INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
General List
No. 95
8 July 1996
LEGALITY OF THE THREAT OR USE
OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Jurisdiction of the Court to give the advisory opinion requested
- Article 65, paragraph 1, of the Statute - Body authorized to request
an opinion - Article 96, paragraphs 1 and 2, of the Charter - Activities
of the General Assembly - "Legal question" - Political
aspects of the question posed - Motives said to have inspired the
request and political implications that the opinion might have.
Discretion of the Court as to whether or not it will give an opinion
- Article 65, paragraph 1, of the Statute - Compelling reasons -
Vague and abstract question - Purposes for which the opinion is
sought - Possible effects of the opinion on current negotiations
- Duty of the Court not to legislate.
Formulation of the question posed - English and French texts -
Clear objective - Burden of proof.
Applicable law - International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights - Arbitrary deprivation of life - Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide - Intent against a group
as such - Existing norms relating to the safeguarding and protection
of the environment - Environmental considerations as an element
to be taken into account in the implementation of the law applicable
in armed conflict - Application of most directly relevant law: law
of the Charter and law applicable in armed conflict.
Unique characteristics of nuclear weapons.
Provisions of the Charter relating to the threat or use of force
- Article 2, paragraph 4 -The Charter neither expressly prohibits,
nor permits, the use of any specific weapon - Article 51 - Conditions
of necessity and proportionality - The notions of "threat"
and "use" of force stand together - Possession of nuclear
weapons, deterrence and threat.
Specific rules regulating the lawfulness or unlawfulness of the
recourse to nuclear weapons as such - Absence of specific prescription
authorizing the threat or use of nuclear weapons -Unlawfulness per
se: treaty law - Instruments prohibiting the use of poisoned weapons
-Instruments expressly prohibiting the use of certain weapons of
mass destruction - Treaties concluded in order to limit the acquisition,
manufacture and possession of nuclear weapons, the deployment and
testing of nuclear weapons - Treaty of Tlatelolco - Treaty of Rarotonga
-Declarations made by nuclear-weapon States on the occasion of the
extension of the Non-Proliferation Treaty - Absence of comprehensive
and universal conventional prohibition of the use or the threat
of use of nuclear weapons as such - Unlawfulness per se: customary
law -Consistent practice of non-utilization of nuclear weapons -
Policy of deterrence - General Assembly resolutions affirming the
illegality of nuclear weapons - Continuing tensions between the
nascent opinio juris and the still strong adherence to the practice
of deterrence.
Principles and rules of international humanitarian law - Prohibition
of methods and means of warfare precluding any distinction between
civilian and military targets or resulting in unnecessary suffering
to combatants - Martens Clause - Principle of neutrality - Applicability
of these principles and rules to nuclear weapons - Conclusions.
Right of a State to survival and right to resort to self-defence
- Policy of deterrence - Reservations to undertakings given by certain
nuclear-weapon States not to resort to such weapons.
Current state of international law and elements of fact available
to the Court - Use of nuclear weapons in an extreme circumstance
of self-defence in which the very survival of a State is at stake.
Article VI of the Non-Proliferation Treaty - Obligation to negotiate
in good faith and to achieve nuclear disarmament in all its aspects.
ADVISORY OPINION
Present:
President BEDJAOUI; Vice-President SCHWEBEL; Judges
ODA, GUILLAUME, SHAHABUDDEEN, WEERAMANTRY, RANJEVA, HERCZEGH,
SHI, FLEISCHHAUER, KOROMA, VERESHCHETIN, FERRARI BRAVO, HIGGINS;
Registrar VALENCIA-OSPINA.
On the legality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons,
THE COURT,
composed as above,
gives the following Advisory Opinion:
1. The question upon which the advisory opinion of the Court has
been requested is set forth in resolution 49/75 K adopted by the
General Assembly of the United Nations (hereinafter called the "General
Assembly") on 15 December 1994. By a letter dated 19 December
1994, received in the Registry by facsimile on 20 December 1994
and filed in the original on 6 January 1995, the Secretary-General
of the United Nations officially communicated to the Registrar the
decision taken by the General Assembly to submit the question to
the Court for an advisory opinion. Resolution 49/75 K, the English
text of which was enclosed with the letter, reads as follows:
"The General Assembly,
Conscious that the continuing existence and development
of nuclear weapons pose serious risks to humanity,
Mindful that States have an obligation under the Charter
of the United Nations to refrain from the threat or use of force
against the territorial integrity or political independence of
any State.
Recalling its resolutions 1653 (XVI) of 24 November 1961,
33/71 B of 14 December 1978, 34/83 G of 11 December 1979, 35/152
D of 12 December 1980, 36/92 1 of 9 December 1981, 45/59 B of
4 December 1990 and 46/37 D of 6 December 1991, in which it declared
that the use of nuclear weapons would be a violation of the Charter
and a crime against humanity,
Welcoming the progress made on the prohibition and elimination
of weapons of mass destruction, including the Convention on the
Prohibition of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of
Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on Their Destruction(1)
and the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production,
Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction(2)
,
Convinced that the complete elimination of nuclear weapons
is the only guarantee against the threat of nuclear war,
Noting the concerns expressed in the Fourth Review Conference
of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons that insufficient progress had been made towards the complete
elimination of nuclear weapons at the earliest possible time,
Recalling that, convinced of the need to strengthen the
rule of law in international relations, it has declared the period
1990-1999 the United Nations Decade of International Law(3) ,
Noting that Article 96, paragraph 1, of the Charter empowers
the General Assembly to request the International Court of Justice
to give an advisory opinion on any legal question,
Recalling the recommendation of the Secretary-General,
made in his report entitled 'An Agenda for Peace'(4) , that United
Nations organs that are authorized to take advantage of the advisory
competence of the International Court of Justice turn to the Court
more frequently for such opinions,
__________
(1) Resolution 2826 (XXVI), Annex.
(2) See Official Records of the 47th Session of the General
Assembly, Supplement No. 27 (A/47/27), Appendix I.
(3) Resolution 44/23.
(4) A/47/277-S/24111.
__________
Welcoming resolution 46/40 of 14 May 1993 of the Assembly
of the World Health Organization, in which the organization requested
the International Court of Justice to give an advisory opinion
on whether the use of nuclear weapons by a State in war or other
armed conflict would be a breach of its obligations under international
law, including the Constitution of the World Health Organization,
Decides, pursuant to Article 96, paragraph 1, of the Charter
of the United Nations, to request the International Court of Justice
urgently to render its advisory opinion on the following question:
'Is the threat or use of nuclear weapons in any circumstance permitted
under international law?'"
2. Pursuant to Article 65, paragraph 2, of the Statute, the Secretary-General
of the United Nations communicated to the Court a dossier of documents
likely to throw light upon the question.
3. By letters dated 21 December 1994, the Registrar, pursuant to
Article 66, paragraph 1, of the Statute, gave notice of the request
for an advisory opinion to all States entitled to appear before
the Court.
4. By an Order dated 1 February 1995 the Court decided that the
States entitled to appear before it and the United Nations were
likely to be able to furnish information on the question, in accordance
with Article 66, paragraph 2, of the Statute. By the same Order,
the Court fixed, respectively, 20 June 1995 as the time-limit within
which written statements might be submitted to it on the question,
and 20 September 1995 as the time-limit within which States and
organizations having presented written statements might submit written
comments on the other written statements in accordance with Article
66, paragraph 4, of the Statute. In the aforesaid Order, it was
stated in particular that the General Assembly had requested that
the advisory opinion of the Court be rendered "urgently";
reference was also made to the procedural time-limits already fixed
for the request for an advisory opinion previously submitted to
the Court by the World Health Organization on the question of the
Legality of the use by a State of nuclear weapons in armed conflict.
On 8 February 1995, the Registrar addressed to the States entitled
to appear before the Court and to the United Nations the special
and direct communication provided for in Article 66, paragraph 2,
of the Statute.
5. Written statements were filed by the following States: Bosnia
and Herzegovina, Burundi, Democratic People's Republic of Korea,
Ecuador, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, India, Ireland, Islamic
Republic of Iran, Italy, Japan, Lesotho, Malaysia, Marshall Islands,
Mexico, Nauru, Netherlands, New Zealand, Qatar, Russian Federation,
Samoa, San Marino, Solomon Islands, Sweden, United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland, and United States of America. In addition,
written comments on those written statements were submitted by the
following States: Egypt, Nauru and Solomon Islands. Upon receipt
of those statements and comments, the Registrar communicated the
text to all States having taken part in the written proceedings.
6. The Court decided to hold public sittings, opening on 30 October
1995, at which oral statements might be submitted to the Court by
any State or organization which had been considered likely to be
able to furnish information on the question before the Court. By
letters dated 23 June 1995, the Registrar requested the States entitled
to appear before the Court and the United Nations to inform him
whether they intended to take part in the oral proceedings; it was
indicated, in those letters, that the Court had decided to hear,
during the same public sittings, oral statements relating to the
request for an advisory opinion from the General Assembly as well
as oral statements concerning the above-mentioned request for an
advisory opinion laid before the Court by the World Health Organization,
on the understanding that the United Nations would be entitled to
speak only in regard to the request submitted by the General Assembly,
and it was further specified therein that the participants in the
oral proceedings which had not taken part in the written proceedings
would receive the text of the statements and comments produced in
the course of the latter.
7. By a letter dated 20 October 1995, the Republic of Nauru requested
the Court's permission to withdraw the written comments submitted
on its behalf in a document entitled "Response to submissions
of other States". The Court granted the request and, by letters
dated 30 October 1995, the Deputy-Registrar notified the States
to which the document had been communicated, specifying that the
document consequently did not form part of the record before the
Court.
8. Pursuant to Article 106 of the Rules of Court, the Court decided
to make the written statements and comments submitted to the Court
accessible to the public, with effect from the opening of the oral
proceedings.
