I. INTRODUCTION
On 11 January 2024 the United States (US) and United Kingdom (UK) armed forces bombed over a dozen sites in the territory of Yemen that, it was claimed, were being used by Iran-backed Houthi rebels to carry out a series of attacks on both commercial and State vessels in the Red Sea since the conflict broke out in Gaza on 7 October 2023.Footnote 1 The Pentagon stated that more than 60 targets at 16 locations used by the Houthis in Yemen had been struck, including radar systems, drone storage and launch sites, missile storage and launch facilities and Houthi command and control centres.Footnote 2 Strikes were reported in the Yemen capital Sanaa, which is controlled by the Houthis, as well as the Red Sea port of Hodeidah, Dhamar and the group's north-western stronghold of Saada.Footnote 3 Support for the mission was provided by Australia, Canada, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Republic of Korea and Bahrain.Footnote 4 While the US had responded to actual and attempted attacks on both military and US flagged commercial ships in the Red Sea previously, including as part of Operation Prosperity Guardian,Footnote 5 the significance of this particular operation was that it was the first time that Houthi targets upon Yemeni territory had been struck.
A day later, on 12 January, the US engaged in a ‘follow-on’ strike against a radar site in Yemen involving Tomahawk missiles.Footnote 6 The US and UK have since engaged in a series of military operations in Yemen, mostly targeting anti-ship missiles that were being prepared to be launched against shipping in the Red Sea and were therefore identified as posing an ‘imminent threat’,Footnote 7 but which also targeted radars, underground storage facilities, command and control centres and drone sites.Footnote 8
The White House issued several joint statements in which the acting States declared that they had ‘conducted joint strikes in accordance with the inherent right of individual and collective self-defense, consistent with the UN [United Nations] Charter, against a number of targets in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen’, adding that ‘[t]hese precision strikes were intended to disrupt and degrade the capabilities the Houthis use to threaten global trade and the lives of international mariners in one of the world's most critical waterways’ and that they would ‘not hesitate to defend lives and protect the free flow of commerce in one of the world's most critical waterways in the face of continued threats’.Footnote 9 The UK Government's published summaries of its legal position for the various strikes similarly stated that ‘[t]he UK is permitted under international law to use force in such circumstances where acting in self-defence is the only feasible means to deal with an actual or imminent armed attack and where the force used is necessary and proportionate’.Footnote 10 A meeting was held at the UN Security Council (UNSC) on 12 January 2024, in which the acting States repeated their justifications,Footnote 11 and both States submitted letters to the Council.Footnote 12
Following the initial 11 January 2024 operation the Houthi group's deputy foreign minister warned that the US and UK would ‘pay a heavy price’ for this ‘blatant aggression’,Footnote 13 while in a statement Iran's foreign ministry ‘consider[ed] it a clear violation of Yemen's sovereignty and territorial integrity, and a breach of international laws, regulations, and rights’.Footnote 14 Meanwhile, the Iran-backed Lebanese armed group Hezbollah also condemned the strikes on Yemen as ‘aggression’.Footnote 15 The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, described the strikes as a ‘disproportionate use of force’.Footnote 16 Other regional reactions, notably from Iraq, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, expressed concern that the strikes expanded the conflict between Israel and Hamas into the region,Footnote 17 while Russia requested an urgent UNSC meeting to discuss the strikes,Footnote 18 and claimed that the strikes showed a ‘complete disregard for international law’ while ‘escalating the situation in the region’.Footnote 19 In a detailed letter to the UNSC, in which it addressed several aspects of the acting States’ legal justification, Russia condemned the ‘illegal armed attacks on the Republic of Yemen by the United States and the United Kingdom’ which were ‘in violation of Article 2(4) of the Charter of the United Nations’ and which were justified by an ‘unwarranted reference to the right of self-defence under Article 51 of the Charter’.Footnote 20
This was a clear invocation by the US and UK of the right of self-defence in the context of the law governing the use of force (the jus ad bellum), a right which under Article 51 of the UN Charter permits States to defend themselves in the face of an ‘armed attack’.Footnote 21 The purpose of this article, in light of both the support and criticism these States received for the military strikes, is to subject this justification to a ‘stress test’ through an analysis of its various aspects. Section II first addresses the rather ambiguous involvement of the UNSC, particularly the adoption of Resolution 2722 (2024) the day before the commencement of the strikes. Section III then focuses on the justification of self-defence, questioning, in particular, whether the Houthis were able to perpetrate an ‘armed attack’ for the purposes of this right. The section then addresses whether the attacks undertaken by the Houthis were of the nature of an armed attack rather than, in particular, acts of piracy, and, connected to this, both whether the targets of the attacks constituted manifestations of a State and whether the gravity and scale of the attacks could be said to constitute an armed attack providing for the invocation of the right of self-defence. Given that the Houthis were ostensibly targeting ships bound for, or connected to, Israel, the question of whether it was necessary for them to have specifically intended to target ships of the US and UK before the right of self-defence arose is also raised. Finally, the article addresses the issue of the extent to which the military strikes in self-defence met the twin customary criteria of necessity and proportionality, before offering some concluding remarks. While as a response to the notable campaign of attacks by the Houthis the invocation of self-defence may seem, on the face of it, to be relatively straightforward and uncontroversial, when the various elements of the justification are picked apart and seen in the context of the generally contested nature of the jus ad bellum, a picture emerges that is not quite as clear and reassuring as it may first appear.
