Author: Norka M. Schell, International Law Lawyer
Tel. (212)564-1589
Website: www.lawschell.com
As the
Congress is getting ready to debate whether it is in the United States national
interest to military strike against Syria in response to a chemical attack
that it says killed more than 1,400 Syrians, many people whether the intervention
is based on international law.
The international community banned the use of chemical and biological weapons after the World War I, in 1972, and again in 1993 by prohibiting the development, production, stockpiling and transfer of chemical and biological weapons.
For
centuries there have been taboos against chemical weapons, but the use of
poisonous gas in World War I led to the
first international law – the 1925 Geneva Protocol – banning as asphyxiating,
poisonous or other gases and bacteriological methods of warfare.
The Protocol
has been followed by most countries since 1925, and it became a landmark in
international humanitarian law. Further legal instruments followed in the form
of Conventions adopted by States in 1972 and 1993.
The 1972
Convention, usually referred to as the Biological Weapon Convention or the
Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, was a major step toward the total
elimination of these abhorrent weapons. As the use of such weapons was already
banned by the 125 Protocol, the Convention prohibited development, production,
stockpiling, acquisition, retention and transfer of such weapons, including the
delivery systems, and required their destruction.
Syria
signed the 1925 Protocol in 1968.
The Convention also required each country to enact national
legislation to enforce its prohibitions. Regular review conferences of all
signatories monitor compliance with the terms of the Convention and adopt
recommendations to promote its implementation and effectiveness.
The 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) was a similar legal
development, extending the prohibition on use in the 1925 Protocol to the
development, production, stockpiling, retention and transfer of chemical
weapons, including their delivery systems.
Syria signed the 1992 Chemical
Weapons Convention.
International verification measures are the responsibility of
the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, based in The Hague.
It provides technical assistance to States in implementing the provisions of
the Convention. Each State is also required to set up a national authority to
ensure liaison and implementation.
The huge potential for both good and harm that major advances in
the chemical and biological sciences bring, means that vigilance against the
misuse of these advances to develop chemical and biological weapons continues
to remain vitally important.
In order to counter these risks, in February 2013 the ICRC appealed
to all States to limit the use of toxic chemicals as weapons for law
enforcement purposes to riot-control agents only.
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