That was President
Obama’s response this week to those who believe he wants
to attack Syria in order to defend his own credibility. Secretary
of State John Kerry said the same thing before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. They were referring to the
88-year-old Geneva
Protocol (Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War
of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or other Gases, and of Bacteriological
Methods of Warfare) and the 20-year-old Chemical
Weapons Convention (Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons
and on their Destruction).
Although 189 nations, including the United States, are parties to the CWC, it doesn’t follow that the United States has been anointed to enforce it. In fact, U.S. action against Syria would in itself violate international law, which permits the use of force by one government against another only in self-defense or as part of a UN-authorized action. Neither applies in this case. (There are libertarian grounds against war even when the UN has authorized it.)
Because the gruesome images of children and other noncombatants killed and wounded allegedly by Bashar al-Assad’s chemical weapons constitute a powerful part of Obama’s appeal for public support for his missile strike (or more), it pays to take a close look at the U.S. record on chemical weapons.
http://reason.com/archives/2013/09/10/the-cynical-us-policy-on-chemical-weapon
Although 189 nations, including the United States, are parties to the CWC, it doesn’t follow that the United States has been anointed to enforce it. In fact, U.S. action against Syria would in itself violate international law, which permits the use of force by one government against another only in self-defense or as part of a UN-authorized action. Neither applies in this case. (There are libertarian grounds against war even when the UN has authorized it.)
Because the gruesome images of children and other noncombatants killed and wounded allegedly by Bashar al-Assad’s chemical weapons constitute a powerful part of Obama’s appeal for public support for his missile strike (or more), it pays to take a close look at the U.S. record on chemical weapons.
http://reason.com/archives/2013/09/10/the-cynical-us-policy-on-chemical-weapon
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