II. THE AMBIGUOUS INVOLVEMENT OF THE UNSC
The day before the initial wave of strikes by the US and UK the UNSC adopted Resolution 2722 (2024) in which it, inter alia, condemned the Houthi attacks on merchant and commercial vessels (para 1) and demanded that the group cease all such attacks (para 2) while
Affirm[ing] the exercise of navigational rights and freedoms by merchant and commercial vessels, in accordance with international law, must be respected, and takes note of the right of Member States, in accordance with international law, to defend their vessels from attacks, including those that undermine navigational rights and freedoms. Footnote 22
This paragraph of the UNSC Resolution is notably vague as to what is meant by the reference to any action being ‘in accordance with international law’. While the Council may authorise military and enforcement action in the maritime context, and has indeed done so previously,Footnote 23 it is clear that it was not doing so on this occasion. The Resolution was not adopted—either explicitly or implicitly—under Chapter VII, which is not mentioned in the Resolution, nor did it refer to a threat to international peace and security, both of which would open the door to enforcement measures under Article 42 of the UN Charter.Footnote 24 Importantly, it also did not authorise the States to take ‘all necessary measures’ to put an end to the attacks that were occurring against the vessels in the Red Sea, the euphemism that has through the practice of the Council come to be recognised as it authorising States to resort to forcible measures to achieve its aims and demands.Footnote 25
The Council did appear, however, to be providing its blessing to States taking miliary action to defend their vessels from attacks, and potentially, therefore, the justification of self-defence that was advanced by the US and UK the following day.Footnote 26 However, the legal basis, nature and extent of the defence that States were supposedly able to engage in to protect vessels from attacks which undermine the freedom of navigation were not clear and ‘[t]he Council deliberations during the adoption of Resolution 2722 (2024) paint a contradictory picture’ on this point.Footnote 27 Slovenia, for example, seemingly interpreted the Resolution and its reference to any military action being ‘in accordance with international law’ as a reference to the right of self-defence as found in Article 51 of the Charter.Footnote 28 Switzerland, on the other hand, expressed ‘concern …about the military strikes carried out by the United States–United Kingdom coalition’ and appeared to understand the Resolution to be endorsing a form of military action that was ‘strictly limited to military measures to intercept attacks against merchant vessels and warships to protect said vessels and the persons on board’.Footnote 29 It was not, however, clear whether Switzerland was of the view that the permitted limited military action against the Houthi attacks came under the right of self-defence or whether the legal basis for the action was located elsewhere. Either way, it was clear that ‘any military operation that goes beyond the immediate need to protect said vessels and persons is disproportionate and therefore not covered by the aforementioned resolution’,Footnote 30 thus appearing to be of the view that any defensive military action did not extend to measures taken upon the territory of Yemen. For its part, the Russian Federation proposed an amendment to this paragraph in the Resolution which would have entirely removed any reference to the right of States to ‘defend their vessels from attack’, which was, in its view, ‘non-existent’.Footnote 31
While neither the US nor the UK directly linked this reference to ‘defence' in paragraph 3 of the Resolution with the right of self-defence contained within Article 51 of the UN Charter, the US Ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, did note that the Resolution ‘referenced the inherent right of Member States to defend, in accordance with international law, their vessels from attacks’.Footnote 32 The right of self-defence as contained within Article 51 expressly provides that ‘[n]othing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations’ (emphasis added), leading to the conclusion that the US understood the Resolution to be supportive of an invocation of the right of defence as found within Article 51 of the Charter.
While there was, therefore, some unhelpful ambiguity regarding the nature of the Resolution and its relationship to both the right of self-defence in international law and the specific invocation of it by the US and the UK on this occasion, it was clear nonetheless that the acting States were invoking the right in justification for their strikes upon the territory of Yemen.
