UK governments routinely claim to uphold national and international
law. But the reality of British policies is quite different, especially
when it comes to foreign policy and so-called ‘national security’. This
explainer summarises 17 long-running government policies which violate
UK domestic or international law.
Is the UK a Rogue State? 17 British Policies Violating Domestic or International Law
British foreign secretary Dominic Raab recently described
the “rule of international law” as one of the “guiding lights” of UK
foreign policy. By contrast, the government regularly chides states it
opposes, such as Russia or Iran, as violators of international law.
These governments are often consequently termed “rogue states” in the
mainstream media, the supposed antithesis of how “we” operate.
The following list of 17 policies may not be exhaustive, but it suggests that the term “rogue state” is not sensationalist or misplaced when it comes to describing Britain’s own foreign and “security” policies.
These serial violations suggest that parliamentary and public oversight over executive policy-making in the UK is not fit for purpose and that new mechanisms are needed to restrain the excesses of the British state.
The following list of 17 policies may not be exhaustive, but it suggests that the term “rogue state” is not sensationalist or misplaced when it comes to describing Britain’s own foreign and “security” policies.
These serial violations suggest that parliamentary and public oversight over executive policy-making in the UK is not fit for purpose and that new mechanisms are needed to restrain the excesses of the British state.
The Royal Air Force’s drone war
Britain’s Royal Air Force (RAF) operates a drone programme in support of the US involving a fleet of British “Reaper” drones operating since 2007. They have been used by the UK to strike targets in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.
Four RAF bases in the UK support the US drone war. The joint UK and US spy base at Menwith Hill in Yorkshire, northern England, facilitates
US drone strikes in Yemen, Pakistan and Somalia. US drone strikes,
involving an assassination programme begun by president Barack Obama,
are widely regarded asillegal under international law, breaching fundamental human rights. Up to 1,700 civilian adults and children have been killed in so-called “targeted killings”.
Amnesty International notes
that British backing is “absolutely crucial to the US lethal drones
programme, providing support for various US surveillance programmes,
vital intelligence exchanges and in some cases direct involvement from
UK personnel in identifying and tracking targets for US lethal
operations, including drone strikes that may have been unlawful”.
Chagos Islands
Britain has violated international law in the case of the Chagos
Islands in the Indian Ocean since it expelled the inhabitants in the
1960s to make way for a US military base on Diego Garcia, the largest
island.
Harold Wilson’s Labour government separated the islands from then British colony Mauritius in 1965 inbreach
of a UN resolution banning the breakup of colonies before independence.
London then formed a new colonial entity, the British Indian Ocean
Territory, which is now an Overseas Territory.
In 2015, a UN Tribunal ruled that the UK’s proposed “marine protected
area” around the islands — shown by Wikileaks publications to be a ruse to keep the islanders from returning — was unlawful since it undermined the rights of Mauritius.
Then in February 2019, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled
in an advisory opinion that Britain must end its administration of the
Chagos islands “as rapidly as possible”. The UN General Assemblyadopted
a resolution in May 2019 welcoming the ICJ ruling and “demanding that
the United Kingdom unconditionally withdraw its colonial administration
from the area within six months”. The UK government has rejected the calls.
Defying the UN over the Falklands
The UN’s 24-country Special Committee on Decolonisation — its
principal body addressing issues concerning decolonisation — has
repeatedly called
on the UK government to negotiate a resolution to the dispute over the
status of the Falklands. In its latest call, in June 2019, the committee approved
a draft resolution “reiterating that the only way to end the special
and particular colonial situation of the Falkland Islands (Malvinas) is
through a peaceful and negotiated settlement of the sovereignty dispute
between Argentina and the United Kingdom”.
The British government consistently rejects these demands. Last year, it stated: “The Decolonisation Committee no longer has a relevant role to play
with respect to British Overseas Territories. They all have a large
measure of self government, have chosen to retain their links with the
UK, and therefore should have been delisted a long time ago.”
In 2016, the UN Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf issued a report finding that the Falkland Islands are located in Argentina’s territorial waters.
Israel and settlement goods
Although Britain regularly condemns Israeli settlements in the
occupied territories as illegal, in line with international law, it permits trade in goods produced on those settlements. It also does not keep a recordof imports that come from the settlements — which include wine, olive oil and dates — into the UK.