9. In the course of public sittings held from 30 October 1995 to
15 November 1995, the Court heard oral statements in the following
order by:
For the Commonwealth
of Australia:
Mr. Gavan Griffith, Q.C., Solicitor-General of Australia, Counsel;
The Honourable Gareth Evans, Q.C., Senator, Minister for Foreign
Affairs, Counsel;
For the Arab Republic
of Egypt:
Mr. George Abi-Saab, Professor of International Law, Graduate
Institute of International Studies, Geneva, Member of the Institute
of International Law;
For the French Republic:
Mr. Marc Perrin de Brichambaut, Director of Legal Affairs, Ministry
of Foreign Affairs;
Mr. Alain Pellet, Professor of International Law, University of
Paris X and Institute of Political Studies, Paris;
For the Federal Republic
of Germany:
Mr. Hartmut Hillgenberg, Director-General of Legal Affairs, Ministry
of Foreign Affairs;
For Indonesia:
H.E. Mr. Johannes Berchmans Soedarmanto Kardarisman, Ambassador
of Indonesia to the Netherlands;
For Mexico:
H.E. Mr. Sergio González Gálvez, Ambassador, Under-Secretary
of Foreign Relations;
For the Islamic
Republic of Iran:
H.E. Mr. Mohammad J. Zarif, Deputy Minister, Legal and International
Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
For Italy:
Mr. Umberto Leanza, Professor of International Law at the Faculty
of Law at the University of Rome "Tor Vergata", Head
of the Diplomatic Legal Service at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
For Japan:
H.E. Mr. Takekazu Kawamura, Ambassador, Director General for
Arms Control and Scientific Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
Mr. Takashi Hiraoka, Mayor of Hiroshima;
Mr. Iccho Itoh, Mayor of Nagasaki;
For Malaysia:
H.E. Mr. Tan Sri Razali Ismail, Ambassador, Permanent Representative
of Malaysia to the United Nations;
Dato' Mohtar Abdullah, Attorney-General;
For New Zealand:
The Honourable Paul East, Q.C., Attorney-General of New Zealand;
Mr. Allan Bracegirdle, Deputy Director of Legal Division of the
New Zealand Ministry for Foreign Affairs and Trade;
For the Philippines:
H.E. Mr. Rodolfo S. Sanchez, Ambassador of the Philippines to
the Netherlands;
Professor Merlin N. Magallona, Dean, College of Law, University
of the Philippines;
For Qatar:
H.E. Mr. Najeeb ibn Mohammed Al-Nauimi, Minister of Justice;
For the Russian
Federation:
Mr. A. G. Khodakov, Director, Legal Department, Ministry of Foreign
Affairs;
For San Marino:
Mrs. Federica Bigi, Embassy Counsellor, Official in Charge of
Political Directorate, Department of Foreign Affairs;
For Samoa:
H.E. Mr. Neroni Slade, Ambassador and Permanent Representative
of Samoa to the United Nations;
Mrs. Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, Assistant Professor, Graduate
Institute of International Studies, Geneva;
Mr. Roger S. Clark, Distinguished Professor of Law, Rutgers University
School of Law, Camden, New Jersey;
For the Marshall
Islands:
The Honourable Theodore G. Kronmiller, Legal Counsel, Embassy
of the Marshall Islands to the United States of America;
Mrs. Lijon Eknilang, Council Member, Rongelap Atoll Local Government;
For the Solomon Islands:
The Honourable Victor Ngele, Minister of Police and National
Security;
Mr. Jean Salmon, Professor of Law, Université libre de Bruxelles;
Mr. Eric David, Professor of Law, Université libre de Bruxelles;
Mr. Philippe Sands, Lecturer in Law, School of Oriental and African
Studies, London University, and Legal Director, Foundation for
International Environmental Law and Development;
Mr. James Crawford, Whewell Professor International Law, University
of Cambridge;
For Costa Rica:
Mr. Carlos Vargas-Pizarro, Legal Counsel and Special Envoy of
the Government of Costa Rica;
For the United Kingdom
of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland:
The Rt. Honourable Sir Nicholas Lyell, Q.C., M.P., Her Majesty's
Attorney-General;
For the United States
of America:
Mr. Conrad K. Harper, Legal Adviser, US Department of State;
Mr. Michael J. Matheson, Principal Deputy Legal Adviser, US Department
of State;
Mr. John H. McNeill, Senior Deputy General Counsel, US Department
of Defense;
For Zimbabwe:
Mr. Jonathan Wutawunashe, Chargé d'affaires a.i., Embassy of
the Republic of Zimbabwe in the Netherlands;
Questions were put by Members of the Court to particular participants
in the oral proceedings, who replied in writing, as requested, within
the prescribed time-limits; the Court having decided that the other
participants could also reply to those questions on the same terms,
several of them did so. Other questions put by Members of the Court
were addressed, more generally, to any participant in the oral proceedings;
several of them replied in writing, as requested, within the prescribed
time-limits.
* * *
10. The Court must first consider whether it has the jurisdiction
to give a reply to the request of the General Assembly for an Advisory
Opinion and whether, should the answer be in the affirmative, there
is any reason it should decline to exercise any such jurisdiction.
The Court draws its competence in respect of advisory opinions
from Article 65, paragraph 1, of its Statute. Under this Article,
the Court
"may give an advisory opinion on any legal question at the
request of whatever body may be authorized by or in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations to make such a request".
11. For the Court to be competent to give an advisory opinion,
it is thus necessary at the outset for the body requesting the opinion
to be "authorized by or in accordance with the Charter of the
United Nations to make such a request". The Charter provides
in Article 96, paragraph 1, that:
"The General Assembly or the Security Council may request
the International Court of Justice to give an advisory opinion
on any legal question."
Some States which oppose the giving of an opinion by the Court
argued that the General Assembly and Security Council are not entitled
to ask for opinions on matters totally unrelated to their work.
They suggested that, as in the case of organs and agencies acting
under Article 96, paragraph 2, of the Charter, and notwithstanding
the difference in wording between that provision and paragraph 1
of the same Article, the General Assembly and Security Council may
ask for an advisory opinion on a legal question only within the
scope of their activities.
In the view of the Court, it matters little whether this interpretation
of Article 96, paragraph 1, is or is not correct; in the present
case, the General Assembly has competence in any event to seise
the Court. Indeed, Article 10 of the Charter has conferred upon
the General Assembly a competence relating to "any questions
or any matters" within the scope of the Charter. Article 11
has specifically provided it with a competence to "consider
the general principles . . . in the maintenance of international
peace and security, including the principles governing disarmament
and the regulation of armaments". Lastly, according to Article
13, the General Assembly "shall initiate studies and make recommendations
for the purpose of . . . encouraging the progressive development
of international law and its codification".
12. The question put to the Court has a relevance to many aspects
of the activities and concerns of the General Assembly including
those relating to the threat or use of force in international relations,
the disarmament process, and the progressive development of international
law. The General Assembly has a long-standing interest in these
matters and in their relation to nuclear weapons. This interest
has been manifested in the annual First Committee debates, and the
Assembly resolutions on nuclear weapons; in the holding of three
special sessions on disarmament (1978, 1982 and 1988) by the General
Assembly, and the annual meetings of the Disarmament Commission
since 1978; and also in the commissioning of studies on the effects
of the use of nuclear weapons. In this context, it does not matter
that important recent and current activities relating to nuclear
disarmament are being pursued in other fora.
Finally, Article 96, paragraph 1, of the Charter cannot be read
as limiting the ability of the Assembly to request an opinion only
in those circumstances in which it can take binding decisions. The
fact that the Assembly's activities in the above-mentioned field
have led it only to the making of recommendations thus has no bearing
on the issue of whether it had the competence to put to the Court
the question of which it is seised.
13. The Court must furthermore satisfy itself that the advisory
opinion requested does indeed relate to a "legal question"
within the meaning of its Statute and the United Nations Charter.
The Court has already had occasion to indicate that questions
"framed in terms of law and rais[ing] problems of international
law . . . are by their very nature susceptible of a reply based
on law . . . [and] appear . . . to be questions of a legal character"
(Western Sahara, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1975,
p. 18, para. 15).
The question put to the Court by the General Assembly is indeed
a legal one, since the Court is asked to rule on the compatibility
of the threat or use of nuclear weapons with the relevant principles
and rules of international law. To do this, the Court must identify
the existing principles and rules, interpret them and apply them
to the threat or use of nuclear weapons, thus offering a reply to
the question posed based on law.
The fact that this question also has political aspects, as, in
the nature of things, is the case with so many questions which arise
in international life, does not suffice to deprive it of its character
as a "legal question" and to "deprive the Court of
a competence expressly conferred on it by its Statute" (Application
for Review of Judgement No. 158 of the United Nations Administrative
Tribunal, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1973, p. 172, para.
14). Whatever its political aspects, the Court cannot refuse to
admit the legal character of a question which invites it to discharge
an essentially judicial task, namely, an assessment of the legality
of the possible conduct of States with regard to the obligations
imposed upon them by international law (cf. Conditions of Admission
of a State to Membership in the United Nations (Article 4 of the
Charter), Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1947-1948, pp. 61-62;
Competence of the General Assembly for the Admission of a State
to the United Nations, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1950,
pp. 6-7; Certain Expenses of the United Nations (Article 17,
paragraph 2, of the Charter), Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1962,
p. 155).
Furthermore, as the Court said in the Opinion it gave in 1980 concerning
the Interpretation of the Agreement of 25 March 1951 between
the WHO and Egypt:
"Indeed, in situations in which political considerations
are prominent it may be particularly necessary for an international
organization to obtain an advisory opinion from the Court as to
the legal principles applicable with respect to the matter under
debate . . ." (Interpretation of the Agreement of 25 March
1951 between the WHO and Egypt, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports
1980, p. 87, para. 33.)
The Court moreover considers that the political nature of the motives
which may be said to have inspired the request and the political
implications that the opinion given might have are of no relevance
in the establishment of its jurisdiction to give such an opinion.
*
14. Article 65, paragraph 1, of the Statute provides: "The
Court may give an advisory opinion . . ." (Emphasis
added.) This is more than an enabling provision. As the Court has
repeatedly emphasized, the Statute leaves a discretion as to whether
or not it will give an advisory opinion that has been requested
of it, once it has established its competence to do so. In this
context, the Court has previously noted as follows:
"The Court's Opinion is given not to the States, but to
the organ which is entitled to request it; the reply of the Court,
itself an 'organ of the United Nations', represents its participation
in the activities of the Organization, and, in principle, should
not be refused." (Interpretation of Peace Treaties with
Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania, First Phase, Advisory Opinion,
I.C.J. Reports 1950, p. 71; see also Reservations to the
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,
Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1951, p. 19; Judgments
of the Administrative Tribunal of the ILO upon Complaints Made
against Unesco, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1956, p.
86; Certain Expenses of the United Nations (Article 17, paragraph
2, of the Charter), Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1962,
p. 155; and Applicability of Article VI, Section 22, of the
Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations,
Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1989, p. 189.)
The Court has constantly been mindful of its responsibilities as
"the principal judicial organ of the United Nations" (Charter,
Art. 92). When considering each request, it is mindful that it should
not, in principle, refuse to give an advisory opinion. In accordance
with the consistent jurisprudence of the Court, only "compelling
reasons" could lead it to such a refusal (Judgments of the
Administrative Tribunal of the ILO upon Complaints Made against
Unesco, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1956, p. 86; Certain
Expenses of the United Nations (Article 17, paragraph 2, of the
Charter), Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1962, p. 155; Legal
Consequences for States of the Continued Presence of South Africa
in Namibia (South West Africa) notwithstanding Security Council
Resolution 276 (1970), Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1971,
p. 27; Application for Review of Judgement No. 158 of the United
Nations Administrative Tribunal, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports
1973, p. 183; Western Sahara, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports
1975, p. 21; and Applicability of Article VI, Section 22,
of the Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United
Nations, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1989, p. 191). There
has been no refusal, based on the discretionary power of the Court,
to act upon a request for advisory opinion in the history of the
present Court; in the case concerning the Legality of the Use
by a State of Nuclear Weapons in Armed Conflict, the refusal
to give the World Health Organization the advisory opinion requested
by it was justified by the Court's lack of jurisdiction in that
case. The Permanent Court of International Justice took the view
on only one occasion that it could not reply to a question put to
it, having regard to the very particular circumstances of the case,
among which were that the question directly concerned an already
existing dispute, one of the States parties to which was neither
a party to the Statute of the Permanent Court nor a Member of the
League of Nations, objected to the proceedings, and refused to take
part in any way (Status of Eastern Carelia, P.C.I.J., Series
B, No. 5).