III. QUESTIONING THE RIGHT OF SELF-DEFENCE
A. Were the Houthis Able to Perpetrate ‘Armed Attacks’?
At the time of the military operation the Houthis were in control of much of the territory and population of Yemen, and there were arguably some tentative signs of their gradual acceptance within the international community, including the US removing them from its list of terrorist groups.Footnote 33 If the Houthis are accepted as the de facto governmental representatives of Yemen, then the question as to whether they are able to perpetrate an armed attack for the purposes of triggering the right of self-defence upon Yemeni territory is arguably uncontroversial. States have previously invoked the right of self-defence in response to attacks by unrecognised governments, or their involvement in them.Footnote 34
Yet problems potentially arise if we are to view the Houthis as non-State actors, either as a terrorist group or an opposition group that does not (yet, at least) represent the State of Yemen. It might be argued that for the attacks to be relevant for the purposes of the jus ad bellum they would need to be attributable to a State actor,Footnote 35 that is, the non-State actors were at least acting on the instructions of, or under the direction or control of, a State in carrying out the attacks.Footnote 36 It is clear that Iran has provided weapons and satellite information confirming the positions of targets for the Houthi attacks, as well as financially and politically supporting the Houthis,Footnote 37 and the US made the claim that Iran had been ‘deeply involved’ in the attacks.Footnote 38 Yet while this level of support by Iran engages certain legal obligations it would not in itself be sufficient for the purposes of attributing the attacks to it.Footnote 39
However, one may equally plausibly—and, preferably, in the present author's view—take the position that whether or not the Houthis represent a government or State actor or whether the attacks can be attributable to a State is irrelevant, at least for the question of whether their actions can be classified as ‘armed attacks’ for the purposes of the right of self-defence.Footnote 40 Article 51 does not require that an armed attack emanates from a State, and many States have invoked self-defence in response to attacks purely by non-State actors.Footnote 41 It was also notable, in this respect, that UNSC Resolution 2722 (2024) spoke of the right under international law for States to ‘defend’ themselves in the context of the Houthi attacks. Under this view such attribution to a State is necessary only to the extent that the response in self-defence takes place on that State's territory.Footnote 42 The actions taken here in self-defence have not (yet, at least) been extended to Iranian territory, meaning that attribution to Iran was unnecessary for the purposes of legally justifying the response taken.
What is of significance, however, is the fact that the military strikes are being taken upon Yemeni territory. It was notable in this respect that Yemen's internationally recognised de jure government, the Presidential Leadership Council (PLC), while not appearing to provide its express consent for the strikes, blamed the Houthis for the UK and US strikes, and claimed that they bore responsibility for dragging Yemen into a conflict through their attacks in the Red Sea.Footnote 43 As will be discussed in Section III.F.2, whether or not this can be interpreted as consent for the strikes by the government of Yemen is of relevance in determining whether the invocation of the right of self-defence was necessary.
B. Were the Houthi Attacks of the Nature of an ‘Armed Attack’?
It may, however, legitimately be questioned whether the activities of the Houthis in the Red Sea since 7 October 2023 have been of the nature of an ‘armed attack’ for the purposes of the international right of self-defence, or whether they should rather be considered as acts of piracy or other illicit activities, with the legal justification for any forcible response located elsewhere, in particular the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). It was significant, in this respect, that the Russian Federation ‘emphasized that the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea is irrelevant in this context as it does not concern issues of the use of force’ and that ‘countering “acts of piracy”’ cannot be legitimised under it.Footnote 44 It is true that UNCLOS is vague as to the nature of, and degree to which, enforcement action can be taken under it, yet certain acts of interference by States in regards to acts of piracy are permitted.Footnote 45
However, there are various reasons to conclude that the Houthi attacks went beyond acts of piracy, and that the US and UK's response required a justification beyond any contained in UNCLOS.Footnote 46 While piracy is normally undertaken by small bands of private individuals,Footnote 47 the Houthis were, as noted in the section above, arguably acting as the de facto government and were in effective control of a large proportion of Yemeni State territory. In addition, piracy tends to take the form of acts carried out for ‘private ends’,Footnote 48 most often monetary gain, although there is at the same time nothing to preclude it being driven by hatred or political reasons. A statement issued by the Houthis indicated, however, that they would continue to target Israeli ships and interests until Israel's ‘aggression against Gaza stops’.Footnote 49 This appeared to be more akin to a claim that the attacks were taken as a form of collective countermeasure or armed reprisal, supposedly in the name of Palestine, than an act of piracy. Countermeasures are, however, taken by State actors,Footnote 50 and it is unclear whether the Houthis can be said to represent such on the basis of their de facto effective control of much of Yemen. Yet, even if they can, countermeasures are not permitted to take the form of such forcible measures,Footnote 51 and it is unclear whether countermeasures could be taken in this instance against commercial ships as a proxy for the State concerned. Armed reprisals are unlawful in all circumstances.Footnote 52
Furthermore, acts of piracy normally involve the use of small private ships or aircraft and relatively light weaponry to gain control of merchant ships.Footnote 53 While this was the modus operandi of some of the Houthi attacks, many involved the launching of ballistic missile and drone attacks from the territory of Yemen.
