MELBOURNE – In international relations, manifestly illegal government action can sometimes be morally defensible. While historical examples of legitimacy trumping legality are few and far between, they do exist. The question of whether the joint U.S.-Israeli war on Iran is one such case demands more attention than it has received so far.
It should be beyond dispute that the initiation of this war by U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu flagrantly violated international law, even if many of their allies have shown a willingness to fudge this issue. Iran did not pose a threat to either country — from nuclear weapons, conventional missiles or state-sponsored terrorism — of an imminence or on a scale that could possibly justify, in the absence of the United Nations Security Council’s approval, preemptive military action as a form of self-defense. The United States and Israel acted when they did not because of Iran’s strength, but because of its relative weakness.
The attack is just the latest in a series of actions by the world’s most powerful countries — including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, China’s militarization of the South China Sea and America’s seizure of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro — that disdain international law. The collapse of whatever is left of the rules-based order is bad news for the rest of the world. It demands concerted pushback from capable middle powers, as Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney compellingly argued in his landmark Davos speech in January.
With your current subscription plan you can comment on stories. However, before writing your first comment, please create a display name in the Profile section of your subscriber account page.