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“There has been a lot of talk about proportionality in the law on self-defence. I refer to the words that the noble Lord, Lord Pannick, used a few days ago on the test of proportionality. It does not mean that the defensive force has to be equal to the force used in the armed attack. Proportionality means that you can use force that is proportionate to the defensive objective, which is to stop, to repel and to prevent further attacks.

Israel has described its war aims as the destruction of Hamas’s capability. From a legal perspective, these war aims are consistent with proportionality in the law of self-defence, given what Hamas says it does and what Hamas has done and continues to do.

Asking a state that is acting in self-defence to agree to a ceasefire before its lawful defensive objectives have been met is, in effect, asking that state to stop defending itself. For such calls to be reasonable and credible, they must be accompanied by a concrete proposal setting out how Israel’s legitimate defensive goals against Hamas will be met through other means. It is not an answer to say that Israel has to conclude a peace treaty, because Hamas is not interested in a peace treaty.

Proportionality also applies in the law that governs the conduct of hostilities, not only in self-defence. The law of armed conflict requires that in every attack posing a risk to civilian life, that risk must not be excessive in relation to the military advantage that is anticipated.

That rule does not mean, even when scrupulously observed, that civilians will not tragically lose their lives in an armed conflict. The law of armed conflict, at its best, can mitigate the horrors of war but it cannot eliminate them.

The great challenge in this conflict is that Hamas is the kind of belligerent that cynically exploits these rules by putting civilians under its control at risk and even using them to seek immunity for its military operations, military equipment and military personnel. An analysis of the application of the rules on proportionality in targeting in this conflict must always begin with this fact.

There has also been some discussion about siege warfare. The UK manual of the law of armed conflict, reflecting the Government’s official legal position—it is a Ministry of Defence document—says:

“Siege is a legitimate method of warfare … It would be unlawful to besiege an undefended town since it could be occupied without resistance”.

Gaza is not an undefended town. It is true that obligations apply to the besieging forces when civilians are caught within the area that is being encircled, and those obligations include agreeing to the passage of humanitarian relief by third parties. But it is not correct to say that encircling an area with civilians in it is not permitted by the laws of war.

A further point that concerns the laws of war is also of particular relevance to the British Government’s practice. It has already been mentioned that the Government have taken the view that Gaza remains under Israeli occupation, even though Israel pulled out in 2005.

The traditional view until 2005 was that occupation required physical presence in the territory. That view is consistent with Article 42 of the Hague regulations of 1907, which states that a territory is occupied when it is actually placed under the authority of the occupying power.

Again, it is also the view taken by the UK manual of the law of armed conflict, which reflects the UK’s official legal position and states that occupation ceases as soon as the occupying power evacuates the area. The European Court of Human Rights, in its jurisprudence, has also adopted a similar approach to occupation.

So I have always been rather baffled by the British Government’s position on this issue, which, as far as I know, has not changed. Yes, it is true that Israel has exercised significant control over the airspace and in the maritime areas, but even as a matter of plain geography it takes two—Israel and Egypt —to control the land access points to Gaza.

More fundamentally, it is Hamas that has been responsible for the government and administration of Gaza. I appreciate that this is a legal matter on which the Minister may not want to respond immediately but it is an important one, because the legal fiction that Israel was still the occupying power under the laws of armed conflict has been relentlessly exploited by Hamas to blame Israel for everything, while using the effective control that it has over the territory, the people and the resources to wage war.

On a final note, I would like to say something briefly on the way in which the war is being reported. When a serious allegation is made, particularly one that could constitute a war crime, the immediate response of the law-abiding belligerent will be to say, “We are investigating”.

The non-law-abiding belligerent, by contrast, will forthwith blame the other side and even provide surprisingly precise casualty figures. The duty to investigate is one of the most important ones in armed conflict.

What happened in the way in which the strike on the hospital was reported is that the side that professes no interest whatever in complying with the laws of armed conflict was rewarded with the headlines that it was seeking.”

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11 responses to “Proportionality”

  1. Alan Avatar

    One can only agree with such well-informed, humane, and reasoned argument!
    There are other important questions, which don’t seem to be getting the attention they deserve.
    1. A good many people, here in the UK and around the world, are asking themselves why does Hamas, a religious extremist body, prepared to carry out the most barbaric acts, exist?
    [The answer is, of course, there are religious extremist in Israel who do everything to frustrate any agreement with the Palestinians in Gaza and on the West Bank.]
    2. Is Israel doing to anything for the one million civilian Palestinians, men, woman, children, babies, the very old, the sick, it is forcing to flee their homes and hospitals and move to the South of Gaza? Food, water, tents, medicine ….

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  2. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    Hamas arose in response to religious Jews!? Good lord.

