# international%20law
Latest news and articles about international%20law
Total: 19 articles found

Israel Defence Chief’s Sweeping Warning — ‘All Iranians’ Are Targets — Stokes Fears of Wider Escalation
Israel’s defence minister declared that “all Iranians” are legitimate targets, a sweeping statement that raises legal, diplomatic and security alarms. The rhetoric escalates an already tense Israel–Iran rivalry and increases the risk of regional spillover, complicating relations with international partners urging restraint.

Iran Calls Israel’s Strike on Tehran Fuel Depot an ‘Ecocide’, Elevating Legal and Diplomatic Stakes
Iran’s foreign minister accused Israel of committing “ecocide” after an alleged Israeli strike on a Tehran fuel depot, warning of long-term environmental and public-health damage and urging punishment as a war crime. The charge elevates legal and diplomatic stakes, even as proving and prosecuting large-scale environmental harm remains legally and politically difficult.

Iran Appeals to UN Security Council, Accuses US President of 'War Crimes'
Iran's foreign minister Araghchi has asked the UN Security Council to intervene to stop current acts of war and to hold the United States and its president accountable, alleging recent US statements constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity. The appeal is a diplomatic effort to internationalise Tehran's accusations, but tangible legal consequences face major political and institutional barriers.

Legal Experts Say US–Israeli Strike on Iran Lacks International Law Justification
The United States and Israel conducted a joint pre‑emptive strike on Iran on February 28, a step Washington justified as necessary to head off an imminent threat. Legal experts say the action lacks clear backing in international law and risks eroding norms that limit the use of force, raising the prospect of broader regional escalation and diplomatic fallout.

Spain’s “No” to Washington: A Legal, Political Rebuff That Could Reverberate Across Europe
Spain publicly refused U.S. requests to use its bases for strikes on Iran, grounding the decision in international law, its bilateral defence agreement with the United States, and domestic parliamentary procedures. The move highlights growing European insistence on legal safeguards and collective mechanisms when faced with unilateral American pressure and could accelerate debates on strategic autonomy within the EU.

UK Says It Won’t Rule Out Joining Strikes on Iran’s Missile Sites, Reopening Diego Garcia Debate
British officials say London has not ruled out joining strikes on Iranian ballistic-missile launchers, while US heavy bombers are reported to be headed to Diego Garcia and RAF Fairford. The development revives legal and diplomatic controversy over use of the Chagos base and increases the risk of wider escalation with Tehran.

Aftermath of a Strike: Allegations of a Deadly Hit on an Iranian Girls’ School and the Wider Geopolitical Fallout
A commentary on Chinese platform Sohu alleges a joint U.S.-Israeli strike on a girls’ primary school in Minab, Iran, killed 165 people, mostly children. The piece uses the incident to condemn U.S. military hegemony, while the episode raises urgent legal, humanitarian and geopolitical questions that demand independent verification and could escalate broader regional tensions.

Canadian Prime Minister Says US‑Israel Strikes on Iran Appear to Violate International Law, Urges De‑Escalation
Canada’s prime minister, referred to in Chinese reports as Kani, said US and Israeli strikes on Iran appear to violate international law and urged de‑escalation. His remarks spotlight legal and diplomatic fractures among Western allies after a reported joint strike that killed Iran’s supreme leader and prompted Tehran’s retaliation.

Canada Urges Immediate De‑Escalation as Middle East Conflict Tests International Order
Canada’s prime minister, speaking in Sydney, urged immediate de‑escalation of the U.S.-Israel–Iran strikes and called the fighting “another example of the international order failing.” His comments highlight Western unease over unilateral military actions and the broader risk that continued exchanges of strikes will drag the region into a wider war.

Starmer Defends Decision on Iran Strikes After Public Rebuke from Trump, Raising Questions over Basing and the Special Relationship
President Trump publicly expressed displeasure with UK prime minister Keir Starmer over Britain's role in recent actions against Iran. Starmer defended his choice as driven by legal obligations and the national interest, while the row highlights tensions over basing rights and coalition warfare between close allies.

France Says US–Israel Strikes on Iran Lack UN Legitimacy, Warns of Dangerous Drift
France’s foreign minister said on March 2 that military action by the United States and Israel against Iran lacked legitimacy because it had not been reviewed by the UN Security Council. Paris warned that indefinite strikes without clear objectives risk escalating into prolonged regional turmoil and urged a return to multilateral deliberation.

Tehran Hospital Hit in Overnight Airstrike; Iran Blames US and Israel, WHO Warns of Legal Breach
A midnight airstrike struck Gandhi Hospital in Tehran on March 1, causing structural damage and injuring medical staff; Iranian authorities blamed the United States and Israel. The World Health Organization warned attacks on medical facilities breach international humanitarian law, while independent verification of responsibility was not available.