Self-Defence, Pernicious Doctrines, Peremptory Norms

Document Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

2019

Publication Information

in Self-Defence against Non-State Actors 174 (Mary Ellen O'Connell, Christian J. Tams & Dire Tladi eds., 2019).
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Abstract

From the Publisher

On 21 August 2015, British Prime Minister David Cameron authorised the killing with military force of a British national, twenty-one-year-old Reyaad Khan. Khan and two other men riding in a vehicle with him were blown to shreds by Hellfire missiles launched from a remotely piloted drone. The attack occurred in Syria, despite the fact that the United Kingdom Parliament had voted to restrict UK involvement in the Syrian Civil War. The Prime Minister declared the killings a lawful exercise of Britain’s ‘inherent right to self-defence’ against a ‘very real threat’. The British suspected Khan of recruiting individuals to ISIS and of plotting terrorist attacks to be carried out in the UK. A few days later, the United States also conducted a drone attack in Syria and announced with a ‘high level of confidence’ that it had succeeded in killing another twenty-one-year-old British national, Junaid Hussain.

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