Glorified Ape said:
Since the Security Council didn't authorize the action, as per the requirements for a war to be consistent with the UN Charter, it can be said that the war IS inconsistent with the charter. As such, it's illegal and the order to participate in the war is illegal and justifiably refusable.
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I seriously doubt that that case would ever hold up though.
Disagree with the first sentence. Agree with the second. Below is a reproduction which quite pithily summarizes the legal foundation for war. As an aside from that, with 1441 the complete lack of a veto by the 3 dissenting powers renders the position of same to what at worst could be described as a minority concurring opinion. The UN Charter is a set of guiding principles which may, in some species of constitutional government, guide the interpretation of domestic law insofar as it touches upon the relations between sovereign states. No serious person of any jurispudence could truthfully describe the UN Charter as an an actual body of law. The treaties which exist within the UN and which find themselves incorporated into domestic legislation is what gives them the force of law.
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Attorney General's Iraq responses pelled out the UK Government's legal basis for military action in a parliamentary written answer.
Lord Goldsmith: Iraq has failed to comply
The Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith, spelled out the UK Government's legal basis for military action in a parliamentary written answer.
He argued that the combined effect of previous UN resolutions on Iraq dating back to the 1990 invasion of Kuwait allowed "the use of force for the express purpose of restoring international peace and security".
Below is the full text of his statement.
All of these resolutions were adopted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter which allows the use of force for the express purpose of restoring international peace and security:
1. In resolution 678 the Security Council authorised force against Iraq, to eject it from Kuwait and to restore peace and security in the area.
2. In resolution 687, which set out the ceasefire conditions after Operation Desert Storm, the Security Council imposed continuing obligations on Iraq to eliminate its weapons of mass destruction in order to restore international peace and security in the area.
Resolution 687 suspended but did not terminate the authority to use force under resolution 678.
3. A material breach of resolution 687 revives the authority to use force under resolution 678.
4. In resolution 1441 the Security Council determined that Iraq has been and remains in material breach of resolution 687, because it has not fully complied with its obligations to disarm under that resolution.
5. The Security Council in resolution 1441 gave Iraq "a final opportunity to comply with its disarmament obligations" and warned Iraq of the "serious consequences" if it did not.
The authority to use force under resolution 678 has revived and so continues today
6. The Security Council also decided in resolution 1441 that, if Iraq failed at any time to comply with and cooperate fully in the implementation of resolution 1441, that would constitute a further material breach.
7. It is plain that Iraq has failed so to comply and therefore Iraq was at the time of resolution 1441 and continues to be in material breach.
8. Thus, the authority to use force under resolution 678 has revived and so continues today.
9. Resolution 1441 would in terms have provided that a further decision of the Security Council to sanction force was required if that had been intended.
Thus, all that resolution 1441 requires is reporting to and discussion by the Security Council of Iraq's failures, but not an express further decision to authorise force.
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A cynic might note that France and others who did not participate in the fighting were flying missions over Iraq until the day before the invasion under the auspices of 678. In fact, France flew hundreds if not thousands of missions from 1991-2003.
One more point.Since the Canadian government permitted a few Canadian soldiers attached to US and UK units who served in Iraq were serving in a so called "illegal war" what purpose would be served fleeing from the US to Canada? Is Canada not equally at fault as an illegal aggressor, or is such illegality as much a question of degree as it is a state of mind?