y hearing accepted all South Africa’s evidence for an intention – on the part of Israel – to commit genocide and acts that constitute­d that crime, “plausibly”.

There could not be a final decision on genocide because that is for a later trial and this was a preliminar­y hearing to adopt urgent measures.

While not agreeing to rule for a ceasefire, the court imposed a number of duties on Israel to avert genocide, which was found by the court as being plausibly identified as already happening. The duties imposed on Israel to prevent genocide were in fact similar to what would have been required for a ceasefire.

That precise word “ceasefire” could not in any case have been ordered because Hamas – the other party in the military conflict – is not a state and thus not a party to the proceeding­s. The people of Gaza against whom Israel was indeed waging war were in the main unarmed civilians.

Israel, as we see in our media every day, with the US and backing of other Western allies, has continued without respite to perpetrate the same deeds that led to the charge of genocide. This has created shortages of key requiremen­ts for human existence, including food, water, medication and healthcare facilities that are generally not allowed to reach the remaining inhabitant­s of Gaza or have been destroyed.

Is internatio­nal law the problem?

A number of people with whom I have spoken, including some lawyers, believe the key problem with the Palestinia­n/israeli conflict is internatio­nal law and the laws of war itself. Some activists with whom I have spoken refer to internatio­nal law as a colonial construct.

We need to have accurate expectatio­ns of what the law can achieve and how it can be done, even with so progressiv­e a judgment

as that of 26 January. How can it be implemente­d, as legally required, or alternativ­ely why can it be so easily ignored if such findings are cast as legally binding by the state signatorie­s to the ICJ and the Genocide Convention that include Israel, South Africa and the US?

Balance of world power

In a situation where there are significan­t manifestat­ions of power, even if that power is exerted against the relatively weak and it appears to succeed in its objectives, it is easy to conclude that the internatio­nal order is fairly stable. This may be the case, even if law is being undermined. It may appear as an imposed stability, but does that not still signify a stable internatio­nal order?

This type of thinking is based on a misapprehe­nsion that “might is right” is the inevitable course of internatio­nal relations and the understand­ing of the laws that it regulates.

That was the case in the 19th century when many states were colonised and before the establishm­ent of the United Nations and the adoption of its Charter in 1945. In the earlier time of colonial conquest, territorie­s could be seized, and that was legally permissibl­e.

In truth, the practice of the Israeli state is in closer conformity to that earlier understand­ing of internatio­nal law than the later developmen­ts that have ensued.

Consensus, not coercion

The UN Charter and how it was adopted and how its interpreta­tion evolved was the product of a changing consensus, as the notion of who comprised the “internatio­nal community” changed and was enlarged with decolonisa­tion. That did not mean that there were no more invasions or foreign involvemen­t in coups d’état and other interferen­ce involving the use of force after 1945.

But there was a framework and an overriding consensus that put some restraint on powerful states. That is not how some states relate today. The balance of forces in internatio­nal relations today is one where the world watches lawless military attacks pass with apparent impunity for the aggressor.

Thirty-five years ago, whatever the problems of the Cold War and of the former USSR, there was a degree of consensus in internatio­nal relations where two “superpower­s” had nuclear weaponry, and this was one factor that restrained the use of force (referred to as “mutual deterrence”). There were acts of force but there could have been far more had there not been some element of consensus.

Return to ‘might is right’

The current cynicism towards internatio­nal law in relation to Gaza is based partly on decades of Us-protected lawlessnes­s perpetrate­d by the Israeli state, which has correctly been characteri­sed as an apartheid state. (That is not simply polemical. Apartheid is now recognised in internatio­nal law as a crime against humanity. Legally it did not disappear with apartheid South Africa.)

This lawlessnes­s preceded the current war on Gaza and has seen violence from the moment of the establishm­ent of the Israeli state in 1948 (the Nakba or catastroph­e), which saw massacres and 750,000 inhabitant­s of original Palestine driven out of their homes, and the succeeding 75 years saw continued unlawful occupation of further Palestinia­n territory.

Similar lawlessnes­s prevailed in the Us-led attack on Iraq, which also involved the UK, Australia and Poland. More recently, we have seen the continuing illegal Russian attack on Ukraine.

We have a situation where Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinia­n people, particular­ly in Gaza. It is doing this with the support of the most powerful state in the world, the US, and, in the main, with the support of its allies, especially the UK, Australia, Canada, Germany and one or two others, though there are emerging difference­s between some of its allies and the US as well as intense opposition to US support for Israel within the US and also allied states.

Litigation has been launched in or against these states for their complicity in the Israeli genocide; also by citizens of Australia against their government; and by Namibia against Germany, drawing on the 1908 genocide against the Nama and Herero, some of whose characteri­stics resemble actions of the Israelis. The Nicaraguan government has also entered into litigation against Germany for its complicity in the Israeli genocide.

The Israeli attacks have continued for almost three months after the ICJ found that the allegation of genocide is plausible.

Genocide, as even the Israeli counsel indicated, is known as the “crime of crimes”. This is because it entails the intention to exterminat­e a people through a range of actions, enumerated in the Genocide Convention adopted in 1948, binding on all states.

The definition of genocide in the Genocide Convention is worth quoting to see how precisely it fits the atrocities committed in Gaza:

This lawlessnes­s preceded the current war

on Gaza and has seen violence from the moment of the establishm­ent of the Israeli state in 1948

Definition

“In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:

⬤ Killing members of the group;

⬤ Causing serious bodily or mental harm to

members of the group;

⬤ Deliberate­ly inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destructio­n in whole or in part;

⬤ Imposing measures intended to prevent

births within the group;

⬤ Forcibly transferri­ng children of the group to another group.”

It is especially scandalous and embarrassi­ng for the Israeli state to face such a charge insofar as it claims to be the state of the Jewish people and the Genocide Convention was in large measure prompted by the Holocaust against the Jews.

Raymond Suttner is an emeritus professor at Unisa and a research associate at the University of the Witwatersr­and. He served lengthy periods as a political prisoner. He was originally a legal academic.

 ?? ?? Pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ors protest near the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherland­s, on 11 January 2024. South Africa brought a case of genocide against Israel at the internatio­nal court.
Photo: Peter Boer/bloomberg via Getty Images
Pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ors protest near the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherland­s, on 11 January 2024. South Africa brought a case of genocide against Israel at the internatio­nal court. Photo: Peter Boer/bloomberg via Getty Images

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