Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2019
Over the last decade, the concept targeted killing has received much attention in debates on the customary interpretation of the right to self-defence, particularly in the context of practices such as US armed drone attacks. In these debates, government silence has often been invoked as acquiescence to the jus ad bellum aspects of targeted killing. Focusing on the question of state silence on targeted killing practices by the Israeli and US governments in recent years, this article investigates over 900 UN Security Council and Human Rights Council debates and argues that there has been no tacit consent to targeted killing. The analysis firstly shows that the majority of states have condemned Israeli targeted killing practices and have raised concerns about armed drone attacks, while falling short of directly protesting against US practices. The article, secondly, applies the customary international law requirements for acquiescence and challenges the idea that silence on US armed drone attacks can be understood as a legal stance towards targeted killing. The article, finally, investigates the political context and engages with alternative interpretations of silence. Contextualizing acts of protest and lack of protest within an asymmetrical political context, the article posits that the invocation of silence as acquiescence in the case of targeted killing is problematic and risks complicity of legal knowledge production with the violence of hegemonic actors.
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34 Military and Paramilitary Activities In and Against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United States Of America), Merits, Judgment of 27 June 1986, [1986] ICJ Rep. 14.
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37 Koh, U.S. Department of State, supra note 23.
38 It has thus been argued that ‘the armed conflict between U.S. military forces and those of the Taliban inside and outside of Afghanistan since October 7, 2001 is an international armed conflict’ within the framework of which ‘all of the customary laws of war apply’, see Paust, supra note 28, at 261.
39 Brennan, supra note 28.
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49 These practices were discussed during a number of Security Council debates and resolutions; see, for example, UNSC, Provisional verbatim record of the 2674th meeting, held at Headquarters, New York, on Tuesday, 15 April 1986, UN Doc. S/PV.2674(1986); UNSC, Israel-Lebanon, UN Doc. S/RES/425(1978); UNGA, Declaration of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the Organization of African Unity on the aerial and naval military attack against the Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya by the present United States Administration in April 1986, UN Doc. A/RES/41/38(1986).
50 See E. Schweiger, ‘The Lure of Novelty: “Targeted Killing” and Its Older Terminological Siblings’, OUP, 3 June 2019, available at doi.org/10.1093/ips/olz006
51 O’Connell, supra note 2.
52 Linderfalk, U., ‘The Post-9/11 Discourse Revisited: The Self-Image of the International Legal Scientific Discipline’, (2010) 2 Goettingen Journal of Intenational Law 893 Google Scholar, 939.
53 House of Lords, House of Commons, Joint Committee on Human Rights, supra note 2.
54 P. Starski, ‘Silence within the Process of Normative Change and Evolution of the Prohibition on the Use of Force’, 15 October 2016, Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law & International Law (MPIL) Research Paper No. 2016-20, available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2851809, at 15.
55 Brookman-Byrne, supra note 30.
56 UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (4929th Meeting): The situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question, UN Doc. S/PV.4929(2004).
57 Ibid.
58 Ibid.; see also Algeria, United Kingdom, Pakistan, Chile, Russia, Spain, Germany, France, Libya, Egypt, Quatar, the League of Arab States, Bahrain, Ireland, Jordan, Tunisia, and Indonesia.
59 UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (4945th Meeting): The situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question, UN Doc. S/PV.4945(2004).
60 Ibid.
61 Ibid.
62 Representative of Jordan in UNSC, UN Doc. S/PV.4929(2004), supra note 56.
63 UNSC, UN Doc. S/PV.4945(2004), supra note 59; UNSC; United Nations Security Council Debate (4934th Meeting): The situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question, UN Doc. S/PV.4934(2004); UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (4357th Meeting): The situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian Question, UN Doc. S/PV.4357(2001).
64 UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (4588th Meeting): The situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question, UN Doc. S/PV.4588(2002).
65 See for example UNSC, UN Doc. S/PV.4929(2004), supra note 56; UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (5411st Meeting): The situation in the Middle East, incuding the Palestinian question, UN Doc. S/PV.5411(2006); UNSC, UN Doc. S/PV.4945(2004), supra note 59.
