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5 - Definitions of Aggression as Harbingers of International Change

from PART I - HISTORIC AND CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON THE UNLAWFUL USE OF FORCE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 May 2018

Leila Nadya Sadat
Affiliation:
Washington University, St Louis
Kirsten E. Sellars
Affiliation:
Visiting Fellow, Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, Australian National University
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Debates about the definitions of aggression are responses to deadlock and harbingers of change. Each, in its own way and in its own time, has heralded a transition from an old to a new set of legal and institutional arrangements. The definitions in the early 1930s, which emerged in response to the failings of the League of Nations, signaled the shift away from the old dichotomy of belligerency and neutrality, and toward a new regime based on legitimate and illegitimate wars. The definitions of the early 1950s, responding to the Cold War Security Council deadlock, presaged the United Nations’ transition from collective security organization to conflict mediator. The General Assembly's definition of 1974, negotiated during the era of détente, might, had the “new” Cold War not intervened, have heralded new alignments between powerful States. And the definition in the 2010 Kampala Amendments, anticipating shifts from a unipolar to a multipolar world, proposes dual sources of authority – the Security Council and International Criminal Court – on the handling of aggression.

Although debates about definitions herald change, they have also given rise to remarkably durable patterns of state behavior, patterns still being repeated to this day. The most consistent advocates of automatic yardsticks of aggression have been States vulnerable to attack or excluded from either the League Council or Security Council. These “excluded” States have not only looked to definitions for legal protection against the vicissitudes of international life, but have also tried to use them to break the powerful States’ monopoly over the determination of aggression. This pattern was first discernible during the interwar years. In 1933, for example, the Soviet Union (a vulnerable State), backed by France (another vulnerable State), broached a definition at the Conference for the Reduction and Limitation of Armaments (Disarmament Conference). During the Cold War decades, smaller States, beguiled by the prospect of undermining the Security Council's mandate under Article 39, kept the definitional flame alight. And today a legion of small, middling, and quite large “excluded” States posit International Criminal Court jurisdiction over the crime of aggression as an alternative (or, more diplomatically, a supplement) to Security Council determination.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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