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Syrian Strikes: A Singular Exception or a Pattern and a Precedent?

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Roberts, Anthea

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Blog of the European Journal of International Law

Abstract

In a recent post, Monica Hakimi argued that, rather than crafting a legal justification for the United States’ use of force in Syria, we should instead treat it as a “one-off incident for addressing conduct that, if not deterred, could be destabilizing,” much like occurred in the United States’ Baghdad strikes in 1993. In order not to further undermine the Article 2(4) prohibition on the use of force, the United States should at the same time “underscore its overall commitment to and investment in” the law governing the use of force so as to avoid the impression that “the United States does not view the jus ad bellum, and maybe international law more generally, as normatively relevant in the global order.”

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EJIL:Talk! Blog of the European Journal of International Law

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Open Access via publisher website

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2099-12-31
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