Brennan’s defence came on the heels of a two-day conference in the same city convened by human rights groups and legal charities opposing the use of drones.
Brennan exposited at length, as the wordage should indicate. He spoke of legalities, ethics and the wisdom of drone use in an environment fraught with operational imperatives and perceived threats to the US. It is an attempt to construct a legal-ethical argument to fit the US’ conduct of war and to prove that the US is being very careful because “we despise war” and because “we are establishing precedents that other nations may follow”. [NB: a brilliant essay on how law is made to serve the purposes of force was panned by Harvard law professor David Kennedy some years ago in his book, Of War and Law.]
Two ideas may be put on the table right away. One is about sequencing. There should be no confusion that law follows force in the interactive dynamic between the two. Second is about the conduct of war itself: legal regimes since the Geneva Conventions may not allow states the “liberty of bloody hand” as Henry V had before the gates of Harfleur, but neither would they let legal niceties prevent their freedom of action when they perceive security to be scarce.
In 2005, the Brookings Institution undertook a project, Force and Legitimacy in the Evolving International System, seeking to “develop cooperative strategies ... that will meet the twin tests of legitimacy and effectiveness and provide a meaningful alternative to unilateralism or institutional paralysis”. As part of one of the rounds, I was fascinated by the painstaking effort by American strategists to overcome the existing legal binds. Of particular interest was the attempt by Edward Luck, a Columbia professor, to unlock Article (2) 4, fourth of the seven guiding principles of the UN, through a paper titled: “Article 2(4) on the Non-Use of Force: What Were We Thinking”.
Over the years we have witnessed many more such attempts, devising multilateral frameworks that, while attempting to bind other states in cooperative strategies, should retain for the US its freedom of unilateral action. This is of course a topic on which much can be, and has been, written. For our purposes, however, this is enough for a quick look at Brennan’s defence.
Here are the salient features:
US use of drones is legal because “The Authorization for Use of Military Force — the AUMF —passed by Congress after the September 11 attacks authorises the president ‘to use all necessary and appropriate force’ against those nations, organisations and individuals responsible for 9/11.” [NB: the authorisation does not list ‘States’.]
It is also legal because “As a matter of international law, the United States is in an armed conflict with al Qaeda, the Taliban, and associated forces ... and we may also use force consistent with our inherent right of national self-defence. There is nothing in international law that bans the use of remotely piloted aircraft for this purpose or that prohibits us from using lethal force against our enemies outside of an active battlefield, at least when the country involved consents or is unable or unwilling to take action against the threat.”
Wrong on both counts. Domestic law cannot override accepted principles of international law or customary state practice, especially the principle of non-intervention. Doing so is an exercise of power, not law. Two, nothing in international law or the UNSC legal regime on terrorism allows State X to operate on the territory of State Y unless the latter expressly permits such action. Therefore, the issue of “unable or unwilling” does not arise as grounds for unilateral determination and action. Nor can such be determined by another state through its own estimation because any action flowing from such unilateralism cannot be subjected to a limiting principle, i.e., there will be no limit to what a powerful state could do to weaker states.
Brennan also defended the use of drones on the principles of necessity, distinction, proportionality and humanity and gave reasons for why such use is wise. The problem with his framework is that the operation of these “principles” — and these factors are essentially operational, not foundational — becomes relevant only after it has been determined that it is indeed legal for a state to use drones (or force) in the manner that the US has done so far and which scores of experts deem to be illegal because it is unilateral and violates the basic principle of non-intervention. In other words, the necessity, distinction, proportionality and humanity of weapon system X as opposed to Y becomes a relevant defence or debate only after the legality of the conflict in which it is to be used and the manner of such use has been accepted.
As it stands, the problems of who decides what is necessary, through what process and in what manner remain unresolved. The very “humane” targeting method that Brennan has outlined can be deemed legal only if it can be determined to be such by a process that separates the judge, jury and the executioner through external scrutiny. That is automatically precluded by the very requirement of secrecy.
Also, while Brennan spoke specifically of targeted strikes, he didn’t say a word about ‘signature’ strikes, a rather interesting omission.
