International Law and the War in Gaza: from fog of war to fog of law

Autor: Juan Amaya Castro

Originally Published at Peace and Conflict Monitor on 08/03/2009

The Israeli theory of what it tried to do here is summed up in a Hebrew phrase heard across Israel and throughout the military in the past weeks: “baal habayit hishtageya,” or “the boss has lost it.” It evokes the image of a madman who cannot be controlled.

“This phrase means that if our civilians are attacked by you, we are not going to respond in proportion but will use all means we have to cause you such damage that you will think twice in the future,” said Giora Eiland, a former national security adviser.

It is a calculated rage. The phrase comes from business and refers to a decision by a shop owner to cut prices so drastically that he appears crazy to the consumer even though he knows he has actually made a shrewd business decision. 

(…)

Shlomo Brom, a researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University and a retired brigadier general, said it was wrong to consider Hamas a group of irrational fanatics.

“I have always said that Hamas is a very rational political movement,” he said. “When they use suicide bombings, for example, it is done very consciously, based on calculations of the effectiveness of these means. You see, both sides understand the value of calculated madness. That is one reason I don’t see an early end to this ongoing war.”(1)

1. The War in Gaza: Irrationality and Lawlessness?

Listening to many of the reactions that have been voiced in response to the horrible events in the Gaza strip, it would seem that many people consider what is going on there to be ‘irrational’. Indeed, the pictures we see, the stories we read, make it difficult to believe that all that is happening there, the bombs, the destruction, the civilians that are killed, that any of that could be in some way obeying some type of rationality. Not just is it easy to consider it all irrational, it is also easy to consider it a prime example of ‘lawlessness’. Many reactions that I have heard, and some have been communicated directly to me in my role as professor of international law, indicate that the war in Gaza is seen as an example of lawlessness, as evidence of the failure of international law and its international legal institutions.

People have expected many things from international law and from international institutions. And more often than not, they have been disappointed. International law, the law of the international community, its institutions, they all seemed relatively powerless – visible through their powerlessness. As we will see below, the war effort obeyed its own rhythm, and nothing much seemed to be able to be done. When the warring parties finally ceased fire, it seemed for many reasons that were not related to international law and its institutions.

2. The Law Behind the Scenes in Gaza

Seen this way, international law would indeed seem helpless. War criminals would seem to get away with their war crimes. Victims would have no recourse. The killing could just go on without anything being done to stop it. The various international institutions, all the courts, national and international, seem helpless and this helplessness is seen to be the helplessness of international law in general.

However, from another perspective, law springs very much alive. The irrationality that we want to see in the war is not always seen by those who carefully study the war and the motives and decisions taken by the warring parties. Military and Political experts have called the reaction by Israel to the rocket attacks by Hamas ‘Calculated Rage’, in other words, a deliberate strategy that aims to be seen to overreact, but that is in fact a very controlled action. Likewise, other experts have referred to the tactics and strategies of Hamas as ‘Calculated Madness’, again referring to a deliberate attempt to seem unpredictable and even suicidal, while in fact being carefully selective in the risks they take. The rage and the madness are here described as part of a strategy – as part of a very rational scheme and set of calculations about intentionality and causality.

Law first appears as part of the strategic landscape of all actors involved. And I am not merely talking of law in terms of the very specific binding and non-binding rules. I am referring to the general picture of rules and principles, legal and moral, as well as the broader set of institutions, legal, political, and other, which includes the media and the ‘international court of public opinion’. Paradoxically, in our age in which weapons have achieved a degree of unparalleled precision and destructiveness, wars are as much about perception than they are about physical military victory and defeat.

To fight this modern war, political and military strategists employ various forms of expertise. Media expertise and political strategy are as essential as knowledge of the physical and geographic terrain. The U.S. military has invested heavily in the last couple of years in the development of the so called ‘human terrain’ expertise, which involves deploying cultural anthropologists in the various levels of military planning and operations. In the same way, legal expertise and general knowledge of legal avenues and procedures are an essential part of any modern military machine. In fact, the Israeli army deploys hundreds of lawyers, many of them with a high level of expertise. Israeli military manuals have been prepared with the assistance of the UN and the ICRC and are generally considered to be of a very high legal quality in terms of the way that they incorporate the principles of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) into every aspect of their operations. Israeli military lawyers participate in the various levels of military decision-making, and the Israeli army is heavily equipped with state of the art technology that allows it to be precise in its attacks and to wage a legally clean war. The legal expertise allows them to expand the grey area left open by the rules, and to do things that, even though they can be questioned, can also be defended by reference to the rules.

To the point that Israel has at times committed clear violations of the rules of war, this may be explained by a deliberate calculation that takes into account the weak enforcement mechanisms of international law and the seemingly unconditional support of western countries. In other words, law, and the political context in which law exists, can be said to be a central part of Israeli military calculations.

But, Hamas too can be said to take law (and the political, moral and media context in which law operates) as the starting point of their strategic calculations. Though Hamas does not have the same amount of legal expertise or the technical capacity to carry out high precision bombings, this does not mean that it is not aware of the legal terrain on which the battle takes place. The thing that Hamas can
do, in this very asymmetrical military and political struggle, is to radically affect the Israeli strategic terrain, which includes the legal one. One way in which Hamas can be seen to be doing this is by hiding their weapons in areas with a high density of civilians, in the vicinity of schools and around the proximity of UN buildings. By doing this they make it more difficult for Israel to apply the principle of distinction, under which military attacks must distinguish between military targets and civilian ones, and avoid the
civilian ones. It also makes it more difficult for the Israelis to abide by the rule that all efforts must be undertaken to avoid civilian casualties, even when targeting military objectives.

