Eli Baron

Israel's Strike on the Gaza Media Building Complies With The Law Of Armed Conflict 

By Eli Bar-On

DEPUTY MILITARY ADVOCATE GENERAL, IDF (2012-2015)

May 2021 will be remembered as a particularly hot month in Israel, but not because of the boiling weather. On May 10th, after several days of clashes between Palestinians and Israelis in East Jerusalem, Hamas, the terror organization that has been ruling the Gaza Strip for almost 15 years, returned to the number one war crime in its playbook: launching rockets towards cities and villages across Israel.

By now, well above 3,500 rockets have been fired from Gaza into Israel. Most were intercepted by the Israeli Iron Dome air defense system. Yet, some managed to penetrate those defenses and kill several Israeli civilians. In response to these attacks, Israel launched its own military campaign - Operation Guardian of the Walls - and has so far targeted over 800 military targets belonging to Hamas and other terror groups operating inside Gaza.

One of the Israeli strikes that gained the  greatest global attention - and criticism - was the attack on the Al-Jalaa building in Gaza. Apparently, what made this strike exceptional was not the fact that this was a fairly tall building, with twelve floors, nor the number of casualties in the strike (there were none). What was special about this building was the fact that it housed the offices of foreign news agencies, including the Associated Press and Al Jazeera. As detailed by the testimonies of several employees in these agencies (here and here, for example), the IDF notified the residents of the building that they should evacuate it within one hour because the IDF intended to target it. Once the building was evacuated, the IDF struck and destroyed it.

Assuming the IDF knew that the building was home to news agencies among other civilian offices and apartments, was it lawful to carry out this strike? Let us examine the legal basis that needs to be substantiated in order to claim that the attack was lawful.

The first thing we need to look at is whether the building was a military objective. The principle of distinction, which is the touchstone of the Laws of Armed Conflict (LOAC), requires all fighting parties to distinguish between military objectives and civilian objects, and to direct their strikes only against military objectives. A military objective is an object which, by its nature, location, purpose or use, makes an effective contribution to military action, and whose partial or total destruction, capture or neutralization, in the circumstances at play at the time, offers a definite military advantage.

How then, does the IDF explain the attack against the building, which appears to be civilian in nature? In a statement made by the IDF, it was claimed that the building contained military assets belonging to the intelligence offices of Hamas. The IDF also claimed that the building housed a Hamas research and development unit operating technological equipment against Israel, which constituted "a unique asset to the Hamas terrorist organization." If that is the case, those assets can indeed qualify as military objectives. But does this mean that the whole building qualifies as a military objective? The LOAC stipulate that clearly separated and distinct military objectives should not be attacked as a single military objective.

Were the specific offices, from which Hamas was operating in the building, "clearly separated and distinct military objectives" that should have been attacked surgically, without attacking the building as a whole? Did the IDF, which has precision-guided munitions and often uses them for pinpoint strikes of specific elements of a structure, have a legal obligation to direct the attack only against the Hamas offices in the building? It seems like this is a very good question to which there is no clear answer.

But in the concrete circumstances of the case, the Israeli military spokesman said: "There was no way of taking down only the Hamas facilities that were in the building. They occupied several floors in the building and it was impossible only to take down those floors. It was deemed necessary to take down the whole building." If that was indeed the case, it seems reasonable enough to claim that the structure was a single unit that qualified as a military objective in its entirety, since through its use it made an effective contribution to Hamas's military action, and its destruction offered a definite military advantage to the IDF. In this respect, the classification of the whole building as a military objective remains correct regardless of its civilian nature and uses.

Now, we should take one step forward with our legal analysis. The qualification of an object as a military target is not enough. The LOAC require the targeting party to take all sorts of precautions to spare civilians and civilian objects. One of the most important precautions is that effective advance warning shall be given of attacks that may affect the civilian population - unless circumstances do not permit.

As was learned from the testimonies of the residents of the building, the IDF did indeed give them time to evacuate and only struck the building after its owner assured the IDF it had been fully evacuated. The fact that there were no civilian casualties or injuries as a consequence of the attack of such a large structure is also proof of the highly effective advance warning that was given. Further proof of that fact could be found in the many photographers who were anticipating the strike and took videos documenting it from different angles.

Finally, the fact that the building was a military objective and that precautions have been taken during the attack is not enough. The LOAC also require that an attack that could be expected to cause incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, damage to civilian objects, or a combination thereof, will not be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated.

