Interesting discussion. I am not as educated on the subject in hand as you
esteemed gentlemen. However I would like to add my Yuan's worth into the discussion. This entire debate, I think has more to do with
geopolitics and
international power play than law. It is simply one side flexing to push the status quo order to make space for it's own upwards trajectory.
In geopolitics power play rarely takes the law into account. One of the most significant flashpoints in 20th century was the
Cuban Missile Crisis where for a few days the world stood at the cusp of nuclear armageddon. What was it about that which warranted a nuclear war?
A
sovereign state (
Cuba) agreed with another
sovereign state (
USSR) to base misiles on it's own
territory. The said missiles would be transported through international waters by ship. At no point were those missiles to enter any go anywhere near
other state's jurisdiction. Thus this matter was entirely and exclusively
within referance of Cuba and Russia. Can somebody here please
cite what law this "transfer"
contravened? I certainly can't think of any.
Forget about 12 nm. Cuba is nearly
100 nm distant from US coast and the missiles were based in sovereign Cuban territory. Given these facts can somebody explain how was it that USA came close to starting a nuclear war?
What was the
legal basis to this? Was that an example of "
unsafe" behaviour?
@Lure Great point you raised there.
@A.P. Richelieu @gambit @rott @Zsari @Penguin