15. Most of the reasons adduced in these proceedings in order to
persuade the Court that in the exercise of its discretionary power
it should decline to render the opinion requested by General Assembly
resolution 49/75K were summarized in the following statement made
by one State in the written proceedings:
"The question presented is vague and abstract, addressing
complex issues which are the subject of consideration among interested
States and within other bodies of the United Nations which have
an express mandate to address these matters. An opinion by the
Court in regard to the question presented would provide no practical
assistance to the General Assembly in carrying out its functions
under the Charter. Such an opinion has the potential of undermining
progress already made or being made on this sensitive subject
and, therefore, is contrary to the interest of the United Nations
Organization." (United States of America, Written Statement,
pp. 1-2; cf. pp. 3-7, II. See also United Kingdom, Written Statement,
pp. 9-20, paras. 2.23-2.45; France, Written Statement, pp. 13-20,
paras. 5-9; Finland, Written Statement, pp. 1-2; Netherlands,
Written Statement, pp. 3-4, paras. 6-13; Germany, Written Statement,
pp. 3-6, para. 2(b).))
In contending that the question put to the Court is vague and abstract,
some States appeared to mean by this that there exists no specific
dispute on the subject-matter of the question. In order to respond
to this argument, it is necessary to distinguish between requirements
governing contentious procedure and those applicable to advisory
opinions. The purpose of the advisory function is not to settle
- at least directly - disputes between States, but to offer legal
advice to the organs and institutions requesting the opinion (cf.
Interpretation of Peace Treaties I.C.J. Reports 1950, p.
71). The fact that the question put to the Court does not relate
to a specific dispute should consequently not lead the Court to
decline to give the opinion requested.
Moreover, it is the clear position of the Court that to contend
that it should not deal with a question couched in abstract terms
is "a mere affirmation devoid of any justification", and
that "the Court may give an advisory opinion on any legal question,
abstract or otherwise" (Conditions of Admission of a State
to Membership in the United Nations (Article 4 of the Charter),
Advisory Opinion, 1948, I.C.J. Reports 1947-1948, p. 61; see
also Effect of Awards of Compensation Made by the United Nations
Administrative Tribunal, Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports 1954,
p. 51; and Legal Consequences for States of the Continued Presence
of South Africa in Namibia (South West Africa) notwithstanding Security
Council Resolution 276 (1970), Advisory Opinion, I.C.J. Reports
1971, p. 27, para. 40).
Certain States have however expressed the fear that the abstract
nature of the question might lead the Court to make hypothetical
or speculative declarations outside the scope of its judicial function.
The Court does not consider that, in giving an advisory opinion
in the present case, it would necessarily have to write "scenarios",
to study various types of nuclear weapons and to evaluate highly
complex and controversial technological, strategic and scientific
information. The Court will simply address the issues arising in
all their aspects by applying the legal rules relevant to the situation.
16. Certain States have observed that the General Assembly has
not explained to the Court for what precise purposes it seeks the
advisory opinion. Nevertheless, it is not for the Court itself to
purport to decide whether or not an advisory opinion is needed by
the Assembly for the performance of its functions. The General Assembly
has the right to decide for itself on the usefulness of an opinion
in the light of its own needs.
Equally, once the Assembly has asked, by adopting a resolution,
for an advisory opinion on a legal question, the Court, in determining
whether there are any compelling reasons for it to refuse to give
such an opinion, will not have regard to the origins or to the political
history of the request, or to the distribution of votes in respect
of the adopted resolution.
17. It has also been submitted that a reply from the Court in this
case might adversely affect disarmament negotiations and would,
therefore, be contrary to the interest of the United Nations. The
Court is aware that, no matter what might be its conclusions in
any opinion it might give, they would have relevance for the continuing
debate on the matter in the General Assembly and would present an
additional element in the negotiations on the matter. Beyond that,
the effect of the opinion is a matter of appreciation. The Court
has heard contrary positions advanced and there are no evident criteria
by which it can prefer one assessment to another. That being so,
the Court cannot regard this factor as a compelling reason to decline
to exercise its jurisdiction.
18. Finally, it has been contended by some States that in answering
the question posed, the Court would be going beyond its judicial
role and would be taking upon itself a law-making capacity. It is
clear that the Court cannot legislate, and, in the circumstances
of the present case, it is not called upon to do so. Rather its
task is to engage in its normal judicial function of ascertaining
the existence or otherwise of legal principles and rules applicable
to the threat or use of nuclear weapons. The contention that the
giving of an answer to the question posed would require the Court
to legislate is based on a supposition that the present corpus
juris is devoid of relevant rules in this matter. The Court
could not accede to this argument; it states the existing law and
does not legislate. This is so even if, in stating and applying
the law, the Court necessarily has to specify its scope and sometimes
note its general trend.
19. In view of what is stated above, the Court concludes that it
has the authority to deliver an opinion on the question posed by
the General Assembly, and that there exist no "compelling reasons"
which would lead the Court to exercise its discretion not to do
so.
An entirely different question is whether the Court, under the
constraints placed upon it as a judicial organ, will be able to
give a complete answer to the question asked of it. However, that
is a different matter from a refusal to answer at all.
* * *
20. The Court must next address certain matters arising in relation
to the formulation of the question put to it by the General Assembly.
The English text asks: "Is the threat or use of nuclear weapons
in any circumstance permitted under international law?" The
French text of the question reads as follows: "Est-il permis
en droit international de recourir à la menace ou à l'emploi d'armes
nucléaires en toute circonstance?" It was suggested that
the Court was being asked by the General Assembly whether it was
permitted to have recourse to nuclear weapons in every circumstance,
and it was contended that such a question would inevitably invite
a simple negative answer.
The Court finds it unnecessary to pronounce on the possible divergences
between the English and French texts of the question posed. Its
real objective is clear: to determine the legality or illegality
of the threat or use of nuclear weapons.
21. The use of the word "permitted" in the question put
by the General Assembly was criticized before the Court by certain
States on the ground that this implied that the threat or the use
of nuclear weapons would only be permissible if authorization could
be found in a treaty provision or in customary international law.
Such a starting point, those States submitted, was incompatible
with the very basis of international law, which rests upon the principles
of sovereignty and consent; accordingly, and contrary to what was
implied by use of the word "permitted", States are free
to threaten or use nuclear weapons unless it can be shown that they
are bound not to do so by reference to a prohibition in either treaty
law or customary international law. Support for this contention
was found in dicta of the Permanent Court of International Justice
in the "Lotus" case that "restrictions upon
the independence of States cannot . . . be presumed" and that
international law leaves to States "a wide measure of discretion
which is only limited in certain cases by prohibitive rules"
(P.C.I.J., Series A, No. 10, pp. 18 and 19). Reliance was
also placed on the dictum of the present Court in the case concerning
Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua
(Nicaragua v. United States of America) that:
"in international law there are no rules, other than such
rules as may be accepted by the State concerned, by treaty or
otherwise, whereby the level of armaments of a sovereign State
can be limited" (I.C.J. Reports 1986, p. 135, para.
269).
For other States, the invocation of these dicta in the "Lotus"
case was inapposite; their status in contemporary international
law and applicability in the very different circumstances of the
present case were challenged. It was also contended that the above-mentioned
dictum of the present Court was directed to the possession
of armaments and was irrelevant to the threat or use of nuclear
weapons.
Finally, it was suggested that, were the Court to answer the question
put by the Assembly, the word "permitted" should be replaced
by "prohibited".
22. The Court notes that the nuclear-weapon States appearing before
it either accepted, or did not dispute, that their independence
to act was indeed restricted by the principles and rules of international
law, more particularly humanitarian law (see below, paragraph 86),
as did the other States which took part in the proceedings.
Hence, the argument concerning the legal conclusions to be drawn
from the use of the word "permitted", and the questions
of burden of proof to which it was said to give rise, are without
particular significance for the disposition of the issues before
the Court.
* *
23. In seeking to answer the question put to it by the General
Assembly, the Court must decide, after consideration of the great
corpus of international law norms available to it, what might be
the relevant applicable law.
*
24. Some of the proponents of the illegality of the use of nuclear
weapons have argued that such use would violate the right to life
as guaranteed in Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights, as well as in certain regional instruments
for the protection of human rights. Article 6, paragraph 1, of the
International Covenant provides as follows:
"Every human being has the inherent right to life. This
right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived
of his life."
In reply, others contended that the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights made no mention of war or weapons, and it had
never been envisaged that the legality of nuclear weapons was regulated
by that instrument. It was suggested that the Covenant was directed
to the protection of human rights in peacetime, but that questions
relating to unlawful loss of life in hostilities were governed by
the law applicable in armed conflict.
25. The Court observes that the protection of the International
Covenant of Civil and Political Rights does not cease in times of
war, except by operation of Article 4 of the Covenant whereby certain
provisions may be derogated from in a time of national emergency.
Respect for the right to life is not, however, such a provision.
In principle, the right not arbitrarily to be deprived of one's
life applies also in hostilities. The test of what is an arbitrary
deprivation of life, however, then falls to be determined by the
applicable lex specialis, namely, the law applicable in armed
conflict which is designed to regulate the conduct of hostilities.
Thus whether a particular loss of life, through the use of a certain
weapon in warfare, is to be considered an arbitrary deprivation
of life contrary to Article 6 of the Covenant, can only be decided
by reference to the law applicable in armed conflict and not deduced
from the terms of the Covenant itself.
26. Some States also contended that the prohibition against genocide,
contained in the Convention of 9 December 1948 on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, is a relevant rule of customary
international law which the Court must apply. The Court recalls
that, in Article II of the Convention genocide is defined as
"any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy,
in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious
group, as such:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of
the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of
life calculated to being about its physical destruction in whole
or in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within
the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another
group."
It was maintained before the Court that the number of deaths occasioned
by the use of nuclear weapons would be enormous; that the victims
could, in certain cases, include persons of a particular national,
ethnic, racial or religious group; and that the intention to destroy
such groups could be inferred from the fact that the user of the
nuclear weapon would have omitted to take account of the well-known
effects of the use of such weapons.
The Court would point out in that regard that the prohibition of
genocide would be pertinent in this case if the recourse to nuclear
weapons did indeed entail the element of intent, towards a group
as such, required by the provision quoted above. In the view of
the Court, it would only be possible to arrive at such a conclusion
after having taken due account of the circumstances specific to
each case.
*
27. In both their written and oral statements, some States furthermore
argued that any use of nuclear weapons would be unlawful by reference
to existing norms relating to the safeguarding and protection of
the environment, in view of their essential importance.
Specific references were made to various existing international
treaties and instruments. These included Additional Protocol I of
1977 to the Geneva Conventions of 1949, Article 35, paragraph 3,
of which prohibits the employment of "methods or means of warfare
which are intended, or may be expected, to cause widespread, long-term
and severe damage to the natural environment"; and the Convention
of 18 May 1977 on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile
Use of Environmental Modification Techniques, which prohibits the
use of weapons which have "widespread, long-lasting or severe
effects" on the environment (Art. 1). Also cited were Principle
21 of the Stockholm Declaration of 1972 and Principle 2 of the Rio
Declaration of 1992 which express the common conviction of the States
concerned that they have a duty "to ensure that activities
within their jurisdiction or control do not cause damage to the
environment of other States or of areas beyond the limits of national
jurisdiction". These instruments and other provisions relating
to the protection and safeguarding of the environment were said
to apply at all times, in war as well as in peace, and it was contended
that they would be violated by the use of nuclear weapons whose
consequences would be widespread and would have transboundary effects.