Finally, Brennan knows well, or should know, the moral hazard that attends preemption and increases manifold as prevention is invoked. No one knows what attacks are being conjured up and preempted and how much of these threats lie in the realm of fantastic scenarios.
Having said this, the final arbiter of this conflict and what a state can do to prevent another state from violating its sovereignty is a function of power, not law. History, ultimately, is the logic of might and the grey area where law and politics interact normally resolves itself in favour of the latter.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 2nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (75)
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Drone attacks on terrorists must continue. Elite can continue chirping in Lahore, Islamabad and Karachi.
I just can't make out whether the Pakistani commenters here are being sarcastic or they are really being serious ?
@observer, who said I'm even talking about the consulates? Pakistan actually has solid proof of Indian involvement unlike india who has only silly conspiracy theories as evidence lmao.
@Bhindian
There are MANY reasons why India would use Afghanistan instead of directly waging a covert war through India-Pak border. Frankly I can’t be bothered to explain why because I already know your response
Fair enough. Keep your ilm-e-ghaib to yourself.
Just give us a list of the 14/18/21 (depending on the analyst) consulates being run by India.
@Lala Gee
You are trying to preach to the Choir. I am all for intervention, 1971 and 2012 included. I am only questioning those who have suddenly turned admirers of non-intervention.
@Zalmai, lmao your post is easily the joke of the week
The Pakistani army should follow the example of Sri Lanka and wipe out the so called good and the bad Taliban along with all other terrorist organizations, if they want this inferno to be extinguished. The Tamil Tigers are yesterday's news thanks to Rajapakse. Pakistan can do the same if it really wanted to rid its country of these terrorists.
@ayesha_khan:
"Secondly when the founder of LeT establishes a new organization called JuD when LeT is banned, he still openly makes hate speeches against India. ...... (By the way even if they say that his links to 26/11 have not been proven. surely there is no paucity of hate speech and incitement against Hindus and India?"
Please search at google.com for the "Hindu Taliban" and visit the links. If you still believe, after reading and watching the videos on these websites, that Hafiz Saeed makes more hateful speeches then I must apologize on his behalf.
"Also what about the policy f bleeding India with thousand cuts that PAkistan used between 1989 and 2003 by training, arming and pushing foreign jihadis into India?Was that not violation of Indian sovereignty?"
What about the policy of breaking Pakistan by training and arming Mukti Bahini between 1970-71 and then brazenly attacking East Pakistan without any mandate from UNSC. Was that not violation of Pakistan's sovereignty? What about arming and financing TTP and BLA terrorists to hurt Pakistan.
Finished watching Rambo three. if you look the way holywood glorified mujahidin's of those days, you will fall off the chair laughing. now these same guys are pain in wrong place.
lala gee you are absolutely right. please forgive the stupid indians.
@observer:
"Will someone please explain to me, A. Was the Jihad against Afghanistan in 1980s in pursuit of non-intervention? B. Was the launch of Taliban from Pakistani soil in the late 1990s an example of non-intervention? C. Do the Haqqanis residing in North Waziristan qualify as forces of non-intervention? If not, Why turn so coy now?"
Your list is pretty incomplete. Here are few more items:
D. Was conspiring with Mukti Bahini against Pakistan and training and arming them by Indian army non-intervention?
E. Was attacking East Pakistan by India non-intervention?
F. Is arming and funding TTP/BLA terrorists and using them against Pakistan is non-intervention?
@Sadhu:
"You hate everybody Hindus, Christians, Indians, Eurpoeans, Shias, Ahmadis et al and expect that every body should love you?"
A vast majority of Pakistanis do not hate anyone but only the enemies of Pakistan whosoever it may be. I admit that we are far from perfect, but so are you too? Can you quote a single incident in Pakistan, since 1947, when minorities or any particular group has been massacred en-mass like in India where 5,000 Sikhs were massacred in 1984 by hooligans or pogrom of 2,000 Muslims in Gujarat.
@All Indian Bloc
Most of the Indian commentators here are blaming Pakistan for harboring terrorists and using them as a strategic tool. Please any Indian commentator tell us who is providing arms and money to TTP/BLA terrorists and using them against Pakistan. If you cannot then please stop the blame game.