Finally, the response of the US and UK went beyond what is permitted in responding to piracy. Whatever the Council was actually referring to in Resolution 2722 (2024) when it ‘[r]eaffirm[ed] that international law, as reflected in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 (UNCLOS), sets out the legal framework applicable to activities in the oceans, including countering illicit activities at sea’, there is nothing within this treaty that expressly provides for the targeting of onshore State infrastructure, as has been the modus operandi of the US–UK strikes since 11 January 2024.Footnote 54
C. The Target(s) of the Houthi Attacks
On the basis of what has been discussed above, the Houthi attacks were conceivably of the nature of an armed attack. Yet, given that they did not take place on the territory of the US or UK one may question whether the targets of the attacks sufficiently represented manifestations of these States for the purposes of them invoking the right of self-defence. Prominent within the justificatory discourse of the States was the claim that they were responding to attacks upon both military and commercial vessels.Footnote 55
Article 3(d) of the UN General Assembly's Definition of Aggression (1974) provides that, subject to what is said in the section below on gravity, attacks ‘on the land, sea or air forces, or marine and air fleets of another State’ may qualify as an act of aggression, and presumably an armed attack for the purposes of the right of self-defence.Footnote 56 The Houthis attacked both an American military aircraft on 30 December 2023 and American and British warships on 9 January 2024,Footnote 57 and within the UK government's summary of its legal position the drone attack on HMS Diamond which had taken place on 9 January 2024 was specifically highlighted.Footnote 58
It might be questioned whether the reference in Article 3(d) to marine ‘fleets’ requires an attack on more than a single vessel before it can constitute an armed attack.Footnote 59 While each incident needs to be assessed individually taking into account the specific circumstances, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Oil Platforms case was not able to ‘exclude the possibility that the mining of a single military vessel might be sufficient to bring into play the “inherent right of self-defence”’,Footnote 60 meaning that it is possible for the limited attacks that had occurred against the acting States’ military vessels to, in principle, constitute armed attacks. Similarly, self-defence for the protection of a State's nationals abroad, which played a further, albeit minor, part in the justificatory discourse of the defending States,Footnote 61 can in principle be incorporated under the general right of self-defence given that nationals represent a clear manifestation of a State,Footnote 62 although the circumstances under which self-defence can be invoked on this basis, particularly as a justification for extensive missile strikes on a State's territory, is not settled.Footnote 63
Less clear is whether—and, if so, to what extent—commercial vessels constitute targets for the purposes of the ‘armed attack’ requirement.Footnote 64 In particular, it may be questioned whether an attack on a non-military vessel flying the flag of a particular State could qualify as an ‘armed attack’ on that State.Footnote 65 The US Ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, appeared to be of the view that they could: ‘It is long-established that States have a right to defend merchant and commercial vessels from attacks.’Footnote 66
It is plausible to argue that ‘since merchant ships are not external manifestations of the flag State, military action against an individual merchant ship may be an infringement on the rights of the flag State, but does not constitute an armed attack against that State triggering its right of self-defence’.Footnote 67 However, if the merchant ship is used as a proxy for attacking the flag State it is also plausible to argue that ‘an attack on a single merchant ship may be an armed attack for which the flag State has a right of self-defence’.Footnote 68 In the Oil Platforms case, the ICJ did not directly address and resolve this issue, but there were indications in the jurisprudence of the Court that self-defence might have been permitted in the face of attacks on commercial vessels flying the flag of the US: ‘the Texaco Caribbean, whatever its ownership, was not flying a United States flag, so that an attack on the vessel is not in itself to be equated with an attack on that State’.Footnote 69 As such, and although not an issue that has been clearly resolved, while commercial ships are not external manifestations of the flag State, as per marine fleets or embassies,Footnote 70 for example, they are arguably entitled to the protection of the State under whose flag they sail.Footnote 71
However, in this instance the commercial vessels attacked by the Houthis were not flying under the flags of the US or UK.Footnote 72 The question therefore arises as to whether such a principle might be extended to the collective self-defence of commercial vessels carrying the flag of a third State or another State's nationals?Footnote 73 Indeed, there were references in the justifications advanced that suggested that this was included as a basis for the strikes by the US and UK.Footnote 74 If it is assumed that this is the case, on the basis of the conditions for the invocation of collective self-defence set out in the Nicaragua case the victim State would need to first declare that its flagged ships or nationals had been attacked,Footnote 75 but at the very least expressly request the assistance of the State acting in collective self-defence,Footnote 76 neither of which appeared to be present in the context of the Red Sea attacks.
D. Were the Houthi Attacks of the Gravity of an ‘Armed Attack’?
While States are prohibited from using ‘force’ in Article 2(4) of the UN Charter, a longstanding debate exists as to whether an ‘armed attack’, for the purposes of triggering the right of self-defence in Article 51, requires a particular gravity or overall scale and effects, and if so at what point, and in which ways, the threshold between the two concepts is to be drawn. The ‘gravity threshold’ debate has been discussed at length,Footnote 77 and will not be engaged in here, suffice to say that whilst the ICJ has taken the view that one exists,Footnote 78 the US, in contrast, remains of the view that the right of self-defence ‘potentially applies against any illegal use of force’.Footnote 79
Accepting for the sake of argument what would appear to be the majority view that such a threshold exists, with armed attacks distinguished by their particular ‘scale and effects’,Footnote 80 it is difficult to perceive any of the Houthi attacks upon shipping within the Red Sea at the time the US–UK military strikes were launched as having crossed this gravity threshold.Footnote 81 There was relatively little reported damage to, or destruction of, the marine vessels, or the death of, or serious injury to, any nationals of any of the States involved resulting from any one of the attacks.Footnote 82 While the UK referred to the ‘serious attacks’ of the Houthis,Footnote 83 there was very little set out regarding the scale and effects of the attacks in the justificatory discourse of the defending States who, by contrast, spoke of the ‘continued threat’ from the ‘harassment’ as well as the ‘international challenge’ this posed to the free flow of commerce.Footnote 84
It was, however, notable that the invocation of self-defence on 11 January 2024 was clearly in response not to a single attack but rather to the Houthis having carried out ‘dozens of serious attacks on shipping in the Red Sea for a sustained period’.Footnote 85 This emphasis on there being a high volume of attacks, rather than any single large-scale attack, gives rise to the impression that the acting States were implicitly relying on the so-called ‘accumulation of events theory’, under which whilst any one of a series of attacks taken by itself might not be of sufficient gravity to constitute an armed attack, the series of attacks taken as a whole might be seen to be.Footnote 86 While this theory has been given some judicial support by the ICJ,Footnote 87 and has been implicitly invoked in the practice of States,Footnote 88 it is not a doctrine which has received the dedicated attention of States.