28. Other States questioned the binding legal quality of these
precepts of environmental law; or, in the context of the Convention
on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental
Modification Techniques, denied that it was concerned at all with
the use of nuclear weapons in hostilities; or, in the case of Additional
Protocol I, denied that they were generally bound by its terms,
or recalled that they had reserved their position in respect of
Article 35, paragraph 3, thereof.
It was also argued by some States that the principal purpose of
environmental treaties and norms was the protection of the environment
in time of peace. It was said that those treaties made no mention
of nuclear weapons. It was also pointed out that warfare in general,
and nuclear warfare in particular, were not mentioned in their texts
and that it would be destabilizing to the rule of law and to confidence
in international negotiations if those treaties were now interpreted
in such a way as to prohibit the use of nuclear weapons.
29. The Court recognizes that the environment is under daily threat
and that the use of nuclear weapons could constitute a catastrophe
for the environment. The Court also recognizes that the environment
is not an abstraction but represents the living space, the quality
of life and the very health of human beings, including generations
unborn. The existence of the general obligation of States to ensure
that activities within their jurisdiction and control respect the
environment of other States or of areas beyond national control
is now part of the corpus of international law relating to the environment.
30. However, the Court is of the view that the issue is not whether
the treaties relating to the protection of the environment are or
not applicable during an armed conflict, but rather whether the
obligations stemming from these treaties were intended to be obligations
of total restraint during military conflict.
The Court does not consider that the treaties in question could
have intended to deprive a State of the exercise of its right of
self-defence under international law because of its obligations
to protect the environment. Nonetheless, States must take environmental
considerations into account when assessing what is necessary and
proportionate in the pursuit of legitimate military objectives.
Respect for the environment is one of the elements that go to assessing
whether an action is in conformity with the principles of necessity
and proportionality.
This approach is supported, indeed, by the terms of Principle 24
of the Rio Declaration, which provides that:
"Warfare is inherently destructive of sustainable development.
States shall therefore respect international law providing protection
for the environment in times of armed conflict and cooperate in
its further development, as necessary."
31. The Court notes furthermore that Articles 35, paragraph 3,
and 55 of Additional Protocol I provide additional protection for
the environment. Taken together, these provisions embody a general
obligation to protect the natural environment against widespread,
long-term and severe environmental damage; the prohibition of methods
and means of warfare which are intended, or may be expected, to
cause such damage; and the prohibition of attacks against the natural
environment by way of reprisals.
These are powerful constraints for all the States having subscribed
to these provisions.
32. General Assembly resolution 47/37 of 25 November 1992 on the
Protection of the Environment in Times of Armed Conflict, is also
of interest in this context. It affirms the general view according
to which environmental considerations constitute one of the elements
to be taken into account in the implementation of the principles
of the law applicable in armed conflict: it states that "destruction
of the environment, not justified by military necessity and carried
out wantonly, is clearly contrary to existing international law".
Addressing the reality that certain instruments are not yet binding
on all States, the General Assembly in this resolution "[a]ppeals
to all States that have not yet done so to consider becoming parties
to the relevant international conventions."
In its recent Order in the Request for an Examination of the
Situation in Accordance with Paragraph 63 of the Court's Judgment
of 20 December 1974 in the Nuclear Tests (New Zealand v. France)
Case, the Court stated that its conclusion was "without
prejudice to the obligations of States to respect and protect the
natural environment" (Order of 22 September 1995, I.C.J.
Reports 1995, p. 306, para. 64). Although that statement was
made in the context of nuclear testing, it naturally also applies
to the actual use of nuclear weapons in armed conflict.
33. The Court thus finds that while the existing international
law relating to the protection and safeguarding of the environment
does not specifically prohibit the use of nuclear weapons, it indicates
important environmental factors that are properly to be taken into
account in the context of the implementation of the principles and
rules of the law applicable in armed conflict.
*
34. In the light of the foregoing the Court concludes that the
most directly relevant applicable law governing the question of
which it was seised, is that relating to the use of force enshrined
in the United Nations Charter and the law applicable in armed conflict
which regulates the conduct of hostilities, together with any specific
treaties on nuclear weapons that the Court might determine to be
relevant.
* *
35. In applying this law to the present case, the Court cannot
however fail to take into account certain unique characteristics
of nuclear weapons.
The Court has noted the definitions of nuclear weapons contained
in various treaties and accords. It also notes that nuclear weapons
are explosive devices whose energy results from the fusion or fission
of the atom. By its very nature, that process, in nuclear weapons
as they exist today, releases not only immense quantities of heat
and energy, but also powerful and prolonged radiation. According
to the material before the Court, the first two causes of damage
are vastly more powerful than the damage caused by other weapons,
while the phenomenon of radiation is said to be peculiar to nuclear
weapons. These characteristics render the nuclear weapon potentially
catastrophic. The destructive power of nuclear weapons cannot be
contained in either space or time. They have the potential to destroy
all civilization and the entire ecosystem of the planet.
The radiation released by a nuclear explosion would affect health,
agriculture, natural resources and demography over a very wide area.
Further, the use of nuclear weapons would be a serious danger to
future generations. Ionizing radiation has the potential to damage
the future environment, food and marine ecosystem, and to cause
genetic defects and illness in future generations.
36. In consequence, in order correctly to apply to the present
case the Charter law on the use of force and the law applicable
in armed conflict, in particular humanitarian law, it is imperative
for the Court to take account of the unique characteristics of nuclear
weapons, and in particular their destructive capacity, their capacity
to cause untold human suffering, and their ability to cause damage
to generations to come.
* * *
37. The Court will now address the question of the legality or
illegality of recourse to nuclear weapons in the light of the provisions
of the Charter relating to the threat or use of force.
38. The Charter contains several provisions relating to the threat
and use of force. In Article 2, paragraph 4, the threat or use of
force against the territorial integrity or political independence
of another State or in any other manner inconsistent with the purposes
of the United Nations is prohibited. That paragraph provides:
"All Members shall refrain in their international relations
from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity
or political independence of any State, or in any other manner
inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations."
This prohibition of the use of force is to be considered in the
light of other relevant provisions of the Charter. In Article 51,
the Charter recognizes the inherent right of individual or collective
self- defence if an armed attack occurs. A further lawful use of
force is envisaged in Article 42, whereby the Security Council may
take military enforcement measures in conformity with Chapter VII
of the Charter.
39. These provisions do not refer to specific weapons. They apply
to any use of force, regardless of the weapons employed. The Charter
neither expressly prohibits, nor permits, the use of any specific
weapon, including nuclear weapons. A weapon that is already unlawful
per se, whether by treaty or custom, does not become lawful by reason
of its being used for a legitimate purpose under the Charter.
40. The entitlement to resort to self-defence under Article 51
is subject to certain constraints. Some of these constraints are
inherent in the very concept of self defence. Other requirements
are specified in Article 51.
41. The submission of the exercise of the right of self-defence
to the conditions of necessity and proportionality is a rule of
customary international law. As the Court stated in the case concerning
Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua
v. United States of America) (I.C.J. Reports 1986, p. 94, para.
176): "there is a specific rule whereby self-defence would
warrant only measures which are proportional to the armed attack
and necessary to respond to it, a rule well established in customary
international law". This dual condition applies equally to
Article 51 of the Charter, whatever the means of force employed.
42. The proportionality principle may thus not in itself exclude
the use of nuclear weapons in self-defence in all circumstances.
But at the same time, a use of force that is proportionate under
the law of self-defence, must, in order to be lawful, also meet
the requirements of the law applicable in armed conflict which comprise
in particular the principles and rules of humanitarian law.
43. Certain States have in their written and oral pleadings suggested
that in the case of nuclear weapons, the condition of proportionality
must be evaluated in the light of still further factors. They contend
that the very nature of nuclear weapons, and the high probability
of an escalation of nuclear exchanges, mean that there is an extremely
strong risk of devastation. The risk factor is said to negate the
possibility of the condition of proportionality being complied with.
The Court does not find it necessary to embark upon the quantification
of such risks; nor does it need to enquire into the question whether
tactical nuclear weapons exist which are sufficiently precise to
limit those risks: it suffices for the Court to note that the very
nature of all nuclear weapons and the profound risks associated
therewith are further considerations to be borne in mind by States
believing they can exercise a nuclear response in self-defence in
accordance with the requirements of proportionality.
44. Beyond the conditions of necessity and proportionality, Article
51 specifically requires that measures taken by States in the exercise
of the right of self-defence shall be immediately reported to the
Security Council; this article further provides that these measures
shall not in any way affect the authority and responsibility of
the Security Council under the Charter to take at any time such
action as it deems necessary in order to maintain or restore international
peace and security. These requirements of Article 51 apply whatever
the means of force used in self-defence.
45. The Court notes that the Security Council adopted on 11 April
1995, in the context of the extension of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons, resolution 984 (1995) by the terms of which,
on the one hand, it
"[t]akes note with appreciation of the statements
made by each of the nuclear-weapon States (S/1995/261, S/1995/262,
S/1995/263, S/1995/264, S/1995/265), in which they give security
assurances against the use of nuclear weapons to non-nuclear-weapon
States that are Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons,"
and, on the other hand, it
"[w]elcomes the intention expressed by certain States
that they will provide or support immediate assistance, in accordance
with the Charter, to any non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons that is a victim
of an act of, or an object of a threat of, aggression in which
nuclear weapons are used".
46. Certain States asserted that the use of nuclear weapons in
the conduct of reprisals would be lawful. The Court does not have
to examine, in this context, the question of armed reprisals in
time of peace, which are considered to be unlawful. Nor does it
have to pronounce on the question of belligerent reprisals save
to observe that in any case any right of recourse to such reprisals
would, like self-defence, be governed inter alia by the principle
of proportionality.
47. In order to lessen or eliminate the risk of unlawful attack,
States sometimes signal that they possess certain weapons to use
in self-defence against any State violating their territorial integrity
or political independence. Whether a signalled intention to use
force if certain events occur is or is not a "threat"
within Article 2, paragraph 4, of the Charter depends upon various
factors. If the envisaged use of force is itself unlawful, the stated
readiness to use it would be a threat prohibited under Article 2,
paragraph 4. Thus it would be illegal for a State to threaten force
to secure territory from another State, or to cause it to follow
or not follow certain political or economic paths. The notions of
"threat" and "use" of force under Article 2,
paragraph 4, of the Charter stand together in the sense that if
the use of force itself in a given case is illegal - for whatever
reason - the threat to use such force will likewise be illegal.
In short, if it is to be lawful, the declared readiness of a State
to use force must be a use of force that is in conformity with the
Charter. For the rest, no State - whether or not it defended the
policy of deterrence - suggested to the Court that it would be lawful
to threaten to use force if the use of force contemplated would
be illegal.