This means that the collateral damage to civilians and civilian property from the attack has to be proportionate to the military gain. In this case, there were no civilian casualties or injuries. If we consider the whole structure to be one military objective, we can also exclude the civilian offices in the building from the proportionality analysis. The civilian property that remains to be considered in this analysis is thus the objects inside the civilian offices and apartments in the building and any expected collateral damage to objects in the vicinity of the building. Presumably, some part of the residents managed to extract from the building at least some of the most precious and valuable equipment that they could within the short time they had to evacuate.

Obviously, the damage to the property that remained in the building is much less significant than any damage to human lives that could have been occurred.

This analysis must be carried out by the IDF commander who decided to approve the strike. Assuming such an assessment has been made, in accordance with the IDF procedures, and assuming that the civilian objects' damage assessment was not excessive in proportion to the direct military gain from the attack, this strike should be considered proportional and lawful.

For understandable reasons, the public outcry after the attack was immense. The strike was criticized by a host of groups around the world. There is no reason to doubt the AP’s statement that it had no indication of Hamas being in, or active in, the building.

At the same time, years of experience with Hamas's modus operandi have taught the IDF that Hamas will never shy away from using civilians as human shields, with the knowledge and consent of these civilians, or with the lack thereof.

Journalists are not immune from this tactic. If the IDF's claim regarding Hamas's use of the building for military purposes is correct, this should come as no surprise.

Hamas did not coincidentally locate its offices in this building, having known full well that it houses the offices of big foreign media outlets. It used their presence cynically, hoping to deter the IDF from striking the building in order to avoid the PR damage that inevitably follows such a strike.

AP and Al Jazeera have called for the IDF to publish the evidence that Hamas was using the building. Prime Minister Netanyahu claimed that such evidence will be passed to the US through intelligence channels. Obviously, making a public case to present the evidence of the attack is almost an insurmountable challenge, because these operations are almost always based on classified information. The publication of such information can endanger the lives of human sources or risk the exposure of invaluable methods of collecting intelligence.

Freedom of the press should always be respected and in times of war even more so. This is why military strikes that bear collateral damage to journalists and press assets should be carried out only after very careful consideration. At the same time, the reality dictated by terror organizations such as Hamas in which journalists sometimes serve as human shields without their knowledge should not deter law-abiding militaries such as the IDF to strike these terror groups even at the cost of harming assets of press agencies, as was done in this case.

Claiming otherwise will only incentivize the terror organizations to keep using these war crimes tactics. This is yet another example of why the civilized world must fight and condemn groups such as Hamas in every possible way.


Eli Bar-On concluded his career in the Israel Defense Forces holding the position of instructor at the IDF National Defense College (the INDC). Prior to that position, Bar-on served as the Deputy Military Advocate General of the IDF (2012 to 2015), where he was in command of approximately 1,000 lawyers and legal experts, including prior to, during and following Operation Pillar of Defense & Operation Protective Edge. He also served as the Chief Legal Advisor for the IDF in the West Bank from 2009 to 2012.

Long Form Analysis: The ICC Palestine Ruling

By Eli Bar-On

DEPUTY MILITARY ADVOCATE GENERAL, IDF (2012-2015)

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In the chronicles of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, February 5, 2021 will be remembered as the day in which the Pre-Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague officially paved the way to the criminalization of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

In order to understand the chain of events that led to the Chamber’s decision, let us take a few steps back.

On November 29, 2012, the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 67/19 that accorded 'Palestine' Non-Member Observer State status.

Following this resolution, the UN Office of Legal Affairs dispatched a memorandum stating that 'Palestine' would now be able to become party to any treaties that are open to ‘any State’ or ‘all States’ deposited with the Secretary-General of the UN. Using this legal opinion, the Palestinians indeed acceded to several international treaties.

On January 2015, 'Palestine' acceded to the Rome Statute, which is the foundational document of the ICC. On April 1, 2015, 'Palestine' was officially welcomed as a State Party to the Statute. 'Palestine' informed the Court that it is delegating its jurisdiction to the ICC over crimes committed on its territory or by its nationals since June 13, 2014.

Interestingly, but not coincidentally, June 13, 2014 is the day after the kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers by Hamas operatives in the West Bank, an event that put in motion an escalation that eventually led to the outbreak of the Gaza war in July 2014.

In January 2015, a few days after 'Palestine’s accession to the Statute, Fatou Bensouda, the Prosecutor of the ICC decided to launch a preliminary examination of the 'Situation in Palestine' since June 13, 2014.

Almost five years later, on December 2019, the Prosecutor concluded the examination and found what she claimed was reasonable basis to proceed with an investigation into the 'Situation in Palestine', based on the belief that both Israeli forces and Hamas members committed war crimes during the 2014 Gaza hostilities. In addition, she raised suspicions that Israeli officials committed war crimes of transferring Israeli civilians into the West Bank (i.e., the Israeli settlements); and lastly, that Israeli soldiers committed crimes using lethal and non-lethal means during the disturbances near the Gaza border with Israel that began in March 2018.