Applying this theory to the Houthi attacks is problematic due to the uncertainty, as discussed above, regarding which attacks were being considered by the US and UK for the purposes of the invocation of the right of self-defence, and in particular the fact that the vast majority of attacks had occurred against vessels sailing under neither US nor UK flags and with no request for collective self-defence by the flag States concerned. However, with these qualifications in mind, along with that regarding the extent to which the theory exists in international law, then based on the volume of Houthi attacks since 7 October 2023 the argument can plausibly be made that by 11 January 2024 a sufficient ‘accumulation’ of attacks had occurred for the purposes of the armed attack criterion, but also that the attacks formed part of a concerted continuing pattern of armed activity against shipping within the Red Sea. Consequently, on this basis alone, the invocation of the right of self-defence, in a form that might appear disproportionate if viewed solely in the context of any of the attacks taken individually, could arguably be justified.Footnote 89
E. Did the Houthis Intend to Perpetrate an ‘Armed Attack’ against the US or UK?
In the Oil Platforms case, the supposedly indiscriminate nature of the attacks by Iran was held by the ICJ to discredit the claim of self-defence advanced by the US.Footnote 90 By slight contrast, the series of Houthi attacks in the Red Sea were not entirely indiscriminate in nature, but instead were stated as targeting ‘Israeli ships and interests’ and any ships travelling towards an Israeli port, although reports suggest that they were in fact more indiscriminate than this.Footnote 91 It might therefore be said that the Houthis lacked any intent to carry out an armed attack specifically against the US, UK or any other State other than Israeli flagged or owned ships or those that it was able to identify as travelling to Israel.
However, drawing such a fundamental mens rea requirement upon which many invocations of self-defence will stand or fall from these passages of the Oil Platforms case can be challenged. Whether or not a State is intentionally targeted, the right of self-defence can arguably be seen to exist for States to be able to take necessary action to defend themselves, sometimes in extremis, without first being required to ascertain the intentions of the attacker, and whether or not they were the intended target of the attacks.Footnote 92 To require otherwise would simply encourage the use of indiscriminate targeting, or for attacks against a specific State to be launched in the mix with others seemingly of a more indiscriminate nature, with the attacker then assured that any injured State would be left without a right to defend itself,Footnote 93 or at the very least having hindered the victim State in taking effective actions in self-defence by requiring investigations regarding intent to be conducted first. The specific aspect of intention is also not one that can be clearly derived from State practice and it is arguable that intention is at best of probative value, in that prior known hostile intent can be useful in determining whether the invocation of the right of self-defence may be necessary in a particular situation. Of course, this is based on a State actually being the victim of an attack of the nature giving rise to self-defence, which in the situation under consideration here is, as discussed above, somewhat doubtful.
F. Was the Response in Self-Defence Necessary and Proportionate?
Much was made in the justificatory discourse of the acting States of the fact that the military action taken was both necessary and proportionate,Footnote 94 the twin criteria for self-defence that are located within customary international law.Footnote 95 Due mainly to their customary nature the precise meaning and requirements of either criterion are not entirely settled, but together they can be seen as broadly providing that the defending State must have no reasonable alternatives to military force to defend itself and that any ensuing military action in self-defence is taken—and restricted to that required—for its defence.Footnote 96
1. Necessity
The acting States had issued warnings to the Houthis of consequences if the attacks persisted, and had taken the issue to the UNSC, which had strongly condemned, and demanded that the Houthis cease, the attacks.Footnote 97 The British Prime Minister explained that ‘[we] have attempted to resolve this through diplomacy … … [including] numerous international calls for the attacks to stop’.Footnote 98 The US also claimed to have delivered a ‘private message’ to Iran following some of the strikes.Footnote 99 There is, therefore, at least some support for the argument that the acting States had first resorted to reasonable non-forcible measures to put an end to the attacks.
