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German court declares Iraq war violated international law
By Justus Leicht
27 September 2005
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Just a few weeks ago, a highly significant judicial decision
was handed down by the German Federal Administrative Court but
barely mentioned in the German media. With careful reasoning,
the judges ruled that the assault launched by the United States
and its allies against Iraq was a clear war of aggression that
violated international law.
Further, they meticulously demonstrated that the German government,
in contrast to its public protestations, had assisted in the aggression
against Iraq without having any legal right to do so. Although
the decision was made three months ago, the judgement and its
legal arguments have only just been made available in written
form, comprising more than 130 pages.
The decision was made in relation to legal proceedings initiated
by a German army officer who had refused to obey an order following
the invasion of Iraq by the US-led coalition of forces because
he feared that he would in effect be supporting the war. As a
result, he was demoted from major to captain and the army filed
a criminal complaint against him for insubordination. In its latest
judgement, the Federal Administrative Court reversed the demotion
and said the charges against the officer contravened Article 4,
Paragraph 1 of the German Constitution, which guarantees the right
to freedom of conscience.
The 48-year-old career soldier was assigned to work on the
development of a computer program that he feared could be employed
in the war against Iraq war. He informed his superior that he
could not carry out the order. He then sought the army chaplain
and his units doctor and informed them that, in his opinion,
based on what he had read in the German press, the war contravened
international law. The doctor then sent him to a psychologist
and even arranged for him to be examined to determine his mental
sanity in an army hospitala reaction that reminds one of
Franz Kafkas novels and the actions taken by Stalinist regimes
against dissidents.
His superior also sent him to the army units legal advisor
so that the legal background could be explained to
him. The advisor threatened him with dishonourable discharge and
demotion. The soldier challenged the legal advisor over the wars
legality under international law, prompting the advisor to turn
to the German defence ministry.
The advisor received a written reply stating that although
the German government rejected the war, it had given permission
to the US and Great Britain to use its airspace and their military
bases in Germany, as well as agreeing to the operation of German
AWACS airplanes for the surveillance of Turkish airspace.
The defence ministry defended its stance by citing Germanys
obligation as a member of NATO to assist the US and Great Britain,
and United Nations resolution 1441, which threatened Iraq with
serious consequences unless it proved that it had destroyed its
weapons of mass destruction. It was an open question
whether the employment of military measures required another UN
Security Council resolution, the ministry said.
In other words, the German coalition government of the Social
Democratic Party (SPD) and the Green Party used exactly the same
legal reasoning as the Bush administration. As the officer was
not prepared to accept these arguments and maintained his refusal
to obey orders, he was demoted and a complaint filed against him.
The German Federal Administrative Court has now pulled this argument
to pieces and overturned it juridically.
Grave concerns for international law
Due to strong public resistance to the remilitarisation of
Germany after the Second World War, under conditions in which
the army leadership initially consisted largely of former members
of the Nazi Wehrmacht, the rebuilding of the German army in the
1950s was tied to a series of democratic provisions. This included
the right to not follow orders that contravened human dignity,
the constitution or German law, or that violated international
law.
The Constitutional Court, however, left open whether such criteria
applied in this case. It said a decision on this issue did not
have to be made. The defendants complaint was upheld because
he made a difficult decision based on his conscience under special
circumstances.
The court left no doubt, though, that it had grave concerns
for international law arising from the Iraq war and Germanys
support for it.
The court referred to Article 4, Paragraph 4 of the United
Nations Charter, which classifies every threat and
use of military force against another nation as an act of aggression.
It specifies only two exceptions: a formal resolution of the UN
Security Council and for self-defence purposes. Neither of these
was the case with Iraq.
In particular, the United States had no legal basis for attacking
Iraq based on previous UN resolutions that it itself had introduced.
UN Resolution 678 in 1990 had only authorised the expulsion of
Iraq from Kuwait. The ceasefire Resolution 687 in 1991 certified
that this aim had been realised. This resolution also threatened
Iraq with serious consequences if it used poisonous
gasses or other biological weapons and renewed the demand for
Iraq to maintain a clear distance from international terrorism.
This resolution was accepted by Iraq.
The court stated that UN Resolution 707 in 1991 did not revoke
the ceasefire nor has it since been repealed. No subsequent resolution
contained a justification for military operations, not even in
relation to forcing Iraq to cooperate with weapons inspectors.
This fact was seen by the court as particularly valid in relation
to Resolution 1441, passed on November 8, 2002, which was later
used by the US and Great Britain to justify war.
This resolution gave instructions to the chief weapons inspectors,
Hans Blix and Mohamed El-Baradei, to report any lack of cooperation
from Iraq to the UN Security Council, so that it could properly
assess the situation. The decisions that the UN Security Council
would then take in such a situation were left open, according
to the court.
Although the Security Council threatened serious consequences,
it did not make explicit what form they would take. On the contrary,
Resolution 1441 expressed unmistakably, according
to the court, that the matter had yet to be determined by the
Security Council. The court argued that the resolution did not
give a free hand for military action, but ratherbased on
the UN Charterleft the decision about any consequences to
the UN.