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  3. Alan Avatar

    Let me rephrase that:
    1. A good many people, here in the UK and around the world, are asking themselves why does Hamas, a religious extremist body, prepared to carry out the most barbaric acts, have such power?

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  4. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    Well, five letters, beginning with I and ending with M.
    Yes, I appreciate that you want to say it’s down to those nasty intransigent Jews who would quite like to live, but, to save going through the entire history of the Israel-Palestine conflict, I’ll just say: no, I profoundly disagree. The majority of Arabs, and the Iranians, have always refused to accept Israel’s existence.
    Well, until recently that is, with the Saudis showing signs of a change of heart – hence the Iranians stirring it up through Hamas.

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  5. Alan Avatar

    “I appreciate that you want to say it’s down to those nasty intransigent Jews who would quite like to live”
    No, I am not saying that! As I have indicated, I believe in the existence of the modern state of Israel and that it has every right to defend itself. I also believe in the two-state solution which was agreed by both sides, and which has been continually undermined by extremists (on both sides), e.g. the religiously inspired settlements on the West Bank.

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  6. Alan Avatar

    I think Israel is missing a huge opportunity to garner international sympathy and support. It should do everything possible to protect and support the one million Palestinians it is forcing South (even though many are Hamas sympathisers and some aid might get through to Hamas!!!!).
    The North should be a “military operation” (you’ve heard that phrase before!!) and more like raids than all out invasion which is exactly what the extremists, on both sides, want.

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  7. TDK Avatar
    TDK

    “I also believe in the two-state solution which was agreed by both sides”
    I think you will find that both Yasser Arafat (and later Mahmoud Abbas) and Hamas both said “no” the last times it was on offer. In particular you will note that protesters are saying “from the river to the sea Palestine will be free” which is incompatible with a two state solution.

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  8. Alan Avatar

    The “agreement” dealt with big issues in a very vague way which meant it could all come undone before everything important was settled, which is what happened. But the idea of two states was on the table.
    One issue, for example, was the “right of return”.
    “From the river to the sea” is the position of extremists on both sides.
    Well worth a read (or at a least dipping in!) is Palestine: Past and Present, ISBN: 978-1-53616-318-6
    Editor: Tristan Dunning, 2019, Nova Science Publishers

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  9. TDK Avatar
    TDK

    If you want me to condemn most settlements on the West Bank, I’ll happily do it but the problem is Israel has closed settlements several times down already.
    Meanwhile the majority of time since 1948, Israel has been ruled by the secular left, who were never bothered about appeasing the handful of religious nutters in Israel. And you know what, they offered a two state solution several times in that timeframe, which the Palestinians rejected.
    Now you claim the agreement was vague and “it could all come undone”. Well Arafat said “no” when the supposed vagueness included most of the West Bank and Gaza and exchanged territory in the Negev to replace what was lost. Israel wanted some security guarantees. So what is Arafat’s “no” supposed to achieve. You want negotiations. He got negotiations. Did we hear his counter offer, no – he launched the second intifada.

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  10. Alan Avatar

    There was a significant difference of opinion on the status of the “second” state which accounts for the rejection by the Palestinians.
    “…. a full sovereign state, not the demilitarised quasi-state envisioned by Israel, whereby Israel retains control of borders, airspace, magnetic field and the ability to veto treaties etc.” [p204 of the work quoted above]
    Could matters not move on? One day, hopefully, economics will prevail over religion!

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  11. WHS Avatar
    WHS

    I am fed up with those who suffer – and I have coined this phrase myself, because I have no other phrase for it; perhaps there is another phrase which I have not seen – from what I call “the rationalism fallacy”.
    i.e. “Hamas slaughtered 200 innocent people at a pop festival – well, they wouldn’t just do that thing for no reason, would they? – they must have been provoked into doing it! What bad people the Israelis must be, to have provoked Hamas to do such a thing!”
    I first saw it with the 2011 Tottenham riots – “A bunch of materialistic young men have looted stores in London and burnt down a place in Tottenham – they must have been provoked to do it by materialism/tuition fees/the Coalition Government/police brutality/insert cause du jour here”
    If a bunch of people commit heinous crimes, they can’t do it for no good reason – someone/thing must have made them do it. That is the fallacy that I have a lousy name for.
    Of course if this fallacy were true, then ALL people in ‘bad positions’ must be forced to commit crimes or terrorist atrocities. But 99.9% of people in bad positions don’t do that.
    In Britain it goes back to Tebbit saying that in the 30s his dad did not riot but got on his bike and looked for work. How the bien pensants and the Mrs Dutt-Paukers scoffed.
    But 99% of people in Brixton did not riot, yet they were poor too. So it’s not poverty that caused the 1% in Brixton to riot (nor is it anything Israel does that causes Hamas to commit atrocities). It is the wilful evil of those who choose to commit evil.

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