Whether or not such efforts were required in this instance, however, is open to question. Indeed, it might be argued that such peaceful means are not required due to them not having ‘any realistic prospect of success’;Footnote 100 that is, they were not reasonable. This is based on the fact that the Houthis are designated as a terrorist organisation by certain States,Footnote 101 and were taking the actions in the Red Sea in support of Hamas, another proscribed terrorist organisation.Footnote 102 Attempts to negotiate were also arguably futile given that the Houthis had clearly stated that the attacks would continue as long as Israel was carrying out military operations in Gaza,Footnote 103 something that was outside of the direct control of the acting States.
Yet, while this may be correct, it may be argued that the acting States should have first at least attempted to work with the de jure recognised government of Yemen. In light of the reliance placed on the so-called ‘unable or unwilling’ doctrine of self-defence by the acting States in recent years,Footnote 104 it was notable that it was not uttered on this occasion. In particular, this doctrine supposedly provides that the invocation of self-defence can be deemed necessary when the government of the State within which the non-State perpetrators of an attack are located is either unable to take the action deemed necessary to cease the attack or series of attacks, or is unwilling to do so.Footnote 105
Given its lack of control over large parts of the territory of the State, along with the fact that it was itself embroiled in a protracted civil war with the Houthis, the government might have reasonably been deemed ‘unable’ to act against the Houthis. Yet, this does not lead to the conclusion that any attempt to work with the government should be seen to be futile.Footnote 106 On the contrary, as noted above,Footnote 107 the Yemeni government had been critical of the actions of the Houthis and there were no indications to suggest that it was in any sense ‘unwilling’ to take the necessary action.
In this light, it must be questioned why the two acting States did not request—at least as far as is publicly known—the consent of the government to carry out the military action on Yemeni soil. It may have been that given the Houthi's de facto status and control the acting States considered the role of the de jure recognised government irrelevant and, with that, also the ‘unable or unwilling’ doctrine. Or it may have been that given the de jure government's lack of control the acting States considered the ‘unable’ arm of the doctrine to have been satisfied, thus providing sufficient grounds for the invocation of the right of self-defence.Footnote 108
Yet, in the case of unable yet willing governments, as the PLC arguably were in this instance, the invocation of self-defence is arguably unnecessary. In particular, if consent is provided it changes the legal basis of any military action from self-defence to that of consent by the territorial State, at least for action taken upon the territory of the consenting State. The invocation of self-defence provides an exception to the prohibition of force and constitutes a circumstance precluding wrongfulness in terms of the violation of a State's territorial integrity.Footnote 109 Yet, the presence of consent means that neither is violated ab initio.Footnote 110
There is, however, no clearly defined obligation upon States to seek the consent of the governmental regime of the territory concerned, even if apparently willing to provide it. And there will be circumstances in which the seeking of consent will not necessarily be reasonable, in particular in emergency situations where a State finds itself under devastating attack requiring it to act without delay, which was not the case here. However, if there is the possibility for consent to be provided by the government of one State to that of another for the latter to undertake military action upon its territory then this is of probative value in the assessment as to whether the invocation of the right of self-defence is necessary.
In addition, within the context of the principle of necessity there are temporal issues to consider. In particular, military action in self-defence is difficult to justify if the armed attack to which it is responding is over.Footnote 111 However, in this instance while each of the attacks by the Houthis was discrete in nature, and there were short periods of time between them, they were also clearly ongoing, with the Houthis proclaiming that they would continue until Israel's actions in Gaza had ceased. It is on this basis difficult to characterise the military response as purely one of armed reprisal, as a clear defensive necessity could be perceived as existing in responding to ongoing attacks.Footnote 112 Yet, given that the Houthi attacks were against ships with links to, or sailing towards, Israel, neither the US nor UK could be certain that the next attack in the series would be against a US or UK ship or one of a State that had requested them to act in collective self-defence, raising question marks over the necessity of the strikes in self-defence. Furthermore, it was notable that the strikes against the anti-ship missiles that were being prepared to be launched were presented as being in response to an ‘imminent threat’, indicative of the fact that while the attacks were portrayed as ongoing the acting States nonetheless felt compelled to incorporate a restrictive temporal element in respect to the justifications for at least some of their defensive strikes, although no evidence or support was provided for the claims regarding the imminent nature of the threat.
An additional question regarding the defensive necessity of the strikes arises in relation to the twin aims advanced by the acting States of ‘degrading’ the Houthi capabilities to carry out the attacks and ‘deterring’ future attacks, which are two very different things. Undoubtedly the strikes degraded the capabilities of the Houthis to continue their attacks in some way. Yet, the extent to which self-defence extends more generally to deterring action is a controversial issue, although it is possible to identify broadly a defensive aim in deterring continuing attacks. However, the fact that the Houthis doubled down in their belligerent rhetoric following the first wave of strikes by the US and UK,Footnote 113 as well as the domestic population in Yemen protesting against them,Footnote 114 arguably demonstrates that the aim of deterring future attacks had not been achieved, and was arguably unlikely to be achieved through military strikes, consequently placing question marks over both the defensive necessity and proportionality of any future strikes in self-defence by the US and UK with this as their aim. Indeed, the US itself acknowledged that the Houthis had not been deterred,Footnote 115 despite the fact that there were reports of a downturn in attacks in February.Footnote 116
A somewhat overlooked, yet important, point was that the primary concern of the acting States in invoking self-defence appeared to be to ensure the freedom of navigation and, through that, the protection of global trade and the free flow of commerce, rather than repelling a clear attack on, and continued danger to, the States themselves.Footnote 117 The ICJ seemed to reject such a wide customary right of self-defence in the protection of a State's interests when it stated that the right ‘does not allow the use of force by a State to protect perceived security interests beyond [armed attacks]’.Footnote 118 If the purpose of the acting States’ invocation of self-defence is to protect trade and commerce, rather than defend against an armed attack, then no amount of force can be necessary or proportionate.
