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Article 51 of the UN Charter
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The right of self-defense in international law is recognized by the United Nations Charter, specifically in Article 51 of Chapter VII, which allows states to use force in self-defense against an armed attack. The customary international law of self-defense, established in the Caroline case, requires a necessity of self-defense that is instant, overwhelming, and leaves no choice of means, and any action taken must be proportional and limited by that necessity. The concept of imminent threat, developed in the Caroline affair, is a standard criterion for international law justification of preemptive self-defense, which allows states to fend off an armed attack without being physically attacked first.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Israel-Palestine Conflict
- 3.Israel Foreign Policy
- 4.British Foreign Policy
- 5.Israel under Benjamin Netanyahu
- 6.2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel
- 7.Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
- 8.Iran Foreign Policy
- 9.Israel-Lebanese Hezbollah Conflict
- 10.Oil Market
- 11.Sunni/Shiites Dispute
- 12.Iranian politics
countries
- 1.Malaysia
- 2.Pakistan
- 3.Palestine, State of
- 4.Qatar
- 5.Saudi Arabia
- 6.Syrian Arab Republic
- 7.United States
- 8.Yemen
- 9.Cameroon
- 10.France
- 11.Egypt
- 12.Israel
organizations
- 1.White House
- 2.European Union
- 3.Hamas
- 4.UN Security Council
- 5.Hezbollah
- 6.Hostages and Missing Persons Families Forum
- 7.Iranian Revolutionary Guards
- 8.Sunni
- 9.Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik
- 10.Organization of Islamic Cooperation
- 11.Mossad
persons
- 1.Joe Biden
- 2.Ishaq Dar
- 3.Benjamin Netanyahu
- 4.Emmanuel Macron
- 5.Masoud Pezeshkian
- 6.Hassan Nasrallah
- 7.Ismail Haniyeh
- 8.Hamidreza Azizi
- 9.Fu'ad Shukr
- 10.Ben Hubbard
- 11.Ayman Hussein Abdullah Al-Safadi
- 12.Anthony Blinken