66 The representative of Austria for example ‘supported the Secretary-General’s call to ensure that attacks by armed drones complied fully with international humanitarian law and human rights laws’ in UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (7109th Meeting): Protection of civilians in armed conflict UN Doc. S/PV.7109(2014), 44; see also UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (6980th Meeting): Children and armed conflict - Report of the Secretary-General on children and armed conflict (S/2013/245), UN Doc. S/PV.6980(2013); UNSC, United Nations Security Council Debate (6917th Meeting): Protection of civilians in armed conflict - Letter dated 4 February 2013 from the Permanent Representative of the Republicof Korea to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General (S/2013/75), UN Doc S/PV.6917(2013).
67 Gray, supra note 10, at 166.
68 HRC, UN Doc. A/HRC/28/38(2014), supra note 2, para. 38. Amongst the participating states were Brazil, Chile, China, France, Germany, Russia, South Africa, UK, and USA
69 Ibid., para. 37.
70 Ibid., para. 33.
71 HRC, Resolution Ensuring Use of Remotely Piloted Aircraft or Armed Drones in Counter-Terrorism and Military Operations in Accordance with International Law, Including International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, UN Doc. A/69/53 (2014), 86–8.
72 Ibid.; amongst them Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, Indonesia, Pakistan, Peru, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and South Africa.
73 Ibid.; USA, UK, Japan, France, Republic of Korea, and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
74 Ibid.
75 HRC, UN Doc. A/HRC/28/38(2014), supra note 2.
76 Ibid., para. 31.
77 HRC, ‘Human Rights Council extends mandates on Syria, Iran, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and Myanmar’, 28 March 2014, available at http://www.ohchr.org/en/HRBodies/HRC/Pages/NewsDetail.aspx?NewsID=14455&LangID=R.
78 Ibid.
79 HRC, Resolution Ensuring Use of Remotely Piloted Aircraft or Armed Drones in Counter-Terrorism and Military Operations in Accordance with International Law, Including International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, UN Doc. A/70/53(2015), 34–5.
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81 UNGA, Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism, UN Doc. A/RES/68/178(2013), para. 6(s).
82 UNGA, UN Doc. A/68/389(2013), supra note 25.
83 HRC, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms While Countering Terrorism, UN Doc. A/HRC/34/61(2017), 61.
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120 ILC, UN Doc. A/CN.4/682, supra note 7, para. 23.
121 Ibid.; G. Danilenko, Law-Making in the International Community (1993), 108.
122 See, for a similar argument, Linderfalk, supra note 52, at 932.
123 ILC, UN Doc. A/CN.4/682, supra note 7.
124 Ibid.
125 ILC, Identification of Customary International Law. Text of the Draft Conclusions Provisionally Adopted by the Drafting Committee, UN Doc. A/CN.4/L.872(2016), Conclusion 10(3) (emphasis added).
126 Starski, supra note 54, at 38.
127 Brookman-Byrne, supra note 30.
128 See, for example, House of Lords, House of Commons, Joint Committee on Human Rights, supra note 2; Dorsey and Paulussen, ICCT Research Paper, supra note 1; A. Dworkin, ‘Policy Brief: Drones and Targeted Killing: Defining a European Position’, July 2013, European Council on Foreign Relations, available at www.ecfr.eu/page/-/ECFR84_DRONES_BRIEF.pdf.
129 Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, ‘Doc. 13928, Reply to Recommendation 2069, Drones and Targeted Killings: The Need to Uphold Human Rights and International Law’, 8 December 2015, available at http://assembly.coe.int/nw/xml/XRef/Xref-XML2HTML-en.asp?fileid=22301&lang=en.
130 Ibid., para 2.
131 HRC, UN Doc. A/HRC/28/38(2014), supra note 2, para. 56.
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138 UNSC, UN Doc. S/PV.5411(2006), supra note 65.
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140 ILC, UN Doc. A/CN.4/682, para. 22.
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151 Ibid.; Olivier Corten similarly points to the legal debates on the invasion of Yugoslavia in which practices by NATO states were emphasized while ‘the reticence and protest of other [non-NATO] states (such as members of the non-aligned movement), on the other hand, were minimized; ignored, even’, in Corten, supra note 10, at 811.
152 Peshawar High Court, Judgment of 11 April 2013, Writ Petition No. 1551-P/2012.
153 European Parliament, Resolution 2014/2567 (RSP), supra note 2.
154 Plaw and and Reis, supra note 8, at 243.
155 Chimni, supra note 144, at 19; see also Stern, supra note 144; Bradley and Gulati, supra note 11.
156 Schweiger, supra note 132.