chamo
17th March 2003, 20:06
Keir Starmer
Monday March 17, 2003
The Guardian
The legal community is deeply divided on the question of the legality of using force against Iraq in the absence of a further UN resolution. There are two camps. The first takes the view that military action can be justified without a further resolution either on the basis of self-defence or on the basis that previous UN resolutions, including resolution 1441, authorise the use of force. The second takes the opposite view that, as things stand, there is no actual or imminent threat from Iraq that would justify a "self-defence" response by the UK and that nothing in resolution 1441, or any other UN resolution, authorises the use of force without a further resolution giving clear authority to do so.
The government has been advised on the issue by Lord Goldsmith, the attorney general. His advice is to be disclosed today. All the prime minister has been prepared to say so far is that the UK will not take any action that does not have a "proper legal basis", as he made clear in his answers in parliament last week.
Full Story - http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,276...,915579,00.html (http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,915579,00.html)
(Edited by happyguy at 5:31 pm on Mar. 18, 2003)
Monday March 17, 2003
The Guardian
The legal community is deeply divided on the question of the legality of using force against Iraq in the absence of a further UN resolution. There are two camps. The first takes the view that military action can be justified without a further resolution either on the basis of self-defence or on the basis that previous UN resolutions, including resolution 1441, authorise the use of force. The second takes the opposite view that, as things stand, there is no actual or imminent threat from Iraq that would justify a "self-defence" response by the UK and that nothing in resolution 1441, or any other UN resolution, authorises the use of force without a further resolution giving clear authority to do so.
The government has been advised on the issue by Lord Goldsmith, the attorney general. His advice is to be disclosed today. All the prime minister has been prepared to say so far is that the UK will not take any action that does not have a "proper legal basis", as he made clear in his answers in parliament last week.
Full Story - http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,276...,915579,00.html (http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,915579,00.html)
(Edited by happyguy at 5:31 pm on Mar. 18, 2003)