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4 - Deciphering post-Charter practice: means and limits

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2009

Nikolas Stürchler
Affiliation:
Universität Basel, Switzerland
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Summary

It is better to be approximately right than exactly wrong.

John Tukey

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The previous chapters have examined historical pedigree, systemic context and case law only to arrive at the conclusion that the legal regime governing threats of force still eludes rigid legal taxonomy. The UN Charter does not define the phrase ‘threat of force’. Within the broad parameters of the drafter's intent, it remains unclear what degree of intensity or what specific conduct would violate article 2(4) or would exceptionally appear lawful under article 51. To read the travaux is to become aware of the lack – not presence – of concrete consent. Subsequent agreements and resolutions affirm but, unhelpfully, merely repeat the Charter text. The ICJ provides very limited and at times contradictory guidance. So far, however, we have not explored the question of whether UN members, who now number four times as many as in 1945, have learned to read article 2(4) differently in their sixty years of practice.

In short, the need arises to employ state practice to narrow the margins of uncertainty; to ascertain whether mobilisations of the military are permissible; which hostile promises are unjustifiable; and which responses, if any, to counter military threats are acceptable. ‘The UN Charter’, the ICJ explained in 1986, ‘by no means covers the whole area of the regulation of force in international relations’.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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