A law-based opportunity for Israel to prevent Iranian nuclear weapons

This is not a moment for Israeli strategic thinking to become confused or shortsighted. Opinion.

By Prof. René Beres, INN    15 April 2024

Iran nuclear program

Though Iran describes its drone and missile attack on Israel as “retaliation,” it is actually an act of aggression. If Iran were an already-nuclear enemy state, Israel’s capacity for lawful self-defense would be glaringly limited. But as Iran is still pre-nuclear, the Iranian aggression could prove net-gainful for Israel. In essence, this Iranian crime offers Israel an eleventh hour opportunity to prevent enemy nuclearization. In formal legal terms, such opportunity falls under the heading of “anticipatory self-defense.”

To be sure, the tangible human and material costs to Israel of any further escalation could be very high, but fighting against a not-yet-nuclear enemy that initiated the aggression would represent Israel’s best chance to avoid an eventual nuclear war.

Among other derelictions, Tehran’s earlier assurance that its strike against Israel would be limited “to avoid escalations” was disingenuous. After all, during any crisis search for “escalation dominance” by an already-nuclear Israel and a not-yet-nuclear Iran, competitive risk-taking would favor the former.

Under authoritative international law, defensive first strikes or acts of “preemption” could be permissible in existential-threat circumstances. But even if resorts to anticipatory self-defense would be deemed lawful or law-enforcing, they could still prove unreasonably dangerous, strategically misconceived, tangibly ineffectual and/or irrational. It follows, going forward, that Israel will need to evaluate all anticipatory self-defense options along the two discrete standards of law and strategy.

From the standpoint of international law, preemption could represent a fully permissible option. Though subject to important constraints and conditions, the right of “anticipatory self-defense” is well established. And while a “bolt from the blue” Israeli preemption against Iran could involve assorted difficulties, such difficulties are unlikely to apply in an ongoing conventional war. In this connection, Iran had repeatedly declared its intention to strike Israel as “punishment.”

In law, this declaration, now fulfilled, was an open admission of mens rea or criminal intent.

The right of self-defense by forestalling an attack appears in Hugo Grotius’ Book II of The Law of War and Peace in 1625. Recognizing the need for “present danger” and threatening behavior that is “imminent in a point of time,” Grotius indicates that self defense is to be permitted not only after an attack has been suffered, but also in advance, that is, “where the deed may be anticipated.” Or, as he explains a bit further on in the same chapter, “It be lawful to kill him who is preparing to kill….”

April 15, 2024 | 5 Comments »

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  1. Jonathan Conricus to Newsmax: Israel Will ‘Roll Back Iranian Aggression’

    By Theodore Bunker | Monday, 15 April 2024 01:59 PM EDT

    Jonathan Conricus, a former spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces, told Newsmax on Monday that Israel is formulating a comprehensive plan to “roll back Iranian aggression” following the attack by Iran over the weekend.

    The IDF announced on Sunday that it had identified 300 Iranian drones and missiles and eliminated “99%” of those headed for Israel on Saturday night. The attack came in response to an alleged Israeli strike on an Iranian consulate in Syria that killed several high-ranking Iranian officials.

    Conricus, now a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said on “National Report,” “An attack like this from a sovereign country against Israel is not something that can or will go unanswered or unchecked.”

    He added, “Israel will retaliate. I think that what Israel is now doing is formulating a strategic plan so as not to retaliate just for the sense of retaliation, but to retaliate as part of a bigger and more expansive plan to really roll back Iranian aggression in the region.”

    The chief of staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri announced on Sunday that the attack had concluded and there was no intention of continuing the operation.

    Israeli ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan on Monday called for the U.N. Security Council to “impose all possible sanctions on Iran before it’s too late.

    “This attack crossed every red line, and Israel reserves the legal right to retaliate,” he said.

    Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, Amir Saeid Iravani, defended the attack to the U.N. Security Council in a meeting, saying that Iran had to “exercise its inherent right to self-defense under international law” and that the country “does not seek escalation or war in the region” and does not want a conflict with the United States.

    “Israeli civilians have been living under Iranian terror for far too long,” Conricus said. “All of the terrorist organizations around us — whether it’s Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza, or Hezbollah in Lebanon, or a bunch of Iranian proxies in Syria — they are all funded and equipped and armed by Iran.”

    “Iran’s actions over the weekend are, in fact, also an invitation for Israel to actually change its strategy and start repaying Iran for attacking and menacing so many Israeli civilians,” he said.

  2. Iran has two reasons to have nuclear weapons, and they both mean Israel is dead,

    1) The original Khomeini regime made it clear that if they had the means to destroy Israel even if it meant mass death and destruction in Iran, Khomeini said in so many words that I am a Muslim and Persia means nothing to me. Israel only needs another suicidal leader like the Ayatollah and its Armageddon.

    2) The Mullahs never attack Israel but arm their proxy armies for attacks on Israel that never, ever end. By having nuclear weapons Iran then is free to do so for eternity knowing if Israel launches so will Iran. Iranian IRGC officers have repeatedly said Israel is a one bomb country. I believe it’s is a multiple bomb country. Example: 7 bombs: Haifa, Jerusalem (2) bombs, Tel Aviv (2) bombs, Dimona and Be’ersheva. Iran will make a dozen nukes or more not just 1 or 6.

    Netanyahu has said many times that Israel will know when Iran gets nuclear weapons or more precisely deliverable nuclear weapons. Will the IDF strike? With Netanyahu at the helm – maybe not. With a leftist Prime Minister? Much more likely.

    If Trump is re-elected Israel may have a better window of opportunity and more freedom to act but Israel should act when it feels it is necessary regardless of who is the US president.

    The next 3 to 6 or so years will tell one way or the other.

  3. I think Professor Beres emphasis in finding legal justifications for an Israaeli preemptive strike to prevent Iran;s aquisition of nuclear weapons is misplaced and unnecessary. Iran had declared war on Israel 30-40 years ago, and it has has been carrying out acts of war directed against Israel ever since, either directly or through proxies that it controls. To me, that is more than enough legal and moral justification for Israel to do whatever it takes to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, No deed for any new or additional justification, as Professor Bares seems to think.

  4. All over the world, military specialists and civilians pray that Israel would bomb Iranian nuclear facilities in retaliation. It would be fair… But the American hostile regime will do everything to prevent this righteous attack. Most probably Gantz, Galant, and others will do their best to follow Biden’s orders.