This focus on the protection of freedom of navigation and commerce raises the question of why the UNSC arguably appeared to provide its blessing to the invocation of self-defence in this way, but did not authorise States to use ‘all necessary means’ to achieve these arguably non-defensive aims (although it is not hard to see the objections that would be raised to this by certain States within the Council). In particular, while the disruption to international commerce perpetrated in this way might legitimately be seen as a ‘threat to the peace’, thereby opening the door to Chapter VII measures at the disposal of the Council, it is far more difficult to see it as falling within the concept of an ‘armed attack’ and a response of self-defence being justifiable.
Nonetheless, although this broad (and un-self-defence-like) motivation was prominent within the discourse of the States in justifying their actions in self-defence (and the UNSC in seemingly providing its blessing to them) it remains the case that while a legitimate defensive necessity for military action needs to be present it does not need to be the sole aim of the action, with the presence of other non-defensive motives not necessarily discrediting a claim of, and action in, self-defence. That said, it remains unclear why the acting States placed this aspect so centrally within a justification of self-defence, other than perhaps to make the action one which the majority of States, who rely on, and have an interest in protecting, such freedom of navigation would find palatable. In this respect, and muddying the waters on this occasion, the legal basis within the notable support from other States that the US–UK military strikes received was not altogether clear or consistent.Footnote 119 The strikes were also met with relatively little express condemnation, this being restricted mainly to Iran, Turkey and Russia, with there also appearing to be arguably some support from the UNSC in Resolution 2722 (2024) which affirmed pre facto the right of ‘defence’ in response to attacks that ‘undermine navigational rights and freedoms’,Footnote 120 although it was unclear, as discussed above, exactly what the Council was referring to by this.
2. Proportionality
As noted above, the acting States both asserted that the actions were, and would continue to be, proportionate. It has been claimed that US (and by extension, UK) warships operating in the area had a right of so-called ‘unit’ self-defence following the attacks launched on them, and indeed acted on this basis in repelling previous Houthi attacks.Footnote 121 While it might be questioned whether, and if so the extent to which, this differs from other forms of self-defence, it is worth noting that other authors have referred to this as ‘on the spot’ self-defence,Footnote 122 indicating that it exists in this context for warships to repel an immediate attack in their locale, rather than a response, as was the case with the current strikes, at a time chosen by the targeted State and in a location far away from the place where the attack took place. In this respect it is notable that in relation to UNSC Resolution 2722 (2024) it has been claimed that the ‘precise and limited choice of wording suggests that the reference in the third paragraph is not one of self-defense, but merely that States may take certain immediate measures to counter attacks on their vessels’.Footnote 123 In other words, the Council was not endorsing the right of States to engage in self-defence extending to the territory of another State, as has been the case with the various defensive strikes undertaken since 11 January 2024, but was instead referring to a form of on-the-spot reaction. Indeed, many States in the UNSC emphasised the need for such a limited proportionate response.Footnote 124
Yet it is not completely clear within the jus ad bellum what this limiting principle of self-defence stipulates, and on what basis proportionality is to be gauged. In this instance, given that at the time the military strikes were launched there had been no reported casualties from the Houthi attacks, as well as very little damage to the vessels concerned, the launching of a series of missile strikes upon the territory of a State leading to relatively extensive damage might be seen to be disproportionate. In this sense, the defensive force could be perceived as excessive when compared to the damage inflicted by the Houthis.Footnote 125
Equating the proportionality of a defensive response to any harm suffered might seem to be reasonable. Yet the jus ad bellum principle of proportionality would seem to require instead that victim States do no more than is necessary to achieve the specific objective of defending themselves.Footnote 126 In the rather unique and in some ways extreme context of the Gaza conflict and Israel's defensive campaign, whereby its defence is perceived as only being realised through the destruction of Hamas, this perception of proportionality can be seen to have resulted in disastrous repercussions for the civilian population and wrought huge death and destruction.Footnote 127 Yet, applied in the context of the continuous Houthi strikes, including the fact that the US and UK had already taken more limited ‘on-the-spot’ military action which had proved unsuccessful in halting the attacks, extending defensive action to the source of the attacks in a bid to disrupt and end them was arguably a proportionate response, despite the extra-legal wider concerns regarding the potential broadening of the Gaza conflict and the potential for direct conflict with Iran. This is, of course, if it is possible to identify an armed attack giving rise to the right of self-defence by the acting States, along with a necessity to act on that basis, which are, as discussed above, far from certain.