The Prosecutor then asked the Chamber to make a ruling over the scope of the territorial jurisdiction of the ICC in 'Palestine', and to acknowledge its jurisdiction over the entire territory of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and Gaza.

While Israel, which is not a member in the ICC, decided not to take part in the proceedings in the Chamber, Israel's Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit published a highly detailed memorandum regarding the Prosecutor's reference to Chamber. The Attorney General argued that the ICC does not have the jurisdiction to hold any proceedings that emanate from 'Palestine'’s referral of jurisdiction to the Court, since 'Palestine' is not and never was a State according to the binding criteria in international law.

Resolution 67/19 of the UN General Assembly, which served as the foundation for the Palestinian accession to the Rome Statute, was only meant to administer 'Palestine'’s representation within the UN. It is a declaratory document that represents a political aspiration for a future Palestinian State, and like all UN General Assembly resolutions, it is not legally binding. The UN Secretary General at the time made clear that his act of circulating the Palestinian accession document to the Statute does not have any ramifications regarding the question of Palestinian statehood.

Mandelblit further asserted that 'Palestine' does not have effective control over the West Bank and Gaza, a crucial precondition for becoming a State. The Palestinian claim that Israel is occupying these areas only acknowledges the Palestinian lack of sovereignty. The right of Palestinians to self-determination should not be conflated with any claim to statehood, the Attorney General stressed.

If the Palestinians don't have the State sovereignty, the Attorney General contended, they can also not delegate to the ICC any jurisdiction to prosecute. There's also no 'territory of' a State (a term used in the Statute) over which the Court can exercise such a jurisdiction. The term which is frequently used in international discourse, “the occupied Palestinian territory,” is strictly political and has no legal ramifications on the question of sovereign title.

Finally, the Attorney General indicated that the Oslo Accords between the Israelis and the Palestinians manifestly stipulate that the Palestinians have no criminal jurisdiction over Area C of the West Bank, Jerusalem, and Israeli nationals  – and obviously cannot delegate to the Court a jurisdiction they do not have.

Following the Prosecutor's referral to the Chamber, the Chamber received dozens of amici curiae (friends of the court) legal opinions in support of both the Israeli and the Palestinian positions. Numerous renowned experts in international law and no less than seven countries (the Czech Republic, Austria, Australia, Hungary, Germany, Brazil, and Uganda) supported the Israeli position that the Court has no jurisdiction over the matter.

The Chamber's decision was not unanimous, but rather decided by Majority, with the Presiding Judge, Judge Kovács, writing a dissenting opinion.

The Majority opinion first reviewed the question whether 'Palestine' can be considered a 'State' for the purposes of recognizing ICC jurisdiction to prosecute crimes that were committed in its territory, and held that 'Palestine' indeed qualifies as such.

The Chamber ruled that the Statute refers to States that are Parties to the Statute and does not require a determination as to whether those 'States' fulfil the preconditions of statehood under general international law. The Majority's opinion indicates that 'Palestine' acceded to the Statute according to the customary procedure to do so and accepted the jurisdiction of the Court with respect to the crimes referred to in the Statute. Any dispute regarding their accession should have been negotiated and if not resolved, be referred to the Assembly of States Parties (only Canada rejected the Palestinian accession to the Court). 'Palestine' has been an active member in the Assembly of State Parties to the Court ever since its accession. The Chamber also contended that it would be ineffective to allow an entity to become a State Party to the Statute, but to limit the Statute’s inherent effects over it.

The bottom line is that the Chamber decided that, under these circumstances, it may not review or challenge the eligibility of 'Palestine' to accede to the Rome Statute.

The Chamber stresses that any territorial determination for the purpose of defining the Court's territorial jurisdiction for criminal purposes has no bearing on the scope of 'Palestine'’s territory. This jurisdiction is set for the sole purpose of establishing individual criminal responsibility under the Rome Statute. The Chamber underlines that it cannot decide whether an entity is a 'State' according to general international law.

After concluding that 'Palestine' is a State for the purpose of the discussion, the Majority opinion discusses the delimitation of its territory over which the ICC can exercise jurisdiction.

The Chamber notes that in Resolution 67/19, the UN General Assembly 'reaffirmed the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and to independence in their State of Palestine on the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967.’

The Majority's opinion mentions that according to the Rome Statute, the application and interpretation of the law by the Court must be consistent with internationally recognized human rights, including the right to self-determination.

Hence, the Chamber concluded that the Court’s territorial jurisdiction in the 'Situation in Palestine' extends to the territories occupied by Israel since 1967, namely the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and Gaza.

