It was in the
midnight of January 3rd 2020 that in an act of terrorism, the
government of the United States decided to close eyes on international law and
assassinated one of Iran’s top generals, Major General Qassim Soleimani, in a drone
strike near Baghdad International Airport.
Immediately
after the attack, Donald Trump appeared in a live address to the US military in
California and openly admitted that he did issue the order of killing General
Soleimani; “Last night, at my direction, the United States military
successfully executed a flawless precision strike that killed the number-one
terrorist anywhere in the world, Qassim Soleimani”, Trump said. Back in 2017 in
a meeting with then National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster, Trump had also expressed
a desire to target General Soleimani.
This criminal
act, the order of which was directly issued by the president of the U.S.,
Donald Trump, was strongly condemned immediately after happening by the Iranian
government and many countries in the region as well as world powers including France,
Russia and China.
Inside the US,
the move was also condemned; Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, for instance, said in
this regard that “Trump’s dangerous escalation brings us closer to another
disastrous war in the Middle East that could cost countless lives and trillions
more dollars,” he said in a statement. “Trump promised to end endless wars, but
this action puts us on the path to another one.”. meanwhile, the US Senate also
rebuke Trump’s act of terrorism and in reaction, passed a resolution the
following week to limit Trump’s power to order military action against Iran
without first seeking Congress’s permission.
But was the
assassination really against international law? The answer is yes; Under article
51 of the UN charter the use of force against any person shall be prohibited
except only under the two circumstances: first, when the use of force was
authorized by the UN Security Council and second, when a country acted in
self-defense. It is as clear as crystal that the UN Security Council did not
authorize the strike. For the attack to be considered as an act of self-defense
under international law, the US must have acted to avert an imminent attack.
However, the Article’s ambit of self-defense is only in the response to an
attack that has already been done or occurred or is underway. Thus,
self-defense is permissible only in response to armed attacks that are imminent.
Therefore, there is no room for question that the brutal assassination of Major
General Qassim Soleimani is nothing but a crime under international law. The UN
also took the same position that what the US did was indeed a breach of
international law.
A United Nations
expert investigating summary executions also said after the attack that the
United States’ targeted killing of General Qassim Soleimani of Iran was
unlawful and risked eroding international laws that govern the conduct of
hostilities. According to Agnès Callamard, the UN special rapporteur on
extrajudicial killing, "the killings of Qassim Soleimani and Abu Mahdi
al-Muhandis violates international human rights law". The brutal
assassination of General Soleimani was not the first act of terrorism by the
United States against the Irani officials and people. In fact, the U.S. has a
long-listed record of criminal acts against Iranians, including, for example, U.S.
missile attack on Iran Air Flight 655 in 1988, in which all 290 people on board
were killed, as well as the assassination of many Iranian nuclear scientists
during the recent years, in all of which the U.S. had a major role along with
Israel.
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