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The Countermeasures of Others: When Can States Collaborate in the Taking of Countermeasures?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 February 2024

Miles Jackson
Affiliation:
Miles Jackson is Associate Professor of Law at the University of Oxford Faculty of Law, UK and a Fellow of Jesus College. Email: [email protected].
Federica I. Paddeu*
Affiliation:
Federica Paddeu is Associate Professor of Law and Derek Bowett Fellow, University of Cambridge, Queens’ College, UK; Fellow, Lauterpacht Centre for International Law.
*
Corresponding author. Email: [email protected].
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Abstract

In the last few years, states have advanced various proposals for cooperation in the use of countermeasures. In this Article, we ask whether, and if so under what conditions, states may lawfully collaborate in the taking of countermeasures against other states. We distinguish five different types of collaboration: (1) independent but coordinated action; (2) secondment; (3) joint action; (4) aid and assistance; and (5) what we term “proxy countermeasures”—the idea of taking a measure at the request and on behalf of another state. We consider the permissibility of each, both where the acting state is itself entitled to resort to countermeasures and where it is not. We also draw attention to certain legal and policy considerations relating to, and to plausible avenues for, the development of international law.

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Article
Creative Commons
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Society of International Law

1. Introduction

States collaborate with each other all the time. They train each other's officials, fund projects, sell weapons, and undertake joint operations. States forge and act within alliances, sometimes informal, sometimes institutionalized. This collaboration is regulated by international law. Thus, in certain circumstances, states will bear joint responsibility where their collaboration entails the commission of an internationally wrongful act. Various rules of complicity give rise to responsibility where states facilitate the wrongful acts of another. The doctrinal aspects of this regulation have received extensive attention in recent international legal scholarship.Footnote 1

States regularly collaborate, too, in the adoption of sanctions or restrictive measures against perceived violators of erga omnes and erga omnes partes obligations. And recently, states have begun to raise the possibility of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures.Footnote 2 For instance, there has been extensive argument about the legality of a proposal to transfer seized Russian assets to Ukraine as a countermeasure in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.Footnote 3 This may involve a number of allies acting in collaboration. Relatedly, in recent statements on the application of international law to cyberspace, states have stressed the importance of alliances in that context,Footnote 4 putting forward views that states may act together in responding to malicious cyberoperations, including by means of countermeasures. In particular, these statements have proposed that collaboration in the taking of countermeasures may take place through support,Footnote 5 collective action,Footnote 6 or where one state acts on behalf of another.Footnote 7 More widely, states may seek to act jointly as a regional bloc in response to some wrongful act which directly injures one of them, a situation that is likely to increase in the light of growing multipolarity and the inadequacies of the UN's collective security system. For example, in December of 2023, the EU's Anti-coercion instrument came into force, which includes the possibility of resorting to countermeasures.Footnote 8

For the most part, collaboration in the taking of countermeasures has not been treated distinctly or drawn out precisely, either in the practice or views of states, or in the related scholarly commentary. This may be due to a variety of factors which, we think, have tended to obscure the question. First, it is possible that cooperation in the taking of countermeasures does occur in practice: injured states may have sought help from allies, or allies may have offered it, in responding to violations of their rights. But this practice may not be public. Second, while in many instances states impose sanctions and other restrictive measures in response to another state's alleged violations of international law in concert, at least some of these measures do not involve breaches of the rights of the target state. Even where they do seem to involve such a breach, this may not be recognized by the state taking the measure. As such, the question of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures has not been raised or considered on its own terms by these states. Third, collaboration in the taking of countermeasures has also tended to be collapsed into a different, though related, question.Footnote 9 Most collaboration in response to wrongs has so far taken place in the context of sanctions regimes imposed on perceived violators of fundamental rules of the international legal order. For this reason, focus has been on the permissibility of countermeasures in the general interest—on “States other than the injured State” (in the sense of Article 48 of the Articles on State Responsibility) taking countermeasures in response to the violation of an erga omnes or erga omnes partes obligation. As we discuss below, the question of the lawfulness of countermeasures in the general interest is a critical aspect for thinking through the permissibility of collaboration, but it is only part of the picture.

The recent developments just mentioned—the proposal to confiscate Russian state assets, countermeasures in cyberspace, and the EU Anti-coercion Instrument—all distinctly raise the possibility of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures. At the same time, though, these positions and proposals do not specify, for the most part, the forms that collaboration can take. Collaboration can range from as little as a statement of support, to participation in the countermeasures of an injured state, to even taking such a measure at another state's request. These different forms of collaboration may, and often do, fall under different rules of international law. By implication, their regulation and, indeed, their permissibility, may not always be the same. For this reason, analyzing the form that collaboration takes and the rules that are applicable to each will be essential in understanding the extent to which, if at all, such collaboration is addressed by, and permitted by, the legal order.

In this Article, we consider five forms of collaboration between states, and assess whether a state acts lawfully when collaborating with an injured state in taking countermeasures. We distinguish: first, independent but coordinated action; second, the secondment of an agent or organ to another state; third, joint conduct; fourth, the provision of assistance to another state's countermeasure; and fifth, the idea that a state may take a countermeasure at the request and on behalf of an injured state. In practice it may often be difficult to determine the exact boundaries between certain forms of collaboration, especially where the terms of the collaboration are not clarified by the various participants. But at a doctrinal level, it is important to distinguish them since the legal rules applicable to each vary and the permissibility of the collaborating state's conduct may—and does, as we will argue—differ from case to case.

The focus of our analysis is on the question whether, and if so under what conditions, a state acts permissibly when it collaborates with an injured state in its countermeasures against the wrongdoing state (or “targeted” state). If the injured state acts in accordance with the substantive and procedural requirements for the taking of countermeasures against its wrongdoer, it will act permissibly. For the collaborating state, two possibilities arise. First, where the collaborating state possesses its own independent entitlement to take countermeasures against the wrong-doing state in question, few difficulties arise. As we will argue, this state will act permissibly when it collaborates with another state that is also entitled to take countermeasures against the same wrongdoer. The difficulty that arises in this scenario is that of identifying the circumstances in which the collaborating state will itself be entitled to take countermeasures against the same wrong-doing state. This will obviously be the case where the two collaborating states are injured by the state targeted by the countermeasure, but it also raises the broader—and long disputed—question of whether a state other than an injured state is entitled to take countermeasures when the prior breach violates an obligation erga omnes or erga omnes partes owed to it. Second, more difficult issues arise where the collaborating state is not itself entitled to take countermeasures in the circumstances. As we show below, the extent to which—if at all—the collaborating state also acts permissibly by cooperating in the injured state's countermeasures in these circumstances is unclear. This is likely to be the more common scenario in practice, insofar as the permissibility of countermeasures by states other than an injured state in response to erga omnes breaches remains controversial and, in any case, is only applicable in relation to a narrow set of obligations. For this reason, this scenario—where the collaborating state possesses no entitlement to take countermeasures—will be our primary focus.

To this end, the Article is structured as follows. Part II sets out some foundational aspects of the law of state responsibility and our framework for analysis. It addresses the idea of countermeasures as a justification to otherwise wrongful conduct, and the ongoing controversy about who is entitled to take countermeasures. Part III forms the bulk of our analysis—it concerns the lawfulness of collaboration in each of our five scenarios where the collaborating state has no entitlement of its own to take a countermeasure. Here, the most complicated question concerns the lawfulness of a collaborating state's assistance to another state's countermeasure. We show that it is plausible to think such assistance is lawful, but that certain considerations of principle relating to essential features of countermeasures challenge this view. In addition, our analysis in Part III addresses an idea that has emerged in the context of the application of international law to cyberspace—that a state may take a countermeasure at the request and on behalf of another state where it would otherwise not have an entitlement to do so. We term this proposal “proxy countermeasures” and show that at present it has no basis in international law, and cannot be justified by analogy to collective self-defense. Thereafter, Part IV briefly considers situations where the collaborating state possesses its own entitlement to act—showing that in all five collaboration scenarios, it acts lawfully. Finally, Part V turns to questions of policy that arise in relation to collaboration in the taking of countermeasures, and sets out potential directions for the development of the law. Part VI concludes.

II. Foundations and Framework

This Part provides a framework for our analysis to come. It will, first, discuss the role of countermeasures in the international legal order, their function as a justification to otherwise wrongful conduct, and the ongoing controversy about who is entitled to take countermeasures, particularly in response to the breach of an erga omnes or erga omnes partes obligation. Second, it will turn to collaboration, noting the limited engagement in the practice and literature with the idea of state collaboration in respect of countermeasures thus far, and the recent developments pointing in that direction.

A. Countermeasures in the International Legal Order

Countermeasures are a mechanism for the enforcement of state responsibility. Under the law of countermeasures, states whose rights have been breached by another state can, in response to the breach and with a view to inducing compliance with the targeted state's obligations of cessation and/or reparation, forego performance of an obligation owed to that state. The regime of countermeasures is set out in the Articles on State Responsibility (ARSIWA), adopted in 2001.Footnote 10 In order to be permissible, countermeasures must satisfy a series of substantive and procedural conditions. Substantively, countermeasures must be a response to a prior wrongful act, and must be adopted by the injured state in order to induce compliance by the wrong-doing state.Footnote 11 They must be temporary,Footnote 12 reversible,Footnote 13 and proportionate.Footnote 14 There is no requirement that the injured state target an obligation connected or closely related to the prior breach: reciprocity is not needed, though the choice of obligation is limited by the exclusions listed in ARSIWA Article 50.Footnote 15 Procedurally, before resorting to countermeasures, the injured state must call upon the wrong-doing state to comply with its obligations and, subject to urgency,Footnote 16 notify the wrong-doing state of its intention to take countermeasures and make an offer to negotiate.Footnote 17 ARSIWA leaves open the question whether states who are not injured by a breach may nevertheless take countermeasures when the breach affects an erga omnes (partes) obligation owed also to them—a question to which we return later.Footnote 18

The regime in ARSIWA reflects a careful balance between competing considerations. On the one hand, there was the desire to ensure that international obligations are respected and injured states’ rights enforced: in the absence of centralized dispute settlement mechanisms, international law must afford states the power to seek this aim unilaterally. As the Argentinian delegate put it in the United Nations General Assembly's Sixth Committee: without countermeasures it was “the injured State [that] could find itself unable to bring about the cessation of wrongful acts in a timely manner, and could turn out to be the main victim of a decentralized system of international sanctions.”Footnote 19 On the other hand, there was the desire to curb the potential for abuse which is inherent in unilateral self-help. There was ample historical evidence of the abuse of reprisals by powerful states against weaker ones, often on the basis of spurious or trivial claims.Footnote 20 Unsurprisingly, certain states that had been subjected to such abuse resisted the inclusion of countermeasures in ARSIWA or pushed for stronger and tighter restrictions. The point was put most forcefully by Brazil when it noted that to recognize “the legitimacy of countermeasures meant denying the equality of States and actually heightened their inequality.”Footnote 21 The compromise eventually reached in the International Law Commission (ILC), and now included in ARSIWA, was found satisfactory by the majority of states in the UN General Assembly (UNGA).

Even if the regime on countermeasures in ARSIWA is generally accepted to reflect customary law, some doubts remain in respect of certain aspects, most notably the procedural conditions of notification and negotiation.Footnote 22 Since the adoption of ARSIWA in 2001, states have tended to endorse the substance of its provisions, even though they have not always mentioned them expressly when taking or addressing countermeasures.Footnote 23 Thus, states have relied upon these rules in their diplomatic practice,Footnote 24 and in litigation.Footnote 25 The ARSIWA regime on countermeasures has also, for the most part, been endorsed by states in statements on international law in cyberspace.Footnote 26

Two aspects of the regulation of countermeasures are relevant for the analysis in the present Article: the characterization of these measures as justifications, namely defenses that render conduct permissible, and the question of who is entitled to take countermeasures. Each of these is addressed in turn.

1. Countermeasures as Justifications

Countermeasures constitute justifications, that is, they are defenses that render permissible conduct that would otherwise be unlawful. This characterization is widely accepted by states.Footnote 27 Justifications do not set aside the affected obligation(s): they have no effect on the continued existence of the relevant primary rule.Footnote 28 The primary rule affected under justification remains in force throughout: even during the period when the state is permitted to forego compliance with it in the light of the justifying circumstances. This is particularly clear in the case of countermeasures: ARSIWA Article 49(2) states that countermeasures are “limited to the non-performance for the time being” of obligations of the invoking state.Footnote 29 There are two features of the concept of justifications that are relevant for our purposes.

First, justifications involve conduct that is prima facie wrong: namely, that is inconsistent with an existing rule of the legal order. The prima facie wrong is at a minimum a procedural one,Footnote 30 in line with the International Court of Justice's (ICJ) approach in the Nicaragua case.Footnote 31 That is to say, the conduct is wrongful at first blush, or on first impression, until all else—including the justification—is considered. But, all things considered, the conduct is held to be permissible. Even so, the point remains that, even after all things have been considered, and the conduct is found not to be a wrong after all, it is conduct inconsistent with an existing rule of the legal order. As we discuss in more detail later, this is why countermeasures are often described as “intrinsically wrongful acts.”Footnote 32

Second, justifications can entail permissible, rather than necessarily commendable, conduct. That is, it is not necessary to benefit from a justification that an agent's conduct is in some way right or praiseworthy, although it may be. Justifications can include conduct that is often described as being merely tolerableFootnote 33—conduct that, while permissible, is still viewed unfavorably by the legal order.Footnote 34 As we discuss in more detail in Section III.D, this is a feature of countermeasures widely emphasized in state practice and scholarship. It is in this sense that Monica Hakimi describes countermeasures as an institution of “unfriendly unilateralism” that must be tolerated despite their “unsavory attributes, because the legal order's formal enforcement processes are commonly weak or absent.”Footnote 35

2. Who Can Take Countermeasures?

According to ARSIWA Article 49(1), countermeasures can be taken by “[a]n injured State.” Injured states are those defined in ARSIWA Article 42. Under this provision, states are considered to be injured by a breach of international law in three circumstances, which turn on the character of the obligation breached.Footnote 36 These are: first, in the case of bilateral obligations, when the breach affects an obligation that is owed to that state individually;Footnote 37 second, in the case of obligations erga omnes or erga omnes partes, when the breach specially affects a state to which the obligation is owed;Footnote 38 and third, in the case of interdependent obligations, where the breach is of “such a character as radically to change the position of all the other States to which the obligation is owed with respect to the further performance of the obligation.”Footnote 39 Each of these state(s), as an injured state, is entitled “to resort to all means of redress contemplated in the” Articles on State Responsibility, including countermeasures.Footnote 40

Whether any other states, beyond those which are injured, are entitled to take countermeasures has been a contentious question for some time. In practice, states often take measures in response to perceived serious violations of international law. Throughout 2022 and 2023, for example, a large number of states adopted restrictive measures against Russia in response to the latter's aggression against Ukraine.Footnote 41 So long as any such measures, even if unfriendly and antagonistic, do not infringe the rights of their target state, they are permissible. The more difficult question is whether all states (to whom an obligation is owed but who are not injured) can adopt measures inconsistent with the rights of a wrong-doing state, where that state's prior violation affects an obligation owed erga omnes (or erga omnes partes). After all, in line with ARSIWA Article 48, all states to which the obligation is owed are recognized to have a legal interest in compliance with it and, as such, to have legal standing to invoke the responsibility of the wrongdoer.Footnote 42

Which states are entitled to take countermeasures under international law is a key question for our analysis. As we will argue, where a state is entitled to take countermeasures against a wrong-doing state, it may lawfully collaborate with another state that is injured by the same wrongdoer and is, as such, also entitled to take countermeasures against it. But matters are less simple where the collaborating state is not so entitled. It is thus useful to consider in some more depth the position of states other than an injured state, and whether international law has come to recognize their entitlement to resort to countermeasures in response to violations of erga omnes (partes) obligations owed to them. After all, collaboration in the taking of countermeasures most likely arises in these circumstances—if only by virtue of the fact that multiple states will be reacting to the same breach. The next two sections will address the position taken by the ILC in ARSIWA as a starting point, and the practice since then, with a view to evaluating whether customary international law currently permits states other than an injured state to take countermeasures in the event of breach of erga omnes (partes) obligations. That is, it will ask whether countermeasures in the general interest are permitted under customary law.Footnote 43

a. The Position in ARSIWA

The Articles on State Responsibility make no provision for countermeasures in the general interest, though the matter was considered in the final two years of the ILC's work. In light of controversial views both within the Commission and the UNGA Sixth Committee,Footnote 44 the ILC resolved to leave the question open for future development. Article 54 of ARSIWA is accordingly a savings clause,Footnote 45 the Commentary to which notes the developing practice on countermeasures in the general interest but ultimately concludes that at that time—2001—there was “no clearly recognized entitlement of States referred to in article 48 to take countermeasures in the collective interest.”Footnote 46

The Commission's choice of a savings clause was driven by two main considerations. First, there was the view that the practice existing at that time was insufficient to meet the requirements of generality, consistency, and uniformity necessary to evidence a rule of customary law. This is clear from the Commentary to ARSIWA, which refers to this practice as “controversial,”Footnote 47 “limited and rather embryonic,”Footnote 48 and “sparse and involv[ing] a limited number of States.”Footnote 49 Second, there was the general tenor of states’ comments in the UNGA Sixth Committee. No fewer than thirty-five states addressed countermeasures in the general interest,Footnote 50 and of these six spoke in favor,Footnote 51 thirteen against,Footnote 52 and ten were cautious about this development.Footnote 53 In some cases, states’ views were in any event hard to interpret.Footnote 54 These were, to be sure, comparatively small numbers. But they were to be read against a background in which a considerable number of states had expressed concern about, or even opposed, the inclusion of countermeasures in the Articles on State Responsibility at all.Footnote 55 Perhaps, given the novelty of other key aspects of the Articles proposed by the Commission—not least of which was the very notion that states other than an injured state had legal standing to invoke responsibility—the choice may have also been driven by the desire to ensure that states in the Sixth Committee would accept the text as a whole.Footnote 56

b. Developments Since 2001

Academic commentary shortly after the adoption of ARSIWA was already critical of the ILC's stance. This commentary engaged in a deep and detailed reassessment of the practice considered by the ILC, noting that many of these measures were inconsistent with obligations owed by the states taking them toward the target state, and found additional instances of practice. These scholars thus concluded that the practice was not limited, embryonic, or sparse, as the ILC had suggested. On the contrary, it was said to be widespread and consistent: it was a settled practice.Footnote 57 Moreover, for these scholars, the Sixth Committee's reception of draft Article 54 (2000) was not as negative as suggested by Special Rapporteur James Crawford's Fourth, and final, report on state responsibility. In their view, states had been much more open and receptive to the notion of countermeasures in the general interest.Footnote 58 These scholars all concluded that international law currently permits this type of countermeasure.Footnote 59 But not all commentators share this assessment.Footnote 60

Since the adoption of the Articles in 2001, states have continued to resort to multi-party responses to perceived violations of erga omnes (partes) obligations.Footnote 61 Martin Dawidowicz listed at least five instances of multi-party reactions to perceived violations of erga omnes (partes) obligations in the period 2001–2014.Footnote 62 Further sanctions regimes were adopted, among others, against Venezuela since 2017,Footnote 63 against Myanmar in 2020, and against Russia and Belarus in 2022 and 2023.Footnote 64 The practice is, by now, considerable—quantitatively at least.