IV. CONCLUSION
The fact that the US and UK felt the need to legally justify the military strikes under the jus ad bellum is, in many respects, to be welcomed. It demonstrates at least an acknowledgement that such actions are regulated by international law, with the justifications providing a focal point for assessment and reflection. Furthermore, given the stream of Houthi attacks and their widely disruptive global impacts, a military response might be seen to be entirely reasonable and necessary. Yet, the fact that the right of self-defence was invoked, and the manner in which it was invoked on this occasion, raises more questions than answers in regards to the integrity and coherence of both the right and the way international law regulates such situations more generally.
First, the justifications of the States themselves, whilst clearly advancing the right of self-defence and articulating Article 51 of the UN Charter, are vague on several key issues. It simply was not certain, for example, what the ‘armed attack’ was that was being responded to, or even if such an attack is considered necessary for the purposes of invoking self-defence. Was it the strikes against the States’ military vessels, or those of a commercial nature, that formed the basis of the invocation on this occasion? If it was the commercial vessels, to what extent had there been a request for assistance in collective self-defence from the States under whose flag those ships had been sailing? Or were the States somehow acting in the protection of the freedom of navigation and in defence of the free flow of commerce, as appeared to be emphasised in the justifications? In light of the overarching emphasis upon this latter particular aim, military action against the Houthi attacks might in some respects be more accurately categorised as a form of collective forcible countermeasure.Footnote 128 Indeed, if the principle of freedom of navigation in international waters is accepted as an obligation erga omnes then the fact that military action in this instance has been taken in response to attacks against the flagged vessels of other States would not necessarily be an issue.Footnote 129 Furthermore, any concerns regarding whether the Houthi attacks were armed attacks for the purposes of the right of self-defence would not arise. Given that the stated aims of the military strikes were to ‘disrupt’ and ‘deter’ the Houthi attacks, they would appear to fit within the aim of countermeasures being to induce compliance, on this occasion seeking to induce the Houthi's respect for the right of freedom of navigation.
Yet, there are problems with accepting this as the basis for the military strikes by the US and UK. In particular, the notion of proportionate collective forcible measures emerged as a means of plugging the gravity gap between the ‘force’ proscribed in Article 2(4) and the requirement for an ‘armed attack’ for the right of self-defence in Article 51 of the UN Charter. In this respect, not only did the acting States clearly claim to be acting in self-defence under Article 51, but the incursion into Yemeni State territory and away from the location of the attacks provides the circumstances under which a justification of self-defence would be required and would in all senses appear to be of the level used in response to an armed attack.Footnote 130
It is, however, unclear what the precise basis was for using force upon the territory of Yemen. Were the US and UK treating the Houthis as the de facto governmental authority of Yemen? Or, if treating them more as pirates or terrorists, was there consent provided by the de jure recognised government? Or, alternatively, was it being implicitly claimed that military action upon Yemeni territory was necessary due to the government being somehow ‘unable’ to take the necessary action? How can the success of the actions be determined, and, with that, whether further actions, perhaps outside of the territory of Yemen, will be deemed necessary, and proportionate?
Second, the involvement of the UNSC has muddied the waters rather than added any clarity. As noted above, it is unclear whether the UNSC was giving its blessing to the international right of self-defence and therefore potentially supporting the implementation of that right on State territory, whether it was instead referring to a more limited ‘on-the-spot’ version of the right whereby the acting States are restricted to defending discrete attacks within the vicinity of where the attacks have taken place, or whether it was providing its blessing to a limited form of forcible countermeasure as a response to violations of the freedom of navigation. Indeed, while the Council appeared to recognise the right of self-defence under international law, it also recognised the right of States to respond to illicit activities under UNCLOS, raising questions as to how the right of self-defence relates to any action that is permitted under UNCLOS.
Finally, the broader precedential impact of these military strikes is not clear. It is, in particular, difficult to see this incident as allaying the fears of those already concerned about both the use and abuse of the right of self-defence and the perceivably malleable limitations imposed by the jus ad bellum more generally. If it is understood that the Council provided its blessing to the invocation of the right of self-defence to protect broader navigational and economic interests, the precedential value of this cannot, as yet, be fully appreciated. As a point of policy, if invocations of the right of self-defence for the protection of ‘interests’, and in particular those of a commercial nature, begin to be accepted regardless of how vital the interests are deemed to be, the legal waters would become so muddied and open to unforeseeable abuse that any pretence that the jus ad bellum exists to restrict rather than enable military action would well and truly collapse. Ultimately, while it is possible to be critical of the actions and justificatory discourse of the acting States and the involvement of the Council, both might also be seen to be operating within—albeit arguably stretching further—the margin of appreciation that this branch of international law seemingly provides.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author would like to thank the participants at the presentation of this paper at the School of Law at the University of Trento on 19 April 2024, especially Professor Marco Pertile, Dr Mariangela La Manna and Dr Matteo Tondini.