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35 Harv. Int'l. L. J. 387 (1994)
The Legitimation of Violence: A Critical Analysis of the Gulf War

handle is hein.journals/hilj35 and id is 393 raw text is: Volume 35, Number 2, Spring 1994

The Legitimation of Violence: A Critical
Analysis of the Gulf War
Roger Normand*
Chris af Jochnick**
INTRODUCTION
This is the second of two Articles challenging the widespread belief
that the laws of war operate to restrain or humanize war. The Articles
trace the historical development of the laws of war and argue that the
laws were carefully drafted to subordinate humanitarian obligations to
military necessities and, as a result, have served to legitimize, rather
than to restrain, wartime violence during the Gulf War..
In the first Article,' we examined the historical record of the laws
governing the means and methods of warfare, concluding that powerful
nations deliberately formulated the laws of war to advance the primacy
of military violence over humanitarian concerns, despite noble rhetoric
to the contrary.2 We illustrated how the Hague Conferences, which
*J.D., Harvard Law School; M.T.S., Harvard Divinity School; Policy Director, Center for
Economic & Social Rights.
** J.D., Harvard Law School; Legal Director, Center for Economic & Social Rights. We wish
to thank the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation for its generous support. We also
thank Professor Richard Falk, Professor Henry Steiner, Sarah Leah Whitson, Joshua Zinner, and
Michael Eisner for their helpful comments on earlier drafts of this Article. Finally, we are grateful
to the participants in the Harvard Study Team and International Study Team human rights
missions to Iraq and to the many people in the United States, Iraq, and Jordan who made these
missions possible.
1. Chris af Jochnick & Roger Normand, The Legitimization of Violence: A Critical History of the
Laws of War, 35 HARV. INT'L L.J. 49 (1994).
2. International law distinguishes between laws governing the resort to force (/us ad bellum)
and laws governing the means and methods of combat during war (jus in bello). See, e g., GEosFREY
BasT, Hum   rrY iN WARFARE 8-9 (1980). Examples of the former include the Pact of Paris, or
Kellogg-Briand Pact, which outlawed the use of war as an instrument of national policy. Treaty
Providing for the Renunciation of War as an Instrument of National Policy, Aug. 27, 1928, T.S.
796. Likewise, article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter requires that [a~ll members ... refrain
in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or
political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the
United Nations. U.N. CHARTER art. 2,   4. The legality of Iraq's use of force against Kuwait
is judged against this jus ad bellum prohibition. The United States-led Coalition sought legal
authority for its resort to force in Security Council resolutions, citing chapter VII (the use of force
under collective security) of the United Nations Charter. Yet regardless of whether these laws on
the resort to force were followed, all parties to the conflict remained bound to respect the laws

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