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The Legality of the 1993 US Missile Strike on Iraq and the Right of Self-Defence in International Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2008

Extract

In the early evening hours of Saturday, 26 June 1993, the United States launched a missile attack on Iraq. Twenty-three Tomahawk sea-to-ground missiles were fired from two US warships, the USS Chancellorsville and the USS Peterson, located in the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea respectively.1 Sixteen of those launched hit their desired military target, the Military Intelligence Headquarters, situated just outside the Iraqi capital of Baghdad. A further four missiles fell within the compound of the intelligence service complex. Conflicting reports put the death toll at between six and eight civilians, with 20 injured, when the remaining three missile warheads went astray.2 The Venezuelan Embassy was also reported to have been damaged.3

Type
Shorter Articles, Comments and Notes
Copyright
Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 1996

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References

1. Fourteen Tomahawk cruise missiles were launched from the USS Peterson and the remaining nine from the USS Chancellorsville: Evans, “Clinton Opts For Tomahawk”. The Times (London), 28 June 1993, p.3.

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10. UN Doc.S/26003 (26 June 1993).

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42. Caroline case, supra n.24.

43. Supra n.10.

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46. See the comment of General Colin Powell: “What we didn't want to do is go all over Baghdad blowing up headquarters and palaces and other targets that might result in a lot of civilian casualties.” Quoted in Cockburn, “Tomahawk Signals Limits of US Power”. Independent (London), 28 June 1993, p.8. Powell estimated that the missile strike could involve the loss of a dozen lives in the neighbourhoods surrounding the Iraqi intelligence headquarters: Clift et al., op. cit. supra n.38.

47. See e.g. the view of Sir David Hannay, the British Representative to the UN, who considered the strike a “proper and proportionate” response to the Iraqi sponsorship of a terrorist act: supra n.14.

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59. Nicaragua, supra n.21, at p.103, para.195. Although see the dissenting opinion of Judge Jennings, who, at p.543. argued for a broader notion of “armed attack”. The narrowness of the ICJ's interpretation has been criticised by Hargrove, , “The Nicaragua Judgment and the Future of the Law of Force and Self-Defence” (1987) 81 A.J.I.L. 135.Google Scholar

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68. Egypt is reported to have considered “selective but aggressive” military action against Sudan for its alleged involvement in the failed assassination attempt on the life of President Hosni Mubarak in Ethiopia in June 1995: Sackur, and Huband, , “Egyptian Hardliners Call for Attack over Sudan Hit Squad”, Observer (London), 2 07 1995, p.14.Google Scholar

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72. Supra n.10.

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81. For a suggestion that this is the present state of the law, see Shaw, , International Law (3rd edn, 1991), p.728, although the precise circumstances in which the use of force may be used in self-defence in response to State-sponsored terrorism are not specified.Google Scholar

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85. Colvin, , “Iraq Plot to Kill Saddam ‘Betrayed By Washington’”, Sunday Times (London), 31 10. 1993, p.I.1.Google Scholar Although the US State Department issued a statement denying the existence of such a plot: see “Americans Deny Saving Saddam”, Independent (London), 8 11. 1993, p.10.Google Scholar

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