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Judgement of the ICJ
U.S. attacks on Iranian oil platforms were not justifiable as self defence
Pieter H.F. Bekker
On
November 6, 2003, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the principal
judicial organ of the United Nations located in The Hague, The Netherlands,
ruled, by 14 votes to two, that a series of retaliatory attacks by the
US Navy against certain Iranian oil platforms in the Persian Gulf in 1987
and 1988, although constituting an unlawful use of force, did not violate
a 1955 commerce treaty between the US and Iran since the attacks did not
adversely affect freedom of commerce between the territories of the parties.
The judges from Egypt and Jordan dissented. The ICJ also rejected, by
15 votes to one, the US counterclaim seeking a finding of Iran's liability
for interfering with the freedoms of commerce and navigation in the Gulf
by attacking ships through missiles and mines.
The
judgement, which comes at a time when the requirements for the use of
force are hotly debated among UN member states, includes important statements
regarding the legal limits on the use of force, including the criteria
of necessity and proportionality.
Historical
background
On September 22, 1980, Iraqi military forces invaded Iran, triggering
a war that lasted almost eight years. Although the war was initially limited
to a land war between Iran and Iraq, it spread to the Persian Gulf in
1984 when Iraq began attacking oil tankers on their way to and from Iranian
ports, in an attempt to disrupt Iran's oil exports. This resulted in the
so-called Tanker War, which ended with the general ceasefire in August
1988. During the Tanker War, Iran retaliated against Iraqi attacks by
attacking and mining mostly neutral-flag ships coming from or destined
for ports in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, in disregard of the rules on neutral
shipping and naval warfare. More than a third of the 550 or so attacks
reportedly were attributable to Iran's military forces. Iran publicly
blamed the US for its support of Iraq.
The
US attacks on the Iranian oil platforms that are at the centre of this
case occurred after two specific attacks on shipping in the Gulf. On October
16, 1987, the Kuwaiti tanker Sea Isle City, which had been re-flagged
to the US, was hit by a missile near Kuwait harbour. Asserting that Iranian
oil platforms were used as a staging facility for attacks by Iranian forces
against shipping in the Gulf, the US attacked and destroyed two Iranian
offshore oil production installations in the Reshadat complex three days
later. On April 14, 1988, the US frigate Samuel B. Roberts struck a mine
in international waters near Bahrain. Five days later, the US attacked
and destroyed the Nasr and Salman platforms belonging to the National
Iranian Oil Company.
In
1955, when relations between Iran and the US were friendly, the two countries
concluded a "Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations and Consular Rights"
(the "Treaty"1) Article X of the Treaty guarantees the freedom
of commerce and of navigation between the territories of the two nations.
After the seizure of the US Embassy in Tehran by Iranian students in November
1979, including the taking of American hostages, relations between Iran
and the US deteriorated up to a point where diplomatic relations were
severed. The two countries did not, however, terminate the Treaty.
The
hostages crisis prompted the US to institute proceedings against Iran
before the ICJ, relying in part on the Treaty. Iran refused to participate
in the proceedings in the Hostages Case, so that the case proceeded in
its absence. The US complaint resulted in a 1980 judgement in which the
ICJ held Iran responsible for violating a series of obligations under
international conventions in force between the two countries, including
the Treaty, as well as rules of general international law (especially
those regarding the treatment of diplomatic and consular representatives).
The
Oil Platforms Case before the Court
On November 2, 1992, Iran brought an Application before the ICJ against
the US in which it complained of the US attacks on its oil platforms.
Although Iran had denied in connection with the 1979-1980 Hostages Case
that the Treaty was still in force and neither party had made any mention
of the Treaty at the time of the impugned actions, the Application relied
on the compromissory clause included in Article XXI of the Treaty3 as
the sole basis of jurisdiction. The Treaty is an example of a "friendship,
commerce and navigation" treaty ("FCN" treaty) that the
US used to enter into with selected countries for bilateral trade purposes,
but which in recent years has been discontinued in favour of a more modern
form of bilateral investment treaty ("BIT"). The US has concluded
dozens of BITs with mostly developing nations. BITs typically do not include
a compromissory clause providing for ICJ jurisdiction, but select World
Bank or other arbitration as the dispute resolution mechanism.
The
US filed preliminary objections seeking the immediate dismissal of the
case in December 1993. Its principal contention was that the Treaty did
not apply to questions concerning the use of force in self-defence. The
ICJ rejected the US preliminary objections in its judgement of December
12, 1996, finding that the destruction of the Iranian oil platforms was
capable of having an adverse effect upon the freedom of commerce guaranteed
by Article X(1) of the Treaty and that its unlawfulness could be evaluated
in relation to that particular paragraph 4. Consequently, a dispute that
arose out of the use of force ended up before the ICJ as a case turning
on the alleged violation of the freedom of commerce guaranteed in a bilateral
treaty.
The
Court's main task on the merits was to ascertain whether the US by destroying
Iranian oil platforms on two occasions, violated its obligation under
Article X(1) of the Treaty concerning freedom of commerce between the
territories of the two countries. The Court decided to examine first whether
the action taken by the US was a measure necessary to protect its essential
security interests in the sense of Article XX(1)(d) of the Treaty 5. The
Court felt justified in taking this approach because the US had relied
on this provision as determinative of the question of the existence of
a breach of its obligations under Article X(1). In its 1996 judgement,
the Court held that
Article
XX is not an exoneration clause barring the ICJ from assessing the lawfulness
of measures taken to protect a party's essential security interests, but
it may afford a possible defence on the merits. For this reason, the November
6 decision deals extensively with the question whether the US actions
could qualify as self-defence under international law and hence as measures
necessary to protect its essential security interests. These issues were
held to be overlapping.