Two observations may nevertheless be made, which ought to be borne in mind when assessing whether the practice meets the requirement of generality.Footnote 65 First, the legality or illegality of the measures is often difficult to establish in the abstract, thus calling into question the relevance of at least some of this practice for the purposes of establishing a customary rule concerning countermeasures in the general interest.Footnote 66 For example, asset freezes, a very common measure in the contemporary sanctions toolkit, are often said to be prima facie wrongful acts,Footnote 67 as coercive interferences with state propertyFootnote 68 and/or breaches of state immunity.Footnote 69 But such assessments are not unanimous. Asset freezes do not seem to meet the Nicaragua threshold for coercion contrary to the principle of non-intervention,Footnote 70 and to the extent that they are implemented by executive action there is a question as to whether they are covered by immunities.Footnote 71 Moreover, whether a measure is legal or not may vary from state to state, in light—in particular—of the treaty relations they may have toward the target state (which may either prohibit the measure, or provide for treaty-based specific responses to breach). Trade restrictions could, for instance, be justified under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade security exception,Footnote 72 and other measures could be justified by other rules of international law—such as material breach of treaty or fundamental change of circumstances.Footnote 73

Second, despite increasing numbers, the practice remains predominantly Western. States in other regions, including Africa and the Middle East, have engaged in such measures too, though seemingly less frequently than Western states.Footnote 74 Aside from some Caribbean members of the Commonwealth,Footnote 75 states in Central and South America have, until recently, not participated in certain sanctions regimes against other states.Footnote 76 Latin America has a strong tradition of rejecting and opposing this kind of intervention, though it is noteworthy that there were some, perhaps timid, restrictive measures imposed against Venezuelan governmental officials in 2019.Footnote 77

The question of opinio juris also remains vexed. As a starting point, it is fair to say that evidence of opinio juris is limited. States rarely invoke countermeasures to justify measures or other sanctions imposed against perceived violators of erga omnes (partes) obligations. Indeed, those studies that have concluded that customary international law permits countermeasures in the general interest have tended to infer opinio juris from the practice.Footnote 78 Thus, for Dawidowicz, this inference is justified because the rule in question is a permissive one, the practice is consistent and regular and evidences no “opinio non juris,” and the notion of “third-party countermeasures” (in his terminology) is the only way to explain the legality of the relevant conduct.Footnote 79 But such an approach may be in tension with the ILC's Conclusions on the Identification of Customary International Law, widely endorsed by states in the UNGA Sixth Committee, pursuant to which ‘no simple inference of acceptance as law’ can be made from the practice in question.Footnote 80 For indeed, the general proposition must surely be that, as held by the ICJ in Nicaragua, legal views should not be ascribed to states, which they do not themselves formulate.Footnote 81 To argue that the only way legally to explain the practice is by means of the concept of countermeasures overlooks the fact that a state might have assessed its conduct to be permissible in light of its existent commitments and accepted the risk that it might be unlawful. Likewise, the (relative) absence of protest to these measures by other states may evidence opinio juris only in specific circumstances.Footnote 82

The available evidence of states’ legal views on countermeasures in the general interest remains mixed. During the ILC work, as already noted, at least six states expressed support for the notion of countermeasures in the general interest—at the very least, as progressive development.Footnote 83 A further five could be said to have implicitly supported this development, as they expressed satisfaction with the proposals made by the Commission on countermeasures as a whole.Footnote 84 At the same time, other states have clearly rejected this notion. No fewer than thirteen states were opposed to draft Article 54 (2000) in the Sixth Committee, and ten expressed caution.Footnote 85

As to other evidence, states have expressed views on the permissibility of these measures in other contexts. At one end of the spectrum are states which continue to reject the notion of countermeasures in the general interest. These include Canada,Footnote 86 China,Footnote 87 and France.Footnote 88 At the other end are states which have expressly endorsed the customary status of this entitlement: Costa Rica, Footnote 89 Estonia,Footnote 90 Ireland,Footnote 91 Italy,Footnote 92 and Poland.Footnote 93 In between, are those states that have endorsed the possibility in aspirational terms, like New Zealand,Footnote 94 and those that have continued to express doubts as to their legality or noted ongoing disagreements among states on the matter, like Algeria,Footnote 95 Denmark,Footnote 96 Netherlands,Footnote 97 Russia,Footnote 98 and (seemingly) the United Kingdom.Footnote 99 Beyond this, expressions of support or objection in the abstract for this concept are infrequent.

It is also noteworthy that states that regularly adopt sanctions against perceived violators of erga omnes (partes) obligations, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, have so far not explicitly and clearly supported the permissibility of countermeasures in the general interest—either in the Sixth Committee, during the ILC's work on state responsibility, or in their legal justifications for the restrictive measures and sanctions regimes. In relation to Russia in particular, the United States has been reported as endorsing countermeasures adopted “by states ‘injured’ and ‘specially affected’ by [the Russian] aggression” against Ukraine.Footnote 100 It has included in this category “allies of Ukraine who have bankrolled its economy and military during the war.”Footnote 101 This approach would transform the United States, and certain other allies of Ukraine, from being a “State other than the injured State,” in the sense of ARSIWA Article 48, into injured states, in the sense of ARSIWA Article 42.Footnote 102 This move would place them in the category of states that are entitled to take countermeasures under current international law, bypassing the debate on countermeasures in the general interest.

In sum, assessments of customary law are notoriously difficult, and the present context raises distinctive methodological problems. As Fernando Lusa Bordin has observed, few customary rules “even those long viewed as established, can survive the brutal scrutiny of the magnifying glass.”Footnote 103 While there is no doubt that evidence of both practice and opinio juris is necessary to identify a rule of customary law, this two-element approach, endorsed in the ILC Conclusions with the support of states, must be applied flexibly.Footnote 104 Even if assessed flexibly, however, the best that can be said is that the law remains uncertain.

B. Collaboration in the Taking of Countermeasures

States regularly collaborate in the pursuance of shared, or collective, aims. Such cooperation is often desirable and, in many instances, necessary: some challenges facing the international community, such as climate change and health emergencies, can only be addressed through coordination and cooperation. States also regularly collaborate in the adoption of sanctions regimes against perceived violators of erga omnes (partes) obligations. For example, G7 states have closely cooperated in the imposition of sanctions against Russia in response to its aggression of Ukraine.Footnote 105

As we noted in the introduction, some states have recently addressed collaboration in the taking of countermeasures. If the proposed plan to distribute Russian assets goes ahead, it will likely involve collaboration amongst a set of allied states in the taking of a countermeasure: as these states have acknowledged, the confiscation of such assets would need to be justified by countermeasures if it is to be permissible.Footnote 106 Similarly, in recent statements on the application of international law to cyberspace, a number of states have referred to the possibility of collaboration in countermeasures to respond to the wrongful cyberactivity by other states. Thus, Canada suggests that “[a]ssistance can be provided on request of an injured State, for example where the injured State does not possess all the technical or legal expertise to respond to internationally wrongful cyber acts.”Footnote 107 Costa Rica proposes that countermeasures may be taken by what they call third states “in response to violations of obligations of an erga omnes nature or upon request by the injured State.”Footnote 108 And Estonia has been a long-standing supporter of the idea that “[a]llies matter also in cyberspace”—that “states which are not directly injured may apply countermeasures to support the state directly affected by the malicious cyber operation.”Footnote 109 Finally, in December of 2023, the EU Anti-coercion Instrument came into force, which allows the EU Council to decide on responses to perceived economic coercion against the Union or (one of) its members, including by way of countermeasures.Footnote 110

This renewed emphasis on collective action appears to be instigated by two concerns, old and new. As to the old, there has been a longstanding worry that the material inequalities among states are such that not only are weaker states more likely to be targeted by countermeasures, they are also less likely to be in a position to take countermeasures themselves, and to do so effectively.Footnote 111 For example, there are likely to be fewer foreign state-owned assets in smaller and less developed economies that could be subjected to freezing as a means to induce compliance. Smaller states are also less likely to possess the technological capability to respond with cyber-measures to wrongful acts, including malicious cyberoperations, by another state. For this reason, the question of collaboration really matters, for it provides a mechanism to offset, if only partially and contingently, the impact of material inequalities among states on the enforcement of their rights. Otherwise, these states may suffer a compounding of injustice: the initial wrongful act, and the material inability to avail themselves of an important enforcement mechanism ostensibly available, equally, to all states. As to the new, or at least a concern that is increasing, the escalating polarization in international politics make the question of state collaboration, particularly in regional blocs, even more likely—which may lead, too, to increased support and cooperation also in reacting to perceived wrongs.

Leaving aside the recent examples just mentioned, collaboration in the context of countermeasures has rarely been addressed as such. Within the ILC, as noted by Martti Koskenniemi, the default assumption was that “[t]here was no general right to assist the injured State” in taking countermeasures.Footnote 112 Collaboration was, however, proposed as a requirement for the taking of countermeasures in the general interest. The ILC's proposal to states on this question required both a request from the injured state, where there was one, and cooperation between states participating in countermeasures in the general interest.Footnote 113 These proposals, as noted above, did not make it into the final draft. Beyond this, there is no evidence of the issue having been discussed within the Commission or in the Sixth Committee of the UNGA. There has been similarly limited engagement by the literature on this topic, and then rarely in depth. Vague references may be found in writings of the late nineteenth and the first part of the twentieth centuries.Footnote 114 Since then, only a handful of writers considered collaboration in this field in the 1970s and 1980s. Michael Akehurst and D.N. Hutchinson's accounts anticipate the notion of countermeasures in the general interest: indeed, crucial for their respective accounts was the identification of an entitlement, for the collaborating state, to take countermeasures.Footnote 115 And while Elisabeth Zoller clearly addressed collaboration where the prior breach affected an individual right of the injured state, her considerations were limited to policy questions: it seemed right and natural, she thought, that victims should rely on their allies in enforcing their rights.Footnote 116 The legal regulation of collaboration in this field thus remains unclear.

These recent developments call for an in-depth analysis of the question of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures. The developments have, indeed, come from different states and as a reaction to different contexts: the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the cyber-activity of states, and the increased use of trade-related measures in a polarized world. They signal broader trends in international relations, and not just contingent responses to particular threats. At the same time, states have addressed the question in very broad terms: the specific manner of cooperation has not been clarified. And yet, what form cooperation takes may affect the permissibility of the conduct of those collaborating in the taking of countermeasures.

In this light, in Part III below we distinguish five ways that states might collaborate in the taking of countermeasures. We use “collaborate” in a non-technical sense, as an umbrella term to cover five ways states may interact in this context. These concern first, independent but coordinated action; second, the secondment of an agent or organ to another state; third, joint conduct; fourth, the provision of assistance to another state's countermeasure; and fifth, the idea that a state may take a countermeasure at the request and on behalf of an injured state. We leave aside certain other ways that states may become involved in some way in the countermeasures of another state.Footnote 117 Finally, it may be noted that a given factual situation may need to be assessed according to more than one category.

As we will argue, the rules regulating these different forms of collaboration vary and, as such, they result in different conclusions on the legality of the collaborating state's participation in the countermeasures of an injured state. Where the collaborating state possesses an entitlement of its own to take countermeasures against the targeted state, it can permissibly cooperate with another state in an equivalent position in taking countermeasures against their common wrongdoer. The ongoing uncertainty about the permissibility of countermeasures in the general interest, as well as the potential for collaboration in situations where there is no erga omnes (partes) breach in play at all, points to the need to understand the permissibility of collaboration in situations where the collaborating state does not possess an entitlement to take countermeasures. The majority of cases of multi-party responses to wrongdoing are likely to fall into this category. And as we will show, where the collaborating state does not possess an entitlement to take countermeasures, the permissibility of its conduct varies depending on the form of collaboration at issue. Whether this variation is desirable and justifiable is a question to which we turn in Part V.

III. Collaboration Where the Collaborating State Has No Individual Entitlement to Take a Countermeasure

This Part addresses five forms of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures. It does so where the collaborating state—the state on which we are focused—has no individual entitlement to take a countermeasure against the targeted state, but the injured state does.

A. Independent but Coordinated Action

The first form of collaboration arises where two (or more) states act individually while coordinating their response. Consider, for instance, a situation where two states independently confiscate and distribute the central bank assets of another state held in each of their jurisdictions, or where two states independently suspend landing rights of the national carrier of another state. This independent action may be taken pursuant to either an ad hoc or institutionalized common position or policy. However, there is no sense here that the independent but coordinated action entails a joint operation. Each state's acts stand on their own.

This situation is not complex in legal terms. It is straightforwardly the case that each state commits an act that is, independently, contrary to the rights of the targeted state. In line with the principle of independent responsibility, which underpins the Articles on State Responsibility each state is individually and independently responsible for its own actFootnote 118—for example, its own confiscation of the assets, its own suspension of overflight rights. And this is the case even if there was some coordination between them. In this scenario, then, each state will have committed a wrongful act against the targeted state and, for this reason, each will require their own justification for their putatively wrongful conduct. Given that the collaborating state does not have one, and subject to the discussion to come on the possibility of proxy countermeasures, it acts wrongfully.

B. Secondment

The second form of collaboration is that of secondment. Here, the collaborating state seconds an official or a unit to the injured state. In ARSIWA, the Commentary notes that this might “include a section of the health service or some other unit placed under the orders of another country to assist in overcoming an epidemic or natural disaster, or judges appointed in particular cases to act as judicial organs of another State.”Footnote 119

In understanding the legal implications of such a secondment, ARSIWA Article 6 sets out the following rule:

The conduct of an organ placed at the disposal of a State by another State shall be considered an act of the former State under international law if the organ is acting in the exercise of elements of the governmental authority of the State at whose disposal it is placed.Footnote 120

These are situations where, as noted by the Commentary, “in performing the functions entrusted to it by the beneficiary State, the organ must also act in conjunction with the machinery of that State and under its exclusive direction and control, rather than on instructions from the sending State.”Footnote 121 These are narrow situations, where the organ of one state is placed at the disposal, and acts under the authority and for the benefit, of another state.Footnote 122

In legal terms, the effect of the “loan” of the state organ is that the conduct of that organ is attributable to the receiving state, and this state only. The conduct is not attributable to the sending state. When the Privy Council acts as court of final appeal of, say, Jamaica, its conduct is attributable to Jamaica and not to the United Kingdom.Footnote 123 Or when French or Spanish judges sit in the courts of Andorra, their conduct is attributable to Andorra and not to either France or Spain.Footnote 124 Similarly, consider a situation where the collaborating state fully seconds a cyber unit of its Defense Ministry to the injured state to assist it with the protection of its cyber infrastructure. Assuming that the unit acts under the exclusive direction and control of the injured state, conduct of the unit during the secondment would be attributable only to the injured state, and not to the seconding state.

This, then, appears to be a permissible form of collaboration in terms of our framework, though to describe it as such might be somewhat misleading. As set out above, under ARSIWA Article 6, the conduct of the seconded unit becomes attributable to the injured state. This state—as an injured state—has an entitlement to take a countermeasure, and so any such measure taken by its own organs or by the seconded unit will be covered by the defense. As to the seconding state, if the conditions of Article 6 are met, the key point is that there is no conduct by that state: the conduct of the seconded unit is not its conduct to justify. While in fact this may be a manifestation of cooperation among states, in a technical legal sense this description is not accurate—for the collaborating state is not acting at all.Footnote 125

In conclusion, two caveats may be noted. First, secondment of this type—that is, which meets the high threshold of Article 6—is not common, particularly where the secondment involves participating in actions of the receiving state that are prejudicial to another state. Indeed, practice shows that the “loan” of military units or personnel is generally not made in a way that satisfies the high threshold of Article 6: sending states rarely relinquish all control over those units or personnel.Footnote 126 Second, assuming such a threshold was met, although the rule set out in Article 6 is generally accepted, it does remain to be seen whether it would hold up in practice outside of the relatively non-conflictual examples given in the ILC's Commentary. Where a powerful state seconds a unit to a less powerful state that undertakes an operation contrary to the interests of another state, would that other state accept the complete non-attributability of that conduct to the powerful state? That remains an open question.