48. Some States put forward the argument that possession of nuclear
weapons is itself an unlawful threat to use force. Possession of
nuclear weapons may indeed justify an inference of preparedness
to use them. In order to be effective, the policy of deterrence,
by which those States possessing or under the umbrella of nuclear
weapons seek to discourage military aggression by demonstrating
that it will serve no purpose, necessitates that the intention to
use nuclear weapons be credible. Whether this is a "threat"
contrary to Article 2, paragraph 4, depends upon whether the particular
use of force envisaged would be directed against the territorial
integrity or political independence of a State, or against the Purposes
of the United Nations or whether, in the event that it were intended
as a means of defence, it would necessarily violate the principles
of necessity and proportionality. In any of these circumstances
the use of force, and the threat to use it, would be unlawful under
the law of the Charter.
49. Moreover, the Security Council may take enforcement measures
under Chapter VII of the Charter. From the statements presented
to it the Court does not consider it necessary to address questions
which might, in a given case, arise from the application of Chapter
VII.
50. The terms of the question put to the Court by the General Assembly
in resolution 49/75K could in principle also cover a threat or use
of nuclear weapons by a State within its own boundaries. However,
this particular aspect has not been dealt with by any of the States
which addressed the Court orally or in writing in these proceedings.
The Court finds that it is not called upon to deal with an internal
use of nuclear weapons.
* * *
51. Having dealt with the Charter provisions relating to the threat
or use of force, the Court will now turn to the law applicable in
situations of armed conflict. It will first address the question
whether there are specific rules in international law regulating
the legality or illegality of recourse to nuclear weapons per
se; it will then examine the question put to it in the light
of the law applicable in armed conflict proper, i.e. the principles
and rules of humanitarian law applicable in armed conflict, and
the law of neutrality.
* *
52. The Court notes by way of introduction that international customary
and treaty law does not contain any specific prescription authorizing
the threat or use of nuclear weapons or any other weapon in general
or in certain circumstances, in particular those of the exercise
of legitimate self- defence. Nor, however, is there any principle
or rule of international law which would make the legality of the
threat or use of nuclear weapons or of any other weapons dependent
on a specific authorization. State practice shows that the illegality
of the use of certain weapons as such does not result from an absence
of authorization but, on the contrary, is formulated in terms of
prohibition.
* 53. The Court must therefore now examine whether
there is any prohibition of recourse to nuclear weapons as such;
it will first ascertain whether there is a conventional prescription
to this effect.
54. In this regard, the argument has been advanced that nuclear
weapons should be treated in the same way as poisoned weapons. In
that case, they would be prohibited under:
(a)
the Second Hague Declaration of 29 July 1899, which prohibits
"the use of projectiles the object of which is the diffusion
of asphyxiating or deleterious gases";
(b)
Article 23 (a) of the Regulations respecting the laws and customs
of war on land annexed to the Hague Convention IV of 18 October
1907, whereby "it is especially forbidden: ...to employ poison
or poisoned weapons"; and
(c)
the Geneva Protocol of 17 June 1925 which prohibits "the
use in war of asphyxiating, poisonous or other gases, and of all
analogous liquids, materials or devices".
55. The Court will observe that the Regulations annexed to the
Hague Convention IV do not define what is to be understood by "poison
or poisoned weapons" and that different interpretations exist
on the issue. Nor does the 1925 Protocol specify the meaning to
be given to the term "analogous materials or devices".
The terms have been understood, in the practice of States, in their
ordinary sense as covering weapons whose prime, or even exclusive,
effect is to poison or asphyxiate. This practice is clear, and the
parties to those instruments have not treated them as referring
to nuclear weapons.
56. In view of this, it does not seem to the Court that the use
of nuclear weapons can be regarded as specifically prohibited on
the basis of the above-mentioned provisions of the Second Hague
Declaration of 1899, the Regulations annexed to the Hague Convention
IV of 1907 or the 1925 Protocol (see paragraph 54 above).
57. The pattern until now has been for weapons of mass destruction
to be declared illegal by specific instruments. The most recent
such instruments are the Convention of 10 April 1972 on the Prohibition
of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological
(Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their destruction - which
prohibits the possession of bacteriological and toxic weapons and
reinforces the prohibition of their use - and the Convention of
13 January 1993 on the Prohibition of the Development, Production,
Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction
- which prohibits all use of chemical weapons and requires the destruction
of existing stocks. Each of these instruments has been negotiated
and adopted in its own context and for its own reasons. The Court
does not find any specific prohibition of recourse to nuclear weapons
in treaties expressly prohibiting the use of certain weapons of
mass destruction.
58. In the last two decades, a great many negotiations have been
conducted regarding nuclear weapons; they have not resulted in a
treaty of general prohibition of the same kind as for bacteriological
and chemical weapons. However, a number of specific treaties have
been concluded in order to limit:
(a)
the acquisition, manufacture and possession of nuclear weapons
(Peace Treaties of 10 February 1947; State Treaty for the Re-establishment
of an Independent and Democratic Austria of 15 May 1955; Treaty
of Tlatelolco of 14 February 1967 for the Prohibition of Nuclear
Weapons in Latin America, and its Additional Protocols; Treaty
of 1 July 1968 on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons; Treaty
of Rarotonga of 6 August 1985 on the Nuclear- Weapon-Free Zone
of the South Pacific, and its Protocols; Treaty of 12 September
1990 on the Final Settlement with respect to Germany);
(b)
the deployment of nuclear weapons (Antarctic Treaty of 1 December
1959; Treaty of 27 January 1967 on Principles Governing the Activities
of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, including
the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies; Treaty of Tlatelolco of 14
February 1967 for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin
America, and its Additional Protocols; Treaty of 11 February 1971
on the Prohibition of the Emplacement of Nuclear Weapons and Other
Weapons of Mass Destruction on the Sea-Bed and the Ocean Floor
and in the Subsoil Thereof; Treaty of Rarotonga of 6 August 1985
on the Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone of the South Pacific, and its
Protocols); and
(c)
the testing of nuclear weapons (Antarctic Treaty of 1 December
1959; Treaty of 5 August 1963 Banning Nuclear Weapon Tests in
the Atmosphere, in Outer Space and under Water; Treaty of 27 January
1967 on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration
and Use of Outer Space, including the Moon and Other Celestial
Bodies; Treaty of Tlatelolco of 14 February 1967 for the Prohibition
of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America, and its Additional Protocols;
Treaty of Rarotonga of 6 August 1985 on the Nuclear-Weapon-Free
Zone of the South Pacific, and its Protocols).
59. Recourse to nuclear weapons is directly addressed by two of
these Conventions and also in connection with the indefinite extension
of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons of 1968:
(a)
the Treaty of Tlatelolco of 14 February 1967 for the Prohibition
of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America prohibits, in Article 1, the
use of nuclear weapons by the Contracting Parties. It further
includes an Additional Protocol II open to nuclear-weapon States
outside the region, Article 3 of which provides:
"The Governments represented by the undersigned Plenipotentiaries
also undertake not to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons
against the Contracting Parties of the Treaty for the Prohibition
of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America."
The Protocol was signed and ratified by the five nuclear-weapon
States. Its ratification was accompanied by a variety of declarations.
The United Kingdom Government, for example, stated that "in
the event of any act of aggression by a Contracting Party to the
Treaty in which that Party was supported by a nuclear-weapon State",
the United Kingdom Government would "be free to reconsider
the extent to which they could be regarded as committed by the
provisions of Additional Protocol II". The United States
made a similar statement. The French Government, for its part,
stated that it "interprets the undertaking made in article
3 of the Protocol as being without prejudice to the full exercise
of the right of self-defence confirmed by Article 51 of the Charter".
China reaffirmed its commitment not to be the first to make use
of nuclear weapons. The Soviet Union reserved "the right
to review" the obligations imposed upon it by Additional
Protocol II, particularly in the event of an attack by a State
party either "in support of a nuclear-weapon State or jointly
with that State". None of these statements drew comment or
objection from the parties to the Treaty of Tlatelolco.
(b)
the Treaty of Rarotonga of 6 August 1985 establishes a South
Pacific Nuclear Free Zone in which the Parties undertake not to
manufacture, acquire or possess any nuclear explosive device (Art.
3). Unlike the Treaty of Tlatelolco, the Treaty of Rarotonga does
not expressly prohibit the use of such weapons. But such a prohibition
is for the States parties the necessary consequence of the prohibitions
stipulated by the Treaty. The Treaty has a number of protocols.
Protocol 2, open to the five nuclear-weapon States, specifies
in its Article 1 that:
"Each Party undertakes not to use or threaten to use any
nuclear explosive device against:
(a) Parties to the Treaty; or
(b) any territory within the South Pacific Nuclear Free
Zone for which a State that has become a Party to Protocol 1
is internationally responsible."
China and Russia are parties to that Protocol. In signing it,
China and the Soviet Union each made a declaration by which they
reserved the" right to reconsider" their obligations
under the said Protocol; the Soviet Union also referred to certain
circumstances in which it would consider itself released from
those obligations. France, the United Kingdom and the United States,
for their part, signed Protocol 2 on 25 March 1996, but have not
yet ratified it. On that occasion, France declared, on the one
hand, that no provision in that Protocol "shall impair the
full exercise of the inherent right of self-defence provided for
in Article 51 of the ... Charter" and, on the other hand,
that "the commitment set out in Article 1 of [that] Protocol
amounts to the negative security assurances given by France to
non-nuclear-weapon States which are parties to the Treaty on .
. . Non-Proliferation", and that "these assurances shall
not apply to States which are not parties" to that Treaty.
For its part, the United Kingdom made a declaration setting out
the precise circumstances in which it "will not be bound
by [its] undertaking under Article 1" of the Protocol.
(c)
as to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
at the time of its signing in 1968 the United States, the United
Kingdom and the USSR gave various security assurances to the non-nuclear-weapon
States that were parties to the Treaty. In resolution 255 (1968)
the Security Council took note with satisfaction of the intention
expressed by those three States to
"provide or support immediate assistance, in accordance
with the Charter, to any non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation . . . that is a victim of an
act of, or an object of a threat of, aggression in which nuclear
weapons are used".
On the occasion of the extension of the Treaty in 1995, the five
nuclear-weapon States gave their non-nuclear-weapon partners,
by means of separate unilateral statements on 5 and 6 April 1995,
positive and negative security assurances against the use of such
weapons. All the five nuclear-weapon States first undertook not
to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon States that
were parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons. However, these States, apart from China, made an exception
in the case of an invasion or any other attack against them, their
territories, armed forces or allies, or on a State towards which
they had a security commitment, carried out or sustained by a
non-nuclear-weapon State party to the Non-Proliferation Treaty
in association or alliance with a nuclear-weapon State. Each of
the nuclear-weapon States further undertook, as a permanent Member
of the Security Council, in the event of an attack with the use
of nuclear weapons, or threat of such attack, against a non-nuclear-weapon
State, to refer the matter to the Security Council without delay
and to act within it in order that it might take immediate measures
with a view to supplying, pursuant to the Charter, the necessary
assistance to the victim State (the commitments assumed comprising
minor variations in wording). The Security Council, in unanimously
adopting resolution 984 (1995) of 11 April 1995, cited above,
took note of those statements with appreciation. It also recognized
"that the nuclear-weapon State permanent members of the
Security Council will bring the matter immediately to the attention
of the Council and seek Council action to provide, in accordance
with the Charter, the necessary assistance to the State victim";
and welcomed the fact that
"the intention expressed by certain States that they will
provide or support immediate assistance, in accordance with
the Charter, to any non-nuclear- weapon State Party to the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons that is a victim
of an act of, or an object of a threat of, aggression in which
nuclear weapons are used."
