Why bombing Syria breaks the law | Toronto Star 
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 Why bombing Syria breaks the law | Toronto Star

By bombing Islamic State targets in Syria, Canada is breaking international law 
and is in violation of the United Nations Charter, says a former Canadian am...

        


 
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Why bombing Syria breaks the law


By bombing Islamic State targets in Syria, Canada is breaking international law 
and is in violation of the United Nations Charter, says a former Canadian 
ambassador.


By: James Bissett Published on Sat Mar 28 2015

There are a number of reasons why Canada’s military mission in Iraq should be 
extended and there seems to be wide public support for doing so. However, there 
is one more powerful reason why that extension should not involve  
<http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2015/03/25/rules-of-war-pertaining-to-canadas-planned-bombing-in-syria.html>
 the bombing of Islamic State targets in Syria.

The reason is that by doing so Canada is breaking international law and is in 
violation of the United Nations Charter. Cynics may react to this by saying, 
“So what?” They may argue that our responsibility to stop the horrors committed 
by this terrorist group overrides our obligations to follow the rule of law. 
The cynics would be wrong.

The principles of territorial integrity and state sovereignty are basic 
principles that have governed the relations between states since the Treaty of 
Westphalia in 1648. While the treaty has been violated many times in the 
intervening years, usually by acts of aggression by the more powerful 
countries, they remain the essential components of international law.

After the cataclysmic events of two world wars and the use of the atomic bomb 
against Japan, the framers of the United Nations incorporated the principles of 
territorial integrity and state sovereignty into the United Nations Charter. 
The charter was seen as the primary safeguard of peace and security in a 
nuclear age. The Helsinki Final act of 1975 reinforced these principles by 
adding to them the principle of the inviolability of borders.

These are fundamental principles and they have universal application. They 
cannot be set aside because of special cases or because they present an 
obstacle to the policy objectives of a powerful nation. The message is simple 
and clear: sovereignty cannot be violated without United Nations Security 
Council authority.

When a democratic nation such as Canada breaks international law and acts 
against the UN Charter it not only loses its moral standing in the world but 
sets a dangerous precedent to be followed by other countries, especially those 
who do not boast of their respect for law and order. It becomes even more 
serious when a democratic country violates international law more than once as 
Canada will have done if we bomb the Islamic State in Syria.

Fifteen years ago this month Canada joined NATO countries (Greece excepted) in 
the bombing of Serbia, thus violating international law, the UN Charter and 
NATO’s own Article 1 prohibiting NATO from using force to resolve international 
disputes and to act always in accordance with the UN Charter. Later, Canada 
again broke the law by following the U.S. in recognizing the unilateral 
declaration of Kosovo’s independence from Serbia (there was no referendum).

The illegal bombing of Serbia and the recognition of Kosovo were justified on 
the grounds that genocide and ethnic cleansing were taking place in Kosovo by 
Serbian security forces. These charges were later proven by the United Nations 
to be highly exaggerated. Forensic experts were unable to find any evidence of 
mass killings and the refugee exodus out of Kosovo took place after the bombing 
started.

Nevertheless, NATO’s support of the Albanians in Kosovo continues to be 
heralded in the West as a model of how humanitarian intervention should work. 
Not everyone agrees.

The current President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, warned that recognizing 
Kosovo’s independence would set a bad precedent and would encourage others 
desiring independence to ignore international law and follow the Kosovo 
example. He indicated that he, too, might like to see a number of Russian 
minority groups in the former Soviet Union become independent.

President Putin’s warnings were ignored. His incorporation of Crimea into 
Russia should not have come as a surprise.

We hear very little today about NATO’s intervention in the Balkans and Canada’s 
role in the bombing of Serbia. However, it was then that the western 
democracies first violated the UN Charter and international law. A precedent 
was set and the framework of international security suffered a serious breach. 
It was set back again with the United States invasion of Iraq and will be again 
if we take part in the bombing of Syria.

James Bissett is a former Canadian ambassador to Yugoslavia, Albania and 
Bulgaria.

 

 

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