C. Joint Conduct in International Law

The third form of collaboration arises where two or more states undertake joint action or a joint operation. Consider a situation where two states acting together seek to leverage a vulnerability in a software program used by the wrong-doing state to gain unauthorized access to the networks of its cyber unit, whereupon they compromise the networks’ integrity.Footnote 127 Or consider two states undertaking a joint ocean patrol which seizes a vessel belonging to the wrong-doing state.Footnote 128

In thinking about joint responsibility in legal terms, there are two central possibilities.Footnote 129 First, states may act through a common organ.Footnote 130 In this respect, Stefan Talmon gives the example of the Coalition Provisional Authority in the occupation of Iraq between April 2003 and June 2004.Footnote 131 In its core form, this scenario will entail the establishment of an integrated body composed of agents of each state.Footnote 132 Each state is then responsible for the conduct of the common organ.Footnote 133 These are likely to be relatively exceptional cases.

Second, states can also act jointly in relation to specific conduct or a specific operation, without the creation of a common organ. As a statement of principle, the Commentary to ARSIWA Article 47 provides that:

[T]wo or more States might combine in carrying out together an internationally wrongful act in circumstances where they may be regarded as acting jointly in respect of the entire operation.Footnote 134

This implicitly assumes that the conduct of the operation as a whole is attributable to both states. As a number of scholars have noted, the elements of joint responsibility, in this sense, remain uncertain.Footnote 135 There is, indeed, difficulty, in understanding the boundaries of this form of responsibility.

To begin with, it is fair to assume that any such doctrine of joint attribution of conduct will be narrow, particularly when compared to relatively capacious doctrines of joint perpetration in domestic criminal or civil law.Footnote 136 As André Nollkaemper and Dov Jacobs argue, this may be explained by reference to the sovereign independence of states,Footnote 137 and its application in the law of state responsibility: the principle of independent responsibility.Footnote 138 Moreover, practice to date provides little clarity, and it is difficult to say much in the abstract, without reference to the specific primary rule at stake.Footnote 139 Scholars, too, disagree on the scope of this category.Footnote 140 For present purposes, we propose that at least where two states make essential and concerted contributions to a specific operation, the conduct of the entire operation may be attributed to both of them.Footnote 141

In these instances, the attribution of the conduct to both the injured state and the collaborating state leads to different outcomes as between them. For the injured state, the wrongfulness of its conduct is precluded on the basis of its entitlement to take a countermeasure. Of course, all conditions for the taking of countermeasures must be met. For the collaborating state, however, the outcome is different. It would need its own justification for its conduct vis-à-vis the targeted state—the conduct that was attributable to both states. Given we assume here that the collaborating state has no individual entitlement to take a countermeasure, it has no way to justify its conduct. This state's conduct remains wrongful and a breach of its international obligations to the targeted state.Footnote 142

D. Assistance to Another State's Countermeasure

The fourth form of collaboration arises where the collaborating state assists the injured state in taking a countermeasure against the targeted state. Canada, for instance, proposed in its 2022 statement on the application of international law to cyberoperations that:

Assistance can be provided on request of an injured State, for example where the injured State does not possess all the technical or legal expertise to respond to internationally wrongful cyber acts. However, decisions as to possible responses remain solely with the injured State.Footnote 143

In this scenario, then, the collaborating state does not itself take a countermeasure—neither individually but pursuant to some coordination, nor jointly as part of an essential and concerted contribution to a joint operation. It merely assists the injured state in taking that measure for itself. The issue under consideration is thus not whether the collaborating state is responsible for the violation of the obligation infringed by the countermeasure as such. Only the injured state would be prima facie responsible for that breach, which it could justify as a countermeasure. The issue is whether by assisting the injured state in taking that measure, the collaborating state itself commits a wrongful act.

This scenario is both the most practically relevant and the most legally and theoretically complex. It is difficult to find public practice on this form of collaboration among states, and there has so far been limited engagement in the scholarly literature.Footnote 144 We start this Section by setting out possible rules of international law which the collaborating state's assistance might breach, before discussing how these apply where a state assists in another state's countermeasure.

1. Aid and Assistance in International Law

There are two kinds of rules, in particular, that might regulate a situation in which a state assists another state in the taking of a countermeasure: certain specific primary rules and the general rule reflected in ARSIWA Article 16.Footnote 145 The first arises where the very conduct that constitutes the assistance infringes a primary rule of international law that the collaborating state owes to the targeted state.Footnote 146 It is impossible to set out the range of examples where this might be the case, but a hypothetical will illustrate the point. It could be, for instance, that the collaborating state and the targeted state are parties to a bilateral treaty pursuant to which they share intelligence and cooperate on technical matters of defense, and under which disclosure of information to third parties is prohibited.Footnote 147 If the collaborating state shares with the injured state information about the targeted state's cyber vulnerabilities obtained through that cooperation arrangement under the bilateral treaty, this would straightforwardly breach the primary norm.Footnote 148

The second is the general rule reflected in ARSIWA Article 16, found to be customary in the Bosnian Genocide case.Footnote 149 Article 16 provides:

A State which aids or assists another State in the commission of an internationally wrongful act by the latter is internationally responsible for doing so if:

  1. (a) that State does so with knowledge of the circumstances of the internationally wrongful act; and

  2. (b) the act would be internationally wrongful if committed by that State.

Four elements of the rule in Article 16 are worth stressing. First, the assisting state must provide its assistance with knowledge of the circumstances of the wrongful act committed by the assisted state.Footnote 150 That is, the assisting state (through its organs) must be aware that its assistance is facilitating a wrong by the assisted state.Footnote 151 Second, the rule is not concerned with general cooperation between states—there must be a clear link between the assistance and the recipient state's wrongful conduct.Footnote 152 Third, the rule entails what is known as the “double obligation” requirement: if the assisting state had undertaken the relevant wrongful conduct of the assisted state, it would have been wrongful for it too.Footnote 153 Finally, under the rule, the assisting state is responsible for its own acts of assistance,Footnote 154 and not for the conduct of the assisted state.

2. A Provisional View on the Lawfulness of Assistance

The question, then, is whether the collaborating state acts wrongfully in assisting the injured state's countermeasure, where, to reiterate, the collaborating state has no entitlement of its own to take a countermeasure. As a starting point, it is necessary to distinguish situations where there is an applicable specific primary rule, as mentioned above, from the application of the general complicity rule in ARSIWA Article 16. As to the former, the example given above entailed the collaborating state's act of assistance infringing a bilateral treaty between it and the targeted state relating to the non-disclosure of technical information to third parties. Where the collaborating state shares such information with the injured state to facilitate its countermeasure against the targeted state, it infringes its obligations under the treaty.Footnote 155 Moreover, given that it has no individual entitlement to take a countermeasure, it has no defense for doing so. Unless the injured state's own defense can somehow be vested in or transferred to the collaborating state, a matter we discuss in the next Subsection, the collaborating state would act wrongfully.

The more widely applicable and pressing question is whether the collaborating state, in facilitating the injured state's countermeasure, would breach the general rule on assistance in ARSIWA Article 16. By way of introduction, two points may be stressed. First, there appears to be little (public) practice on this question and, since the ILC did not raise this issue during its work on state responsibility,Footnote 156 it is difficult to say how states (would) frame the permissibility of their collaboration in these circumstances in legal terms. Second, there appear to be no clear and obvious solutions to what domestic scholarship sometimes calls the “problem of accessorial liability,”Footnote 157 namely to the question of the (im)permissibility of assistance in the justified, but prima facie wrongful, act of a principal. This is evident in the variety of solutions available in domestic legal orders: systems of domestic criminal lawFootnote 158 and private lawFootnote 159 resolve this problem in a range of ways, and their choices usually depend on the weighing and balancing of system-specific factors.Footnote 160

With these points in mind, it makes sense to start with a preliminary, and intuitively appealing, view. To reiterate, Article 16 applies where a state “aids or assists another State in the commission of an internationally wrongful act.” That is, Article 16 is a complicity rule, one which turns on the existence of the principal's wrong. Thus, of course, if the injured state's countermeasure does not fulfill the relevant conditions for the lawfulness of countermeasures, then the collaborating state will be responsible for its wrongful assistance, assuming the other elements of Article 16 are fulfilled.Footnote 161 It will have assisted in the commission of a wrongful act by the assisted state. Crucially, though, if the assisted state's countermeasure is lawful, it would seem to follow that there is no wrong for the assisting state to be complicit in.Footnote 162 On this approach, assuming there is no other specific primary rule in play, it would be lawful for states to assist the injured state in taking a countermeasure.

This intuitive response to the problem of assistance to a countermeasure may be supported by reference to a commonly held view in criminal law doctrine and scholarship. In that context, scholars have long discussed the applicability of a principal's defenses to secondary parties or accessories.Footnote 163 The issue is closely linked to the debate on the distinction between justifications and excuses. One common view is that if a principal's conduct is justified, then accessories may assist them and benefit from their defense.Footnote 164 Douglas Husak illustrates this position with the following example: “Suppose that [the principal] acts in self-defense in repelling an unlawful aggressor. Surely [the accessory] has a defense if he assists [the principal] in his efforts.”Footnote 165 By contrast, where the principal's conduct is merely excused, it is suggested that any accessory will not benefit from the excuse.Footnote 166 Underpinning this doctrinal position is the assumption that where the principal's conduct is justified, their act is lawful, and assisting in a lawful act is not wrongful.Footnote 167 Here, the fact that justifications center on features or characteristics of the act (rather than on features and characteristics of the actor), and render that conduct lawful within the legal order, produces a “universalizing” effect such that they can also be relied on by accomplices.Footnote 168

On this approach, the fact that countermeasures are generally understood as providing a justification to the injured state would mean that the assisting state commits no wrong. The injured state's justification would have a universalizing effect, providing cover also for the conduct of the assisting state. This approach is certainly plausible, and has found support as a position of principle in the international law scholarship that has addressed this problem.Footnote 169

3. Assisting Tolerable Conduct and the Question of Agent-Relative Justifications

In this Section, we draw attention to two factors that provoke further reflection on this provisional conclusion. They stem from the traditional caution and concern of many states about the institution of countermeasures in international law, and the tightly regulated regime intended to provide safeguards against their abuse.

First, many states were ambivalent about the entire institution of countermeasures during the ILC's work, several even resisted their inclusion in ARSIWA at all.Footnote 170 These states tended to warn against the dangers inherent in the unilateral and—usually—unchecked character of countermeasures. For example, Brazil thought them “distasteful,”Footnote 171 Mexico that they tended to exacerbate instead of solve disputes,Footnote 172 and South Africa that they should be “marginalized.”Footnote 173 Even states that were more accepting of the notion, tended to emphasize the exceptionality and undesirability of countermeasures. For Argentina, they “could only be tolerated under international law as an extreme remedy to be taken only in exceptional cases,”Footnote 174 and for Colombia “[r]esort to countermeasures was not a right under international law, but a barely tolerated practice in exceptional cases covered by partially developed customary law.”Footnote 175 More recently, Brazil's legal position on international law in cyberspace recalled “that several states have criticized countermeasures because they would be prone to abuses, especially due to the material inequality of states.”Footnote 176 Scholars, too, have emphasized this ambivalence. Hakimi, quoted earlier, frames countermeasures as an institution of “unfriendly unilateralism” and, in language reminiscent of that of Argentina and Colombia, argues that countermeasures must be “tolerated” by international law “because the legal order's formal enforcement processes are commonly weak or absent.”Footnote 177 A common definition highlights their character as “intrinsically wrongful acts.”Footnote 178 These observations point, essentially, to one of the key features of countermeasures we emphasized earlier: that they involve conduct that is prima facie wrongful and that, even if all-things-considered permissible, remains inconsistent with an existing rule of the legal order.Footnote 179

Second, states’ traditional unwillingness to accept the permissibility of countermeasures in the general interest—as we discussed above—suggests that an entitlement to take countermeasures arises from a particular relationship with the injury and/or the obligation breached by the wrong-doing state. During the ILC's work, states could not agree that any state beyond the injured state, even one to which the obligation breached is owed, could react by way of countermeasures. These discussions did not revolve around our question of assistance to a countermeasure. But they reveal an important feature of the right to take countermeasures: namely, that it is personal to the injured state (or Article 48 state, if that is the case) by virtue of its particular connection to the injury and/or the breach in question.

In our view, these points reveal two important features of countermeasures—their tolerable and personal character—which may have a bearing on whether it ought to be permissible for one state to assist another's countermeasure. Moreover, these features track two insights in philosophical work that challenge the intuitive view that justifications are universalizable, and thus necessarily lead to the legality of the accessory's acts of assistance. The first concerns what exactly is entailed in the idea of justificationFootnote 180 and, in particular, how countermeasures fit into this category. The second concerns the idea that countermeasures, although a justification, entail what philosophers refer to as an agent-relative justification.

As to the first, we noted already that the category of justification is often understood as entailing permissible rather than commendable conduct, and that permissible conduct can include both commendable or praiseworthy behavior as well as acts that are merely tolerated by the legal system.Footnote 181 After all, to put it more broadly, the law can “take an unfavourable view of actions that it ultimately permits.”Footnote 182

A distinction between permissible conduct that is commendable and permissible conduct that is tolerable is not unknown to international law.Footnote 183 For instance, in his declaration in the Kosovo Advisory Opinion, Judge Bruno Simma took issue with the ICJ's conceptual approach to the question of (im)permissibility of unilateral declarations of independence under international law. The UNGA's resolution asked the Court whether the unilateral declaration of independence by Kosovo's Provisional Institutions of Self-Government was “in accordance with” international law.Footnote 184 The Court responded that the declaration had not violated international law. The Court's approach to this question, said Judge Simma, revealed a binary of permission/prohibition that he thought was inconsistent with the contemporary international legal order, and which omitted “the possible degrees of non-prohibition, ranging from ‘tolerated’ to ‘permissible’ to ‘desirable.’”Footnote 185 The Court, in his view, could have accepted that international law was neutral or silent with respect to certain acts, or even that it might simply “tolerate” those acts. For Judge Simma, “toleration” reflected a legal category between permission and prohibition: a concept of “non-prohibition” or “not illegality,” rather than “permissibility” and “legality.”Footnote 186 But the idea need not go that far, and we need not, and do not, adopt it here. It is possible to make room for certain “shades” within the category of legally permissible conduct by accepting that permissibility does not always entail good or right conduct (“desirable,” in Simma's categories), but that it may include also tolerable acts.Footnote 187

This point—the understanding that justified conduct may include both commendable and tolerable conduct—has implications for thinking about the role of those who assist. As Husak argues:

If [the principal's] conduct were commendable, it is plausible to suppose that the law should not discourage, and might actually encourage, assistance from others, notwithstanding the fact that [the principal's] conduct apparently violates a criminal law. But these results do not follow if [the principal's] conduct is merely tolerable. The law need not encourage, and might actively discourage, assistance with conduct that it is willing to permit.Footnote 188

A similar insight is revealed by the distinction between agent-neutral and agent-relative justifications, which tracks the second feature mentioned above. The distinction is generally accepted among moral philosophers, although much remains contested.Footnote 189 In this context, an agent-neutral justification is one that applies to all persons who are placed in the particular situation. This is typically the case with lesser-evils or consequentialist justifications, as illustrated in the famous trolley problem. If we accept that it is permissible to pull the lever to kill one and save five, such conduct would be permissible for any person who could pull the lever and saw the situation in the same way.Footnote 190 Or consider a situation where, in order to save a town from the spread of a fire, an individual control-burned a private dwelling. All else being equal, any person in the position of that individual would act permissibly if they set fire to the dwelling. But law and morality also allow individuals, in certain circumstances, to prioritize their own interests over those of others, even where their acts do not produce a net benefit or reduce overall harm. This includes acts that express an actor's partiality toward themselves, or toward those close to them with whom they have a special relation. To use an example from Larry Alexander and Michael Moore, a parent is “thought to be permitted (at the least) to save his own child even at the cost of not saving two other children to whom he has no special relation.”Footnote 191 Here, an agent-relative justification allows the parent “to give extra weight to [their] own legitimate interests in [their] moral calculus.”Footnote 192

As with the distinction between commendable and tolerable conduct, the distinction between agent-neutral and agent-relative justifications may also have implications for the position of those who assist. Kimberley Kessler Ferzan, for instance, suggests that agent-relative justifications do not “permit third-party assistance,”Footnote 193 as do Alexander and Moore.Footnote 194 Similarly, Husak gives the example of a mother who diverts a train which is speeding toward her infant daughter, thus killing two other innocent children.Footnote 195 Although it may be the case that the mother's conduct is permissible on the basis of an agent-relative justification—that is, the parental relationship—it does not follow that others who are strangers should be allowed to assist the mother in prioritizing her own interests over the general good.Footnote 196 In fact, Husak puts it more strongly still, proposing that it “makes little sense for the law to allow or encourage any [third party], who bears no special relation to [the principal], to assist her.”Footnote 197

4. Conclusion on Assistance

Practice provides no clear answer to the problem of accomplice liability in relation to countermeasures in international law.Footnote 198 Two points pull in different directions. In one direction, there is the intuitive view that because countermeasures are justified—because the principal state's act is all-things-considered permissible—this should have a universalizing effect. As such, a state that assists in the countermeasure of another state would act permissibly. Pulling in the opposite direction is, however, the fact that the international legal order takes a cautious approach to countermeasures, one that suggests such measures are tolerable, rather than commendable, and that they arise from the particular relation between the injured state, the injury, and the breach. This point puts pressure on the intuitive response: for it provides reasons to restrict those behaviors, including by limiting the participation of third parties. We return in Part V to considerations of policy that may bear on this question.