60. Those States that believe that recourse to nuclear weapons
is illegal stress that the conventions that include various rules
providing for the limitation or elimination of nuclear weapons in
certain areas (such as the Antarctic Treaty of 1959 which prohibits
the deployment of nuclear weapons in the Antarctic, or the Treaty
of Tlatelolco of 1967 which creates a nuclear-weapon-free zone in
Latin America), or the conventions that apply certain measures of
control and limitation to the existence of nuclear weapons (such
as the 1963 Partial Test-Ban Treaty or the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons) all set limits to the use of nuclear weapons.
In their view, these treaties bear witness, in their own way, to
the emergence of a rule of complete legal prohibition of all uses
of nuclear weapons.
61. Those States who defend the position that recourse to nuclear
weapons is legal in certain circumstances see a logical contradiction
in reaching such a conclusion. According to them, those Treaties,
such as the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
as well as Security Council resolutions 255 (1968) and 984 (1995)
which take note of the security assurances given by the nuclear-weapon
States to the non-nuclear-weapon States in relation to any nuclear
aggression against the latter, cannot be understood as prohibiting
the use of nuclear weapons, and such a claim is contrary to the
very text of those instruments. For those who support the legality
in certain circumstances of recourse to nuclear weapons, there is
no absolute prohibition against the use of such weapons. The very
logic and construction of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of
Nuclear Weapons, they assert, confirm this. This Treaty, whereby,
they contend, the possession of nuclear weapons by the five nuclear-weapon
States has been accepted, cannot be seen as a treaty banning their
use by those States; to accept the fact that those States possess
nuclear weapons is tantamount to recognizing that such weapons may
be used in certain circumstances. Nor, they contend, could the security
assurances given by the nuclear-weapon States in 1968, and more
recently in connection with the Review and Extension Conference
of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons in 1995, have been conceived without its being supposed
that there were circumstances in which nuclear weapons could be
used in a lawful manner. For those who defend the legality of the
use, in certain circumstances, of nuclear weapons, the acceptance
of those instruments by the different non-nuclear-weapon States
confirms and reinforces the evident logic upon which those instruments
are based.
62. The Court notes that the treaties dealing exclusively with
acquisition, manufacture, possession, deployment and testing of
nuclear weapons, without specifically addressing their threat or
use, certainly point to an increasing concern in the international
community with these weapons; the Court concludes from this that
these treaties could therefore be seen as foreshadowing a future
general prohibition of the use of such weapons, but they do not
constitute such a prohibition by themselves. As to the treaties
of Tlatelolco and Rarotonga and their Protocols, and also the declarations
made in connection with the indefinite extension of the Treaty on
the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, it emerges from these
instruments that:
(a)
a number of States have undertaken not to use nuclear weapons
in specific zones (Latin America; the South Pacific) or against
certain other States (non-nuclear-weapon States which are parties
to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons);
(b)
nevertheless, even within this framework, the nuclear-weapon
States have reserved the right to use nuclear weapons in certain
circumstances; and
(c)
these reservations met with no objection from the parties to
the Tlatelolco or Rarotonga Treaties or from the Security Council.
63. These two treaties, the security assurances given in 1995 by
the nuclear-weapon States and the fact that the Security Council
took note of them with satisfaction, testify to a growing awareness
of the need to liberate the community of States and the international
public from the dangers resulting from the existence of nuclear
weapons. The Court moreover notes the signing, even more recently,
on 15 December 1995, at Bangkok, of a Treaty on the Southeast Asia
Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone, and on 11 April 1996, at Cairo, of a treaty
on the creation of a nuclear-weapons-free zone in Africa. It does
not, however, view these elements as amounting to a comprehensive
and universal conventional prohibition on the use, or the threat
of use, of those weapons as such.
*
64. The Court will now turn to an examination of customary international
law to determine whether a prohibition of the threat or use of nuclear
weapons as such flows from that source of law. As the Court has
stated, the substance of that law must be "looked for primarily
in the actual practice and opinio juris of States" (Continental
Shelf (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya/Malta), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1985,
p. 29, para. 27).
65. States which hold the view that the use of nuclear weapons
is illegal have endeavoured to demonstrate the existence of a customary
rule prohibiting this use. They refer to a consistent practice of
non-utilization of nuclear weapons by States since 1945 and they
would see in that practice the expression of an opinio juris
on the part of those who possess such weapons.
66. Some other States, which assert the legality of the threat
and use of nuclear weapons in certain circumstances, invoked the
doctrine and practice of deterrence in support of their argument.
They recall that they have always, in concert with certain other
States, reserved the right to use those weapons in the exercise
of the right to self-defence against an armed attack threatening
their vital security interests. In their view, if nuclear weapons
have not been used since 1945, it is not on account of an existing
or nascent custom but merely because circumstances that might justify
their use have fortunately not arisen.
67. The Court does not intend to pronounce here upon the practice
known as the "policy of deterrence". It notes that it
is a fact that a number of States adhered to that practice during
the greater part of the Cold War and continue to adhere to it. Furthermore,
the Members of the international community are profoundly divided
on the matter of whether non-recourse to nuclear weapons over the
past fifty years constitutes the expression of an opinio juris.
Under these circumstances the Court does not consider itself able
to find that there is such an opinio juris.
68. According to certain States, the important series of General
Assembly resolutions, beginning with resolution 1653 (XVI) of 24
November 1961, that deal with nuclear weapons and that affirm, with
consistent regularity, the illegality of nuclear weapons, signify
the existence of a rule of international customary law which prohibits
recourse to those weapons. According to other States, however, the
resolutions in question have no binding character on their own account
and are not declaratory of any customary rule of prohibition of
nuclear weapons; some of these States have also pointed out that
this series of resolutions not only did not meet with the approval
of all of the nuclear-weapon States but of many other States as
well.
69. States which consider that the use of nuclear weapons is illegal
indicated that those resolutions did not claim to create any new
rules, but were confined to a confirmation of customary law relating
to the prohibition of means or methods of warfare which, by their
use, overstepped the bounds of what is permissible in the conduct
of hostilities. In their view, the resolutions in question did no
more than apply to nuclear weapons the existing rules of international
law applicable in armed conflict; they were no more than the "envelope"
or instrumentum containing certain pre-existing customary
rules of international law. For those States it is accordingly of
little importance that the instrumentum should have occasioned
negative votes, which cannot have the effect of obliterating those
customary rules which have been confirmed by treaty law.
70. The Court notes that General Assembly resolutions, even if
they are not binding, may sometimes have normative value. They can,
in certain circumstances, provide evidence important for establishing
the existence of a rule or the emergence of an opinio juris.
To establish whether this is true of a given General Assembly resolution,
it is necessary to look at its content and the conditions of its
adoption; it is also necessary to see whether an opinio juris
exists as to its normative character. Or a series of resolutions
may show the gradual evolution of the opinio juris required
for the establishment of a new rule.
71. Examined in their totality, the General Assembly resolutions
put before the Court declare that the use of nuclear weapons would
be "a direct violation of the Charter of the United Nations";
and in certain formulations that such use "should be prohibited".
The focus of these resolutions has sometimes shifted to diverse
related matters; however, several of the resolutions under consideration
in the present case have been adopted with substantial numbers of
negative votes and abstentions; thus, although those resolutions
are a clear sign of deep concern regarding the problem of nuclear
weapons, they still fall short of establishing the existence of
an opinio juris on the illegality of the use of such weapons.
72. The Court further notes that the first of the resolutions of
the General Assembly expressly proclaiming the illegality of the
use of nuclear weapons, resolution 1653 (XVI) of 24 November 1961
(mentioned in subsequent resolutions), after referring to certain
international declarations and binding agreements, from the Declaration
of St. Petersburg of 1868 to the Geneva Protocol of 1925, proceeded
to qualify the legal nature of nuclear weapons, determine their
effects, and apply general rules of customary international law
to nuclear weapons in particular. That application by the General
Assembly of general rules of customary law to the particular case
of nuclear weapons indicates that, in its view, there was no specific
rule of customary law which prohibited the use of nuclear weapons;
if such a rule had existed, the General Assembly could simply have
referred to it and would not have needed to undertake such an exercise
of legal qualification.
73. Having said this, the Court points out that the adoption each
year by the General Assembly, by a large majority, of resolutions
recalling the content of resolution 1653 (XVI), and requesting the
member States to conclude a convention prohibiting the use of nuclear
weapons in any circumstance, reveals the desire of a very large
section of the international community to take, by a specific and
express prohibition of the use of nuclear weapons, a significant
step forward along the road to complete nuclear disarmament. The
emergence, as lex lata, of a customary rule specifically
prohibiting the use of nuclear weapons as such is hampered by the
continuing tensions between the nascent opinio juris on the
one hand, and the still strong adherence to the practice of deterrence
on the other.
* *
74. The Court not having found a conventional rule of general scope,
nor a customary rule specifically proscribing the threat or use
of nuclear weapons per se, it will now deal with the question
whether recourse to nuclear weapons must be considered as illegal
in the light of the principles and rules of international humanitarian
law applicable in armed conflict and of the law of neutrality.
75. A large number of customary rules have been developed by the
practice of States and are an integral part of the international
law relevant to the question posed. The "laws and customs of
war" - as they were traditionally called - were the subject
of efforts at codification undertaken in The Hague (including the
Conventions of 1899 and 1907), and were based partly upon the St.
Petersburg Declaration of 1868 as well as the results of the Brussels
Conference of 1874. This "Hague Law" and, more particularly,
the Regulations Respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land,
fixed the rights and duties of belligerents in their conduct of
operations and limited the choice of methods and means of injuring
the enemy in an international armed conflict. One should add to
this the "Geneva Law" (the Conventions of 1864, 1906,
1929 and 1949), which protects the victims of war and aims to provide
safeguards for disabled armed forces personnel and persons not taking
part in the hostilities. These two branches of the law applicable
in armed conflict have become so closely interrelated that they
are considered to have gradually formed one single complex system,
known today as international humanitarian law. The provisions of
the Additional Protocols of 1977 give expression and attest to the
unity and complexity of that law.
76. Since the turn of the century, the appearance of new means
of combat has - without calling into question the longstanding principles
and rules of international law - rendered necessary some specific
prohibitions of the use of certain weapons, such as explosive projectiles
under 400 grammes, dum-dum bullets and asphyxiating gases. Chemical
and bacteriological weapons were then prohibited by the 1925 Geneva
Protocol. More recently, the use of weapons producing "non-detectable
fragments", of other types of "mines, booby traps and
other devices", and of "incendiary weapons", was
either prohibited or limited, depending on the case, by the Convention
of 10 October 1980 on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of
Certain Conventional Weapons Which May Be Deemed to Be Excessively
Injurious or to Have Indiscriminate Effects. The provisions of the
Convention on "mines, booby traps and other devices" have
just been amended, on 3 May 1996, and now regulate in greater detail,
for example, the use of anti-personnel land mines.