@Bhindian
I just want to highlight the hypocrisy of your fellow countrymen.
@ayesha_khan, expected that response, if Indian government says it then it must be true but if Pakistan says it then it's all crazy lies. There are MANY reasons why India would use Afghanistan instead of directly waging a covert war through India-Pak border. Frankly I can't be bothered to explain why because I already know your response...it's all crazy lies and I've been brainwashed by Pak Army hehe
Domestic law cannot override accepted principles of international law or customary state practice, especially the principle of non-intervention.
Will someone please explain to me,
A. Was the Jihad against Afghanistan in 1980s in pursuit of non-intervention?
B. Was the launch of Taliban from Pakistani soil in the late 1990s an example of non-intervention?
C. Do the Haqqanis residing in North Waziristan qualify as forces of non-intervention?
If not, Why turn so coy now?
@Bhindian: "ayesha_khan, and india is waging a covert war against Pakistan through Afghanistan. "
I know your army and politicians are telling you this. But do you know how crazy it sounds? If India wanted to support a covert war in Pakistan, why would it not use the border it already shares with Pakistan instead of the more expensive and less reliable way of doing it through Afghanistan? As for the 19 consulates that India supposedly has i Afghanistan - ummm no. It only has 4. You cannot actually hide a consulate.
@Zalmai, no one forced you to come here and read his article
Ejaz Haider should expound on the legalities of Lyari killings, non state actors operating with impunity in Pakistan, Waheeda Shah slapping a peon and many other legal issues that plague Pakistan and spare us this lecture in international law about the use of drones.
@ayesha_khan, and india is waging a covert war against Pakistan through Afghanistan.
@elementary: "not clearing out militant sanctuaries is just another failure of our governmen"
In some cases Pakistani rulers are guilty of more than simply incompetence in clearing militant sanctuaries. In some cases they are actually responsible for creating them. Our angst is not against the odrinary suffering Pakistanis but against Pakistani ruling elite who have repeatedly indulged in acts of covert war against India that have gone unpunished because India does not want an overt war.
@elementary, exactly my point, drone strikes aren't legal in Pakistans case and that was exactly the point of this article. Whether US thinks drone strikes are right that is another issue. @Babloo, If Pakistan is arming, sheltering, providing sanctuary to militant groups then what is stopping US from declaring war against Pakistan? As I've said before, conspiracy theories don't count as evidence. Since according to conspiracy theorists Pakistan is running a huge insurgency in Afghanistan there should be plenty of evidence at the hand of US but they've been unable to present any.
inter alia corruption,inflation,misgovernance,not clearing out militant sanctuaries is just another failure of our government/army which we have to suffer as a common man.I guess we will have to accept drone strikes and it's repercussions as part of our miserable lives.
@Elementary, arming, sheltering , providing sanctuary to militant groups that attack other countries like India, Afghanistan and promote attacks in other countries, is an act of war. India does not militarily retaliate like US does because India fears a wider war and does not possess the overwhelming military resources USA has. India knows its dealing with an irrational party . So what USA is doing is retaliating against acts of war from Pakistan soil against its forces in Afghanaistan, against Americans in Mumbai 26/11 attack and against other attacks like 9/11 that originated from Pakistan soil, including 100,000$ that were wired to 9/11 manager Mohammed Fata from Karachi. There is enough evidense for USA to hold Pakistan state itself liable for all these acts of war. It has chosen not to do so directly but has chosen to retaliate against acts of war that originate from Pakistan soil. Indians are happy that Pakistan is being held accountable and justice, in some little measure, is being delivered to those to arm, shelter and ideologically support these proxy militant groups.
There were quite a few things Brennan didn't say, probably out of politeness.
Many Pakistani government officials - and Pakistani reporters - are perfectly aware of the how the drone strikes are justified under international law: under the post-9/11 U.N. Security Council Resolutions (especially 1373) Pakistan has the binding sovereign obligation to root out terrorists, terror-training camps, and terror havens in its territory.