E. Countermeasure at the Request and on Behalf of Another State – Proxy Countermeasures

The fifth form of collaboration arises where the collaborating state purports to take a countermeasure at the request and on behalf of an injured state. In practical terms, consider a situation where the targeted (wrong-doing) state violates a bilateral obligation it owes to the injured state: it fails, for example, to ensure the inviolability of the injured state's diplomatic premises. Alternatively, the targeted state might be violating the injured state's territorial sovereignty through an exorbitant exercise of enforcement jurisdiction within the injured state's territory. The injured state would be entitled to take countermeasures against it. Could the injured state request a collaborating state to take a countermeasure on its behalf?Footnote 199

That a state may take such a measure in this situation is, perhaps, the most radical proposal to emerge from recent discussion on the application of international law in cyberspace.Footnote 200 Thus, to give an example, Costa Rica's recent statement proposes that “countermeasures may be taken by the injured State, i.e., the State specifically affected by the breach, as well as third States in response to violations of obligations of an erga omnes nature or upon request by the injured State.”Footnote 201 The proposal is radical because it suggests that a state that is not entitled to take countermeasures may rely on the entitlement of the injured state by virtue of the latter's request. To put it more bluntly, where a state is prohibited to, for example, freeze the assets of the target state on its own, it may permissibly do so if, and because, it is requested to do so by a state which can so act.

The original nature of this proposal is sometimes obscured by the terminology that has become accepted in the cyber context: states and scholars alike have discussed this form of collaboration under the label of “collective countermeasures.”Footnote 202 This term, however, does not distinguish situations where the collaborating state taking the countermeasure (1) has and (2) does not have an independent entitlement to take such a measure. Indeed, the term “collective countermeasures” has previously been used to describe what we have termed “countermeasures in the general interest”: that is, it is often taken to refer to the entitlement of states other than an injured state to take countermeasures in response to the breach of an erga omnes (partes) obligation owed to them. It is for this reason that we think a new term is needed to refer to the scenario of a collaborating state that, without an independent entitlement, takes a countermeasure at the request, and on behalf, of the injured state. For, as we will argue, whether the collaborating state possesses an entitlement of its own to take countermeasures currently determines the legality of its collaboration in the countermeasures of another in this scenario. We will refer to this latter collaboration scenario—where the collaborating state has no entitlement of its own—as one of “proxy countermeasures.”

In this Section, we start by showing how the possibility that a state might request another to take countermeasures on its behalf was considered by the ILC. The crucial point, in this respect, is that the ILC's consideration exclusively arose in the context of assessing the entitlement of Article 48 states to resort to countermeasures in the event of a breach of an erga omnes (partes) obligation that was owed to them. It did not arise where the obligation breached was not owed to the requested state. Thereafter, we review the available practice, limited as it is. As will be seen, no clear basis emerges from these sources in support of the concept of proxy countermeasures.Footnote 203 We will then consider additional arguments that might be taken to support the permissibility of the collaborating state acting at the request and on behalf of the injured state in the absence of an independent entitlement to do so: two analogies, and the idea of rights vesting. The analogies are, however, faulty, and international law does not recognize any doctrine of transfer or vesting of a defense in this context.

1. The Idea of Request in the Work of the ILC

The idea that countermeasures could be taken by a state on behalf and at the request of another state emerged in the work of the ILC, during its consideration of countermeasures in the general interest.Footnote 204 The Commission considered that, where there existed a state that was specially affected (and so, injured) by the breach of the erga omnes (partes) obligation,Footnote 205 other states to which the obligation was owed should not be allowed to act without a request by this state. This was because states that were not injured “should not be able, in effect, to intervene in a dispute by taking countermeasures if the principal parties wish to resolve it by other means.”Footnote 206 As discussed in Part II, the proposed draft Article 54 did not survive the cool reception given to it by states in the Sixth Committee. In its final form, Article 54 is simply a savings clause that makes room for further development. The Commentary to this provision, however, retains some echo of the distinction when it notes, after a brief survey of relevant practice, that “in those cases where there was, identifiably, a State primarily injured by the breach in question, other States have acted at the request and on behalf of that State.”Footnote 207 Whether this is now a requirement of positive law is not clear.Footnote 208

The key takeaway from this discussion is that, while the ILC considered the question of a state requesting another to take a countermeasure on its behalf, it only did so in the context of countermeasures in the general interest. That is, it was working from the assumption that the obligation that had been breached was erga omnes, and was owed to all of the states involved: the injured state (where there was one) and the requested state. This is crucial, because it makes clear that the entitlement of the requested state to take countermeasures in these circumstances arose from the character of the obligation breached as erga omnes (partes), and its legal interest in compliance with that obligation, and not from the request by the injured state. The requirement that the injured state consent, or request, the taking of the countermeasure by the other state was intended to limit or condition the exercise of the latter state's right. The request had a limiting function.

There is thus no support for the idea of what we call proxy countermeasures in the ILC's work.Footnote 209 In the conceptual framework developed by the Commission to regulate countermeasures by states other than the injured state, the idea of a request was intended to condition or limit the entitlement of these states in cases where the breach specially affected one (or more) state(s). The crucial point is that any such concept was only understood to be applicable where the requested state itself had a legal interest in compliance with the obligation breached by the wrong-doing state. Nothing in the ILC's work supports the idea that a request to act could create a legal entitlement where there was not otherwise one.

2. The Lack of Basis in State Practice

Aside from the statements of a handful of states in their legal positions on international law in cyberspace, the legal value of which is still uncertain,Footnote 210 it is difficult to find practice of states taking a countermeasure on behalf of another where they have no independent entitlement to take one themselves, or wider statements of support for such a proposition.Footnote 211 Indeed, this has been put more strongly. Writing in 2018, Isabella Brunner argued that “[t]here currently seems to be no state practice or opinio juris supporting the notion that [such] countermeasures without any legal interest would be in compliance with international law.”Footnote 212 In this Section, we discuss two possible examples—responses to the Iran Hostage Crisis and a claim relating to looted Albanian Gold after World War II. In the end, it is doubtful that either provides any real support for the proposition.

The first arises in the aftermath of the Iran Hostage Crisis in 1979/1980 in relation to Iran's serious breaches of diplomatic law. Obligations arising under diplomatic law are ordinarily understood as bilateralizable, even when arising under a multilateral treaty.Footnote 213 In response to the occupation of the United States’ Embassy, a statement of the nine foreign ministers of the member states of the European Economic Community announced that:

The Foreign Ministers of the Nine, deeply concerned that a continuation of this situation may endanger international peace and security, have decided to seek immediate legislation where necessary in their national Parliaments to impose sanctions against Iran in accordance with the Security Council Resolution on Iran, dated 10th January 1980, which was vetoed and in accordance with the tenets of international law.Footnote 214

The measures included a ban on any new export or services contracts with persons or organizations in Iran, reduction of embassy staff in Tehran and the number of Iranian diplomats accredited in each country, the reintroduction of travel visas, and arms-sales related bans,Footnote 215 as well as the suspension of all contracts concluded after the taking of the hostages.Footnote 216 At least some of the Nine subsequently did impose sanctions on Iran.Footnote 217

It is difficult to say whether this practice supports the idea of proxy countermeasures, but the better view is that it does not. First, it is not altogether clear that the proposed and/or implemented measures would have infringed or did infringe obligations owed by these states to Iran under international law—that is, it is not clear that the measures imposed would need to be legally justified in the first place.Footnote 218 Second, the underlying wrongful acts by Iran entailed breaches of different kinds of obligations—both ordinary bilateralizable obligations under diplomatic law but also the taking of hostages and the deprivations of liberty that are likely breaches of obligations owed erga omnes, and potentially the use of force.Footnote 219 Third, and relatedly, the statement of the nine foreign ministers is focused on the release of the hostages, but also notes the collective interest in “international peace and security” when explaining the imposition of sanctions.Footnote 220 For these reasons, this example provides at best equivocal, and probably doubtful, support for the assertion of an entitlement to take countermeasures absent any legal interest in the other state's compliance with the underlying obligation.

The second example arises out of the events at issue in the Monetary Gold case before the ICJ. At issue was a quantity of gold, looted by Germany from Rome in 1943, later recovered, and then found to belong to Albania.Footnote 221 Under the provisions of the Paris Agreement on Reparation of 1946, the United Kingdom, the United States, and France composed a Tripartite Commission tasked with returning the gold to its original owners. On the basis that Albania had failed to pay the compensation ordered in its favor in the Corfu Channel case, the United Kingdom sought to have that judgment satisfied from the gold. The three states composing the Tripartite Commission agreed, subject to certain conditions, including whether Italy could provide proof that it had better title to the gold. In his assessment of this practice, Akehurst proposes that it might be understood as a “clear case of reprisals by third States,”Footnote 222 given the real argument was that “Albania's illegal refusal to pay the damages awarded in the Corfu Channel case to the United Kingdom justified not only the United Kingdom, but also France and the United States, in committing what would normally have been an illegal act.”Footnote 223

On reflection, however, this practice does not provide support for a general doctrine of proxy countermeasures. First, the basis of the United Kingdom's claim is extremely narrow—it is specifically about actions in response to the non-settlement of a compensation award by the ICJ. This is evident in Sir Gerald Fitzmaurice's pleadings before the Court:

Not a penny of those damages . . . has in fact been paid. . . . This has been a matter of great regret to my country . . . [but] must also, on wider grounds, be a matter of importance to all members of the family of nations—whose relations are governed by international law—that the judgments of the highest international tribunal, as indeed of all tribunals, should be respected and carried out.Footnote 224

Even if the argument were accepted, which remains a matter of dispute, this is a claim about conduct in response to non-compliance with an international judgment specifically. Besides, as a matter of policy, where there is such a judgment the risks of abuse by third states—an important factor that we will return to in Part V—are diminished.Footnote 225 Second, the argument also relied heavily on shared or common interests:

It cannot fail to be prejudicial to the international community and to the rule of law in international relations if the judgments of international tribunals, and particularly of such a tribunal as the present Court, are contravened or disregarded. It would be right to say . . . that not only must such an occurrence be a matter of concern to all members of the international community, but also that all countries are, if not bound, at any rate entitled to take all such reasonable and legitimate steps as may be open to them to prevent such an occurrence, and either individually or by common action to do what they can to ensure that judgments, particularly of this court, are duly implemented and carried out.Footnote 226

This passage clearly foreshadowed later developments—led, in part, by Fitzmaurice himself during his tenure as ILC special rapporteur on the law of treaties—concerning multilateral obligations and erga omnes obligations in international law.Footnote 227 Whether such a collective interest could (and can, today) be said to exist is a matter of debate.Footnote 228 But at the very least this emphasis casts doubt on the precedential value of this case for proxy countermeasures. On the contrary, if this provides evidence of any state practice at all, it is arguably in favor of countermeasures in the general interest. It may be worth noting, too, that after the United Kingdom could not find any Albanian assets within its jurisdiction, it did not request any of its allies to confiscate assets available within theirs—as Fitzmaurice had suggested, on behalf of the United Kingdom, would be possible.

In sum, these two instances, though interesting, do not provide support for a general claim about the permissibility of proxy countermeasures.

3. Two Faulty Analogies: Collective Self-Defense and Non-state Actors

There are two analogies that might be explored in this context that may ground the idea of proxy countermeasures. The first is the analogy with collective self-defense; the second is with the way that states may request private actors to act on their behalf.

To start with the first—collective self-defense—the analogy goes like this. If states other than the injured state(s) are permitted to use armed force at the request of an injured state, why should such states not be permitted to take countermeasures at the request of an injured state?Footnote 229 But this analogy is faulty. It is faulty because the prohibition on the use of force is widely understood to generate obligations erga omnes.Footnote 230 And, indeed, it was understood in this way by the ILC, when raising collective self-defense in discussing the possibility of countermeasures by states other than the injured state.Footnote 231 As such, all states have a legal interest in compliance with the obligation and the right of collective self-defense may thus be rationalized as a specific manifestation of states’ legal interest in compliance with that obligation.Footnote 232 The request by the injured state in the collective self-defense context is playing a limiting role, rather than an expansive one.Footnote 233 The request, that is, does not create the entitlement to act in self-defense: it limits that entitlement.

The second analogy focuses, instead, on the fact that states may (and do) request private actors to act on their behalf. For instance, no one would doubt that an injured state could engage a private corporation—say, a technology company—to hack into the targeted state's networks as a countermeasure, of course subject to all of the ordinary conditions. If the injured state can engage a technology company to act on its behalf, why can it not engage a collaborating state to do the same?

To frame the problem this way, however, overlooks a crucial difference: that the collaborating state is bound to respect the targeted state's sovereignty (and any other applicable rules), an obligation which may be implicated by the operation.Footnote 234 The private entity is not bound to respect the targeted state's sovereignty, so its own responsibility, as a general matter, is not really at stake at all so far as international law is concerned. However, under international law, its acts can be attributed to the injured state. The private conduct could be attributed under ARSIWA Article 5, insofar as the entity was exercising elements of the injured state's governmental authority. It could also be attributed under ARSIWA Article 8, insofar as the act would be instructed, directed, or controlled by the state. As to the putative wrongfulness of that conduct, the injured state's justification bites here, precluding the wrongfulness of the conduct. Thus, the potential violation of the targeted state's sovereignty by means of the cyberoperation would be attributed to the injured state, which could then rely on its entitlement to take a countermeasure to justify its prima facie breach of the targeted state's rights. But the same is not true for a collaborating state: for, unlike the private entity, it is itself bound to respect the targeted state's sovereignty. It would remain responsible for its conduct—the operation—in breach of its own international obligations toward the targeted state. Where the private entity can hide, as it were, behind the veil of the injured state's sovereignty (and thus entitlement), the collaborating state cannot do the same. The analogy with a request to a non-state actor does not work.

4. Agency or the Transfer of a Justification?

Finally, it may be asked whether there is some other way in which the collaborating state might act lawfully when taking a countermeasure at the request and on behalf of an injured state. An initial difficulty here is that there is as yet little assessment of how this idea of a proxy countermeasure is to be understood in legal terms rather than as a simple description of the phenomenon. As noted above, one possibility is the exceptional case of secondment recognized in ARSIWA Article 6.Footnote 235 Here, by placing its organ at the exclusive disposal of the injured state, the collaborating state drops out of the picture. The relevant conduct is the injured state's conduct, on which its own justification bites. To reiterate, however, as we noted above it is not clear that this rule would hold in conflictual scenarios.

Beyond this exceptional case, we might consider two other possibilities: the first, a wider analogy to the law of agency, and the second, the transfer or vesting of a legal power. As to the first, Angelo Sereni, writing in 1940, surveyed a range of practice under which states empowered other states to act for them. These instances included general authority to act in international relations, as well as more specific authority to act in particular fields, such as economic relations or diplomatic protection.Footnote 236Although Sereni thought that there were no sufficiently determinate rules of international law governing agency, he suggested that no “objection has been raised in principle by any member of the international community to the resort to agency in international relations.”Footnote 237

In legal terms, as with the domestic law of agency, the relevant conduct of the agent is treated by the legal order as the conduct of the principal.Footnote 238 In our situation, the principal's conduct would be that of the injured state, which raises the possibility that the injured State's own justification would render the conduct in question lawful. The difficulty with the argument is that it fails to properly consider the position of third states—that is, third states to the agency agreement. In our case, this is the targeted state, who is the target of the countermeasure taken by the collaborating state (putatively) acting as an agent of the injured state. Sereni argued, in the first place, that notification of the arrangement to third states was required. Second, he suggested that it would then be up to third parties so notified to “proceed to its formal recognition”’ if they so wished.Footnote 239 This seems to us to be right as a matter of principle. If this is true, agency would not apply in the hostile situations we are examining: the targeted state would need to be notified of the arrangement as to the taking of the countermeasure by the collaborating states, and have no objections to it.

The second possibility is whether international law recognizes a doctrine by which the injured state could vest, or transfer, the exercise of its entitlement to take countermeasures onto the collaborating state.Footnote 240 In legal terms, it would not be the case, as in the previous paragraph, that the conduct of the collaborating state is treated as conduct of the injured state, but rather that the justification would be transferred from one to the other. Here, some care is needed. It is true that legal orders recognize a variety of doctrines pursuant to which one party can transfer or vest a right or power in another. However, the question here is much more specific—and concerns the putative transfer of a defense such that the collaborating state has a justification for infringing its own obligations vis-à-vis the targeted state. Put in this narrower way, it is hard to find any support in even roughly analogous situations in domestic law. Although a full survey of all domestic orders is not possible, it is doubtful that in contract law, for instance, such a possibility would exist. It would entail that, absent specific agreement to the contrary, a breach of a contractual obligation owed by X to Y, which might justify some remedial action by Y, could entitle Z not to comply with its own, independent, obligations to X just because Y requests that they not comply. Indeed, much as in international law, it is doubtful that Z would even have standing to bring a claim in relation to the breach.Footnote 241

F. Conclusions on Collaboration

Drawing together this discussion, the following conclusions may be drawn. For independent but coordinated action, as well as joint action, the collaborating state is responsible for the relevant conduct. As such, given it has no entitlement of its own to take a countermeasure, it acts unlawfully. Similarly, international law does not recognize the possibility of what we have called proxy countermeasures—where a state takes such a measure at the request and on behalf of an injured state. That leaves two scenarios—secondment and assistance. As to secondment, as we argue above, under the rule in Article 6 this would be a permissible form of collaboration, even if that term is slightly misleading—the legal order treats the relevant acts as acts of the injured state only. This, however, would be a rare case, and doubts arise as to whether it would really hold up in conflictual situations such as this. For these reasons, assistance becomes a crucial question. As argued above, it is plausible to simply take the view that a collaborating state that assists another state's countermeasure acts lawfully, for what it is doing is simply assisting in the commission of an act whose wrongfulness is precluded. However, certain essential features of the institution of countermeasures—their tolerable rather than desirable quality and their personal character—put pressure on this conclusion.

