Since the March 2003, U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, rumors have persisted of a United States plan to attack Iran. Some U.S. officials are apparently willing to contemplate the use of military force to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. Under international law, however, there is no right without Security Council authorization to use significant military force on the territory of another state to stop nuclear research. Knowing this, alternative arguments are being floated by those sympathetic to the plan to attack Iran. One such argument asserts that the U.S. could attack Iran on the basis of collective self-defense with Iraq or Israel. This article makes clear that the United States in fact has no right to attack Iran on the basis of...
In 1981, Israel launched a preemptive attack on the Iraqi Osiraq nuclear reactor. Now a similar stri...
The history of international law is, in large part, about the development of restraints on states\u2...
© 2020 Marcus Robert Hickleton75 years after the cataclysmic nuclear strikes on Hiroshima and Nagasa...
Since the March 2003, U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, rumors have persisted of a United States plan to at...
The United States claims that Iran\u27s uranium enrichment program is for the purpose of creating nu...
International law does not permit the use of military force against Iran to attempt to end its nucle...
This short article addresses a pressing issue of global concern that has emerged – whether Israel an...
In this Article, the author questions the legality of the U.S. missile attack on Iraq\u27s intellige...
The Iraq war rekindled debate – a debate now further inflamed in discussions of Iran and North Korea...
The recent targeted attack resulting in the death of Qassem Soleimani has received extensive attenti...
Lost in the international debate raging around Iran’s burgeoning nuclear weapons program is the deep...
Latterly, various experts and political analysts have been hotly debating in the world press whether...
In this article, Professor Daniel Joyner analyzes the legal arguments on both sides of the Iran nucl...
As the intensity of the verbal exchanges between Israel and the Islamic Republic of Iran grows, so d...
Iran’s defiance of the IAEA has raised questions about Tehran’s desire to build nuclear weapons and ...
In 1981, Israel launched a preemptive attack on the Iraqi Osiraq nuclear reactor. Now a similar stri...
The history of international law is, in large part, about the development of restraints on states\u2...
© 2020 Marcus Robert Hickleton75 years after the cataclysmic nuclear strikes on Hiroshima and Nagasa...
Since the March 2003, U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, rumors have persisted of a United States plan to at...
The United States claims that Iran\u27s uranium enrichment program is for the purpose of creating nu...
International law does not permit the use of military force against Iran to attempt to end its nucle...
This short article addresses a pressing issue of global concern that has emerged – whether Israel an...
In this Article, the author questions the legality of the U.S. missile attack on Iraq\u27s intellige...
The Iraq war rekindled debate – a debate now further inflamed in discussions of Iran and North Korea...
The recent targeted attack resulting in the death of Qassem Soleimani has received extensive attenti...
Lost in the international debate raging around Iran’s burgeoning nuclear weapons program is the deep...
Latterly, various experts and political analysts have been hotly debating in the world press whether...
In this article, Professor Daniel Joyner analyzes the legal arguments on both sides of the Iran nucl...
As the intensity of the verbal exchanges between Israel and the Islamic Republic of Iran grows, so d...
Iran’s defiance of the IAEA has raised questions about Tehran’s desire to build nuclear weapons and ...
In 1981, Israel launched a preemptive attack on the Iraqi Osiraq nuclear reactor. Now a similar stri...
The history of international law is, in large part, about the development of restraints on states\u2...
© 2020 Marcus Robert Hickleton75 years after the cataclysmic nuclear strikes on Hiroshima and Nagasa...