In this regard, the Chamber stresses that it is neither making a decision on a border dispute under international law nor prejudging the question of any future borders.

The Chamber then proceeds to discuss the argument that the Palestinians could not delegate criminal jurisdiction to the ICC over Israeli nationals, Area C, or Jerusalem, since they do not have such a jurisdiction according to the Oslo Accords.

The Chamber asserts that this argument is not relevant to the scope of the Court’s territorial jurisdiction in 'Palestine'. The Rome Statute has specific arrangements to deal with any obligations of a State Party under international law that conflict with its obligations under the Statute.

Finally, the Chamber emphasizes that its conclusions relate only to the initiation of the investigation by the Prosecutor, and any interested party, including a State or a suspect, will be able to challenge issues of jurisdiction again in the future.

Yet Judge Kovács, in his dissenting opinion, says that the formal accession of 'Palestine' to the Court, and resolution 67/19 of the General Assembly, should not be read separately from other international law instruments that referred to the Oslo Accords, and that promoted peace initiatives between Israel and the Palestinians.

These include the Road Map of the Quartet, as well as many resolutions of the UN General Assembly, the Security Council, and other UN organs. The resolutions of the General Assembly are non-binding in nature, even if adopted by Majority voting. There are no binding international law instruments regarding Palestinian statehood.

The Prosecutor's request and the Majority opinion referred to non-binding documents but failed to mention that these documents also stress the necessity of establishing borders by way of internationally promoted negotiations. It is obviously premature, in Judge Kovács' opinion, to speak of a fully-fledged 'Palestinian State' and of its territory. It would be more appropriate to refer to 'Palestine' as a nascent State, recognized by some countries, whose borders still need to be negotiated, and the Oslo Accords still play a role in determining its authorities.

As to the scope of the territory in which the Prosecutor may exercise her investigative authorities, Judge Kovács contends that this should be based on the same circumstances that would allow 'Palestine', as a State Party, to assert jurisdiction over such crimes under its legal system, i.e., according to its own criminal jurisdiction in the Oslo Accords.

This means that when the Prosecutor concludes that continuing an investigation may trespass the limits of 'Palestine'’s competences in this complex criminal law regime, she should request Israel's consent.

There are many problematic issues with the Majority's opinion and they are mostly covered in Judge Kovács' opinion.

The question of whether and how an entity becomes an internationally recognized State in international law is complex and intricate. The Majority's analysis on this issue is almost technical, relying on the process of accession to the Court as the sole criterion in deciding whether 'Palestine' can be a State that can refer its jurisdiction to the ICC.

The UN Secretary General as a depositary of the Statute made it clear that he served a technical role by circulating the Palestinian accession document, and that this should not be understood as having any legal ramifications on Palestinian statehood.

He relied on a legal memorandum that referred to an option possessed by the Palestinians to accede to international treaties, emanating from the status that Resolution 67/19 accorded to them.

But there was nothing in Resolution 67/19 or the legal memorandum that leads to recognition of 'Palestine' meeting the legal standards of becoming a State according to general international law.

Nor is there a precedent in international law for the creation of a State on a territory under occupation. As Judge Kovács rightfully claims, the Majority's decision practically outsourced the judicial discretion to the UN, using Resolution 67/19 and the legal memorandum (which was meant to be an internal memo) as fait accompli acts.

The Majority did so without delving into the whole process that led to the UN Resolution and the dilemmas that surrounded it  –  which Judge Kovács did. He summarized his research as follows: "What can be deduced with absolute certainty from the text and the history of the adoption of Resolution 67/19 is that the great Majority of States represented at the General Assembly wanted to upgrade Palestine’s formal status in the UN and show political support for its endeavors by giving a political impetus, while waiting for the outcome of the initiated procedure of admission as a full member.”

And so, an array of 'technical' acts creates a situation in which 'Palestine' enjoys a status that should be reserved to sovereign States, without meeting the required standards for this to happen. This outcome does not comport with the most basic foundation on which the ICC was established, that only sovereign States that are recognized as such in international law can delegate sovereign jurisdiction to the ICC.

Another problem lies with the Majority's decision to recognize the entirety of 'the Occupied Palestinian Territories' as the territory over which the Court can exercise its jurisdiction. In doing so, the Majority relies on the right of the Palestinians to self-determination as a human right that the Court needs to apply in its rulings. It is not entirely clear why the Majority decided to use international law sources that are external to the Statute in this respect, but refused to do so while determining the first issue of 'Palestine' being a State Party to the Statute. Anyway, it is hard to understand the Majority's decision to treat the demarcation of the territory issue, one of the most controversial and sensitive issues throughout the negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, in such a simplistic manner. As Judge Kovács' said, "to accept as determinative a unilateral statement concerning the exact demarcation of a territory that is known to be the object of a very slowly progressing and frequently suspended series of negotiations, would have required at least an explanation".