IV. Collaboration Where the Collaborating State Does Have an Individual Entitlement to Take a Countermeasure

For completeness, this Part addresses collaboration in the taking of countermeasures where both—or all—of the collaborating states have their own entitlement to take a countermeasure. It will do so briefly, as for the most part it does not raise particular problems. In all five instances of collaboration, assuming other requirements are met, the collaborating states act lawfully.

First, as to independent but coordinated action, each state remains responsible for their own conduct—the distribution of the confiscated assets, the suspension of overflight rights, and so on. Each state's own justification precludes the wrongfulness of its own conduct.

Second, as to secondment, the situation is to be analyzed slightly differently. To reiterate the rule set out in ARSIWA Article 6:

The conduct of an organ placed at the disposal of a State by another State shall be considered an act of the former State under international law if the organ is acting in the exercise of elements of the governmental authority of the State at whose disposal it is placed.Footnote 242

In Part III above, we discussed the requirements of this rule, its likely use in practice, and certain doubts as to whether it would really operate as intended in conflictual scenarios. But for present purposes, those questions can be left aside. Whether the conduct of the seconded unit is attributed to the receiving state—as set out in the rule—or not, the entitlement of both or all collaborating states to take a countermeasure renders that conduct justifiable.

Third, as to joint action, the conduct is attributed to each of the states participating in the joint operation. Part III, above, explored the boundaries of joint responsibility of this kind under international law. For present purposes, the key point is that each of the states to whom the conduct is attributed possesses its own independent justification for its conduct. Each state's entitlement to take a countermeasure will provide a legal basis for the permissibility of its measure.

Fourth, there is the question of assistance by one state to another state in the taking of countermeasures. In Part III, above, we set out certain rules that regulate interstate assistance. For the purposes of this Part, the key point is that the assisting state's individual entitlement to take a countermeasure can justify its putatively wrongful acts of assistance. Aside from the limits imposed in ARSIWA Article 50 and the requirement of proportionality,Footnote 243 and absent specific rules to the contrary, states can take measures that affect any obligations owed to the targeted state. Any potential breach of obligations not to assist another state in committing wrongful acts would be justified by the collaborating state's own entitlement to take countermeasures: it can, as a countermeasure, choose to disregard these particular obligations. In a less doctrinal sense, this conclusion also follows from the collaborating state's own entitlement to respond to the targeted state's breach by taking a countermeasure of the kind taken by the assisted state. To spell that out, if the collaborating state could have lawfully undertaken that conduct, and it could lawfully have undertaken that conduct jointly with the other state, it must be the case that it can assist the other state too. This is a situation where permissibility of the lesser—assisting another state—is rightly implied by the greater—the collaborating state's independent entitlement to take a countermeasure.Footnote 244

Fifth, and finally, there is the question of collaboration at the request and on behalf of another state. Here, the terminology of “at the request and on behalf of” another state does not appear accurately capture the legal relationships at play. To reiterate, we have assumed for the purposes of this Part that the collaborating state has its own entitlement to take a countermeasure against the targeted state. In a colloquial sense, the state may be doing so at the request and on behalf of the other state, but legally what it is doing is exercising its own independent entitlement to take a countermeasure to uphold a collective interest.Footnote 245 Any such request is not doing any legal work.

V. Policy and Potential Developments

A. Recapitulation

Where states have an independent entitlement to take countermeasures, they can permissibly collaborate with an injured state (or with other states so entitled) in taking countermeasures. The scope of who is so entitled is thus the central question. As we set out in Part II, despite the increasing weight of practice, the lawfulness of countermeasures in the general interest remains a difficult question.

Where states are not entitled to take countermeasures, the permissibility of collaboration varies depending on the form that it takes. For the most part, in our analysis of the relevant rules, states that are not entitled to take a countermeasure cannot collaborate with others in doing so. Specifically, independent but coordinated measures, joint measures, and what we have called proxy countermeasures are impermissible. Two forms of collaboration entail different answers: secondment and assistance. First, as to secondment, any such conduct of the seconded unit is treated as conduct of the receiving state, a state whose own justification to act thus applies. As we note above, technically speaking this is not really collaboration at all as formally the seconding state is not acting in a legal sense, and we are not certain the rule on secondment would be accepted in a conflictual scenario. Second, as to assistance, this is the most practically relevant and difficult scenario to analyze. We show above that while it is plausible to think assistance to another state's countermeasure is permissible, certain essential features of the institution of countermeasures point in the opposite direction.

An initial question is whether these overarching conclusions cohere with other aspects of the legal order. For the most part, we think they do. As a starting point, distinctions that follow from the different positions of individually entitled/non-individually entitled states make sense. Where the collaboration breaches an obligation of the collaborating state toward the target state, and the conduct is attributable to it, then it will be liable for its own act. That a collaborating state acts impermissibly in this case, where it has no entitlement to take a countermeasure of its own, is consistent with the principle of independent responsibility and its extension to defenses: like responsibility, defenses, too, are individual. One may query, however, the varying legality of different forms of collaboration for a non-entitled state—in particular given that the lines between forms of participation will often be a matter of degree. The line between joint action and secondment, for example, may be blurred in practice, and the permissibility of the collaborating state's conduct will vary depending on which side of the line it falls. Similarly, the analysis above places immense pressure on the line between assistance and joint conduct. Where the non-entitled state's collaboration remains within the realm of assistance, it is possible to argue that it acts lawfully; where it becomes joint conduct, it does not.

B. Evaluation

This leads to the question of whether the current position is desirable. As a starting point, it is worth emphasizing the context of these developments: one of increased polarity in international affairs and geopolitical conflicts between powerful states, and between these and smaller states. These developments have manifested themselves in, among others, instances and threats of aggression against smaller neighbors, cyberoperations between great powers and against weaker states, and the continued use of economic pressure and coercion as an instrument of foreign policy. In all these instances, it is usually smaller states who stand to lose the most, without any obviously effective remedies. In many situations, too, there may be spillover or collateral effects on a broader number of states.

Inevitably the question turns to what can be done to stop these harms or threats, or at the very least minimize their impact. In the case of aggression, the victim state is entitled to react in self-defense and can call on its allies to act in collective self-defense. But it may not be always in the allies’ interest to participate in self-defensive action. In addition, cyberactivity tends to remain “below the threshold”—that is, it falls below the threshold of an armed attack as a trigger for the lawful exercise of self-defense by the victim and its allies,Footnote 246 and many forms of economic coercion are not usually understood to be prohibited.Footnote 247 While these are not as jarring as armed aggression, both malicious cyberoperations and economic coercion can have devastating financial and humanitarian consequences in the targeted state.Footnote 248 In all cases, due to material inequalities, the victims’ responses may be ineffective in inducing compliance by the wrongdoer, even when they involve the taking of measures that would be in breach of the rights of the target state. In the light of this context, states have begun to articulate and propose policies and mechanisms of joint response, so as to be able to collaborate with allies in more effectively counteracting these harms. It is thus no surprise that the strongest proponents of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures currently include Ukraine, the victim of aggression, and Estonia and Costa Rica, both of which have been victims of wide-ranging and damaging cyberoperations.Footnote 249

This context, as we mentioned earlier, has brought to the surface an old worry about the institution of countermeasures. This is that countermeasures, and perhaps unilateral enforcement more generally,Footnote 250 can entail a double disadvantage for smaller and developing states.Footnote 251 These are the states that, historically, were the primary victims of abuse of the institution of reprisals (the ancestor, as it were, of today's countermeasures) by powerful states. At the same time, these states are also less likely to be able to resort to countermeasures, and to do so effectively: material differences mean that these states are less likely to have the means, or to have the weight, to put sufficient pressure on larger and more economically powerful states to induce them to comply with their obligations. As Simma put it, international law enforcement reflects an “every-man-for-himself” paradigm which, while in keeping with state sovereignty and the principle of equality, “unveils, and even endorses, the crucial dependence of the bilateral enforceability of a State's international rights upon a favourable distribution of power.”Footnote 252

The cyber-context provides a distinctive manifestation of this general point. In its recent statement on the law applicable to cyberspace, Canada, for example, noted that collaboration in the taking of countermeasures can be provided “where the injured State does not possess all the technical or legal expertise to respond to internationally wrongful cyber acts.”Footnote 253 For Ireland, collaboration was particularly relevant in the cyber context given that some states “lack the technological capacity” to respond to cyberoperations alone.Footnote 254 This point is similarly emphasized in the literature in support of cooperation in the field of cyber-countermeasures.Footnote 255 Moreover, it is evident too in the discussions surrounding sanctions against Russia, and the desire to come to the assistance of Ukraine in achieving reparation: there are simply not sufficient Russian assets within Ukraine to meet the extent of the reparative obligation. Turning back to our collaborative scenarios, this all suggests a policy imperative to widen the set of situations where states can collaborate in the taking of countermeasures. Indeed, if the institution of countermeasures is the only equally available legal mechanism for the enforcement of international law, then why not facilitate it?Footnote 256

Allowing allied participation, especially by powerful states, in the countermeasures of other states is, however, not without objections and risks. First, the expansion in the number of potential participants may also increase the likelihood of escalation of disputes and tensions—something inherent in self-help measures of this kind. In the context of increasing polarization in international relations, it is not implausible that powerful states could use harm and injury caused to others as a pretext to target each other, as well as less-powerful allied states. Instead of the proxy wars of the 1970s and 1980s, this may result in proxy-conflict of lesser intensity (at least, lesser kinetic intensity)—but one that is still harmful and damaging to the parties involved, and to the international legal order. Such risks may be heightened in the cyber-context, where attribution of the initial wrong may be difficult, where hasty reactions are often needed, and where covertness and secrecy are key to effectiveness. But these risks are pervasive across all the measures that states might undertake in this context: after all, countermeasures are usually taken in the absence of third-party determination of the existence of the prior wrong.

Second, although pitched as a way to correct the power imbalances that hamper smaller and developing states’ ability to resort to countermeasures, the reality is that the central difficulty of the distribution of power among states is not quite so easily contained, nor so easily resolved. On the contrary, certain solutions may end up further entrenching countermeasures as an enforcement mechanism for the few. In this respect, reliance on powerful states to collaborate in the taking of countermeasures means that, once again, it is these states that will end up taking the measures or, at the very least, that countermeasures cannot be taken without them. Put differently, to allow collaboration in these circumstances may be another way to license powerful states to disregard their obligations, or to facilitate the disregarding of such obligations by others.

Third, there is a risk of a too-idealistic picture of the reasons for which, and situations in which, powerful states would be willing to collaborate with another state in taking a countermeasure. In some situations, these reasons may have less to do with a desire to ensure that the injured state's rights be upheld, and more to do with their own interests.Footnote 257 Writing in 2002 on what he called solidarity measures, Koskenniemi argued that given there is no suggestion of a duty to act—unlike in respect of a domestic police force—powerful states could create “a world order of their liking by choosing between violations they enforce and violations they do not, as well as deciding on the manner and intensity of their reaction.”Footnote 258 Koskenniemi's point applies with as much force to questions of collaboration.

C. Moving Forward on Collaboration

As states continue to formulate their positions on countermeasures and react to other states’ breaches, the following considerations become key. First, there is a terminological issue. In the coming period, the issue of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures is likely to become more central in the operational practice of states, in their articulation of legal positions, and in the scholarly literature. In this respect, greater precision in describing what exactly is being done and/or proposed would assist with both doctrinal analysis and policy evaluation. This includes distinguishing between different forms of collaboration, but also the key issue of whether the term “collective countermeasures,” ordinarily used to refer to countermeasures in response to the breach of erga omnes (partes) obligations, extends to situations where the collaborating state has no independent entitlement to take a countermeasure. As we set out above, we propose the use of the term proxy countermeasures to draw attention to the distinctive issues at play in that situation.

Second, the analysis above shows that a fundamental question for assessing the legality of state collaboration in the taking of countermeasures remains the question of the permissibility of countermeasures in the general interest. As we discussed in Part II, practice continues to increase, even though there remains a question of its representativity. The real issue, however, is opinio juris. To the extent that states desire a permissible regime for collaboration in the taking of countermeasures, the first step would be to make clear their understanding of the lawfulness of countermeasures in the general interest, and the conditions for their use.

Third, and relatedly, to the extent countermeasures in the general interest are permissible, the next question becomes one of determining exactly which obligations are owed erga omnes or erga omnes partes. This question has received comparatively less attention in the practice and scholarship,Footnote 259 but it is critical. In this respect, the core is generally accepted—aggression, genocide, slavery, and racial discrimination and self-determination of peoples.Footnote 260 But what of the principles of sovereignty and non-intervention?Footnote 261 These would traditionally be understood as entailing bilateral relations between states, but this understanding could come under pressure to the extent states wish to respond collectively to breaches of these obligations by other states, especially in the context of cyber-space. To widen the pool of multilateral obligations is to widen the situations in which states could permissibly collaborate in response to a breach (subject, of course, to the acceptance of countermeasures in the general interest).Footnote 262

Fourth, states may wish to clarify or develop the rules applicable to collaboration specifically, particularly insofar as a state without an entitlement to take countermeasures wishes to collaborate with an injured state. In this respect, we suggest that the idea of proxy countermeasures is not an appropriate approach. In addition to distinctive risks of abuse and escalation, this would also entail systemic incoherence in the legal order. It would grant to a state the right to take a countermeasure where it has no legal interest of its own in compliance with the underlying obligation, and would simply bypass the deep disagreement amongst states about the permissibility of countermeasures in the general interest and argument about which obligations are owed erga omnes. By contrast, it is in relation to assistance where there is room for confirming or developing the law. At present, as we argued earlier, it is not clear that assistance in these circumstances is permitted in relation to the rule in Article 16 ARSIWA. Moreover, we raised above certain considerations of principle that militate against the appropriateness of assistance to another state's countermeasure in these situations. But it is possible that the value of being able to come to another state's aid may ultimately outweigh those concerns.Footnote 263 Crucially, this assistance could not cross the line into joint responsibility such that the assisting state would then need its own justification, or breach a discrete primary obligation of the assisting state.

Fifth, and finally, the rules we discuss above apply by default—they are part of the general law of responsibility. By treaty, and subject to certain overriding constraints, states may set up particular regimes regulating their relationships, including by providing for distinctive rules multilateralizing responsibility or processes for third-state enforcement. If it is the case that the general rules do not provide workable solutions for a particular subfield—as is sometimes suggested for aspects of responsibility in cyberspace—it is open to states to vary those general rules by specific agreement.Footnote 264 This may include distinctive rules relating to collaboration in the taking of countermeasures.Footnote 265 In the long term, that might be a better solution than seeking to accommodate all of the needs of any particular subfield within the relatively stable core of general international law.

VI. Conclusion

The question of collaboration in the taking of countermeasures is bound up with the wider debate about the promises and risks of unilateral enforcement measures in a decentralized legal order. There is a compelling demand for effective enforcement mechanisms, and a compelling need to restrain their abuse. These considerations have accompanied the institution of countermeasures for decades and were central to the ILC's codification efforts in this area. They are now re-emerging in a different political context, and by reference to different features of the regulation of countermeasures in international law. The new political reality of international affairs may demand that the balance arrived at in the ARSIWA regime of countermeasures in 2001 be revisited, possibly in the direction of unilateral enforcement, including through collaboration. Writing on the tail-end of the Cold War, a period of similar polarity and fracture in international affairs, Jonathan Charney noted that “[t]hird State remedies may appear at first glance to serve only the desirable goal of promoting rules of international law, but they may also produce negative side effects.”Footnote 266 This warning remains as relevant today.

Footnotes

*

We would like to thank Talita Dias, Sarah Heathcote, Massimo Lando, and Priya Urs for helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article, and Liyu Feng, Jessica Sutton, and Jonas Wieschollek for their excellent research assistance. We are also grateful to participants in workshops in Oxford, Bristol, El Escorial, New Haven, and London for their suggestions, and to the editors and reviewers for their close engagement with the text.

References

1 See Helmut Philipp Aust, Complicity and the Law of State Responsibility (2011); Miles Jackson, Complicity in International Law (2015); Vladyslav Lanovoy, Complicity and Its Limits in the Law of International Responsibility (2016); Marina Aksenova, Complicity in International Criminal Law (2019); Principles of Shared Responsibility in International Law: An Appraisal of the State of the Art (André Nollkaemper & Ilias Plakokefalos eds., 2014); The Practice of Shared Responsibility in International Law (André Nollkaemper & Ilias Plakokefalos eds., 2017); Benjamin Nussberger, Interstate Assistance to the Use of Force (2023).

2 Sanctions do not necessarily involve conduct inconsistent with obligations owed to the target state. Indeed, broad categories of sanctions—such as certain economic measures and disruption to diplomatic relations—are likely to be consistent with international law. As such, cooperation in the taking of sanctions does not necessarily involve cooperation in the taking of countermeasures. On the difference between these concepts, see Tom Ruys, Sanctions, Retorsions and Countermeasures: Concepts and International Legal Framework, in Research Handbook on UN Sanctions and International Law (Larissa van den Herik ed., 2017).

