Who is like God arbour wrote:International law don't knows "War against Terror".
War is an international affair.
But a terror organisation like al-Qaida is no international legal personality. It's is according to the law of nations impossible to wage a war against it.
That's a pleasant but fallacious way to claim the GWoT is illegal.
Semantic gamesmanship aside, the principle of global censure and use of all means available against terror groups is contained in UN resolutions, including 1368 which you quote. 1373 which you also quote reaffirms 1368, reaffirms the inherent right of individual or collective self-defense, and reaffirms the Charter, in which the very preamble declares that force is an option for the common interest.
The 9/11 was a crime - a dreadful and shocking crime - but nevertheless only a crime.
It was no
casus belli.
My ass. Seriously, when did attacks upon a sovereign nations soil become not-casus-belli? If you want to play games with words and say that 9/11 was just a "crime" because Al Qaeda has no national boundary, then fine . . . 9/11 made us the most pissed-off cops the world has ever seen.
Of course Afghanistan was harboring and supporting Al Qaeda, so then it was a military thing. But the GWoT would still qualify, your semantics games notwithstanding.
As for Iraq, your own link refers to the notion that the only modern just causes for war are self-defense and via UN Resolution. The Iraq War was both.
To attack Afghanistan was a violation of international laws.
WHAT?!?
And it was unnecessary.
WHAT?!?
But the U.S. have wanted the unconditional extradition - without giving any proof that he was responsible for 9/11.
His extradition was already required for 1998, but the Taliban refused then too, claiming that no evidence had been provided. We provided it in August, they ignored it. They thought they could thumb our nose at us, since all Clinton did was send some cruise missiles.
That's the real trick of Bush . . . the terrorists had gotten used to a soft United States. Oh, we might send a few cruise missiles, like a kid hurling insults on the playground after getting a bloody nose, but nothing more than that.
Ah, but this time they started to shit 'cause we went to full ass-kick mode.
But I digress . . . the Taliban, a non-recognized government of Afghanistan, had previously refused to extradite bin Laden despite evidence. Why expect something different on this occasion?
Article 3 European Convention on Human Rights
"European"? Is this in the UN? Are we signatories?
More to the point, do I give a shit in regards to known terrorists? No, as a matter of fact I don't. In fact, I give less than a shit. Indeed, calculations suggest I give negative shit. I daresay I'd have to eat shit in order to be able to care one iota on the matter. But then I'd be full of shit and my opinion wouldn't be of consequence anyway.
Seriously, Wilga, it's starting to look like you and I have no common ground whatsoever on which to discuss this issue.
Frankly, I don't even know what planet you're from right now.
Afghanistan harbored and aided a group responsible for 9/11. There is no doubt of this. By standing with the target, they made themselves a target.
Even if, by some wild stretch of the imagination, your interpretation of UN phrasings were accurate, it would only mean that the law was wrong, and that if we are outlaws, we're outlaws in the right.
If you can't understand that or won't agree to it, then that's your problem. Taliban rule of Afghanistan and its harboring of Al Qaeda is now something relegated to history, as it should be. Destroying the Taliban was justified by any code of ethics or set of laws worth its salt. If it was not justified in yours, then check your premises . . . you've got something horribly wrong.