The Majority's decision to simply ignore the argument regarding the Oslo Accords and their implication on the limited jurisdiction that the Palestinians can delegate to the Court is a big flaw in its decision.

It remains unclear what the current status of the Oslo Accords is in the Majority's opinion. The Accords stood  – and still stand  – at the heart of the relationship between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. The Majority regard the argument concerning the Accords as a technical issue that might interfere with future attempts of the Prosecutor to get assistance in her investigation from the Palestinians, due to conflicting obligations they will have between the Rome Statute and the Oslo Accords.

But the core of this argument deals with the very essence of the competence to refer the jurisdiction to the Court in the first place. Judge Kovács' analysis, again, makes more legal sense and offers a way for the Prosecutor to investigate while accommodating both the Statute and the Oslo Accords.

It should also be said that the Majority's clarification, according to which any interested party will be able to challenge issues of jurisdiction again in the future, emasculates the Prosecutor's intention of taking such issues off the table in advance.

The ramifications of the decision for Israel

It is easy to understand why Israel, as the national homeland of the Jewish People, with the horrendous atrocities that befell it in World War II, was one of the main proponents of the establishment of the ICC. Unfortunately, political manipulations that dragged the Statute of the ICC away from its intended course made Israel decide not to become a State Party in the Court. Israel's concern that the Court will be weaponized for political purposes is now materializing, with the Chamber's decision to allow the Prosecutor to investigate Israel without its consent.

The Court, established as a court of last resort to prosecute the most heinous atrocities, was never meant to target democracies such as Israel. It is worrisome that Israel, as a democracy with a heritage of respect for international law, and Hamas as a terror organization that defies international law, are being assessed by the Prosecutor on an equal footing.

The Chamber's decision should not be taken lightly or disregarded by the Israeli government. Although the Chamber repeatedly emphasizes that its decision has no legal ramifications on the legal claims regarding the Palestinian statehood, there is no doubt that this decision will be cited as another landmark in the Palestinian entity’s evolution towards becoming a State.

The decision is also clearly a very concerning milestone in the ongoing campaign to delegitimize Israel. While there is still a long way to go before any indictments against Israeli officials will be submitted to the Court, the gate is now open for the Prosecutor to start her investigation against those officials and even issue warrants for their arrest.

Such warrants can be issued secretly and every State that is a member of the Court is obliged to enforce them. It is easy to imagine the drama that will shroud a surprising arrest of a senior Israeli official somewhere around the globe. Such a reality will significantly restrict the movements of many Israeli officials (it should be noted that the investigations will probably focus on political leaders and senior military officers and not on low-ranking soldiers or government officials).

The Prosecutor of the court will end her tenure in June this year. Her replacement has not been named yet. Her successor will have an independent agenda regarding the issue, for better or for worse, regarding Israel.

When considering the priorities of the Office of the Prosecutor and the way to move forward, Judge Kovács' concluding remark will surely be taken into consideration: "I am convinced that without the cooperation of the directly interested States in the present and truly complicated, over-politicized situation, the Prosecutor will have no real chance of preparing a trial-ready case or cases. This should go hand in hand with national prosecutions when needed and according to the rule on complementarity".

In this respect of complementarity (meaning, the priority that States have over the ICC to investigate and prosecute crimes committed by their nationals or in their territories), we should bear in mind that Israel has a robust system to examine and investigate violations of the Laws of Armed Conflict – a fact that was confirmed by the detailed report of Israel’s Turkel Commission that was set up to investigate the Israeli raid on the Turkish Gaza flotilla, and which reviewed Israel's investigative mechanisms.

The Prosecutor recently decided not to launch an investigation against British military personnel for alleged crimes committed in the war in Iraq. The Prosecutor satisfied herself with the existence and operation of UK's investigative mechanisms, although the British investigations did not end in criminal prosecutions. Given the robustness of Israel's mechanisms, the British example is undoubtedly a reassuring sign as far as the Prosecutor's investigation concerns the military operations of the IDF.

On the other hand, the Prosecutor's decision to investigate Israel's settlement activities in the West Bank and East Jerusalem should be a major concern for Israel. Israel never considered its settlement to be illegal, and both left-wing and right-wing governments throughout the years have invested in the promotion of this project.

