Friday, November 06, 2009

Goldstone Says Gaza Op Legal?

In a debate with former Israeli UN ambassador Dore Gold, Judge Goldstone stated (in response to criticisms that his report neglected Israel's right to defend itself):
"Israel not only has the right to defend its citizens, but the duty to do so according to international law. The military operation is legal. In this context, the committee found that Hamas and other organizations had committed war crimes against civilians in southern Israel. The rockets terrorized women and children every day. This was mentioned in the report in detail," the judge argued.

Emphasis added. It's a little unclear, but Judge Goldstone has persistently sought to distinguish the jus ad bellum aspects of the conflict (the decision to go to war) from the jus in bellum aspects (how the war is prosecuted), claiming his mandate was only to investigate the latter. Of course, he is perhaps the only person who has held to that distinction in the ensuing debate over the controversy. I think the contours of how Goldstone's report was received would have changed dramatically if he had written: a) Israel unambiguously was within its rights to launch a military strike into Gaza in response to rocket attacks, and b) the manner in which the campaign was prosecuted at times amounted to war crimes. Part "b" of that formulation came through quite prominently, part "a" not at all.

But the passage above is still slightly opaque, so I don't want to say with total confidence that Judge Goldstone is endorsing the jus ad bellum legality of Cast Lead.

3 comments:

Cory said...

Actually, Professor Chinken, also part of the Goldstone pannel has also made the distinction between jus in and jus ad bello.

The differnce is, she made it when it became clear that she had signed a letter suggesting that Israel had no right to go to war in Gaza. It's what she used to deflect calls for her to recuse herself.

http://buckeach.blogspot.com/2009/08/cotler-and-queen-of-hearts.html

Anonymous said...

Why is there any obligation to positively affirm the legality of anything? If the point of the investigation is to find war crimes I don't see why there would be. It's like people claiming a domestic court "found X innocent" when no such legal determination exists.

PG said...

Anonymous,

Why is there any obligation to positively affirm the legality of anything?

Because even at the individual level, criminal law recognizes certain defenses, such as that of self-defense against a physical attack. If self-defense is not legal, then one cannot be found innocent of the crime of assault or murder by reason of self-defense. So an important part of a criminal inquiry would be whether one's actions were legal as self-defense.