No efforts to do so = no sovereignty with regards to terrorism. That's why Brennan's remarks don't refer to Pakistan at all. That's also why Pakistan's position receives little if any support at the United Nations.
@elementary: "All indians who are supporting drone strikes on these blogs need to understand that it’s our territory and our citizens which get killed and we as nations have to bear the repercussions in the form of suicide bombings in our cities,ever more chaos and unrest.To you it’s just another discusssion on current affairs for us it’s matter of life and death."
I feel your pain. It is true that sometimes our responses lack empathy for people who are caught in cross-fire. The reason has been the open support for jihad against India by Pakistanis for over 15 years, duplicity of KArgill and a series of terror attacks emanating from Pak soil from 2006 to 2008 and the frustration that our government was unable and unwilling to stop Pakistan from killing Indians. This is why when we see US actually taking out Haqqanis and Afghan Taliban, it serves as a balm for our open wounds.
@elementary: Conceptually you have a good point.Pakistan's reality is that the army has openly said that it does not have capacity to take on the Haqqanis and Afghan Taliban in North Waziristan. This is the basis of saying Pakistan is unwilling. OF course people around the world believe it is not an issue of capacity but will - still.
Secondly when the founder of LeT establishes a new organization called JuD when LeT is banned, he still openly makes hate speeches against India. The smoke screen is that Hafiz Saeed was let free by the courts. But tell me has your court convicted a single terrorist? Isn't your army also resorting to extraconstitutional means to take on terrorists that IT pereceives are bad? Would India then not legitimately conclude that Pakistan is either unwilling or unable to act against Hafiz Saeed? (By the way even if they say that his links to 26/11 have not been proven. surely there is no paucity of hate speech and incitement against Hindus and India?
Also what about the policy f bleeding India with thousand cuts that PAkistan used between 1989 and 2003 by training, arming and pushing foreign jihadis into India?Was that not violation of Indian sovereignty?
A might is right rule troubles me also. But when a country deliberately misuses its land to allow attacks on another country and gets away scotfree - surely that is unacceptable also? Pakistan has a history of doing so. The Chinese say so privately, the Iranians, Afghans, Indians and now Amercians say it openly. This is why it is alienated and there is no sympathy for the current Pakistani predicament..
Instead of complaining about everyone else while Terrorists are roaming in Pakistan and exported to otther countries why don't you root them out from Pakistan? Pakistan's refusal to action against them makes rest of the world to act.
When people Trained in Pakistani Madrassa's, the world has every right to take action of any kind wherever they are.
Pakistan's refusal to eradicate terrorism from its soil = Drone Strike. All you intellectuals should be demanding your government and the military to take necessary action instead of complaining.
This legal debate can't be settled in newspapers and journals articles. The American position regarding these issues have been robustly challanged and refuted by a significant number of international law experts. The issue maybe settled in a proper court of law; in the International Criminal Court or any ad-hoc interntional tribunal. Even this may not lead to any actual change of consequences on the ground. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled against USA in 1984 when Nicaragua complained regarding USA actions of supporting the rebels called 'Contra' and mining Nicaragua's harbours. Despite the ICJ decision in Nicaragua favour, USA never paid the reparation awarded and used its influence in UN Security Council to block the attempts by Nicaragua to obtain any compensation.
All indians who are supporting drone strikes on these blogs need to understand that it's our territory and our citizens which get killed and we as nations have to bear the repercussions in the form of suicide bombings in our cities,ever more chaos and unrest.To you it's just another discusssion on current affairs for us it's matter of life and death. You can not have same perspective as us on these strikes
@Arjun: we have too weak a government who is unable to negotiate.
@ayesha_khan:@Babloo: State X can not operate in state Y without it's express consent according to international law,"Unless they are unwilling or unable to" . If state X decides unilaterllay that state Y is unable or unwilling ,this is very subjective and an exercise of power rather than law and there will be no limit to what powerful state can do to weaker state. This is a powerful argument which you didn't really address in your comments.Drone strikes serve indian foriegn policy well but that does not mean that it is legal and ethical.You may have refreshing clarity of thought from indian perspective,but to an objective analyst this is very biased and narrow view.
@Lala Gee
And what's stopping you?