Israel's Supreme Court has been scrutinizing thousands of cases regarding the settlements, dealing with complex legal issues of international, administrative and constitutional law ever since Israel seized the West Bank in 1967. But Israel has never criminally prosecuted any acts relating to the settlements because it fundamentally rejects the idea that these are illegal under international law. Thus, Israel will not be able to claim that complementarity considerations should label the settlement cases inadmissible at the Court, and it now faces a fierce legal battle in this arena. The Chamber's reference to UN Security Council Resolution 2334 that condemns the Israeli settlement activity is an ominous sign in this respect.

 

What should Israel do now?

Israel should launch multiple, simultaneous efforts in the diplomatic and legal spheres.

Diplomatically, Israel should remember that it is not alone in this battle. During the proceedings before the Chamber, it has gained the support of seven important States that supported its legal views before the Chamber.

After the Chamber's decision was published, the U.S. State Department and the Foreign Ministers of both Canada and Australia rejected it.

Israel should work closely with the Biden administration and coordinate responses to the Chamber's decision. The ongoing investigation against the activities of U.S. forces in Afghanistan makes Israeli and American interests (and indeed, those of all other Western democracies) in this respect very similar.

Israel should also launch an organized public diplomacy effort to engage in a dialogue with diverse influential audiences around the world and present to them its articulate legal positions.

Israeli officials should refrain from attacking the Court and its officials. Such attacks are not constructive in any way and can only antagonize Israel's friends in the world. This would be especially counter-productive at this sensitive time, in which the process of the nomination of the next Prosecutor is still ongoing.

Israel should also strive to find a way out from the current stagnation in the negotiations with the Palestinians. This stagnation has undoubtedly played a role in the motivation of the Office of the Prosecutor to push the investigation forward. It is not unreasonable to contend that ongoing negotiations can serve as a justification to stall the investigation because it will not serve the interests of justice, a legitimate consideration that can be taken into account by the Prosecutor.

Israel can also use the assistance of its new Arab friends in the region in pushing the negotiations with Palestinians forward.

Legally, Israel has to keep cultivating its own examination and investigation mechanisms and make sure they continue to enjoy their independence.

Israel should also devise plans to tackle the most challenging legal issues that might arise during the investigation, including the legal status of the settlements and the legal status of the crime that refers to them in the Statute; the legal status of the Gaza Strip after Israel withdrew from it; the legal definition of Israel's conflict with Hamas as international or non-international, and other key issues.

Lastly, Israel should also consider what kind of cooperation, if any, it wants to have with the ICC. While Israel’s reluctance to openly cooperate with the Court under such circumstances is clear, there are many more nuanced and discrete ways to engage with the Court – and some of them may carry valuable advantages.

In any case, this is no time to panic or rage. It is time to roll up sleeves and prepare for a long uphill battle. Israel is morally right. And as such it will eventually win this battle, like many before it.


Eli Bar-On concluded his career in the Israel Defense Forces holding the position of instructor at the IDF National Defense College (the INDC). Prior to that position, Bar-on served as the Deputy Military Advocate General of the IDF (2012 to 2015), where he was in command of approximately 1,000 lawyers and legal experts, including prior to, during and following Operation Pillar of Defense & Operation Protective Edge. He also served as the Chief Legal Advisor for the IDF in the West Bank from 2009 to 2012.

Hezbollah: A systematic violator of international law: Pt 2

By Eli Bar-On

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The laws of armed conflict, also known as international humanitarian law, are the manifestation of the various norms the international community has adopted as the legal framework for conducting war in modern times.

This corpus of law was put in place to ensure that the unimaginable suffering to which humanity was exposed during the two world wars in the 20th century would not repeat itself. Accordingly, these laws strike a balance between militaries’ need to win the wars they engage in, and their obligation to do so while minimizing harm to civilians. A clear indication of how these laws value human life can be found in the principle of distinction, one of the key principles of the laws of war.

This principle obligates all belligerents to distinguish between combatants and civilians, and between military objectives and civilian objects, and to carry out attacks only against combatants and military objectives. Additionally, this principle states that combatants must distinguish themselves from the civilians around them (both enemy civilians and their own civilians), and they are forbidden from using the presence of civilians in their vicinity to render themselves immune from attack.

In defiance of this basic principle of the law, Hezbollah makes no effort to hide its intention to kill and maim Israeli civilians. One way it plans to do this is through cross-border ground raids in the next war with Israel. Hezbollah has repeatedly declared its intention of sending its elite Radwan Force death squads into the Galilee region, with the mission of attacking civilians.

The IDF’s uncovering of six large Hezbollah cross-border tunnels in 2018 exposed just how Hezbollah planned to carry out such an attack.

In order to terrorize citizens across the border, Hezbollah publications have shown the group’s terrorists holding signs saying that combat in Syria is merely a “practice run” for their planned cross-border killing raids into Israel.

