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Baltimore Jewish Times Opinion: A Right To Attack by Jay Sekulow and Robert Ash. rss feedComments (0)

A Right To Attack

March 16

Jay Sekulow and Robert Ash

In a world where nuclear weapons could soon be in the hands of a rogue nation like Iran, an Israeli preemptive strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities would be fully justified.  Despite its ban on aggressive war,  Article 51 of the U.N. Charter clearly recognizes a state’s inherent right of self-defense. Thus, Israel has full authority to act unilaterally or collectively in its self-defense.

Yet Article 51 does not create the right to self-defense; it is an inherent right of all states under customary international law. Hence, determining when self-defense is appropriate lies, as it always has, with each state.

Under the charter, the U.N. Security Council is charged with lifting the burden of individual national self-defense and taking appropriate steps to restore international peace and security. One must recognize, however, that the muscular Security Council envisioned in the charter has never materialized. As such, threatened states are almost always required to make their own decisions and bear their own burdens.

Article 51 allows Israel to use aggressive force against Iran’s nuclear program if an “armed attack” occurs. Its plain language is satisfied when one state has used armed force to attack another state. Under customary international law, a preemptive strike also is permitted when an armed attack is imminent.

Thus an Israeli attack would be legitimate because:

• Iran already is conducting armed attacks through Islamist terrorist surrogates Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hamas;

• And even if one questions this, Iran’s development of weapons of mass destruction constitutes an imminent, existential threat to Israel.

Under customary international law, the “armed attack” requirement that evokes a right of self-defense can occur when a state perceives that such an attack is “immediately impending and inevitable.”

Historically, two elements must be met to legitimize a preemptive strike: proportionality and necessity.

For the necessity element, the acting state must have exhausted all other alternatives of dealing with the problem, and the threat from the hostile state must be imminent; imminence related to necessity will be the most contested issue in deciding the strike’s legality.

The traditional definition for imminent is when there is “some outward act that initiates the attempt to harm such that the actual harm is close at hand.” Historically an attack was considered imminent when a state could see the mobilization of enemy armed forces preparing for attack.

Yet the more “modern” definition has lagged behind the development of technology, particularly WMDs and their rapid means of delivery. Under the historic definition, Israel likely could be required to wait until nuclear warheads were attached to missiles and about to be launched. But that would be too late.

If Israel deems that Iran is actively preparing for a nuclear attack against the State of Israel (an opinion amply supported by Iran’s continuous bellicose threats), the threat would be imminent. As such, Israel would be justified in making a preemptive strike against Iran’s, as long as the attack were proportional and Israel had exhausted all other meaningful alternatives.

While the general rule in international law is that a state may not initiate aggressive war toward another state, an Israeli attack on Iranian nuclear facilities would not qualify as aggressive war; it would simply reflect Israel’s inherent right to self-defense.

Jay Sekulow is chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice, based in Washington.  Robert Ash is the group’s senior counsel.