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Martin Halfpenny, for The Independent, refers to UN Resolution 1546 in
this article:
Mr Sapsford added that the defence team was prepared to produce expert evidence to show that UN Resolution 1546, relied upon by the UK and US governments to justify the invasion, was no defence in international law.
Yes, that would be the reference. Still, it doesn't make much sense. How could the government seriously be using as its argument for the lawfulness of the 2003 invasion a resolution that wasn't passed until the 8th of June, 2004? It would make much more sense if the actual argument is based on resolution 1441 (November 8th, 2002), where Iraq is faced with "serious consequences" if it does not comply with its obligations to disarm. 1441 is the resolution that the U.S. government, having failed in the spring of 2003 to obtain a second resolution explicitly authorising the use of force against Iraq, relied on as the international justification for the invasion. Was not the same argument used by Britain, its principal ally? --
Anders Püschel13:32, 16 April 2006 (UTC)reply
It makes sense here because Kendall-Smith was ordered to go to Iraq on July 12, 2005, long after UNSCR 1546 authorized his presence. That makes the legality of the initial invasion irrelevant to the case. --
Randy206319:36, 16 April 2006 (UTC)reply
This would be a whole lot easier if we didn't need to rely on journalists filtering the court proceedings. Do transcripts of these things get released to the public? Maybe we can get hold of them. -
Christiaan21:41, 22 March 2006 (UTC)reply
Usually full transcripts are only released when someone pays the fee, which is substantial. The only thing you can expect to get for free is the judgment issued by the court. Try contacting the defence lawyers to see what they can provide.
Links
Does anyone know if there is a support organization for this chap? If so, a link to that would be good.
According to
[1]"(Messages of support can be sent via justin@roselaw.co.uk for anybody who is interested)". Ah, this appears to be the email address of Mr. Kendall-Smith's Lawyer, Justin Hugheston-Roberts
[2].
Judges comments
I found the judges remarks that servicemen cannot pick and choose which orders they follow to be very interesting. I can say for sure, as a holder of a commission, you are not allowed to follow an order you believe to be manifestly illegal. Stand-by if it is proved to be legal but nonetheless he (the judge) surely ought to have phrased that better?
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