Hezbollah’s intentions regarding its massive projectile arsenal are no different. The arsenal, replenished by Iran since the 2006 Second Lebanon War, has grown to 170,000 rockets and missiles, according to some estimates.

It includes unguided short-range projectiles, long-range rockets, and missiles with ranges of more than 300 km., as well as hundreds of attack drones. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has repeatedly threatened to use his long-range missiles to strike Israel’s nuclear power reactor in Dimona.

In what has become the top-priority conventional threat to Israel, Iran and Hezbollah are also engaged in an effort to build precision-guided munitions (PGMs). Iran has attempted to smuggle precision-guidance kits into Lebanon to ensure that Hezbollah’s projectiles reach their targets and the organization’s ammunition is not wasted.

Israeli military experts suggest that Hezbollah and Iran have succeeded in their efforts, at least to some extent, and Hezbollah is now in possession of a few dozen precision-guided missiles. Such a capability will allow Hezbollah to conduct pinpoint strikes in any future conflict with Israel and target the country’s top strategic assets.

Hezbollah can fire up to 4,000 projectiles a day, compared to a total of fewer than 4,000 rockets fired throughout the entirety of the 34-day conflict in 2006. Its surface-to-surface firepower capability is greater than that of 95% of the world’s militaries.

In 2006, with a significantly inferior arsenal, Hezbollah’s rockets hit Israeli schools, hospitals, and other civilian sites. Some 300,000 Israelis became internally displaced during the war. Forty-three civilians and 12 soldiers were killed inside Israel, thousands were injured, and major property damage was sustained.

In 2016, Nasrallah declared that he has his own version of an “atomic bomb,” in the form of a missile strike on Haifa’s ammonium storage site – which has since been emptied – that would result in the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians.

Consequently, in any future war, the IDF will have no choice but to operate deep in Lebanon – both through airstrikes and a ground campaign – to neutralize Hezbollah’s capabilities. Unfortunately, in light of Hezbollah’s modus operandi, and the multiple ways in which it disregards the laws of armed conflict to shield itself with Lebanese civilians, and to deliberately target Israeli civilians, it is inevitable that the Lebanese population will pay a price.

The question is whether the international community will recognize the flagrant violations by Hezbollah and its role in all but guaranteeing the suffering of the Lebanese population.


Eli Bar-On concluded his career in the Israel Defense Forces holding the position of instructor at the IDF National Defense College (the INDC). Prior to that position, Bar-on served as the Deputy Military Advocate General of the IDF (2012 to 2015), where he was in command of approximately 1,000 lawyers and legal experts, including prior to, during and following Operation Pillar of Defense & Operation Protective Edge. He also served as the Chief Legal Advisor for the IDF in the West Bank from 2009 to 2012.

Hezbollah: A systematic violator of international law

By Eli Bar-On

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As Prime Minister Netanyahu outlined during his presentation to the UN General Assembly, Hezbollah is a terrorist organization, one which draws its influence through systemic violations of international law. 

In early August, a powerful blast caused by the detonation of an enormous quantity of ammonium nitrate stored at the Beirut port, shook the entire Lebanese capital, killing at least 190 deaths, thousands of injuries and causing devastating damage to property.

While an investigative report into the explosion has yet to be published, many Lebanese protesters have been pointing fingers at Hezbollah as the prime culprit for the explosion. Circumstantial suspicion of Hezbollah's responsibility for this tragedy is predicated upon the organization's well-known control of the port, and its pattern of storing ammonium nitrate for terror purposes in various locations around the world; including Germany, Cyprus, the UK, and Thailand. This tragic incident reminds the world of Hezbollah's malign activities and violations of the law in general, and international law in particular, in Lebanon, the Middle East and throughout the world.

Hezbollah was established in 1982 as an Iranian-backed terror organization. Since then, it has gained growing political power in Lebanon. By the elections of 2018, Hezbollah and its political allies had won the majority of seats in the Lebanese parliament. At the same time, Hezbollah's military wing has morphed into a fully-equipped and well-trained modern army. In many ways, Hezbollah is operating as 'a state within a state' in Lebanon.

As was explicitly admitted by the organization's Secretary-General, Hassan Nasrallah, the lion's share of Hezbollah's budget, some 700 million dollars a year (a decrease from past years), comes directly from Iran. An estimated 200 million more dollars comes from illegal international Hezbollah activities, such as the trafficking of narcotics and money laundering.  

In recent years, the organization has been struggling to deal with international sanctions that were imposed on its funding, mainly by the U.S..