The long and wordy attempt by Mr. Brennan to defend USA rights of attacking alleged opponents in another country informs us that the issue is legally highly contentious. The use of drones is not an issue per se. Drones can be deployed by countries and non-state actors in armed conflicts as long as the restrictions imposed by international humanitarian law (both treaty and customary) on means and methods of war are observed. American are clearly flouting and stretching the limitations imposed by this important area of international law. Wars were supposed to be delimited temporally and geographically. Now the so called ‘War on Terror’ can be waged anytime anywhere depending on Americans’ perception.
It is not possible that drone attaks are happening, without establishment consent
So really need to answer the following questions - was consent at any point of time ever given - if yes who gave that consent - was that ever revoked
Pakistan has acknowledged that secret written deals have been done in the past. One day it will come out on wikileaks or some place, look forward to that date
@Lala Gee: You hate everybody Hindus, Christians, Indians, Eurpoeans, Shias, Ahmadis et al and expect that every body should love you?
@Lala Gee: "And Pakistan has the same right to shoot them down"
Maybe so. Does it have the courage to exercise that right?
Imperialism in todays world is called "International Law"
@All Indian Bloc
I admit that you are supposed to support anything and everything that hurts Pakistan irrespective of being right or wrong, irrespective of that innocent children, women, and men are being killed in drone attacks. You are doing what enemies do and Pakistanis shouldn't be complaining. What else can be expected from hate filled lagoons. Job well done.
Domestic law cannot override accepted principles of international law
The domestic law in these tribal belts, specially related to "gunning down" is no different from what Americans. Pakistani law too do not apply here, and for the same reason the army wanted to leave them alone as it is difficult to fight the asymmetric war ( law vs lawless) with them. "legality, ethics and wisdom" was not shown when these tribal were made to co-opt and take part in ambitious ( profitable to the planners!), strategic game plan. It is unwise to bring it now, and hence the ending too will be illegal, unethical and unwise.
@ayesha_khan:
"I agree. Would you agree that this also applies to Pakistan’s strategic depth policy of using Haqqanis to destabilize"
How would you then justify supporting, funding, and arming "Mukti Bahni" during 1970-71 to interfere in the affairs of Pakistan?
@Arindom:
"Not getting into legal tangles, it is simply common sense that terrorists need to be eliminated. And if Pakistan doesnot want to do it, the US as the sole superpower has to do it. It has the world’s support in ridding the world of terrorists!!"
I am myself is not fan of terrorism, but my question is who created these terrorists in the first place? And more importantly, who is supporting and funding TTP/BLA terrorists? You just cannot see the world with one eye and closed mind.
@Arjun:
"In the future, think of the predator/reapers as the haqqani network.."
And Pakistan has the same right to shoot them down as the USA has the self claimed right to kill them indiscriminately.
Ok..so let me get this straight. Our argument is that the Drones violate our sovereignty and kill innocent people. Fair enough.
So, why do we harbour militants that kill people in other countries. Isnt that a violation of the other countries' sovereignty, and arent these militants guilty of homicide?
And, if we refuse to do anything about these militants when they kill people in other countries, arent those countries duty bound to come and kill these characters?
Another article by Khalid Munir in this news paper is saying that Drone strikes are accurate and people of North wazirstan approves it.What Author has to say about it
@Ayesha Khan, you have a refreshing clarity of views.
1) Domestic law does override international norms or laws. In the US, customary international law is treated as federal common law, and common law- as judge-made law- can never trump actual legislation. Hence, CIL is subservient to all legislation. Also, after Medellín v. Texas, the presumption of self-execution as regards international treaties signed by the US no longer stands, which means such treaties do not confer private rights or private rights of action in the absence of implementing legislation.
2) Express consent is not needed for state A to operate on state B's territory, only consent is needed. I think it is safe to say that Pakistan has given the US this consent as regards drone strikes, especially after the Wikileaks revelations about Gilani's statements.