The
US argued that a missile attack on and the mining of ships flying its
flag, together with other Iranian acts endangering neutral shipping in
the Gulf, constituted a threat to its essential security interests within
the meaning of Article XX(1)(d) of the Treaty. The Court concluded, however,
that the US had not submitted convincing evidence that the missile attack
on the Sea Isle City in 1987 could be attributed to Iran. With regard
to the April 1988 attacks on the Nasr and Salman platforms, the Court
noted that these attacks, unlike the one that took place the previous
year, were not an isolated operation directed at the oil platforms but
formed part of a much more extensive US military action code-named "Operation
Praying Mantis." In view of all the circumstances and the evidence
submitted by the US, the Court found that, although the mining of a single
military vessel might suffice to trigger the inherent right of self-defence,
the mining of the USS Samuel B. Roberts was insufficient in itself to
amount to an "armed attack" on the US by Iran justifying US
action in self-defence. The Court concluded that the evidence of Iran's
responsibility for mining the USS Samuel B. Roberts was inconclusive.
Confirming
the applicability of the international law criteria of necessity and proportionality
in relation to the use of force in alleged self-defence, the Court was
not satisfied that the US attacks of 1987-1988 were necessary to respond
to the shipping incidents in the Gulf and constituted a proportionate
use of force in self-defence. On the issue of necessity, the Court placed
the burden on the United States to show that the attacks on its vessels
"were of such a nature as to be qualified as `armed attacks' within
the meaning of that expression in Article 51 of the United Nations Charter,
and as understood in customary law on the use of force." (Paragraph
51 of the Judgement). This formulation could have implications for future
claims of a right of anticipatory or pre-emptive self-defence insofar
as it indicates that an armed attack is a prerequisite to the right of
self-defence under Article 51 of the Charter and under customary international
law. On the other hand, it should be noted that the Court was only responding
to a US argument to the effect that armed attacks (the missile attack
in 1987 and the mine in 1988) had already occurred against it. Consequently,
the Court was not faced with an issue of anticipatory or pre-emptive self-
defence.
On
the issue of proportionality, the Court noted that if the US response
to the 1987 missile attack on the Sea Isle City had been shown to be necessary,
it might have been considered proportionate. But the same could not be
said for the US response to the 1988 mining of the USS Samuel B. Roberts
because it was part of the more extensive "Operation Praying Mantis"
which involved not only the attack on the oil platforms, but also the
destruction of two Iranian frigates and a number of other naval vessels
and aircraft (Paragraph 77 of the Judgement). The Court concluded that
the attacks against Iranian oil installations carried out by US forces
in 1987-1988 could not be justified, under Article XX(1)(d) of the Treaty,
as being necessary to protect the essential security interests of the
US., and did not fall within the category of measures contemplated by
that provision.
The
remaining question to be decided was whether the US actions complained
of by Iran had the potential to affect "freedom of commerce"
as guaranteed by Article X(1) of the Treaty. The Court considered that
where a state destroys another state's means of production and transport
of goods destined for export, or means ancillary or pertaining to such
production or transport, there is in principle an interference with the
freedom of international commerce. It added, however, that it does not
follow that any interference with such activities involves an impact on
the freedom of commerce "between the territories" of Iran and
the US., as Article X(1) requires. In other words, commerce must involve
direct trading (here, in oil) between Iran and the US and does not encompass
indirect commerce involving intermediaries.
The
evidence showed that at the time of the first US attack in October 1987,
the targeted oil platforms were under repair and inoperative, i.e., were
not producing oil. When the US attacked the other platforms in April 1988,
a US embargo on oil and services of Iranian origin was in place. Based
on this evidence, the Court concluded that there was at the time of each
of the US attacks no commerce between the territories of Iran and the
US in respect of oil produced by the targeted oil platforms, so that the
US actions against the platforms could not be said to have infringed the
freedom of commerce in oil within the meaning of Article X(1) of the Treaty.
Consequently, the ICJ rejected Iran's submissions and its claim for reparation.
The
ICJ also rejected the US counterclaim. The US had requested the Court
to adjudge and declare that, in attacking vessels in the Persian Gulf
with mines and missiles and otherwise engaging in military actions that
were dangerous and detrimental to commerce and navigation between the
territories of Iran and the US. Iran had breached its obligations to the
US under Article X(1) of the Treaty and must make full reparation to the
US. In the Court's view, to succeed on its counterclaim, the US had to
prove two things. First, it had to demonstrate that its freedom of commerce
or of navigation "between the territories of the High Contracting
Parties" to the Treaty was actually infringed. Second, it had to
prove that the acts which allegedly impaired one or both of those freedoms
were attributable to Iran.
The
Court concluded that none of the vessels described by the US as being
damaged by the Iranian attacks of which the US complained was engaged
in commerce or navigation "between the territories of the High Contracting
Parties" to the Treaty. Consequently, the U.S. counterclaim failed
on the first requirement, and the Court did not need to address the contested
issues of attribution of the alleged Iranian attacks.
This
latest decision concludes a series of cases against the United States.
On September 10, 2003, Libya's case against the US arising from the aftermath
of the crash of PanAm flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, was discontinued
and removed from the ICJ's General List of cases. The case had been pending
for more than a decade. An earlier case between Iran and the US arising
out of the shooting down by the USS Vincennes of an Iranian
Airbus
over the Gulf on July 3, 1988, was settled and discontinued on February
22, 1996, after having been pending for almost seven years. One case against
the US, which was brought by Mexico earlier this year and involves issues
of consular notification in connection with certain Mexican nationals
on "death row" in US prisons, is still pending before the ICJ.
Pieter
H.F. Bekker, Practices international law and arbitration at White &
Case LLP in New York City, and formerly served as a staff lawyer at the
International Court of Justice. |