With the formulation serious consequences, Resolution
1441 only issued a general warning, but had deliberately distanced
the Security Council from authorising the use of force by the
US and the UK.
The court argued that only if the UN Security Council resolution
text had explicitly provided for the use of military force, within
the confines of the UN Charter, would military action against
Iraq have been permitted. An apparent silence, or
the position that the meaning of serious consequences
was left unclarified, did not suffice to justify military action.
The court also did not consider the objection valid that the
resolution text was interpreted differently by the US and UK.
It stated: For the determination of what the UN Security
Council had decided in one of its resolutions, what is decisive
is not what government representatives thought about
the proceedings and resolutions themselves. It is far more dependent
on what was actually laid down in the text of the agreed resolution.
If it is not in the text, an appropriate draft resolution is lacking.
The mental reservations of governments or their representatives
are not valid insofar as international law is concerned.
The text of Resolution 1441 showed, on the contrary, that an
exemption to the fundamental prohibition on the use of force had
not been decided on. Nowhere did it contain an endorsement or
an authorisation for any government or state to use force according
to Chapter VII of the UN Charter. The term authorisation
in this context did not even appear anywhere in the resolution.
The attempt of the governments in the US, UK and Spain to have
a resolution passed immediately before the start of the war that
would have authorised military action did not find majority support
in the Security Council. To avoid the resolution being defeated,
the draft resolution was withdrawn.
German support for the war violated international
law
What was particularly noteworthy was that the judges continually
referred to a paper published by the scientific study service
of the German parliament committee on January 2, 2003, that also
concluded that the UN resolutions did not legitimise an attack
on Iraq. Even if one assumes that not every parliamentarian read
this paper, one has to assume, at the very least, that members
of the cabinet and German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder himself
must have been made aware that the Iraq war violated international
law.
The court said that the US and UK had, in their diplomatic
notes to the UN Security Council, nowhere made a substantiated
claim that a dangerous situation existedsomething necessary
if a right to self-defence was being put forward as the justification.
The court devoted much detail to the logistical support provided
by Germany to the warin particular, the use of military
bases and the fly-over rights for the US and UK.
It soberly declared: The support for an illegal military
action can not only be expressed through military participation
in combat operations, but also in other ways. A breach of international
law can be committed through an action orwhen an obligation
exists under international lawthrough inaction. Support
given to an offence under international law is itself an offence.
Article 26 of the German constitution, which prohibits the preparation
of an illegal war, prohibits even more forcefully any support
of such a war.
The obligations of Germany under international law were sourced
to Resolution 3314, passed by a general sitting of the United
Nations on December 14, 1974, the works of the International Law
Commission of the United Nations, and various international treaties
and customs that stem back to the Hague Convention of 1907.
The last-mentioned prohibited states from allowing their territory
to be used for the transport of troops or military supplies. The
Hague Convention also prohibited third nations from supplying
telecommunication services in every form as well as airspace rights.
By Article 25 of the German constitution, these general rules
of international law, as part of German federal law, take priority
over other laws.
The claim of the German government that it had a partner
duty as a member of NATO did not invalidate these rules.
The NATO Treaty refers to the UN Charter and does not compel its
member states to support wars conducted by other NATO members
that violate international law. In addition, the court stated
that the clause that specifies supporting other NATO members only
applies in those cases where an armed conflict takes
place inside NATO territory. Nor did the NATO Council agree to
any kind of cooperative action in the case of war with Iraq. In
addition, the NATO Treaty contained a clauseinserted in
1949 at the behest of the USwhere member states cannot be
forced to fulfil obligations to the NATO Treaty or its implementation
if this violates their own national constitutions.
The German government also did not have the right to offer
its support for the war for political reasons, as it was bound
to the rule of law by Article 20, paragraph III of the Constitution
and by Article 25 to the general regulations of international
law.
At first glance, it is amazing that this judgement did not
make larger waves, as the German government has effectively been
accused of violating both the German constitution and international
law. The governments claim that it did everything in its
power to prevent war in Iraq was proven to be false by one of
the highest courts in the land. Not only did the government have
the legal possibility, but it also had the responsibility to bar
use of German airspace and bases on German soil from use for the
Iraq war.
In most of the media, Gerhard Schröder is celebrated for
his supposed anti-war stance. Others accuse the SPD-Green coalition
government of having damaged the transatlantic alliance with the
United States over its handling of the Iraq war. If a coalition
government consisting of the Christian Democratic Union, Christian
Social Union and Free Democratic Party emerges out of the recent
German elections, it will either continue the policy of Schröder
or bring Germany closer to the USand most likely confront
decisions similar to those made by Schröder the next time
the US attacks a country. As for the recently formed Left Party-Party
of Democratic Socialism, one only needs to note that its leading
candidate, Gregor Gysi, has praised Schröders policy
with regard to Iraq.
See Also:
Munich Security Conference
Schröder demands role for Germany as world power
[18 February 2005]
Paris and Berlin consider
military intervention in Iraq
[28 January 2004]
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