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A SHARP increase in British and American bombing raids on Iraq in the run-up to
war “to put pressure on the regime” was illegal under international
law, according to leaked Foreign Office legal advice.
The advice was first provided to senior ministers in March 2002. Two months later
RAF and USAF jets began “spikes of activity” designed to goad Saddam
Hussein into retaliating and giving the allies a pretext for war.
The Foreign Office advice shows military action to pressurise the regime was
“not consistent with” UN law, despite American claims that it was.
The decision to provoke the Iraqis emerged in leaked minutes of a meeting between
Tony Blair and his most senior advisers — the so-called Downing Street
memo published by The Sunday Times shortly before the general election.
Democratic congressmen claimed last week the evidence it contains is grounds
for impeaching President George Bush.
Those at the meeting on July 23, 2002, included Blair, Geoff Hoon, then defence
secretary, Jack Straw, the foreign secretary, and Sir Richard Dearlove, then
chief of MI6. The minutes quote Hoon as saying that the US had begun spikes
of activity to put pressure on the regime.
Ministry of Defence figures for bombs dropped by the RAF on southern Iraq,
obtained by the Liberal Democrats through Commons written answers, show the
RAF was as active in the bombing as the Americans and that the “spikes”
began in May 2002.
However, the leaked Foreign Office legal advice, which was also appended to
the Cabinet Office briefing paper for the July meeting, made it clear allied
aircraft were legally entitled to patrol the no-fly zones over the north and
south of Iraq only to deter attacks by Saddam’s forces on the Kurdish
and Shia populations.
The allies had no power to use military force to put pressure of any kind on
the regime.
The increased attacks on Iraqi installations, which senior US officers admitted
were designed to “degrade” Iraqi air defences, began six months
before the UN passed resolution 1441, which the allies claim authorised military
action. The war finally started in March 2003.
This weekend the Liberal Democrat peer Lord Goodhart, vice-president of the
International Commission of Jurists and a world authority on international law,
said the intensified raids were illegal if they were meant to pressurise the
regime.
He said UN Resolution 688, used by the allies to justify allied patrols over
the no-fly zones, was not adopted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which
deals with all matters authorising military force.
“Putting pressure on Iraq is not something that would be a lawful activity,”
said Goodhart, who is also the Liberal Democrat shadow Lord Chancellor.
The Foreign Office advice noted that the Americans had “on occasion”
claimed that the allied aircraft were there to enforce compliance with resolutions
688 and 687, which ordered Iraq to destroy its weapons of mass destruction.
“This view is not consistent with resolution 687, which does not deal
with the repression of the Iraqi civilian population, or with resolution 688,
which was not adopted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, and does not contain
any provision for enforcement,” it said.
Elizabeth Wilmshurst, one of the Foreign Office lawyers who wrote the report,
resigned in March 2003 in protest at the decision to go to war without a UN resolution
specifically authorising military force.
Further intensification of the bombing, known in the Pentagon as the Blue Plan,
began at the end of August, 2002, following a meeting of the US National Security
Council at the White House that month.
General Tommy Franks, the allied commander, recalled in his autobiography, American
Soldier, that during this meeting he rejected a call from Condoleezza Rice,
the national security adviser, to cut the bombing patrols because he wanted
to use them to make Iraq’s defences “as weak as possible”.
The allied commander specifically used the term “spikes of activity”
in his book. The upgrade to a full air war was also illegal, said Goodhart.
“If, as Franks seems to suggest, the purpose was to soften up Iraq for
a future invasion or even to intimidate Iraq, the coalition forces were acting
without lawful authority,” he said.
Although the legality of the war has been more of an issue in Britain than
in America, the revelations indicate Bush may also have acted illegally, since
Congress did not authorise military action until October 11 2002.
The air war had already begun six weeks earlier and the spikes of activity
had been underway for five months.