UN Security Council resolutions require
all states to “distinguish, in their relevant dealings, between the
territory of the State of Israel and the territories occupied since
1967”. The UK is failing to do this.
Israel’s blockade of Gaza
Israel’s blockade of Gaza, imposed in 2007 following the territory’s takeover by Hamas, is widely regardedas illegal. Senior UN officials, a UN independent panel of experts, and Amnesty International
all agree that the infliction of “collective punishment” on the
population of Gaza contravenes international human rights and
humanitarian law.
Gaza has about 1.8 million inhabitants who remain “locked in” and denied free access to the remainder of putative Palestine (the West Bank) and the outside world. It has poverty and unemployment rates that reached nearly 75% in 2019.
Through its naval blockade, the Israeli navy restricts Palestinians’ fishing rights, fires on local fishermen and has intercepted ships delivering humanitarian aid. Britain, and all states, have an obligation “to ensure compliance by Israel with international humanitarian law” in Gaza.
However, instead of doing so, the UK regularly collaborates with the
navy enforcing the blockade. In August 2019, Britain’s Royal Navy took
part in the largest international naval exercise ever held by Israel, off the country’s Mediterranean shore. In November 2016 and December 2017, British warships conducted military exercises with their Israeli allies.
Exports of surveillance equipment
Declassified revealed
that the UK recently exported telecommunications interception equipment
or software to 13 countries, including authoritarian regimes in the
United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia and Oman. Such technology can
enable security forces to monitor the private activities of groups or
individuals and crack down on political opponents.
The UAE has been involved in programmes monitoring domestic activists using spyware. In 2017 and 2018, British exporters were given four licences to export telecommunications interception equipment, components or software to the UAE.
UK arms export guidelines
state that the government will “not grant a licence if there is a clear
risk that the items might be used for internal repression”. Reports by Amnesty International
document human rights abuses in the cases of UAE, Saudi Arabia and
Oman, suggesting that British approval of such exports to these
countries is prima facie unlawful.
Arms exports to Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia has been accused
by the UN and others of violating international humanitarian law and
committing war crimes in its war in Yemen, which began in March 2015.
The UK has licensed nearly £5-billion worth of arms to the Saudi regime during this time. In addition, the RAF is helping to maintain Saudi warplanes at key operating bases and stores and issues bombs for use in Yemen.
Following legal action brought by the Campaign Against the Arms
Trade, the UK Court of Appeal ruled in June 2019 that ministers had
illegally signed off on arms exports without properly assessing the risk
to civilians. The court ruled that the government must reconsider the export licences in accordance with the correct legal approach.
The ruling followed a report by a cross-party House of Lords committee, published earlier in 2019, which concluded
that Britain is breaking international law by selling weapons to Saudi
Arabia and should suspend some export licences immediately.
Julian Assange’s arbitrary detention and torture
In the case of WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange — currently held in
Belmarsh maximum-security prison in London — the UK is defying repeated
opinions of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) and the
UN special rapporteur on torture.
The latter, Nils Melzer, has called
on the UK government to release Assange on the grounds that officials
are contributing to his psychological torture and ill treatment. Melzer
has also called for UK officials to be investigated
for possible “criminal conduct” as government policy “severely
undermines the credibility of [its] commitment to the prohibition of
torture… as well as to the rule of law more generally”.
The WGAD — the supreme international body scrutinising this issue — has repeatedly demanded that the UK government end Assange’s “arbitrary detention”. Although the UN states that WGAD determinations are legally binding, its calls have been consistently rejected by the UK government.
Covert wars
Covert military operations to subvert foreign governments, such as Britain’s years-long operation in Syria to overthrow the Assad regime, are unlawful. As a House of Commons briefing notes, “forcible assistance to opposition forces is illegal”.
A precedent was set in the Nicaragua case in the 1980s, when
US-backed covert forces (the “Contras”) sought to overthrow the
Sandinista government. The International Court of Justice held
that a third state may not forcibly help the opposition to overthrow a
government since it breached the principles of non-intervention and
prohibition on the use of force.
