Are Targeted Drone Strikes Allowed Under Just-War Theory?

On Tuesday the U.S. embassy in Baghdad was stormed by a crowd of thousands of protesters and Iran’s head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force, Qasem Suleimani was alleged to have been behind the attacks.

 Iran’s head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force, Qasem Soleimani, April, 2016.
Iran’s head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force, Qasem Soleimani, April, 2016. (photo: Wikimedia Commons.)

WASHINGTON — A U.S. drone strike that killed a top Iranian official on Friday has ignited discussion of the Catholic Church’s teaching on just war theory. One theologian talked to CNA about the morality of targeting military leaders.

Early on Friday morning at a Baghdad airport, Iran’s head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force, Qasem Soleimani, was killed by drone strikes, for which the U.S. later claimed responsibility. Soleimani’s forces are listed by the U.S. as a foreign terrorist organization. Also killed in the strikes was Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, known for helping fight against ISIS.

The strikes are the latest episode in a series of interactions between the U.S. and Iran in the region, that are causing concern of an intensifying conflict. After an American contractor was killed by a rocket barrage in Iraq last week, the U.S. retaliated against Iranian-backed Shiite militias it said was responsible for the attack. The U.S. counterattack killed 25 Iraqis.  

On Tuesday the U.S. embassy in Baghdad was stormed by a crowd of thousands of protesters. Suleimani was alleged to have been behind the attacks.

After the drone strikes on Friday morning, Iran’s president Hassan Rouhani threatened retaliation in a statement on Friday on Twitter. According to U.S. defense officials, 3,000 American troops were being deployed to the Middle East on Friday, the AP reported.

In a statement released late Thursday night in Washington, the Pentagon said the strikes were ordered by President Trump as a “decisive defensive action to protect U.S. personnel abroad,” as Soleimani “was actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in Iraq and throughout the region.”

“We took action last night to stop a war. We did not take action to start a war,” President Trump stated on Friday.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, on CNN Friday morning, said that Soleimani posed an “imminent” threat to American lives and was plotting attacks “not just in Iraq” but “throughout the region, but wouldn’t give further details, noting that “I’m not going to say anything more about the nature of the attack.”

The U.S. has defended the drone strike as a legitimate removal of a man responsible for the deaths of hundreds of U.S. military personnel in past years, and the more recent attacks of U.S. bases in Iraq by Iranian-backed forces.

Dr. Kevin Miller, a moral theologian at the Franciscan University of Steubenville, spoke with CNA about the application of Catholic just-war theory to the strike.

Catholic teaching on the use of lethal force “doesn’t rule this sort of thing out,” he said of “targeted killing of military leaders.” If Soleimani was behind attacks on the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, as alleged, then “you’re talking about an attempted attack on American civilian lives,” Dr. Miller said.

However, Dr. Miller cautioned, prudence must be considered with such a use of force, namely the possibility of greater evils replacing the threat that Soleimani allegedly posed to civilians. If another official were to take his place and carry on with similar threats to civilians, or if Soleimani’s death caused a “power vacuum” with mob rule in the streets, then the situation could be “worse rather than better.”

And given Iran’s proxy wars in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East, “if this causes, on balance, an escalation of that war—even if it maybe for the moment puts an end to attempted attacks on our embassy—if this, on balance, causes an escalation of the situation, a worsening of this proxy war that’s going on, I don’t see how that makes the situation, on balance, better rather than worse,” Dr. Miller told CNA.

“I think this is one of those situations in which you really have to make sure that you’re not falling into that trap of saying ‘what could possibly go wrong?’ without really thinking the matter through,” he said.

The question of legality also surfaced on Friday. Agnes Callamard, UN Special Rapporteur on Extra-Judicial Executions and director of Global Freedom of Expression at Columbia University, tweeted on Friday that “Outside the context of active hostilities, the use of drones or other means for targeted killing is almost never likely to be legal.”

When such force is used, she said, it can only be done in cases of an “immanent threat to life”—one which carries a “very narrow” standard for cases of “anticipatory self-defence.”

“This test is unlikely to be met in these particular cases,” she tweeted.

The threat of a regional conflict to vulnerable religious minorities in Iraq prompted concern from Christian aid and advocacy groups.

“Heightened tensions bring increased possibility of counterattacks on religious minorities,” said Toufic Baaklini, president of the group In Defense of Christians, in a statement on Friday.

“We can count on more instability, and instability is not the friend of Christians and other minorities,” said Michael La Civita of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association, a pontifical aid organization.