In Downing Street, Keir Starmer has been at pains to emphasise that he will only authorise the use of UK bases by the US for “defensive” strikes on Iranian military targets. In the White House, Donald Trump has threatened to bomb civilian infrastructure – and said on Monday that he was “not at all” worried about committing war crimes.
So far in the war, Starmer’s position has allowed him to present the UK as a responsible actor concerned for regional security – but not a direct participant in the conflict on the US side.
But while that has incurred Trump’s displeasure, it has also drawn questions about whether it is legally plausible to neatly divide defensive and offensive operations – and if US attacks do begin against targets such as bridges and power plants, scrutiny of the British position will intensify even if those attacks are not launched from UK bases.
When it set out its stance on “defensive” strikes, the government took the unusual step of releasing a summary of its legal position: that it was acting “in the collective self-defence of regional allies who have requested support”. It is fair to say that many were sceptical from the start about the UK’s attempt to distinguish defensive operations involving US bombers from offensive operations in what most international law experts agreed was a conflict illegally started by the US and Israel.
Susan Breau, a professor of international law and a senior associate research fellow at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, said: “How do you distinguish what’s defensive from what’s offensive? It will be extremely complicated for the UK to maintain that distinction given what Trump has said – his whole battle plan is changing. I mean, today, the Israelis issued a warning about trains [and for Iranians not to use them]. Trump’s whole battle plan now is to attack civilian infrastructure.”
For Breau, who had concerns about the UK position from the start, it is allowing the US to use UK bases that is the main issue. “I could see the UK still having bases and having ships there to defend its Gulf neighbours but it’s allowing the US to use their bases that’s problematic,” she said. “When the attack came on the [UK] base in Cyprus, on their allies in the Gulf, I could understand why the UK would open up their bases. But now Trump is changing the battle plan, he’s changing the rules of engagement.”
However, Victor Kattan, an assistant professor of public international law at the University of Nottingham, said he thought the UK’s existing legal position could potentially be defended, even if Trump carries out his threats.
He said the British government knowingly allowing their planes, missiles or bases for such purposes would be unlawful “and the UK government should make that clear to the Americans and perhaps even stop them from using those bases in those contexts.”
But he added: “They [the British] could say, ‘Look, we’re only allowing our systems, hardware, our personnel to shoot down rockets and the launchers as well that shoot those rockets that are being targeted at, say, the Qataris or the Kuwaitis or the Emiratis or the Saudis. But our bases and hardware’s not being used to punish the government of Iran, for example, or to participate in attacks on bridges, critical infrastructure, oil and gas, bunkers, that kind of thing.’ It’s a fine distinction to make, but I think it’s tenable.”
Where Breau and Kattan do agree is that the UK will be keeping a close eye on its legal position to see whether it remains fit for purpose, even if they do not necessarily agree on the answer to that key question.
Kattan said it was a given that the UK would be “constantly reviewing” it, while Breau said of the legal case: “They need to reconsider it. And I would be surprised if they’re not [already].
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com