3) Finally, about the use (not 'usage') of drone strikes, the relevant legal principle to go to is the 'political question doctrine'. The use of drones is not justiciable, that is to say, the US govt cannot be sued in its own courts about which technology it uses because national security and foreign policy decision-making abroad are solely in the political domain of the executive. Courts cannot impose the judge/jury/executioner model on such decision-making. It is sad, but the courts can only be involved ex-post in such scenarios. Anwar Al-Awlaki's father's appeal in a US federal court after Al-Awlaki was put on a hit list (even though he was a US citizen) was shot down on these basis.
When Khaled Ahmed annotates his articles with references to books and studies, he sounds scholarly and wise. When Ejaz Haider does it, he sounds immature and show-offy. Why is that?
@Lala Gee: "Jihad is OK if done against USSR and the “Mujaheddin” are praised by the west, but it is terrorism if done against India, or USA."
No. Jihad against SOviet Union was also not Okay. US is now realizing the adverse impact of supporting people like Saddam and Afghan Taliban to achieve its foreign policy goals. Soviet Union would have disintegrated due to economic reasons no matter what happened in Afghanistan.
@Roflcopter: It seems your reading comprehension falls in line with the inbred who's mothers makes it a daily thing to ride rollercoasters. @Agnostic Muslim: Unable doesn't mean giving you free toys to do it and then doing it. Nobody has to give you anything. It's the same as blackmail. It's "you take care of them or we will" not "we'll only take care of it if you give us what we want" You're not in a negotiating position.
Pak army never defends the Haqanni militants, even though it supports them. It always says that 'its stretched thin, so cannot attack them now'. So there is the duplicity and its lack of courage to say clearly what it thinks. It says it does not have 'resources' to attack them. Very good, says USA. "If you are incapable or unwilling " to control them, we will do the job. Lies always create more trouble.
I wonder Will drone strike become morally acceptable and legal-if this technology is transferred to Pakistan for use??
@Roflcopter: "@Babloo, It seems you missed the whole point of this article. Good job sherlock".
That is certainly one option. The other option could be that he understands but disagrees with the author's conclusion. He has then succinctly explained WHY he disagrees using author's own quote.
Mr. Haider, Can also write another long winded article on illegality of the violation of pakistan's sovereignty, when they came with helicopters and a whole bunch of US SEAL team, all the way to kakul academy in abbottabad and killed OBL?
@Agnostic Muslim: Pakistan has never accepted to attack the Haqqani forces on pakistans territory under any circumstances. So Pakistan willing to go after B when A is the one creating the problem cannot be accepted as pakistans willingness to prevent its territory to be used for attacks against another sovereign country. So naturally the affected parties(US and Afghanistan) will have to do whatever is necessary to tackle the haqqanis since Pakistan is unwilling to do so on its own.
"Domestic law cannot override accepted principles of international law or customary state practice, especially the principle of non-intervention." I agree. Would you agree that this also applies to Pakistan's strategic depth policy of using Haqqanis to destabilize Pakistan and earlier supporting Afghan Taliban who oppressed majority population of Afghanistan which was Non-Pushtoon. This policy also applies to what was earlier not acknowledged and now is acknowledged as the policy of sending jihadis to India and also applies to what is even TODAY not acknowledged by Pakistan but the whole world believes i.e. using non-state actors like LeT and JeM to destabilize India.
Also in case of such intervention by Pakistan in other sovereign countries would you agree that the others have a right to retaliate? Yes India has been loath to retaliate because sadly Indian politicians are weak in this regards. But USA can, does and will retaliate in response to intervention by Pakistani supported non-state actors who interfere in Afghanistan and kill NATO forces there.
Not getting into legal tangles, it is simply common sense that terrorists need to be eliminated. And if Pakistan doesnot want to do it, the US as the sole superpower has to do it. It has the world's support in ridding the world of terrorists!!
This is more like statment from ISPR and not a legal or political analysis. A whole lot of nothing is said without any reference or conclusion. Unless Pakistan comes clean with the presence of terrorists in its army base and in its terrority, we have no credibility no matter what we say. We have to come clean and the civilized world is not stupid as we think. They want to see remorse not anger in our words and attitude before they forgive that we had an open season for global jihadists in Pakistan for many years. Let us clean Pakistan as its name demands only then we can talk morals and legal ethics.
