Wednesday, April 1, 2026

HH Judge Jeff Blackett, “The legality of the use of armed force against Iran”


In a recent post, HHJ Blackett has commented on the lawfulness of the joint Israeli and American use of force against Iran.

The essay advances a doctrinal and normative claim about the lawfulness of the use of force against Iran. Doctrinally, the argument is that the United States and Israel could lawfully resort to force on two distinct bases: first, self-defense under Article 51 of the U.N. Charter beginning on February 28, 2026; and second, Security Council authorization following the adoption of Resolution 2817 on March 11, 2026. Normatively, it contends that the Charter should not be interpreted through an unduly narrow, historically fixed reading that fails to account for contemporary threats such as proxy warfare, transnational terrorism, and nuclear proliferation.


The essay frames the Article 51 argument around three asserted predicates. For Israel, it points to Iranian support for armed attacks by Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. For the United States, he relies on Iran-sponsored attacks against Americans and U.S. facilities. For both states, it adds Iran’s alleged continued pursuit of nuclear weapons, coupled with openly hostile rhetoric toward the United States and Israel. On this view, Iran’s conduct satisfies the threshold for self-defense not merely through direct state action, but also through substantial involvement in proxy violence and through the scale of the danger posed by a developing nuclear capability.


The essay then places considerable weight on Resolution 2817, which we should read as a resolution condemning Iranian attacks on neighboring Gulf states, threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, and affirming the inherent right of individual and collective self-defense. The essay further suggests that the absence of Security Council condemnation of prior U.S. and Israeli actions implies retrospective validation and furnishes a legal basis for continued or broader multinational action. That is a notably expansive reading of the resolution’s legal effect, and it is central to the claim that force was lawful both before and after March 11.


The major theme is an institutional critique. The argument goes that the Charter’s collective-security design has not functioned as intended because the veto has often impeded rather than enabled peace enforcement. There is emphasis on the failure of the Military Staff Committee and the collapse of the Charter’s expectation that member states would maintain forces available for rapid U.N. action. These structural failures help explain why states have increasingly relied on self-defense rationales rather than awaiting Security Council consensus. We, therefore, are presented with contemporary law on the use of force as a product not only of treaty text, but also of state practice developing in response to institutional paralysis.


The legal analysis of self-defense relies heavily on the evolution of “armed attack” and “imminence.” The International Court of Justice’s reasoning in Nicaragua supports the proposition that a state may commit an armed attack through proxies, irregulars, or substantial involvement with non-state actors. Also, post-9/11 practice argues that terrorist attacks can trigger Article 51. From there, the essay endorses an expanded conception of anticipatory self-defense, drawing on the Caroline formula but arguing that imminence should now be assessed not only temporally, but also by reference to the gravity of the threatened harm, the adversary’s capabilities, and the nature of the potential attack.


At the same time, the essay expressly limits the scope of its intervention. While the legality of resort to force is addressed, how hostilities are conducted is not; for example, even a lawful initial use of force does not immunize a state from later violations of the law of armed conflict. In sum, the essay offers a modernization thesis: Article 51 must evolve through state practice to remain operationally relevant in an era defined by proxy violence, terrorism, and existential strategic threats.



Monday, March 30, 2026

Comment on Convoluted Paths

"ON DAY NUMBER 1, EVERYONE ASSOCIATED WITH A CASE SHOULD KNOW WHAT DAY WILL BE NUMBER 120."


United States v. Carlisle, 25 M.J. 426, 428 (C.M.A. 1988); see also United States v. Wilson, 72 M.J. 347, 358 (C.A.A.F. 2013) (Cox, S.J., dissenting).

Sunday, March 29, 2026

A court martial stayed for delay - a convoluted path

Last Wednesday, the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada (CMAC) upheld a stay of prosecution for delay.  While this judgment is unlikely to have a marked impact on jurisprudence in Canadian military law, it may impact the manner in which the Canadian Military Prosecution Service (CMPS) governs itself. 

In R v Jacques, 2026 CMAC 3, Chief Justice Mary Gleason (on behalf of a unanimous bench) dismissed both the appeal by the Director of Military Prosecutions (DMP) - on behalf of the Minister - and the cross-appeal by Major Jacques (retired).

And it is illustrative that Major Jacques was still serving when the process began, but was retired by the time that the appeal was heard.

This matter has a relatively long history.  It is, perhaps, not as long as some well-aged grievances in the Canadian Forces grievance process, but the judgment of the CMAC marks the (likely) end of a process that has taken nearly 7 years.
 
This judgment concerns the application of the framework established by the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) under R v Jordan, 2016 SCC 27 (the "Jordan framework") as applied at court martial.  This framework is used to assist in determining if an accused has been denied trial within a reasonable amount of time, thereby contravening the accused right under s 11(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Charter).

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Hazing in Argentina

    Michael Verón, 26 years of age, became a victim of a "welcome" ritual on his military base in the province of Misiones in Argentina, where he became a paraplegic and lost consciousness for 21 days.  The event occurred on June 8, 1922, when the victim, who suffered a serious, irreversible, spinal cord injury after having been subjected to abusive and humiliating practices known as the "promotion baptism," could no longer feel his extremities or move.  The "baptism" involved the victim taking on the expense of making a barbecue for everyone, and then forcing him to drink too much alcohol and food, and then to fling himself repeatedly into a swimming pool with very little water.

In this context, Verón, when speaking in public, said that he could no longer remember whether he fell into the pool, or was pushed or whether they threw him into it.  His injuries occurred in the swimming pool when he was obliged to throw himself into the pool for the third time.  Each activity was ordered as part of the ritual. He said that there has to be a final stop to these brutal rituals within the military.

A total of 25 members of the base were submitted to the Disciplinary Council of the Army. The investigation ended with 15 members of the military getting light sanctions, another 7 received 60 days  arrest and 4 were removed from their posts, having been held to have principal responsibility for the ritual.

A similar case occurred with the death of Matías Chirino (22) on June 18, 2025.  He died of bronchial aspiration during a similar ritual and the members of the military responsible were tried for homicide.  The federal court has also taken up the case of Verón, but since he is not dead those responsible are being tried for responsibility for the victim's "serious injuries."  The military has assumed charge of his medical care and four years later he is still unable to move or feel his legs.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Stiffer penalties coming in Taiwan

Taiwan is considering stiffer penalties for certain national security offenses by military personnel. Reporting here from the Taipei Times. Excerpt:

The Ministry of National Defense is addressing Taiwan’s light sentences for national security contraventions through legal reforms and by improving internal military security, while pushing amendments to the Military Trial Act, Minister of National Defense Wellington Koo said today.

Koo’s statement comes after the Control Yuan yesterday urged stricter punishments for military personnel convicted of contravening national security regulations by spying for China, saying that the average sentence is 12.7 times shorter than in other democratic countries.

The ministry has proposed amendments to the Criminal Code of the Armed Forces increasing the penalties for expressing “loyalty” to the enemy and for “conspiracy” and “premeditation,” Koo said.