3 See, e.g., James Politi, Washington Puts Forward G7 Plan to Confiscate $300bn in Russian Assets, Fin. Times (Dec. 28, 2023), at https://www.ft.com/content/d206baa8-3ec9-42f0-b103-2c098d0486d9.

4 Kersti Kaljulaid, National Position of Estonia (2019), Cyberlaw (May 29, 2019), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_Estonia_(2019) [hereinafter Estonia 2019].

5 Id.; New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, National Position of New Zealand (2020), Cyberlaw (Dec. 1 2020), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_New_Zealand_(2020).

6 National Position of Estonia (2021), Cyberlaw (Aug. 2021), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_Estonia_(2021) [hereinafter Estonia 2021]; Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Costa Rica, National Position of Costa Rica (2023), Cyberlaw, para. 15 (July 21, 2023), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_Costa_Rica_(2023).

7 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Costa Rica, supra note 6.

8 Regulation (EU) 2023/2675 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 November 2023 on the Protection of the Union and Its Member States from Economic Coercion by Third Countries, OJ L 2023/2675, at https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=OJ:L_202302675.

9 As also noted by Ashley Deeks, Defend Forward and Cyber Countermeasures, in The United States’ Defend Forward Cyber Strategy: A Comprehensive Legal Assessment (Jack Goldsmith ed., 2022).

10 ARSIWA with Commentaries, Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrong Acts, Art. 22 (2001), at https://legal.un.org/ilc/texts/instruments/english/commentaries/9_6_2001.pdf [hereinafter ARSIWA] (in the context of circumstances precluding wrongfulness, and in Chapter II of Part Three (on implementation of state responsibility)).

11 Id. Art. 49.

12 Id. Art. 49(2) and Commentary to Pt. 3, Ch. II, para. 4.

13 Id. Art. 49(3).

14 Id. Art. 51.

15 Countermeasures may not affect: the prohibition of force; fundamental human rights obligations; obligations of a humanitarian character prohibiting reprisals; and obligations under peremptory rules of international law. Id. Art. 50(1). In addition, the following obligations may not be the object of countermeasures: dispute settlement obligations existing between the injured and wrong-doing state; and obligations concerning the inviolability of diplomatic or consular agents, premises, archives, and documents Id. Art. 50(2).

16 Id. Art. 52(2).

17 Id. Art. 52(1)(b). ARSIWA also includes provisions on the suspension of countermeasures, and their termination. See id. Arts. 52(3), 53.

18 See Section II.A.

19 ILX, Report on the Work of its Forty-Eighth Session, para. 42, UN Doc. A/C.6/51/SR.36 (Nov. 8, 1996).

20 See, for example, the Inter-American Juridical Committee's list of fourteen instances of Western intervention in Latin America from the independence of the Latin American republics in the early nineteenth century and through the early part of the twentieth century. Inter-American Juridical Committee, Contribution of the American Continent to the Principles of International Law that Govern the Responsibility of the State, Opinion Prepared in Accordance with Resolution CIV of the Tenth Inter-American Conference, Resolution VI of the Third Meeting and Resolution XII of the Fourth Meeting of the Inter-American Council of Jurists, at 3–5 (1962).

21 General Assembly, Summary Record of the 25th Meeting, para. 40, UN Doc. A/C.6/47/SR.25 (Nov. 2, 1992).

22 See, e.g., United Kingdom: State Responsibility: Comments and Observations Received by Governments, UN Doc. A/CN.4/488 and Add.1-3 (Mar.–July 1998); United States: State Responsibility: Comments and Observations Received by Governments, at 122, UN Doc. A/CN.4/488 (Mar.–July 1998); Germany: State Responsibility: Comments and Observations Received by Governments, at 121, UN Doc. A/CN.4/488 (Mar.–July 1998). Note that Germany seemed to change its position later: ILC, Report on the Work of its Fifty-Second Session, at 10, para. 55, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.14 (Oct. 23, 2000). See, in the literature, Linos-Alexandre Sicilianos, La codification des contre-mesures par la Commission du droit international, 38 RBDI 447, 479 (2005).

23 Expressly referring to ARSIWA before international courts and tribunals. See, e.g., Application of the Interim Accord of 13 September 1995 (Maced. v. Greece), Counter-Memorial of Greece, 196–203 (Int'l Ct. Just. Jan. 19, 2010). In legal positions on international law in cyberspace, see, e.g., Canada, International Law Applicable in Cyberspace, Gov't of Canada, paras. 34–37, nn. 23–24 (Apr. 22, 2022), at https://www.international.gc.ca/world-monde/issues_development-enjeux_developpement/peace_security-paix_securite/cyberspace_law-cyberespace_droit.aspx?lang=eng; Costa Rica's Position on the Application of International Law in Cyberspace, paras. 14–16, nn. 19–26 (2023), at https://docs-library.unoda.org/Open-Ended_Working_Group_on_Information_and_Communication_Technologies_-_(2021)/Costa_Rica_-_Position_Paper_-_International_Law_in_Cyberspace.pdf.

24 See, e.g., U.S. Dep't of State Press Release, U.S. Countermeasures in Response to Russia's Violations of the New START Treaty (June 1, 2023), at https://www.state.gov/u-s-countermeasures-in-response-to-russias-violations-of-the-new-start-treaty.

25 Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros Project (Hung. v. Slovk.), Merits, 1997 ICJ Rep. 7 (Sept. 25); Archer Daniels Midland Company and Tate & Lyle Ingredients Americas, Inc. v. United Mexican States, ICSID Case No. ARB (AF)/04/5 (Nov. 21, 2007); Corn Products International, Inc. v. United Mexican States, ICSID Case No. ARB (AF)/04/1 (Jan. 15, 2008); Application of the Interim Accord of 13 September 1995, supra note 23, at 120–22.

26 Other than Brazil, most legal positions have endorsed the rules included in ARSIWA (with the exception of the procedural requirements, which have been called into question either in general, or in their application to cyberspace, by some states). For the relevant parts of these legal positions, see Countermeasures, Cyberlaw, at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/Countermeasures.

27 States have invoked countermeasures to support the permissibility of their conduct. See Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros Project, supra note 25, para. 69; Archer Daniels Midland Company, supra note 25, para. 124; Corn Products International, supra note 25, at 150–51; Application of the Interim Accord of 13 September 1995, supra note 23, at 120–21; Appeal Relating to the Jurisdiction of the ICAO Council Under Article 84 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation (Bahr., Egypt, Saudi Arabia and U.A.E. v. Qatar), Memorial of the Kingdom of Bahrain, the Arab Republic of Egypt, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, at 53 (Int'l Ct. Just. Dec. 27, 2018). These states had previously made a similar statement in the dispute before the International Civil Aviation Organization. In re Application of the State of Qatar Relating to the Disagreement Arising Under the Convention on International Civil Aviation, Preliminary Objections of the Arab Republic of Egypt, the Kingdom of Bahrain, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, at 14, (Mar. 19, 2018) (included as Annex 24, Vol. III, at 612, of the Memorial presented before the International Court of Justice). States in the UNGA Sixth Committee also overwhelmingly endorsed this view during the ILC work on ARSIWA. For references, see Federica Paddeu, Justification and Excuse in International Law: Concept and Theory of General Defences 253–55 (2018).

28 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Chapter V of Pt. One, para. 2.

29 Id. Art. 49, para. 2. This is one of the key differences between countermeasures and the suspension of treaty obligations under Article 60 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties: Commentary to Chapter II of Part Three, ARSIWA, paragraph 4. While the two are often difficult to distinguish in practice, conceptually and legally, the two are distinct. Much has been written on the comparison between these two rules. Most prominently, see generally: Bruno Simma & Christian J. Tams, Article 60 (1969), in The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties: A Commentary 1351 (Olivier Corten & Pierre Klein eds., 2011); Bruno Simma & Christian J. Tams, Reacting Against Treaty Breaches, in The Oxford Guide to Treaties (Duncan Hollis ed., 2020); Maria Xiouri, The Breach of a Treaty: State Responses in International Law (2021).

30 This is different from the concept of a substantive prima facie wrong. For a discussion, see John Gardner, In Defence of Defences, in John Gardner, Offences and Defences: Selected Essays in the Philosophy of Criminal Law (2007).

31 Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua (Nicar. v. U.S.), Merits, 1986 ICJ Rep. 14, para. 226 (June 27).

32 See, e.g., Denis Alland, The Definition of Countermeasures, in The Law of International Responsibility (James Crawford, Alain Pellet, Simon Olleson & Kate Parlett eds., 2010); Patricia Tarre Moser, Non-recognition of State Immunity as a Judicial Countermeasure to Jus Cogens Violations: The Human Rights Answer to the ICJ Decision on the Ferrini Case, 4 Göttingen J. Int'l L. 809, 816 (2012); Paul Ducheine & Peter Pijpers, The Missing Component in Deterrence Theory: The Legal Framework, in Netherlands Annual Review of Military Studies: Deterrence in the 21st Century – Insights from Theory and Practice (Frans Osinga & Tim Sweijs eds., 2020); Henning Lahmann, Unilateral Remedies to Cyber Operations: Self-Defence, Countermeasures, Necessity, and the Question of Attribution 113 (2020); Gleider I. Hernández, International Law 353 (2d ed. 2022).

33 Douglas N. Husak, Justifications and the Criminal Liability of Accessories, 80 J. Crim L. & Criminology 491, 495 (1989–1990); Joshua Dressler, New Thoughts About the Concept of Justification in the Criminal Law: A Critique of Fletcher's Thinking and Rethinking, 32 UCLA L. Rev. 61, 72 (1984–1985). In international law, see Paddeu, supra note 27, at 273–76.

34 Luís Duarte d'Almeida, Defences in the Law of State Responsibility: A View from Jurisprudence, in Exceptions in International Law (Lorand Bartels & Federica Paddeu eds., 2020).

35 Hakimi, Monica, Unfriendly Unilateralism, 55 Harvard Int'l L.J. 105, 115 (2014)Google Scholar.

36 On the bilateral or multilateral character of obligations much has been written. See, most prominently, Crawford, James, Multilateral Rights and Obligations in International Law, 319 Recueil des Cours 325 (2006)Google Scholar; Christian Tams, Enforcing Obligations Erga Omnes in International Law 117–57 (2005).

37 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Art. 42(a).

38 Id. Art. 42(b)(i). The category of “specially affected states” is somewhat elusive. According to the ILC's Commentary, a state is specially affected when it is “affected by the breach in a way which distinguishes it from the generality of other States to which the obligation is owed.” This will “have to be assessed on a case-by-case basis, having regard to the object and purpose of the primary obligation breached and the facts of each case.” Id., Commentary to Art. 42, para. 12.

39 Id. Art. 42(b)(ii).

40 Id., Commentary to Art. 42, para. 3.

41 For an overview of the economic sanctions adopted in 2022, see Christine Abely, The Russia Sanctions: The Economic Response to Russia's Invasion of Ukraine (2023). Other sanctions have been adopted in addition to these ones, including flight bans. See, e.g., United Kingdom Government, UK Sanctions Following Russia's Invasion of Ukraine (May 13, 2022), at https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/uk-sanctions-following-russias-invasion-of-ukraine; The Council of the European Union and the European Council, EU Restrictive Measures Against Russia Over Ukraine (Jan. 8, 2024), at https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/policies/sanctions/restrictive-measures-against-russia-over-ukraine; U.S. Dep't of State, United with Ukraine (Oct. 21, 2022), at https://www.state.gov/united-with-ukraine/#sanctions.

42 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Art. 48. The standing of states other than an injured state to invoke responsibility has been endorsed, at least in the context of obligations erga omnes partes, by the ICJ in its preliminary objections decisions in: Questions Relating to the Obligation to Prosecute or Extradite (Belg. v. Sen.), Preliminary Objections, 2012 ICJ Rep. 422 (July 20); Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Gam. v. Myan.), Preliminary Objections, 2022 ICJ Rep. 477 (July 22).

43 A note on our use of terminology may be useful. Countermeasures taken in the event of violations of erga omnes (partes) obligations have received different labels: “collective countermeasures” (e.g., Linos-Alexandre Sicilianos, Countermeasures in Response to Grave Violations of Obligations Owed to the International Community as a Whole, in The Law of International Responsibility (James Crawford, Alain Pellet, Simon Olleson & Kate Parlett eds., 2010)); “third-party countermeasures” (e.g., Martin Dawidowicz, Third-Party Countermeasures in International Law (2017)); “countermeasures of general interest” (e.g., Denis Alland, Countermeasures of General Interest, 13 Eur. J. Int'l L. 1221 (2002)); and, although less commonly, “solidarity [counter]measures” (e.g., Martti Koskenniemi, Solidarity Measures: State Responsibility as a New International Order?, 72 Brit. Y.B. Int'l L. 337 (2002)). The ILC Commentary to Article 54 of ARSIWA refers to these as “countermeasures in the general or collective interest.” ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 54, para. 6. The term “third-party countermeasures” does not, we think, adequately capture the situation of states other than an injured state in the case of violation of erga omnes (partes) obligations. These states, while not injured by the breach, nevertheless have a legal interest in the performance of the obligation in question and so they are not, strictly speaking, “third-parties” or “third states.” The term “collective countermeasures,” in turn, has recently been used in a much wider sense in the cyber context: to refer to, or to include, countermeasures taken by a state on behalf of another state, at their request, in any circumstances—that is, regardless of the erga omnes (partes) character of the obligation breached by the wrong-doing state, a question to which we will return in Section III.E infra. For these reasons, and to avoid confusion, we will use the term “countermeasures in the general interest” in this Article to refer to this concept, as this term adequately captures the character of the interests affected by the breach of international law which triggers the taking of countermeasures.

44 For a summary of the debates, see ILC, Report of the Commission on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, UN Doc. A/55/10 (2000); ILC, Report of the Commission on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, UN Doc. A/56/10 + Corr.1 (2001).

45 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 54, para. 7.

46 Id., para. 6.

47 Id., Commentary to Pt. 3, Ch. II, para. 8.

48 Id., Commentary to Art. 54, para. 3.

49 Id., para. 6.

50 Out of a total of ninety-seven who spoke on the topic of countermeasures (either singly, or through regional groups), in both 2000 and 2001.

51 Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden, represented by Finland, noted that: “The most ambitious aspect of the chapter was the provision on collective countermeasures contained in article 54. The Nordic delegations commended the efforts to establish a public law enforcement system in the case of a breach of obligations owed to the international community as a whole.” ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, at 5, para. 30, UN Doc. A/C.6/56/SR.11 (Nov. 9, 2001). Mongolia “regretted, however, that the final draft omitted the provision in the former draft article 54 for a non-injured State to take countermeasures. As a small State, Mongolia believed that the option of collective action, in the form of either sanctions or countermeasures, should have been preserved in the draft articles.” ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, at 9, para. 56, UN Doc. A/C.6/56/SR.14 (Nov. 13, 2001).

52 See Algeria: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 5, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.18 (2000); Botswana: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 63, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.15 (2000); Brazil: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 65, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.18 (2000); China: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, paras. 40–41, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.14 (2000); Cuba: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, paras. 59, 61, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.18 (2000); Jordan: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 17, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.18 (2000); Iran: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 17, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.15 (2000); Israel: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 25, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.15 (2000); Japan: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 67, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.14 (2000); Libya: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 52, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.22 (2000); Mexico: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, paras. 35–36, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.20 (2000); Poland: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 48, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.18 (2000); Russia: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 51, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.18 (2000).

53 See Austria: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, paras. 76–79, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.17 (2000); Cameroon: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, paras. 63–64, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.24 (2000); France: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, para. 72, UN Doc. A/C.6/56/SR.11 (2001) (note that France would subsequently oppose this development, as noted in Section 2.A.2.b); Germany: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 54, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.14 (2000); Italy: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 28, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.16 (2000); New Zealand: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, para. 46, UN Doc. A/C.6/56/SR.11 (2001); Pakistan: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, para. 76, UN Doc. A/C.6/56/SR.11 (2001); Singapore: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, para. 55, UN Doc. A/C.6/56/SR.12 (2001); Slovenia: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 27, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.18 (2000); United Kingdom: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 31, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.14 (2000).

54 These states commented generally, and usually positively, on the regime of countermeasures proposed by the ILC, but did not address draft Article 54 (2000) or countermeasures in the general interest explicitly. See, e.g., Argentina: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 66, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.15 (2000); Chile: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 48, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.17 (2000); Costa Rica: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 65, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.17 (2000); Sierra Leone: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 51, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.16 (2000); Spain: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 13, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.16 (2000).

55 See James Crawford, Fourth Report on State Responsibility, Pt. 1, UN Doc. A/CN.4/517 and Add.1 (2001).

56 See, e.g., Tams, supra note 36, at 200.

57 Id. at 230–31; Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 240–50; Elena Katselli Proukaki, The Problem of Enforcement in International Law 109–201 (2011). A similar conclusion (based on a much shorter analysis of state practice) is provided in: Sicilianos, supra note 43, at 1146–48.

58 Tams, supra note 36, at 246–47; Proukaki, supra note 57, at 201–02; Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 249–50.

59 Tams, supra note 36, at 246–47; Proukaki, supra note 57, at 201–02; Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 282–83. See also Oona A. Hathaway, Maggie Mills & Thomas Poston, War Reparations: The Case for Countermeasures, 76 Stanford L. Rev. __ (forthcoming 2024), available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=4548945 (at draft page 54).

60 E.g., Focarelli, Carlo, International Law and Third-Party Countermeasures in the Age of Global Instant Communication, 29 Questions Int'l L. – Zoom in 17 (2016)Google Scholar; Alexandra Hofer, Unilateral Sanctions as a Challenge to the Law of State Responsibility, in Research Handbook on Unilateral and Extraterritorial Sanctions (Charlotte Beaucillon ed., 2021); Talita Dias, Countermeasures in Cyber-Space, Chatham House, Sec. 3(II) (forthcoming 2024) (on file with authors).