Thought provoking, as always..
The US is following the principles of non-intervention just like Pakistan follows the principles of non-intervention in Afghanistan....you know...by using the haqqani proxies...
In the future, think of the predator/reapers as the haqqani network..
@Seema:
"... and one with bounty on his head walking freely hand in hand with retired army Generals and ISI people, we justifying terrorists on our side, what message are we sending to the world?"
Jihad is OK if done against USSR and the "Mujaheddin" are praised by the west, but it is terrorism if done against India, or USA.
@Babloo:
"So the bottom line as per USA is that since Pakistan does not control Waziristan and cannot or will not take action against terrorist network of Haqanni/Al-Qaida, thats why USA feels free to take action. Its not very complicated."
It is ironic that the Terrorists of the present and Mujaheddins of the past were a brainchild of USA herself who organized, trained, armed, and funded them through US taxpayers money - whosoever digs a ditch for the other, ought to befall himself in it.
@Babloo, It seems you missed the whole point of this article. Good job sherlock.
AgM, we know that Americans are afraid that Pakistanis would only target the real terrorists, if any - since none have been proven, while Americans are out to target innocent bystanders in order to create terrorism inside and blackmail Pakistan. Pakistani people are too intelligent to miss American chicanery in this and all other matters.
war on terror is a war on islamic countries
Babloo:
Consent: Pakistan has not given the US any official consent to conduct unilateral drone strikes, and the statement by the FO after the recent drone strike should make that clear
Unwilling: Pakistan has repeatedly offered alternatives to unilateral drone strikes by the US - joint drone strikes, PAF led airstrikes based on US and Pakistani intel, Pakistan operated drone strikes based on US and Pakistani intel - the US therefore cannot argue that unilateral drone strikes by her are legal and justified because of a lack of alternatives.
given that a man like Ijaz Haider can articulate that drone attacks are illegal, why is our government unable to? If our government is tacitly approving the drone attacks, whilst publicly condemning them, what else is our government agreed to? The bannu jail break being part of a deal maybe? The haqqanis part of pk channel of communication to taliban maybe? And all this with approval of the master US. My point is...we cannot trust the govt of pk.
When most wanted man OBL found under the very nose of Army, and one with bounty on his head walking freely hand in hand with retired army Generals and ISI people, we justifying terrorists on our side, what message are we sending to the world? Bannu jail break, tells American that 400 hundred terrorist passed many check posts, without any resistance, in whole episode not a single causality occurred on both sides. We as nation justifying and projecting a terrorist as a philanthropist. who we are fooling, ourselves or the world.
Domestic law cannot override accepted principles of international law or customary state practice, especially the principle of non-intervention.
The principle of non-intervention is just that - a principle. It is not a law. While "respecting principles" serves the smooth functioning of nation states by enabling sovereignty, it is not legally binding. So there is no way, that a "principle" can be used to negate a "law" whether international or domestic.
As regards the "respect for Pakistan's sovereignty" and thus non-intervention in Pakistan's tribal areas, Pakistan has done nothing to earn that respect. In fact, our laws such as the Frontier Crimes Regulation, denial of political rights to FATA and our persistent claims of inability to control the tribal areas serve to renounce Pakistan's sovereignty over the region. As such, the use of principle of non-intervention to rebut Brennan's legal argument isn't sound.
Again, well done, sir. Without reading your article, I am sure you will use excellent logic for excellent purposes. Please keep Pakistan on the right path as great thinkers like you have done for the last 65 years. Pakistan's days of glory under your wise guidance are not far off.
Let me summarize in few words, why USA considers it is right to attack terrorists within the border of Pakistan. Here it is in Mr Brennan's own words and quoted by Mr Ejaz Haider. "There is nothing in international law that bans the use of remotely piloted aircraft for this purpose or that prohibits us from using lethal force against our enemies outside of an active battlefield, at least when the country involved consents or is unable or unwilling to take action against the threat.” So the bottom line as per USA is that since Pakistan does not control Waziristan and cannot or will not take action against terrorist network of Haqanni/Al-Qaida, thats why USA feels free to take action. Its not very complicated.
well written and thought provoking.