
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the End to ‘International Law’
If Dr. Strangelove (Peter Sellars) can “learn to shop worrying and love the bomb,” then I can certainly “learn to stop worrying and love the end to international law.” To wit: After the U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran — including 30 bombs on the compound of the Ayatollah Khamenei — I’ve been spending a lot of time watching BBC and France 24 news coverage, largely because they’re ad-free and actually have correspondents in Iran. Of course, the coverage on these two channels is largely anti-U.S. and anti-Israel, though they kinda give Israel more of a pass in protecting itself against an existential threat. The BBC even did a live interview with an officer in the Iranian Foreign Ministry, who blamed everything on the U.S. and Israel and refused to say if the Ayatollah is still alive. What I found most interesting was an interview with U.S.-based David Albright, president of the non-profit Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, D.C. He seemed to support Trump’s actions and certainly Israel’s, and even pinpointed hidden Iranian nuclear development sites that should be struck. Albright’s most salient point was that what came to be known as “international law” — as symbolized in the
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the End to ‘International Law’
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