61 For a comprehensive review of practice up to 2017, see Dawidowicz, supra note 43, Ch. 4. For a review of additional since then practice, see Dias, supra note 60, Sec 3(II).

62 Against Zimbabwe (2002), Belarus (2004), Libya (2011), Syria (2011), and Russia (2014). Id. at 203–38.

63 On which, see Dapo Akande, Payam Akhavan & Eirik Bjorge, Economic Sanctions, International Law, and Crimes Against Humanity: Venezuela's ICC Referral, 115 AJIL 493 (2021); Hofer, supra note 60, at 193 et seq.

64 For an overview of the sanctions adopted in 2022, see Abely, supra note 41. These have been maintained, and in some instances expanded, throughout 2023.

65 ILC, Draft Conclusions on Identification of Customary International Law with Commentaries, Y.B. Int'l L. Comm'n, Vol. II(2), at 26, Conclusion 8 (2018). This requirement is also very well established in the decisions of the ICJ. Most prominently, see North Sea Continental Shelf Cases (Ger. v. Den.; Ger. v. Neth.), Merits, 1969 ICJ Rep. 3 (Feb. 20); Jurisdictional Immunities of the State (Ger. v. It.: Greece intervening), Merits, 2012 ICJ Rep. 99 (Feb. 3); Legal Consequences of the Separation of the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965, Advisory Opinion, 2019 ICJ Rep. 95 (Feb. 25); MacDonald, R.St.J., The Nicaragua Case: New Answers to Old Questions?, 24 Can. Y.B. Int'l L. 127, para. 207 (1986)Google Scholar.

66 Focarelli, supra note 60.

67 Omer Yousif Elagab, The Legality of Non-forcible Counter-Measures in International Law 214 (1988); James Crawford, Third Report on State Responsibility, Pt. 3, UN Doc. A/CN.4/507 and Add.1-4 (2000).

68 Tams, supra note 36, 209; Hathaway, Mills & Poston, supra note 59.

69 Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 113, n. 7.

70 Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua, supra note 31, at 14. The sanctions adopted by the United States against Nicaragua at issue in that case are “the most common, and potentially most severe, economic actions that can be employed against a state” (emphasis added). Maziar Jamnejad & Michael Wood, The Principle of Non-intervention, 22 Leiden J. Int'l L. 345, 370 (2009). Asset freezing is far less severe than the U.S. sanctions, so it stands to reason that they would not constitute coercive interference.

71 Ingrid (Wuerth) Brunk, Central Bank Immunity, Sanctions, and Sovereign Wealth Funds, 91 George Washington L. Rev. 1616, 1628 (2023).

72 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, Art. XXI, Oct. 30, 1947, 61 Stat. A-11, 55 UNTS 194.

73 See, e.g., the United States’ suspension of the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe. Overheid Treaty Database (2023), Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe – Parties with Reservations, Declarations and Objections, at https://treatydatabase.overheid.nl/en/Treaty/Details/004285_b.

74 Hofer, supra note 60, at 193.

75 See, e.g., the sanctions against Nigeria in 1995. Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 162–68.

76 As acknowledged by id. at 243.

77 See, e.g., República de Panamá, Comisión Nacional contra el Blanqueo de Capitales, Financiamiento del Terrorism y Financiamiento de la Proliferación de Armas de Destrucción Masiva, Resolución No. 02-018, (Mar. 27, 2018), available at https://web.archive.org/web/20190405215206/https://www.mef.gob.pa/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Comunicado-002-2018.pdf; Georgina Zerega, México congela cuentas de 19 empresas y personas que vendieron alimentos al Gobierno de Maduro, EL PAÍS (July 18, 2019), at https://elpais.com/internacional/2019/07/18/america/1563464146_218094.html#.

78 Tams, supra note 36, at 238–39.

79 Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 252–54.

80 ILC, Draft Conclusions on Identification of Customary International Law with Commentaries, supra note 65, Commentary to Conclusion 3, para. 7.

81 Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua, supra note 31, para. 266.

82 ILC, Draft Conclusions on Identification of Customary International Law with Commentaries, supra note 65, Conclusion 6, and commentary thereto, para. 3.

83 See Section II.A.2.a supra.

84 Id.

85 Id.

86 Canada: “has considered the concept of ‘collective cyber countermeasures’ but does not, to date, see sufficient State practice or opinio juris to conclude that these are permitted under international law.” National Position of Canada (2022), Cyberlaw, para. 37 (Apr. 2022), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_Canada_(2022) [hereinafter Canada 2022]

87 UNGA, Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, para. 74, UN Doc. A/C.6/71/SR.9 (2016). China also suggested that ARSIWA Article 54 should be deleted from a future treaty on state responsibility. UNGA, Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, para. 87, UN Doc. A/C.6/62/SR.12 (2007).

88 France: “Under international law, such counter-measures must be taken by France in its capacity as victim. Collective counter-measures are not authorised, which rules out the possibility of France taking such measures in response to an infringement of another State's rights.” French Ministry of Defence, National Position of France (2019), Cyberlaw (Sept. 9, 2019), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_France_(2019).

89 Costa Rica: “[C]ountermeasures may be taken by the injured State, i.e., the State specifically affected by the breach, as well as third States in response to violations of obligations of an erga omnes nature or upon request by the injured State.” Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Costa Rica, supra note 6, para. 15.

90 Estonia: “Estonia is furthering the position that states which are not directly injured may apply countermeasures to support the state directly affected by the malicious cyber operation … states may respond collectively to unlawful cyber operations where diplomatic action is insufficient, but no lawful recourse to use of force exists.” Estonia 2019, supra note 4; Estonia: “[I]njured states have the right to take measures such as retorsions, countermeasures or, in case of an armed attack, the right to self-defence. These measures can be either individual or collective.” Estonia 2021, supra note 6.

91 Ireland: “On the question of third party or collective countermeasures, Ireland considers that since the adoption of ARSIWA in 2001, state practice indicates that such measures are permissible in limited circumstances, in particular in the context of violations of peremptory norms.” Irish Department of Foreign Affairs, National Position of Ireland (2023), Cyberlaw, para. 26 (July 6, 2023), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_Ireland_(2023).

92 ILC, Peremptory Norms of General International Law (Jus Cogens): Comments and Observations Received from Governments, at 86, UN Doc. A/CN.4/748 (2022) (Italy).

93 Poland: “[T]he evolution of customary international law over the last two decades provides grounds for recognising that a state may take countermeasures in pursuit of general interest as well. In particular, the possibility of taking such measures materialise itself in response to states’ violations of peremptory norms, such as the prohibition of aggression.” Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Poland, The Republic of Poland's Position on the Application of International Law in Cyberspace (2002), Cyberlaw, para. II(9), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/Countermeasures#Poland_(2022).

94 New Zealand: “Given the collective interest in the observance of international law in cyberspace, and the potential asymmetry between malicious and victim states, New Zealand is open to the proposition that victim states, in limited circumstances, may request assistance from other states in applying proportionate countermeasures to induce compliance by the state acting in breach of international law. In those circumstances, collective countermeasures would be subject to the same limitations set out above.” New Zealand, supra note 5.

95 UNGA, Responsibility of States for internationally wrongful acts, para. 30, UN Doc. A/C.6/77/SR.14 (2022).

96 Denmark: “The question of collective countermeasures does not seem to have been fully settled in state practice and needs careful consideration.” Denmark's Position Paper on the Application of International Law in Cyberspace, Cyberlaw, at 8–9 (July 4, 2023), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/Countermeasures#Denmark_(2023).

97 ILC, Peremptory Norms of General International Law (Jus Cogens): Comments and Observations Received from Governments, at 87–88, UN Doc. A/CN.4/748 (2022) (Netherlands).

98 UNGA, Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, para. 37, UN Doc. A/C.6/74/SR.13 (2019).

99 The United Kingdom: “It is open to States to consider how the international law framework accommodates, or could accommodate, calls by an injured State for assistance in responding collectively.” National Position of the United Kingdom (2022), Cyberlaw (May 19, 2022), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_the_United_Kingdom_(2022).

100 Lauren Dubois & Sam Fleming, The Legal Case for Seizing Russia's Assets, Fin. Times (Dec. 20, 2023), at https://www.ft.com/content/adb09fd6-e5f7-4099-9994-806814b4c9b4.

101 Id.

102 We leave aside whether this argument is convincing.

103 Fernando Lusa Bordin, A Glass Half Full: The Character, Function and Value of the Two-Element Approach to Identifying Customary International Law, 21 Int'l Cmty. L. Rev. 283, 297 (2019).

104 Id. at 297–301.

106 See, e.g., Natasha Bertrand, US Explores Options to Seize Russian Assets and Funnel Them to Ukraine, CNN (Jan. 12, 2024), at https://edition.cnn.com/2024/01/12/politics/us-proposal-russian-assets-ukraine/index.html.

107 Canada 2022, supra note 87, para. 37.

108 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Costa Rica, supra note 6.

109 Estonia 2019, supra note 4.

110 Regulation (EU) 2023/2675 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 November 2023 on the Protection of the Union and its Member States from Economic Coercion by Third Countries, supra note 8, pmbl. paras. 13–14.

111 See, e.g., Michael N. Schmitt & Sean Watts, Collective Cyber Countermeasures?, 12 Harv. Nat'l Sec. J. 373, 397–410 (2021).

112 Koskenniemi, supra note 43, at 345.

113 This was perceived as necessary to ensure compliance with the requirements and conditions of these measures, in particular the requirement of proportionality. ILC, Draft Articles Provisionally Adopted by the Drafting Committee on Second Reading, draft Art. 54(3), UN Doc. A/CN.4/L.600 (2000); ILC, Summary Records of the 2262d Meeting, Y.B. Int'l L. Comm'n, Vol. I, para. 90 (2000).

114 Theodore Dwight Woolsey, Introduction to the Study of International Law 20 (5th ed. 1886); Ellery Cory Stowell, Intervention in International Law 46–47 (1921).

115 Akehurst, Michael, Reprisals by Third States, 44 Brit. Y.B. Int'l L. 1 (1970)Google Scholar; Hutchinson, D.N., Solidarity and Breaches of Multilateral Treaties, 59 Brit. Y.B. Int'l L. 151 (1989)Google Scholar.

116 Elisabeth Zoller, Peacetime Unilateral Remedies: An Analysis of Countermeasures 114–15 (1988).

117 For instance, a state could coerce another state to take a countermeasure against a targeted state (ARSIWA Art. 18), or it could direct and control another's taking of a countermeasure (ARSIWA Art. 17). These cases do not involve collaboration, as both coercion and direction and control concern conduct by one state that forces the will of another state. ARWISA, supra note 10.

118 Id., Commentary to Pt. 1, Ch. IV, paras. 1, 5.

119 Id., Commentary to Art. 6, para. 3. For further examples, see James Crawford, State Responsibility: The General Part 133 (2013).

120 Id. Art. 6.

121 Id., Commentary to Art. 6, para. 2.

122 Crawford, supra note 119, 133.

123 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 6, para. 8.

124 Drozd and Janousek v. France and Spain, Ser. A, No. 240, paras. 96, 110 (Eur. Ct. Hum. Rts. 1992).

125 It may be the case that the conduct of other state agents/organs will entail aid and assistance to the injured state (including the seconded unit). The analysis under Section III.D infra would thus apply.

126 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 6, para. 5.

127 For discussion of collaboration between the United States and Israel in relation to the deployment of Stuxnet malware, see Berenice Boutin, Shared Responsibility for Cyber Operations, 113 AJIL Unbound 197, 199 (2019).

128 See, e.g., Efthymios Papastavridis, Piracy, in The Practice of Shared Responsibility in International Law (André Nollkaemper & Ilias Plakokefalos eds., 2017).

129 See further Christian Dominicé, Attribution of Conduct to Multiple States and the Implication of a State in the Act of Another State, in The Law of International Responsibility (James Crawford, Alain Pellet, Simon Olleson & Kate Parlett eds., 2010); Pierre d'Argent, Reparation, Cessation, Assurances and Guarantees of Non-repetition, in Principles of Shared Responsibility in International Law, supra note 1; Samantha Besson, La pluralité d’États responsables: Vers une solidarité internationale, 1 SRIEL 7 (2007).

130 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Pt. 1, para. 2; Commentary to Art. 47, para. 2.

131 Stefan A. G. Talmon, A Plurality of Responsible Actors: International Responsibility for Acts of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, in The Iraq War and International Law (Phil Shiner & Andrew Williams eds., 2008).

132 Id.; André Nollkaemper et al., Guiding Principles on Shared Responsibility in International Law, 31 Eur. J. Int'l L. 15, Commentary to Principle 3, para. 5 (2020).

133 Talmon, supra note 131; Aust, supra note 1, at 158–59; Francesco Messineo, Attribution of Conduct, in Principles of Shared Responsibility in International Law, supra note 1, at 72–73; Nollkaemper et al., supra note 133, Commentary to Principle 3, para. 5 (2020).

134 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 47, para. 2.

135 See, e.g., Besson, supra note 129; André Nollkaemper & Dov Jacobs, Shared Responsibility in International Law: A Conceptual Framework, 34 Mich. J. Int'l L. 359, 363 (2013).

136 See further d'Argent, supra note 129, at 244 (doubting analogies to domestic conceptions of joint responsibility).

137 Nollkaemper & Jacobs, supra note 135, at 386.

138 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Pt. 1, Ch. IV, paras. 1, 5.

139 Id., Commentary to Art. 7, para. 8; d'Argent, supra note 129, at 242.

140 See e.g., d'Argent, supra note 129, at 244–48; Crawford, supra note 119, at 335; Aust, supra note 1, at 219–20.

141 Lanovoy, supra note 1, at 149–50.

142 Section III.E infra asks whether the injured state can vest the in the collaborating state its justification.

143 Canada 2022, supra note 86, para. 37.

144 Michael N. Schmitt, Tallinn Manual 2.0 on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Operations 132, para. 9 (2017).

145 See further Aust, supra note 1; Jackson, supra note 1; Lanovoy, supra note 1.

146 See Schmitt, supra note 144, Commentary on Rule 24, para. 9 (where it is noted, without more, that some participants “took the position that the lawfulness of [measures of facilitation] depends on whether they would violate a legal obligation owed to the State against which the countermeasure is directed by the State providing assistance”).

147 Even though the aid here is not material/physical, it is still straightforwardly a form of assistance. On the boundaries of the rule in Article 16, see Jackson, Miles, State Instigation in International Law: A General Principle Transposed, 30 Eur. J. Int'l L. 391 (2019)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

148 To be clear, this breach would arise at the moment of the prohibited sharing—it does not turn on whether the assisted state subsequently takes the countermeasure.

149 Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosn. & Herz. v. Serb. and Montenegro), Merits, 2007 ICJ Rep. 43 (Feb. 26).

150 See further Giorgio Gaja, Interpreting Articles Adopted by the International Law Commission, 85 Brit. Y.B. Int'l L. 10 (2015). For a discussion of the fault element, see: Harriet Moynihan, Aiding and Assisting: Challenges in Armed Conflict and Counterterrorism (2016); Marko Milanović, Intelligence Sharing in Multinational Military Operations and Complicity Under International Law, 97 Int'l L. Stud. 1269 (2021).

151 It may be noted that this requirement may raise particular complications in the cyber context, where covertness and secrecy are said to be key to effectiveness.

152 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 16, para. 5.

153 For criticism, see, e.g., Lanovoy, supra note 1, at 103–06.

154 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 16, para. 10.

155 See id., Commentary on Rule 24, para. 9; Schmitt, supra note 144.

156 According to Koskenniemi, quoted earlier, the ILC worked on the assumption that there was no right to assist the injured state in taking countermeasures, Koskenniemi, supra note 43, at 345.

157 Husak, supra note 33, at 492.

158 See, e.g., Hans-Ludwig Schreiber, Problems of Justification and Excuse in the Setting of Accessorial Conduct, 1986 BYU L. Rev. 611 (1986); Giorgio Marinucci & Emilio Dolcini, Manuale Di Diritto Penale: Parte Generale 199 (Giuffrè ed., 2d ed. 2006); Finbarr McAuley, The Theory of Justification and Excuse: Some Italian Lessons, 35 Am. J. Comp. L. 359, 375 et seq. (1987); John C. Smith, Justification and Excuse in the Criminal Law 27–28 (1989).

159 On this, see: Dietrich, Joachim, Accessorial Liability in the Law of Tort, 31 Legal Stud. 231 (2010)Google Scholar; Paul S. Davies, Defences and Third Parties: Justifying Participation, in Defences in Tort 107 (Andrew Dyson, James Goudkamp & Frederick Wilmot-Smith eds., 2015).

160 Paddeu, Federica, Shared Non-responsibility in International Law? Defences and the Responsibility of Co-perpetrators and Accessories in the Guiding Principles, 31 Eur. J. Int'l L. 1263, 1268 (2020)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

161 Schmitt, supra note 144, Rule 18, at 100.

162 Paddeu, supra note 160, at 1268.

163 Husak, supra note 33, at 492.

164 Id. at 493. As set out below, Husak's own view is more nuanced than this.

165 Id.

166 Husak gives the following example for excuses: “[S]uppose that D1 attacks an innocent victim, and is acquitted on grounds of insanity. Surely D2, if sane, has no defense if he assists D1.” Id.