As Declassified has shown, the UK is currently engaged in seven covert wars, including in Syria, with minimal parliamentary oversight. Government policy
is “not to comment” on the activities of its special forces “because of
the security implications”. The public’s ability to scrutinise policy
is also restricted since the UK’s Freedom of Information Act applies an “absolute exemption” to special forces. This is not the case for allied powers such as the US and Canada.
Torture and the refusal to hold an inquiry
In 2018 a report
by parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee found that the UK
had been complicit in cases of torture and other ill treatment of
detainees in the so-called “war on terror”. The inquiry examined the
participation of MI6 (the secret intelligence service), MI5 (the
domestic security service) and Ministry of Defence (MOD) personnel in
interrogating detainees held primarily by the US in Afghanistan, Iraq
and Guantanamo Bay during 2001-10.
The report found that there were 232 cases where UK personnel
supplied questions or intelligence to foreign intelligence agents after
they knew or suspected that a detainee was being mistreated. It also
found 198 cases where UK personnel received intelligence from foreign
agents obtained from detainees whom they knew or suspected to have been
mistreated.
In one case, MI6 “sought and obtained authorisation
from the foreign secretary” (then Jack Straw, in Tony Blair’s
government) for the costs of funding a plane which was involved in
rendering a suspect.
After the report was published, the government announced it was
refusing to hold a judge-led, independent inquiry into the UK’s role in
rendition and torture as it had previously promised to do. In 2019,
human rights group Reprieve, together with Conservative and Labour MPs,
instigated a legal challenge to the government over this refusal–which the High Court has agreed to hear.
The UN special rapporteur on torture, Nils Melzer, has formally
warned the UK that its refusal to launch a judicial inquiry into torture and rendition breaches international law, specifically the UN Convention Against Torture. He has written
a private “intervention” letter to the UK foreign secretary stating
that the government has “a legal obligation to investigate and to
prosecute”.
Melzer accuses the government of engaging in a “conscious policy” of co-operating with torture since 9/11, saying it is “impossible” the practice was not approved or at least tolerated by top officials.
UK’s secret torture policy
The MOD was revealed in 2019 to be operating a secret policy
allowing ministers to approve actions which could lead to the torture
of detainees. The policy, contained in an internal MOD document dated
November 2018, allows ministers to approve passing information to allies
even if there is a risk of torture, if “the potential benefits justify
accepting the risk and legal consequences”.
This policy also provides for ministers to approve lists of
individuals about whom information may be shared despite a serious risk
they could face mistreatment. One leading lawyer has said
that domestic and international legislation on the prohibition of
torture is clear and that the MOD policy supports breaking of the law by
ministers.
Amnesty for crimes committed by soldiers
There is a long history of British soldiers committing crimes during wars. In 2019 the government outlined plans
to grant immunity for offences by soldiers in Iraq, Afghanistan and
Northern Ireland that were committed more than 10 years before.
These plans have been condemned
by the UN Committee Against Torture, which has called on the government
to “refrain from enacting legislation that would grant amnesty or
pardon where torture is concerned. It should also ensure that all
victims of such torture and ill-treatment obtain redress”.
The committee has specifically urged the UK to “establish
responsibility and ensure accountability for any torture and
ill-treatment committed by UK personnel in Iraq from 2003 to 2009,
specifically by establishing a single, independent, public inquiry to
investigate allegations of such conduct.”
The government’s proposals are also likely to breach
UK obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights, which
obliges states to investigate breaches of the right to life or the
prohibition on torture.
GCHQ’s mass surveillance
Files revealed by US whistleblower Edward Snowden in 2013 show
that the UK intelligence agency GCHQ had been secretly intercepting,
processing and storing data concerning millions of people’s private
communications, including people of no intelligence interest — in a
programme named Tempora. Snowden also revealed that the British
government was accessing personal communications and data collected by
the US National Security Agency and other countries’ intelligence
agencies.
All of this was taking place without public consent or awareness,
with no basis in law and with no proper safeguards. Since these
revelations, there has been a long-running legal battle over the UK’s unlawful use of these previously secret surveillance powers.
In September 2018, the European Court of Human Rights ruled
that UK laws enabling mass surveillance were unlawful, violating rights
to privacy and freedom of expression. The court observed that the UK’s
regime for authorising bulk interception was incapable of keeping
“interference” to what is “necessary in a democratic society”.
The UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal, the body which considers
complaints against the security services, also found that UK
intelligence agencies had unlawfully spied on the communications of Amnesty International and the Legal Resources Centre in South Africa.
In 2014, revelations also confirmed
that GCHQ had been granted authority to secretly eavesdrop on legally
privileged lawyer-client communications, and that MI5 and MI6 adopted
similar policies. The guidelines appeared to permit surveillance of
journalists and others deemed to work in “sensitive professions”
handling confidential information.
MI5 personal data
In 2019, MI5 was found
to have for years unlawfully retained innocent British people’s online
location data, calls, messages and web browsing history without proper
protections, according to the Investigatory Powers Commissioner’s Office
which upholds British privacy protections. MI5 had also failed to give
senior judges accurate information about repeated breaches of its duty
to delete bulk surveillance data, and was criticised for mishandling
sensitive legally privileged material.
The commissioner concluded
that the way MI5 was holding and handling people’s data was
“undoubtedly unlawful”. Warrants for MI5’s bulk surveillance were issued
by senior judges on the understanding that the agency’s legal data
handling obligations were being met — when they were not.
“MI5 have been holding on to people’s data—ordinary people’s data, your data, my data — illegally for many years,” said
Megan Goulding, a lawyer for rights organisation Liberty, which brought
the case. “Not only that, they’ve been trying to keep their really
serious errors secret — secret from the security services watchdog,
who’s supposed to know about them, secret from the Home Office, secret
from the prime minister and secret from the public.”
Intelligence agencies committing criminal offences
MI5 has been operating under a secret policy
that allows its agents to commit serious crimes during
counter-terrorism operations in the UK, according to lawyers for human
rights organisations brin
ging a case to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal.
The policy, referred to as the “third direction”, allows MI5 officers
to permit the people they have recruited as agents to commit crimes in
order to secure access to information that could be used to prevent
other offences being committed. The crimes potentially include murder, kidnap and torture and have operated for decades. MI5 officers are, meanwhile, immune from prosecution.
A lawyer for the human rights organisations argues
that the issues raised by the case are “not hypothetical”, submitting
that “in the past, authorisation of agent participation in criminality
appears to have led to grave breaches of fundamental rights”. He points
to the 1989 murder of Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane, an attack carried
out by loyalist paramilitaries, including some agents working for the British state.
The ‘James Bond clause’
British intelligence officers can be authorised to commit crimes outside the UK. Section 7
of the 1994 Intelligence Services Act vacates UK criminal and civil law
as long as a senior government minister has signed a written
authorisation that committing a criminal act overseas is permissible.
This is sometimes known as the “James Bond clause”.
British spies were reportedly given authority to break the law
overseas on 13 occasions in 2014 under this clause. GCHQ was given five
authorisations “removing liability for activities including those
associated with certain types of intelligence gathering and interference
with computers, mobile phones and other types of electronic equipment”.
MI6, meanwhile, was given eight such authorisations in 2014.
Underage soldiers
Britain is the only country in Europe and Nato to allow direct enlistment into the army at the age of 16. One in four UK army recruits is now under the age of 18. According to the editors of the British Medical Journal,
“there is no justification for this state policy, which is harmful to
teen health and should be stopped”. Child recruits are more likely than
adult recruits to end up in frontline combat, they add.
It was revealed
in 2019 that the UK continued to send child soldiers to fight in Iraq
and Afghanistan despite pledging to end the practice. The UK says it
does not send under-18s to warzones, as required by the UN Optional
Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict, known as the
“child soldiers treaty”.
The UK, however, deployed five 17-year-olds to Iraq or Afghanistan
between 2007 and 2010: it claims to have done so mistakenly. Previous to
this, a minister admitted that teenagers had also erroneously been sent into battle between 2003 and 2005, insisting it would not happen again.
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child expressed concern
at the UK’s recruitment policy in 2008 and 2016, and recommended that
the government “raise the minimum age for recruitment into the armed
forces to 18 years in order to promote the protection of children
through an overall higher legal standard”. Parliament’s Joint Committee
on Human Rights, the children’s commissioners for the four jurisdictions
of the UK, along with children’s rights organisations, all support this
call.
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