77. All this shows that the conduct of military operations is governed
by a body of legal prescriptions. This is so because "the right
of belligerents to adopt means of injuring the enemy is not unlimited"
as stated in Article 22 of the 1907 Hague Regulations relating to
the laws and customs of war on land. The St. Petersburg Declaration
had already condemned the use of weapons "which uselessly aggravate
the suffering of disabled men or make their death inevitable".
The aforementioned Regulations relating to the laws and customs
of war on land, annexed to the Hague Convention IV of 1907, prohibit
the use of "arms, projectiles, or material calculated to cause
unnecessary suffering" (Art. 23).
78. The cardinal principles contained in the texts constituting
the fabric of humanitarian law are the following. The first is aimed
at the protection of the civilian population and civilian objects
and establishes the distinction between combatants and non-combatants;
States must never make civilians the object of attack and must consequently
never use weapons that are incapable of distinguishing between civilian
and military targets. According to the second principle, it is prohibited
to cause unnecessary suffering to combatants: it is accordingly
prohibited to use weapons causing them such harm or uselessly aggravating
their suffering. In application of that second principle, States
do not have unlimited freedom of choice of means in the weapons
they use.
The Court would likewise refer, in relation to these principles,
to the Martens Clause, which was first included in the Hague Convention
II with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on Land of 1899 and
which has proved to be an effective means of addressing the rapid
evolution of military technology. A modern version of that clause
is to be found in Article 1, paragraph 2, of Additional Protocol
I of 1977, which reads as follows:
"In cases not covered by this Protocol or by other international
agreements, civilians and combatants remain under the protection
and authority of the principles of international law derived from
established custom, from the principles of humanity and from the
dictates of public conscience."
In conformity with the aforementioned principles, humanitarian
law, at a very early stage, prohibited certain types of weapons
either because of their indiscriminate effect on combatants and
civilians or because of the unnecessary suffering caused to combatants,
that is to say, a harm greater than that unavoidable to achieve
legitimate military objectives. If an envisaged use of weapons would
not meet the requirements of humanitarian law, a threat to engage
in such use would also be contrary to that law.
79. It is undoubtedly because a great many rules of humanitarian
law applicable in armed conflict are so fundamental to the respect
of the human person and "elementary considerations of humanity"
as the Court put it in its Judgment of 9 April 1949 in the Corfu
Channel case (I.C.J. Reports 1949, p. 22), that the Hague
and Geneva Conventions have enjoyed a broad accession. Further these
fundamental rules are to be observed by all States whether or not
they have ratified the conventions that contain them, because they
constitute intransgressible principles of international customary
law.
80. The Nuremberg International Military Tribunal had already found
in 1945 that the humanitarian rules included in the Regulations
annexed to the Hague Convention IV of 1907 "were recognized
by all civilized nations and were regarded as being declaratory
of the laws and customs of war" (International Military Tribunal,
Trial of the Major War Criminals, 14 November 1945 - 1 October
1946, Nuremberg, 1947, Vol. 1, p. 254).
81. The Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to paragraph 2
of Security Council resolution 808 (1993), with which he introduced
the Statute of the International Tribunal for the Prosecution of
Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian
Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991,
and which was unanimously approved by the Security Council (resolution
827 (1993)), stated:
"In the view of the Secretary-General, the application of
the principle nullum crimen sine lege requires that the
international tribunal should apply rules of international humanitarian
law which are beyond any doubt part of customary law . . .
The part of conventional international humanitarian law which
has beyond doubt become part of international customary law is
the law applicable in armed conflict as embodied in: the Geneva
Conventions of 12 August 1949 for the Protection of War Victims;
the Hague Convention (IV) Respecting the Laws and Customs of War
on Land and the Regulations annexed thereto of 18 October 1907;
the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide of 9 December 1948; and the Charter of the International
Military Tribunal of 8 August 1945."
82. The extensive codification of humanitarian law and the extent
of the accession to the resultant treaties, as well as the fact
that the denunciation clauses that existed in the codification instruments
have never been used, have provided the international community
with a corpus of treaty rules the great majority of which had already
become customary and which reflected the most universally recognized
humanitarian principles. These rules indicate the normal conduct
and behaviour expected of States.
83. It has been maintained in these proceedings that these principles
and rules of humanitarian law are part of jus cogens as defined
in Article 53 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties of
23 May 1969. The question whether a norm is part of the jus cogens
relates to the legal character of the norm. The request addressed
to the Court by the General Assembly raises the question of the
applicability of the principles and rules of humanitarian law in
cases of recourse to nuclear weapons and the consequences of that
applicability for the legality of recourse to these weapons. But
it does not raise the question of the character of the humanitarian
law which would apply to the use of nuclear weapons. There is, therefore,
no need for the Court to pronounce on this matter.
84. Nor is there any need for the Court elaborate on the question
of the applicability of Additional Protocol I of 1977 to nuclear
weapons. It need only observe that while, at the Diplomatic Conference
of 1974-1977, there was no substantive debate on the nuclear issue
and no specific solution concerning this question was put forward,
Additional Protocol I in no way replaced the general customary rules
applicable to all means and methods of combat including nuclear
weapons. In particular, the Court recalls that all States are bound
by those rules in Additional Protocol I which, when adopted, were
merely the expression of the pre-existing customary law, such as
the Martens Clause, reaffirmed in the first article of Additional
Protocol I. The fact that certain types of weapons were not specifically
dealt with by the 1974-1977 Conference does not permit the drawing
of any legal conclusions relating to the substantive issues which
the use of such weapons would raise.
85. Turning now to the applicability of the principles and rules
of humanitarian law to a possible threat or use of nuclear weapons,
the Court notes that doubts in this respect have sometimes been
voiced on the ground that these principles and rules had evolved
prior to the invention of nuclear weapons and that the Conferences
of Geneva of 1949 and 1974-1977 which respectively adopted the four
Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the two Additional Protocols thereto
did not deal with nuclear weapons specifically. Such views, however,
are only held by a small minority. In the view of the vast majority
of States as well as writers there can be no doubt as to the applicability
of humanitarian law to nuclear weapons.
86. The Court shares that view. Indeed, nuclear weapons were invented
after most of the principles and rules of humanitarian law applicable
in armed conflict had already come into existence; the Conferences
of 1949 and 1974-1977 left these weapons aside, and there is a qualitative
as well as quantitative difference between nuclear weapons and all
conventional arms. However, it cannot be concluded from this that
the established principles and rules of humanitarian law applicable
in armed conflict did not apply to nuclear weapons. Such a conclusion
would be incompatible with the intrinsically humanitarian character
of the legal principles in question which permeates the entire law
of armed conflict and applies to all forms of warfare and to all
kinds of weapons, those of the past, those of the present and those
of the future. In this respect it seems significant that the thesis
that the rules of humanitarian law do not apply to the new weaponry,
because of the newness of the latter, has not been advocated in
the present proceedings. On the contrary, the newness of nuclear
weapons has been expressly rejected as an argument against the application
to them of international humanitarian law:
"In general, international humanitarian law bears on the
threat or use of nuclear weapons as it does of other weapons.
International humanitarian law has evolved to meet contemporary
circumstances, and is not limited in its application to weaponry
of an earlier time. The fundamental principles of this law endure:
to mitigate and circumscribe the cruelty of war for humanitarian
reasons." (New Zealand, Written Statement, p. 15, paras.
63-64.)
None of the statements made before the Court in any way advocated
a freedom to use nuclear weapons without regard to humanitarian
constraints. Quite the reverse; it has been explicitly stated,
"Restrictions set by the rules applicable to armed conflicts
in respect of means and methods of warfare definitely also extend
to nuclear weapons" (Russian Federation, CR 95/29, p. 52);
"So far as the customary law of war is concerned, the United
Kingdom has always accepted that the use of nuclear weapons is
subject to the general principles of the jus in bello"
(United Kingdom, CR 95/34, p. 45); and
"The United States has long shared the view that the law
of armed conflict governs the use of nuclear weapons - just as
it governs the use of conventional weapons" (United States
of America, CR 95/34, p. 85.)
87. Finally, the Court points to the Martens Clause, whose continuing
existence and applicability is not to be doubted, as an affirmation
that the principles and rules of humanitarian law apply to nuclear
weapons.
*
88. The Court will now turn to the principle of neutrality which
was raised by several States. In the context of the advisory proceedings
brought before the Court by the WHO concerning the Legality of
the Use by a State of Nuclear Weapons in Armed Conflict, the
position was put as follows by one State:
"The principle of neutrality, in its classic sense, was
aimed at preventing the incursion of belligerent forces into neutral
territory, or attacks on the persons or ships of neutrals. Thus:
'the territory of neutral powers is inviolable' (Article 1 of
the Hague Convention (V) Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral
Powers and Persons in Case of War on Land, concluded on 18 October
1907); 'belligerents are bound to respect the sovereign rights
of neutral powers . . .' (Article 1 to the Hague Convention (XIII)
Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers in Naval War,
concluded on 18 October 1907), 'neutral states have equal interest
in having their rights respected by belligerents . . .' (Preamble
to Convention on Maritime Neutrality, concluded on 20 February
1928). It is clear, however, that the principle of neutrality
applies with equal force to transborder incursions of armed forces
and to the transborder damage caused to a neutral State by the
use of a weapon in a belligerent State." (Legality of
the Use by a State of Nuclear Weapons in Armed Conflict, Nauru,
Written Statement (I), p. 35, IV E.)
The principle so circumscribed is presented as an established part
of the customary international law.
89. The Court finds that as in the case of the principles of humanitarian
law applicable in armed conflict, international law leaves no doubt
that the principle of neutrality, whatever its content, which is
of a fundamental character similar to that of the humanitarian principles
and rules, is applicable (subject to the relevant provisions of
the United Nations Charter), to all international armed conflict,
whatever type of weapons might be used.
*
90. Although the applicability of the principles and rules of humanitarian
law and of the principle of neutrality to nuclear weapons is hardly
disputed, the conclusions to be drawn from this applicability are,
on the other hand, controversial.
91. According to one point of view, the fact that recourse to nuclear
weapons is subject to and regulated by the law of armed conflict
does not necessarily mean that such recourse is as such prohibited.
As one State put it to the Court:
"Assuming that a State's use of nuclear weapons meets the
requirements of self-defence, it must then be considered whether
it conforms to the fundamental principles of the law of armed
conflict regulating the conduct of hostilities" (United Kingdom,
Written Statement, p. 40, para. 3.44);
"the legality of the use of nuclear weapons must therefore
be assessed in the light of the applicable principles of international
law regarding the use of force and the conduct of hostilities,
as is the case with other methods and means of warfare" (United
Kingdom, Written Statement, p. 75, para. 4.2(3)); and
"The reality . . . is that nuclear weapons might be used
in a wide variety of circumstances with very different results
in terms of likely civilian casualties. In some cases, such as
the use of a low yield nuclear weapon against warships on the
High Seas or troops in sparsely populated areas, it is possible
to envisage a nuclear attack which caused comparatively few civilian
casualties. It is by no means the case that every use of nuclear
weapons against a military objective would inevitably cause very
great collateral civilian casualties." (United Kingdom, Written
Statement, p. 53, para. 3.70; see also United States of America,
Oral Statement, CR 95/34, pp. 89-90.)
