How are targeted killings different from assassinations – and are they legal?

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After Israel’s strike on Hezbollah’s leader Hassan Nasrallah last month, President Joe Biden and other world leaders called it a measure of justice. But retribution and even justice, some analysts note, are not sufficient grounds for killing under the laws of warfare.

Israel has carried out dozens of targeted strikes to take out senior operatives within Hezbollah and Hamas since the latter group’s brutal Oct. 7 attack on Israeli civilians last year.

Why We Wrote This

Recent strikes by Israel on Hezbollah and Hamas leaders are part of a global expansion of targeted killings, including by the United States. We examine the legal basis for such operations.

They are part of a global expansion of what have been called “signature” or “decapitation” killings that go back to the U.S. war on terror. In the past decade alone, a dozen countries, including Iraq, Iran, Egypt, and Turkey, have launched programs to carry out such hits on enemies of their own.

Israel’s Supreme Court in 2006 ruled that targeted killings are a legitimate form of self-defense against terrorists, though it cautioned that these assassinations should be weighed against harm to innocent bystanders. The U.S. government has since reached a similar conclusion in a legal journey that started in the mid-20th century.

The essence of the legal arguments by Israeli and U.S. officials who green-light targeted killings is that they are acts of self-defense in a war against a terrorist group.

After Israel’s strike on Hezbollah’s leader Hassan Nasrallah last month, President Joe Biden and other world leaders called it a measure of justice. But retribution and even justice, some analysts note, are not sufficient grounds for killing under the laws of warfare.

The dozens of targeted strikes by Israel to take out senior operatives within Hezbollah and Hamas since the latter group’s brutal Oct. 7 attack on Israeli civilians last year come with almost dulling frequency today.

They are part of a global expansion of what have been called “signature” or “decapitation” killings that go back to the U.S. war on terror. In the past decade alone, a dozen countries, including Iraq, Iran, Egypt, and Turkey, have launched programs to carry out such hits on enemies of their own.

Why We Wrote This

Recent strikes by Israel on Hezbollah and Hamas leaders are part of a global expansion of targeted killings, including by the United States. We examine the legal basis for such operations.

These strikes alarm many humanitarian law experts who urge proportionality and protection of civilians, too: Mr. Nasrallah’s death involved multiple 2,000-pound bombs and razed several apartment buildings.

In the cold calculus of military advantage, even the seasoned strategists who carry out these operations sometimes wonder aloud whether they actually work – or whether they create more terrorists than they kill.

Don’t the U.S. and other countries have laws against assassination?

Take Israel, for example, the country most recently in the news for targeted killings. Israel’s Supreme Court in 2006 ruled that targeted killings are a legitimate form of self-defense against terrorists, though it cautioned that these assassinations should be weighed against harm to innocent bystanders. Both Israel and the United States designate Hezbollah and Hamas as terrorist organizations.

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