In this way, they raise the cost of military attacks for Israel, not just in terms of the efforts made trying to play by the rules, but in terms of the political, moral, and potential legal costs of causing large numbers of civilians to die. Here too, Hamas may at times choose to disregard clear rules, and here too the calculation can be traced to broad considerations that include the political and media context in which the legal rules operates, as well as the deficient enforcement mechanisms. As far as the costs in human lives is concerned, Hamas may have been taking a cue from Hezbollah, which two years ago was able to claim some sort of victory amidst the rubble and destruction, and the hundreds of civilian casualties.  

From this perspective, international law, in spite of the best intentions of its drafters, operates as a terrain that can be played out in ones advantage. Even so, most of the attention goes to law’s helplessness, as is evidenced by the responses in the formal legal institutions.

3. The International Legal & Institutional Response

International lawyers all over the world have been doing a lot of work, talking about the legality of the whole war, as well as the legality of the various individual armed actions that have been a part of this war. The issues are complex: is Gaza an occupied territory? Who is in control there? If it is not an occupied territory, then what is it, since it is not a sovereign state? Does all this matter at all? Each and every one of these questions has international lawyers typing away like crazy – and for each one there are strong positions, one way or another.

Meanwhile, people have looked to the various international legal institutions and their attempts to deal with the situation:

4. The Pursuit of Justice through Law… and its limitations

But, is it a good idea to pursue the objective of criminal prosecutions? How much do these legal instruments offer anyway? How clear are the rules that have allegedly been breached? What can international law really offer to the thousands of victims and their survivors? In this section, I want to highlight a number of limitations offered by international humanitarian law and by international criminal law for the achievement of the justice and accountability that many of us would like to see.

  1. IHL and ICL have achieved significant results in the past, but in different types of situations. The crimes that were tried in Nuremberg and Tokyo, as well as the growing number of convictions that have come from the ad hoc tribunals (Yugoslavia and Rwanda), and the so-called hybrid tribunals (Sierra Leone, Cambodia, etc.), to the extent that these have been successful, have mostly been of a different nature than what has been seen so far in the Gaza war. The convictions were for large scale and systematic massacres, mass rape and the attempt to systematically exterminate a particular group of people. In the case before us it is a very different situation, with armed groups attacking each other while civilians are caught in the middle. As we will see below, these are much more difficult to deal with.
  2. It is extremely unlikely, though not unthinkable, that the military actions of a country that enjoys the strong support of the U.S. as well as from the large majority of Western countries will be brought to some form of international legal prosecution. The political and institutional context in which these rules operate will make it a very arduous legal battle indeed. Unfortunately, various examples of this type of lack of accountability precede the Gaza war.
  3. Many of the violations of international humanitarian law (such as the use of certain weapons or the lack of adequate precautions when targeting military objectives) will not lead to the finding of individual responsibility; rather only state responsibility, which under international law does not carry a specific penalty or even punishment. At best, Israel might be under the obligation to pay some form of financial compensation or reparation. Though better than nothing, it is very different from the justice that is now pursued in human rights quarters. Moreover, the same unlikeliness applies here as well.
  4. There is a precedent (involving the war between Ethiopia and Eritrea) in which an international (pseudo) judicial body looked into the question of state responsibility for violations of international
    humanitarian law, but was forced to find most of the allegations void for lack of evidence. This brings us to the point that this type of proceedings is often very costly and difficult.
  5. Though there may be a couple of alleged violations of international law that can be ascertained through (independent) fact finding missions, many of them will get stranded in the ambiguity of the
    legal rules that relate to warfare. Here is a list of challenges:

All the complexities, the confusion, the sensory overload, the stress, and even how the mind deals with these experiences after the fact, all this is often referred to as ‘the fog of war’, and it communicates the difficulty to maintain your wits about during battle. However, in my opinion, the rules and procedures available are filled with unavoidable ambiguity and will lead the clarity of moral outrage to go astray in the fog of law.

Lista de Referencias
[1] (Ethan Bronner, Parsing Gains of Gaza War, NY-Times, 19.01.09) http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/19/world/middleeast/19assess.html?pagewanted=all.

Bio: Since March 2004, I have been working as Co-director of the Department of International Law, and head, together with Gudmundur Eiriksson, the two Masters Programmes: “International Law and the Settlement of Disputes” and “International Law and Human Rights”. I first came to UPEACE in September 2003 as a visiting professor to teach part of the general introductory course on international law. In my current capacity I am responsible for general management and further development of our two programmes, planning of the curriculum and academic calendar, and overall functioning of the department. I will be teaching in the general foundational courses, and also in some of the specialized courses in our programmes, as well as in other UPEACE programmes. I will also supervise many of the independent studies with which students conclude their ten month programme. Before coming here and while working on my Ph.D. dissertation on the public/private distinction in human rights discourse, I lectured on both international law and human rights at a number of Dutch universities. I plan to defend my dissertation soon at Erasmus University in Rotterdam. Prior to assuming this position I spent six months as a visiting researcher with the European Law Research Center at Harvard Law School. My research interest generally concerns the integration of contemporary thought on power, knowledge, subjectivity, and language with our thinking about international law and human rights.