Hezbollah in its entirety has been designated as a terror organization by a growing number of countries, which recognize that there is no distinction whatsoever between its political and military wings. Prominent countries that have banned Hezbollah in its entirety include the U.S., the UK, Canada, Japan, the Netherlands, Germany, Lithuania, Israel and several Latin American countries. The Arab League has also declared it a terror entity, as has the Gulf Cooperation Council. Unfortunately, the European Union, which has only designated the military wing of the organization as a terror group, has yet to follow suit, creating an obstacle in the effort to disrupt Hezbollah's overseas activities. 

Hezbollah's footprint in global terrorism has been enormous ever since its inception. While many of its terror plots have been foiled, examples of its deadly attacks include the 1983 Marine Corps barracks attack in Beirut, the 2012 Burgas bus bombing, and mass casualty bombings of Jewish and Israeli targets in Argentina in the 1990s. Hezbollah terror cells are active around the world. 

In Lebanon itself, Hezbollah is a non-state actor that has gradually come to take control of Lebanese state institutions. After the Hezbollah-led bloc took control of the cabinet and parliament in 2019, and following the organization's growing penetration of state budgets and ministries, it has become increasingly difficult to distinguish between Hezbollah and Lebanon. 

Lebanon is either unwilling or unable to take control of this rogue organization, and both Lebanon's and Hezbollah's systematic violations of UN Security Council resolutions go unchallenged.  

Resolution 1559, passed in 2004, called for the disbanding and disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias. Resolution 1701, passed during the 2006 Lebanon War, calls for full respect of the Blue Line (the border demarcation between Lebanon and Israel, declared by the UN in 2000), and the disarmament of all armed groups in Lebanon. It also stipulates that the area south of the Litani River must be free from armed personnel, assets and weapons other than those of UNIFIL (the UN's observer force in the area) and the Lebanese Military. These resolutions have been violated continuously in various ways, both by Lebanon and Hezbollah. 

Hezbollah continues to store weapons across southern Lebanon – whether received from Iran and Syria or produced internally. It continues to develop its program to produce precision guided missiles. In the whole of Lebanon, Hezbollah, replenished by Iran since the 2006 war, has an arsenal estimated to be as high as 170,000 projectiles. 

Armed Hezbollah operatives maintain a presence on the Blue Line itself. In April 2017, in a tour that was organized by Hezbollah, foreign and Lebanese media documented armed Hezbollah operatives on the border with Israel. UNIFIL later said it did not see them.

The Green Without Borders organization is a Hezbollah front group that purportedly advances an environmental agenda, but which is linked to the terror organization, and maintains at least 16 known posts along the Israeli border that are manned by armed Hezbollah operatives. 

Following the September 2019 missile attack on an IDF vehicle near Avivim, northern Israel, a UNIFIL investigation found that the attack was launched from a location next to a Green Without Borders post, an area UNIFIL says it has no access to. 

Hezbollah will sometimes organize "protests" by civilians that it rallies to the border, who occasionally cross into Israeli territory and carry out operational missions. It also uses goat herders for reconnaissance gathering missions. Moreover, it attacks and harasses UNIFIL observers and prevents them from gaining full access to any point along the Blue Line on a regular basis. 

In December 2018, the IDF exposed six Hezbollah cross-border tunnels, which were intended to enable thousands of elite terror operatives to cross into Israel and massacre civilians. The tunnels represent another blatant violation of Resolution 1701. 

While the Lebanese Forces and the Lebanese government were supposed to disarm Hezbollah according to UN Security Council resolutions, the opposite is happening. Hezbollah is infiltrating the Lebanese army, and increasingly using its assets, as well as those of the Lebanese government. During a 2016 Hezbollah parade in Syria, armored personnel carriers taken from the Lebanese army were put on display. 

The Prime Minister was correct. The growing menace of Hezbollah must be tackled, not merely for the sake of Lebanon's neighbors, including Israel, but for the sake of the Lebanese themselves. They have borne the brunt of Hezbollah's flagrant violation of international law once already this year. Let that be no recurrence of such suffering. 


Eli Bar-On concluded his career in the Israel Defense Forces holding the position of instructor at the IDF National Defense College (the INDC). Prior to that position, Bar-on served as the Deputy Military Advocate General of the IDF (2012 to 2015), where he was in command of approximately 1,000 lawyers and legal experts, including prior to, during and following Operation Pillar of Defense & Operation Protective Edge. He also served as the Chief Legal Advisor for the IDF in the West Bank from 2009 to 2012.

VIDEO: A conversation with Colonel Eli Bar-On (IDF Ret.)

Discussing past and current affairs with the former D.M.A.G On Wednesday, January 29th, 2020, during the course of a campus lecture tour under our auspices, Colonel Eli Bar-On (IDF Ret.) sat down for a conversation with Benjamin Anthony, Co-Founder & CEO of The MirYam Institute, in front of a live audience of over 100 young professionals.