167 Robinson, Paul H., Criminal Law Defenses: A Systematic Analysis, 82 Col. L. Rev. 199, 279 (1982)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Husak, supra note 33, at 493–94. For discussion in the context of necessity, see Lahmann, Henning, The Plea of Necessity in Cyber Emergencies: Unresolved Doctrinal Questions, 92 Nordic J. Int'l L. 422 (2023)Google Scholar.

168 Husak, supra note 33, at 493–94; Kimberley Kessler Ferzan, Justification and Excuse, in The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Criminal Law 241–42 (John Deigh & David Dolinko eds., 2011).

169 See, e.g., Helmut Philipp Aust, Circumstances Precluding Wrongfulness, in Principles of Shared Responsibility in International Law, supra note 1; Paddeu, supra note 27, at 66–70. See also Nollkaemper et al., supra note 132, Commentary to Principle 5, para. 4.

170 See, e.g., Morocco: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Forty-Seventh Session, para. 60, UN Doc. A/C.6/50/SR.20 (1995); Uruguay: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Forty-Seventh Session, para. 22, UN Doc. A/C.6/50/SR.21 (1995); Mexico: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Forty-Seventh Session, para. 61, UN Doc. A/C.6/50/SR.21 (1995); Cameroon: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Forty-Seventh Session, para. 2, UN Doc. A/C.6/50/SR.24 (1995); Cuba: ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-First Session, para. 94, UN Doc. A/C.6/54/SR.28 (1999).

171 ILC, Report on the Work of Its Forty-Sixth Session, para. 2, UN Doc. A/C.6/49/SR.25 (1994).

172 Id., para. 26.

173 ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Second Session, para. 24, UN Doc. A/C.6/55/SR.14 (2000).

174 ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fiftieth Session, para. 93, UN Doc. A/C.6/53/SR.15 (1998).

175 ILC, Report on the Work of Its Fifty-Third Session, at 7, para. 40, UN Doc. A/C.6/56/SR.16 (Nov. 2, 2001).

176 National Position of Brazil (2021), Cyberlaw (Aug. 2021), at https://cyberlaw.ccdcoe.org/wiki/National_position_of_Brazil_(2021)#res.

177 Hakimi, supra note 35, at 115.

178 See, e.g., Alland, supra note 32, at 1127; Tarre Moser, supra note 32, at 816; Ducheine & Pijpers, supra note 32, at 487; Lahmann, supra note 32, at 113; Hernández, supra note 32, at 353.

179 See Section II.A supra.

180 This question has been debated at length by criminal law theorists. For an overview, see Dressler, supra note 33, at 68 n. 37.

181 Husak, supra note 33, at 495; Dressler, supra note 33, at 72. In international law, Paddeu, supra note 27, at 273–76.

182 Duarte d'Almeida, supra note 34, at 186.

183 For similar views, see Anne Peters, Does Kosovo Lie in the Lotus-Land of Freedom?, 24 Leiden J. Int'l L. 95 (2011). See also André de Hoogh, The Compelling Law of Jus Cogens and Exceptions to Peremptory Norms: To Derogate or Not to Derogate, That Is the Question!, in Exceptions in International Law, supra note 33, at 138–39.

184 Accordance with International Law of the Unilateral Declaration of Independence in Respect of Kosovo, Summary of the Advisory Opinion, 2010 ICJ Rep. 403 (July 22).

185 Id. (dec., Simma, J.), at 481, para. 10

186 Id. (dec., Simma, J.), at 481, paras. 9–10. For a different approach, see Peters, supra note 183, at 101–02.

187 The international legal order would have some difficulty appraising “non-wrongfulness” as a distinct deontic category—at least, in its current form. Federica Paddeu, Clarifying the Concept of Circumstances Precluding Wrongfulness (Justifications) in International Law, in Exceptions in International Law, supra note 33.

188 Husak, supra note 33, at 518.

189 For an overview, see Michael Ridge, Reasons for Action: Agent-Neutral vs Agent-Relative, in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archive (Edward N. Zalta & Uri Nodelman eds., 2023), at https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2023/entries/reasons-agent.

190 Larry Alexander, Kimberly Kessler Ferzan & Stephen J. Morse, Crime and Culpability: A Theory of Criminal Law 94 (2009).

191 Larry Alexander & Michael Moore, Deontological Ethics, in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Edward N. Zalta ed., 2016).

192 Saba Bazargan-Forward, Vesting Agent-Relative Permissions in a Proxy, 37 L. & Phil. 671, 672 (2018).

193 Ferzan, supra note 168, at 247–48. But these defenses are not, however, excuses: after all, as Ferzan notes, they involve permissions.

194 Alexander & Moore, supra note 191.

195 Husak, supra note 33, at 518.

196 Id.

197 Id. at 519.

198 Similarly: Michael N. Schmitt, Responding to Malicious or Hostile Actions under International Law (Lieber Institute White Paper, 2022), at https://lieber.westpoint.edu/white-paper-responding-malicious-hostile-actions-international-law.

199 Given we are dealing with countermeasures, specifically, we assume that what the injured state is requesting the collaborating state to do would be a breach of that state's international obligations toward the wrong-doing state. If the relevant conduct requested would not breach the collaborating state's obligations, then its conduct would not need to be justified at all. For example, if the injured state asked the collaborating state to suspend aid to the wrongdoer state: without the existence of a binding commitment to maintain aid, it is not unlawful for one state to withdraw aid from another. This may be unfriendly, and may be understood as a lawful act of retorsion, but it would not be a countermeasure.

200 Also highlighting the novelty of this position, Samuli Haataja, Cyber Operations and Collective Countermeasures Under International Law, 25 J. Conflict & Security L. 33, 47 (2020).

201 Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Costa Rica, supra note 6, para. 15 (emphasis added).

202 See, e.g., Schmitt & Watts, supra note 111, at 397–410; Haataja, supra note 200; Jeff Kosseff, Collective Countermeasures in Cyberspace, 10 N.D. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 18 (2020); Lahmann, supra note 31, at 138–39.

203 See similarly Isabella Brunner, 1998 – UNGA Resolution 53/70 “Developments in the Field of Information and Telecommunications in the Context of International Security” and Its Influence on the International Rule of Law in Cyberspace, 23 Austrian Rev. Int'l & Eur. L. Online 183, 198 (2020). There are earlier suggestions in the literature, but these pre-date either the full development of the concept of erga omnes obligations or its acceptance in international law: they tend to raise the argument in respect of serious or grave violations of fundamental rules, and so on. As a result, these are more likely to be early reflections on and elaboration of what eventually became the idea of countermeasures in the general interest, than they are of the idea presently under discission—of what we call “proxy countermeasures.” See, e.g., Akehurst, supra note 115; Hutchinson, supra note 115 (reflecting what may today be called erga omnes partes obligations). At any rate, in these discussions, the premise was the recognition by the legal order of an entitlement for said third states: not the idea that, absent such an entitlement, states could act as proxies for injured states.

204 On which, see Part II supra

205 Crawford, supra note 67, para. 400; see also Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 93–97.

206 Crawford, supra note 67, para. 400. For Crawford, the existing practice tended to support this requirement. Id., para. 401.

207 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 54, para. 5.

208 Dawidowicz, supra note 43, at 271.

209 François Delerue, Cyber-Operations and International Law 454–55 (2020).

210 The language used in this connection is, as we noted in Part II infra, rather vague and often aspirational.

211 Similarly, Akehurst, supra note 115, at 14–15.

212 Brunner, supra note 203, at 198.

213 Sicilianos, supra note 43, at 1133–34.

214 Hansard, HL Deb, Vol. 408, (Apr. 23, 1980), at https://hansard.parliament.uk/Lords/1980-04-23/debates/76f36613-28e9-49d1-98bb-c0398a1d715a/IranEecDecision. Australia and Japan also took measures in response, respectively a trade embargo and a decision to freeze all exports except food and medicine. See 80 Dep't State Bull. No. 2040, at 73 (July 1980), available at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=msu.31293008122321&seq=81.

215 Declaration by the Foreign Ministers of the Nine of 22 April 1980, endorsed by the European Council on 27 and 28 April, 13 Bull. Eur. Communities, 24, paras. 5–6, (1980), available at http://aei.pitt.edu/65381/1/BUL258.pdf.

216 Declaration by the Foreign Ministers of the Nine of 18 May 1980, 13 Bull. Eur. Communities, at 25, para. 3 (1980).

217 80 Dep't State Bull. No. 2039, at 497 (June 1980), available at https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=msu.31293008122313&seq=495; see also 80 Dep't State Bull. No. 2040, supra note 214, at 71–73.

218 Jochen A. Frowein, Reactions by Not Directly Affected States to Breaches of Public International Law, 248 Recueil des Cours 345, 417 (1994). See in relation to the legality of the (similar) measures taken by the United States, Oscar Schachter, Self-Help in International Law: US Action in the Iranian Hostages Crisis, 37 J. Int'l Aff. 231 (1984).

219 On this question, Gábor Kajtár & Gergő Barna Balázs, Beyond Tehran and Nairobi: Can Attacks Against Embassies Serve as a Basis for the Invocation of Self-Defence?, 32 Eur. J. Int'l L. 863 (2021); Tom Ruys, Can Attacks Against Embassies Serve as a Basis for the Invocation of Self-Defence? A Reply to Gábor Kajtár and Gergő Balázs, 32 Eur. J. Int'l L. 889 (2021).

220 The Nine stated, for example, that: “Since the hostages were first detained, the Nine, fully respecting the independence of Iran and the right of the Iranian people to determine their own future, have insisted that they must be released. The fact that after six months they are still detained, despite the efforts of the Nine and the clear condemnation by the Community of Nations, is intolerable from a humanitarian and legal point of view.” Declaration by the Foreign Ministers of the Nine of 22 April 1980, supra note 215, para. 4.

221 Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 (It. v. Fr., UK and U.S.), Preliminary Objections, 1954 ICJ Rep. 19 (June 15); see also Akehurst, supra note 115, at 14.

222 Akehurst, supra note 115, at 14–15.

223 Id. at 13–14.

224 Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943 (It. v. Fr., UK and U.S.), Pleadings, Oral Arguments, Documents, at 126 (Int'l Ct. Just.), at https://www.icj-cij.org/sites/default/files/case-related/19/019-19540510-ORA-01-00-BI.pdf.

225 Akehurst, supra note 115, at 14–15. Akehurst's view is that where there is such a judgment by an impartial tribunal, the risk of abuse is “virtually eliminated.” Id. at 16.

226 Monetary Gold Removed from Rome in 1943, supra note 221, at 126.

227 As we discuss in Part V, expanding the set of obligations that protect a common interest is a coherent way to expand the set of situations in which countermeasures in the general interest may be taken.

228 On which, see Linos-Alexandre Sicilianos, Les réactions décentralisées à l'illicite: Des contre-mesures à la légitime défense 104–07 (1990).

229 For an example, see Haataja, supra note 200, at 48; Deeks, supra note 9, at 189–90.

230 In relation to aggression, Barcelona Traction, Light and Power Company, Limited (Belg. v. Spain), Merits, 1970 ICJ Rep. 3, paras. 33–34 (Feb. 5); and more widely, Oliver Dörr, Use of Force, Prohibition of, in Max Planck Encyclopaedia of Public International Law, para. 30 (Rudiger Wolfrum ed., 2019, online edition).

231 Crawford, supra note 67, para. 400.

232 At any rate, the right of states to act in collective self-defense is specifically provided for by Article 51 of the UN Charter and under customary international law. On the theoretical explanation of the right of collective self-defense, on which much was written in the decades after the adoption of the Charter, see the discussion in James A. Green, Collective Self-Defence in International Law, Ch. 2 (2024).

233 For references, see id. at 147–48.

234 We leave aside disagreement concerning the application of the principle of sovereignty in cyberspace. For a summary of the debate on this topic, see: Nicholas Tsagourias, The Legal Status of Cyber-Space: Sovereignty Redux?, in Research Handbook on International Law and Cyberspace 16–17 (Nicholas Tsagourias & Russell Buchan eds., 2d ed. 2021); Michael N. Schmitt & Liis Vihul, Sovereignty in Cyber-Space: Lex Lata Vel Non?, 111 AJIL Unbound 213 (2017).

235 Section III.A supra.

236 Angelo Sereni, Agency in International Law, 34 AJIL 638 (1940).

237 Id. at 644.

238 Id. at 639.

239 Id. at 649.

240 See, e.g., the Right of Passage case, where the ICJ explained that Portugal was authorized to exercise military and police functions in its enclaves on Indian territory “on behalf of the Maratha ruler,” and that it only had “such authority as had been delegated” to it by the Marathas. Right of Passage over Indian Territory (Port. v. India), Merits, 1960 ICJ Rep. 6, 38–39 (Apr. 12). In relation to moral theory, see Bazargan-Forward, supra note 192.

241 Any relevant exception to privity of contract would likely require that Z has some interest in the contract. See, e.g., UK Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.

242 ARSIWA, supra note 10, Art. 6.

243 Id. Art. 51.

244 See similarly Aust, supra note 169, at 190.

245 Note, however, that the collaborating state could only take countermeasures to induce the wrong-doing state to comply with its obligation of reparation “in the interest” of the requesting state: that is, it could only take the measure to induce the targeted state to, for example, pay compensation to the requesting state and not to pay said compensation to the collaborating state. See ARSIWA, supra note 10, Art. 48(2)(b).

246 See, e.g., Michael N. Schmitt, “Below the Threshold” Cyber Operations: The Countermeasures Response Option and International Law, 54 Va. J. Int'l L. 697 (2014); Haataja, supra note 200.

247 For discussion, see Antonios Tzanakopoulos, The Right to be Free from Economic Coercion, 4 Camb. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 616 (2015).

248 See, e.g., in relation to Estonia: Damien McGuinness, How a Cyber Attack Transformed Estonia, BBC News (Apr. 27, 2017), at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/39655415; in relation to Costa Rica: How Conti Ransomware Group Crippled Costa Rica – Then Fell Apart, Fin. Times (July 9, 2022), at https://www.ft.com/content/9895f997-5941-445c-9572-9cef66d130f5. In relation to economic measures, see, e.g., the work of the Special Rapporteur on the Negative Impact of Unilateral Coercive Measures on the Enjoyment Of Human Rights, Initially Established by the Human Rights Council in 2014 – Human Rights Council, Human Rights and Unilateral Coercive Measures, UN Doc. A/HRC/Res/27/21 (Oct. 3, 2014).

249 Id.

250 Discussing a variety of responses in the context of breaches of multilateral treaties, see Hutchinson, supra note 115, at 157–59.

251 See, e.g., Christian Tomuschat, Are Counter-measures Subject to Prior Recourse to Dispute Settlement Procedures?, 5 Eur. J. Int'l L. 77, 78 (1994); Koskenniemi, supra note 43, at 343; Julio Barboza, Contramedidas en la reciente codificación de la responsabilidad de los Estados: Fronteras con la legítima defensa y el estado de necesidad, 12 Anuario Argentino Di 15, 19 (2003).

252 Bruno Simma, International Crimes: Injury and Countermeasures. Comments on Part 2 of the ILC Work on State Responsibility, in International Crimes of State: A Critical Analysis of the ILC's Draft Article 19 on State Responsibility (Joseph H. Weiler, Antonio Cassese & Marina Spinedi eds., 1989).

253 Canada (2022), supra note 86, para. 37; see also Haataja, supra note 200.

254 Ireland (2023), supra note 91, para. 26.

255 See, e.g., Schmitt & Watts, supra note 111, at 401–02; Michael Schmitt, Three International Law Rules for Responding Effectively to Hostile Cyber Operations, Just Security (July 13, 2021); Delerue, supra note 206, at 456.

256 As already emphasized by Zoller, supra note 116, at 113–18.

257 Ellen Cory Stowell had already emphasized the point in 1921: “In international affairs, the enforcement of law usually waits until some powerful state is sufficiently interested to have it vindicated. But the interests of the great states are now so widespread that it will rarely happen that not one will be found to demand the enforcement of the law; and in this way the motive of self-interest has now become still more potent to keep the actual system working in a manner reasonably satisfactory.” Stowell, supra note 114, at 50.

258 Koskenniemi, supra note 43, at 344, and further 340 on states’ reluctance “to accept that they might sometimes be coerced by third parties into good behaviour—perhaps less out of stubborn selfishness than out of the prudent fear that once the door to collective reaction is opened, it can no longer be closed in order to prevent the hegemon from walking right through it, less as a policeman than as the bully.”

259 See in particular, Tams, supra note 36.

260 See, e.g., ARSIWA, supra note 10, Commentary to Art. 48, para. 9.

261 For discussion in the particular context of cyber operations, see Harriet Moynihan, The Application of International Law to State Cyberattacks – Sovereignty and Non-intervention, Chatham House (2019).

262 See similarly, Roguski's discussion of whether there is a collective obligation to protect the “public core of the internet”—terming it a candidate for a “cyber-specific community interest norm.” Przemyslaw Roguski, Collective Countermeasures in Cyberspace – Lex Lata, Progressive Development or a Bad Idea?, 12th Int'l Conf. Cyber Conflict 39 (2020).

263 Zoller, supra note 116, at 113–18.

264 See, e.g., Kosseff, supra note 202; Gary Corn & Eric Jensen, The Use of Force and Cyber Countermeasures, 32 Temple J. Int'l & Comp L. 127 (2018); Schmitt & Watts, supra note 113; Deeks, supra note 9, at 186.

265 For discussion of certain aspects of this question, see Mary Ellen O'Connell, Attribution and Other Conditions of Lawful Countermeasures to Cyber Misconduct, 10 N.D. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 1 (2020).

266 Jonathan I. Charney, Third State Remedies in International Law, 10 Mich. J. Int'l L. 57, 59 (1989).