92. Another view holds that recourse to nuclear weapons could never
be compatible with the principles and rules of humanitarian law
and is therefore prohibited. In the event of their use, nuclear
weapons would in all circumstances be unable to draw any distinction
between the civilian population and combatants, or between civilian
objects and military objectives, and their effects, largely uncontrollable,
could not be restricted, either in time or in space, to lawful military
targets. Such weapons would kill and destroy in a necessarily indiscriminate
manner, on account of the blast, heat and radiation occasioned by
the nuclear explosion and the effects induced; and the number of
casualties which would ensue would be enormous. The use of nuclear
weapons would therefore be prohibited in any circumstance, notwithstanding
the absence of any explicit conventional prohibition. That view
lay at the basis of the assertions by certain States before the
Court that nuclear weapons are by their nature illegal under customary
international law, by virtue of the fundamental principle of humanity.
93. A similar view has been expressed with respect to the effects
of the principle of neutrality. Like the principles and rules of
humanitarian law, that principle has therefore been considered by
some to rule out the use of a weapon the effects of which simply
cannot be contained within the territories of the contending States.
94. The Court would observe that none of the States advocating
the legality of the use of nuclear weapons under certain circumstances,
including the "clean" use of smaller, low yield, tactical
nuclear weapons, has indicated what, supposing such limited use
were feasible, would be the precise circumstances justifying such
use; nor whether such limited use would not tend to escalate into
the all-out use of high yield nuclear weapons. This being so, the
Court does not consider that it has a sufficient basis for a determination
on the validity of this view.
95. Nor can the Court make a determination on the validity of the
view that the recourse to nuclear weapons would be illegal in any
circumstance owing to their inherent and total incompatibility with
the law applicable in armed conflict. Certainly, as the Court has
already indicated, the principles and rules of law applicable in
armed conflict - at the heart of which is the overriding consideration
of humanity - make the conduct of armed hostilities subject to a
number of strict requirements. Thus, methods and means of warfare,
which would preclude any distinction between civilian and military
targets, or which would result in unnecessary suffering to combatants,
are prohibited. In view of the unique characteristics of nuclear
weapons, to which the Court has referred above, the use of such
weapons in fact seems scarcely reconcilable with respect for such
requirements. Nevertheless, the Court considers that it does not
have sufficient elements to enable it to conclude with certainty
that the use of nuclear weapons would necessarily be at variance
with the principles and rules of law applicable in armed conflict
in any circumstance.
96. Furthermore, the Court cannot lose sight of the fundamental
right of every State to survival, and thus its right to resort to
self-defence, in accordance with Article 51 of the Charter, when
its survival is at stake.
Nor can it ignore the practice referred to as "policy of deterrence",
to which an appreciable section of the international community adhered
for many years. The Court also notes the reservations which certain
nuclear-weapon States have appended to the undertakings they have
given, notably under the Protocols to the Treaties of Tlatelolco
and Rarotonga, and also under the declarations made by them in connection
with the extension of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons, not to resort to such weapons.
97. Accordingly, in view of the present state of international
law viewed as a whole, as examined above by the Court, and of the
elements of fact at its disposal, the Court is led to observe that
it cannot reach a definitive conclusion as to the legality or illegality
of the use of nuclear weapons by a State in an extreme circumstance
of self-defence, in which its very survival would be at stake.
* * *
98. Given the eminently difficult issues that arise in applying
the law on the use of force and above all the law applicable in
armed conflict to nuclear weapons, the Court considers that it now
needs to examine one further aspect of the question before it, seen
in a broader context.
In the long run, international law, and with it the stability of
the international order which it is intended to govern, are bound
to suffer from the continuing difference of views with regard to
the legal status of weapons as deadly as nuclear weapons. It is
consequently important to put an end to this state of affairs: the
long-promised complete nuclear disarmament appears to be the most
appropriate means of achieving that result.
99. In these circumstances, the Court appreciates the full importance
of the recognition by Article VI of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons of an obligation to negotiate in good faith a
nuclear disarmament. This provision is worded as follows:
"Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue
negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation
of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament,
and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict
and effective international control."
The legal import of that obligation goes beyond that of a mere
obligation of conduct; the obligation involved here is an obligation
to achieve a precise result - nuclear disarmament in all its aspects
- by adopting a particular course of conduct, namely, the pursuit
of negotiations on the matter in good faith.
100. This twofold obligation to pursue and to conclude negotiations
formally concerns the 182 States parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons, or, in other words, the vast majority of the
international community.
Virtually the whole of this community appears moreover to have
been involved when resolutions of the United Nations General Assembly
concerning nuclear disarmament have repeatedly been unanimously
adopted. Indeed, any realistic search for general and complete disarmament,
especially nuclear disarmament, necessitates the co-operation of
all States.
101. Even the very first General Assembly resolution, unanimously
adopted on 24 January 1946 at the London session, set up a commission
whose terms of reference included making specific proposals for,
among other things, "the elimination from national armaments
of atomic weapons and of all other major weapons adaptable to mass
destruction". In a large number of subsequent resolutions,
the General Assembly has reaffirmed the need for nuclear disarmament.
Thus, in resolution 808 A (IX) of 4 November 1954, which was likewise
unanimously adopted, it concluded
"that a further effort should be made to reach agreement
on comprehensive and co-ordinated proposals to be embodied in
a draft international disarmament convention providing for: .
. . (b) The total prohibition of the use and manufacture of nuclear
weapons and weapons of mass destruction of every type, together
with the conversion of existing stocks of nuclear weapons for
peaceful purposes."
The same conviction has been expressed outside the United Nations
context in various instruments.
102. The obligation expressed in Article VI of the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons includes its fulfilment in
accordance with the basic principle of good faith. This basic principle
is set forth in Article 2, paragraph 2, of the Charter. It was reflected
in the Declaration on Friendly Relations between States (resolution
2625 (XXV) of 24 October 1970) and in the Final Act of the Helsinki
Conference of 1 August 1975. It is also embodied in Article 26 of
the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties of 23 May 1969, according
to which "[e]very treaty in force is binding upon the parties
to it and must be performed by them in good faith".
Nor has the Court omitted to draw attention to it, as follows:
"One of the basic principles governing the creation and
performance of legal obligations, whatever their source, is the
principle of good faith. Trust and confidence are inherent in
international co-operation, in particular in an age when this
co-operation in many fields is becoming increasingly essential."
(Nuclear Tests (Australia v. France), Judgment of 20 December
1974, I.C.J. Reports 1974, p. 268, para. 46.)
103. In its resolution 984 (1995) dated 11 April 1995, the Security
Council took care to reaffirm "the need for all States Parties
to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons to comply
fully with all their obligations" and urged
"all States, as provided for in Article VI of the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, to pursue negotiations
in good faith on effective measures relating to nuclear disarmament
and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict
and effective international control which remains a universal
goal".
The importance of fulfilling the obligation expressed in Article
VI of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons was
also reaffirmed in the final document of the Review and Extension
Conference of the parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons, held from 17 April to 12 May 1995.
In the view of the Court, it remains without any doubt an objective
of vital importance to the whole of the international community
today.
* * *
104. At the end of the present Opinion, the Court emphasizes that
its reply to the question put to it by the General Assembly rests
on the totality of the legal grounds set forth by the Court above
(paragraphs 20 to 103), each of which is to be read in the light
of the others. Some of these grounds are not such as to form the
object of formal conclusions in the final paragraph of the Opinion;
they nevertheless retain, in the view of the Court, all their importance.
* * *
105. For these reasons,
THE COURT,
(1)
By thirteen votes to one,
Decides to comply with the request for an advisory opinion;
IN FAVOUR: President Bedjaoui; Vice-President Schwebel;
Judges Guillaume, Shahabuddeen, Weeramantry, Ranjeva, Herczegh,
Shi, Fleischhauer, Koroma, Vereshchetin, Ferrari Bravo, Higgins;
AGAINST: Judge Oda.
(2)
Replies in the following manner to the question put by the General
Assembly:
A.
Unanimously,
There is in neither customary nor conventional international
law any specific authorization of the threat or use of nuclear
weapons;
B.
By eleven votes to three,
There is in neither customary nor conventional international
law any comprehensive and universal prohibition of the threat
or use of nuclear weapons as such;
IN FAVOUR: President Bedjaoui; Vice-President Schwebel;
Judges Oda, Guillaume, Ranjeva, Herczegh, Shi, Fleischhauer,
Vereshchetin, Ferrari Bravo, Higgins;
AGAINST: Judges Shahabuddeen, Weeramantry, Koroma.
C.
Unanimously,
A threat or use of force by means of nuclear weapons that is
contrary to Article 2, paragraph 4, of the United Nations Charter
and that fails to meet all the requirements of Article 51, is
unlawful;
D.
Unanimously,
A threat or use of nuclear weapons should also be compatible
with the requirements of the international law applicable in
armed conflict, particularly those of the principles and rules
of international humanitarian law, as well as with specific
obligations under treaties and other undertakings which expressly
deal with nuclear weapons;
E.
By seven votes to seven, by the President's casting vote,
It follows from the above-mentioned requirements that the threat
or use of nuclear weapons would generally be contrary to the
rules of international law applicable in armed conflict, and
in particular the principles and rules of humanitarian law;
However, in view of the current state of international law,
and of the elements of fact at its disposal, the Court cannot
conclude definitively whether the threat or use of nuclear weapons
would be lawful or unlawful in an extreme circumstance of self-defence,
in which the very survival of a State would be at stake;
IN FAVOUR: President Bedjaoui; Judges Ranjeva,
Herczegh, Shi, Fleischhauer, Vereschetin, Ferrari Bravo;
AGAINST: Vice-President Schwebel; Judges Oda, Guillaume,
Shahabuddeen, Weeramantry, Koroma, Higgins.
F.
Unanimously,
There exists an obligation to pursue in good faith and bring
to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament
in all its aspects under strict and effective international
control.
Done in English and in French, the English text being authoritative,
at the Peace Palace, The Hague, this eighth day of July, one thousand
nine hundred and ninety-six, in two copies, one of which will be
placed in the archives of the Court and the other transmitted to
the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
(Signed) Mohammed BEDJAOUI,
President.
(Signed) Eduardo VALENCIA-OSPINA,
Registrar.
President BEDJAOUI, Judges HERCZEGH, SHI, VERESHCHETIN and FERRARI
BRAVO append declarations to the Advisory Opinion of the Court.
Judges GUILLAUME, RANJEVA and FLEISCHHAUER append separate opinions
to the Advisory Opinion of the Court.
Vice-President SCHWEBEL, Judges ODA, SHAHABUDDEEN, WEERAMANTRY,
KOROMA and HIGGINS append dissenting opinions to the Advisory Opinion
of the Court.
(Initialled) M. B.
(Initialled) E. V. O.
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