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A new book launching in Cambridge today explores the parliamentary convention intended to allow MPs a vote on military action. 探花直播authors say that the intervention in Syria provides just the latest of several 鈥榚xceptions鈥 鈥 chipping away further at a convention that may no longer meaningfully exist.

Our analysis reveals repeated exceptions created by successive governments even prior to the recent unilateral strikes in Syria

Veronika Fikfak

探花直播recent intervention in Syria may add airstrikes to the expanding list of exceptions to the convention established to provide democratic oversight of UK military action through a parliamentary vote, say experts in international and constitutional law.

During research for a new book, launched today, the legal academics found that, in addition to broadly-defined 鈥榚mergency鈥 or 鈥榮ecrecy鈥 exceptions, two specific types of military activity 鈥 the deployment of embedded Special Forces and unmanned drone strikes 鈥 had already been exempted from the convention.听听

Now, by unilaterally authorising the recent intervention in Syria, and justifying the action using language that further narrows the convention鈥檚 purview, the current government may have created a further exception for airstrikes 鈥 a cornerstone of modern warfare.

Drs Veronika Fikfak and Hayley J. Hooper, who conducted the research for their book at Cambridge鈥檚 Faculty of Law, say that 鈥渋f the War Powers Convention continues to exist, we question whether it exists in any meaningful sense鈥.

They argue that increasing exemptions from the convention, combined with a flourishing 鈥渋nformation asymmetry鈥 between government and parliament, creates a real risk of another 鈥業raq moment鈥 in the near future.

traces the last century of Westminster decision-making during the build up to hostilities, with a focus on the legal debates following the establishment of the War Power Convention in the wake of the Iraq war.

Published by Bloomsbury, the book will be launched at Homerton College, Cambridge, with both authors as part of the College鈥檚 250 anniversary series of events.

鈥 探花直播idea that the War Powers Convention gives parliament political control over whether the UK goes to war has now been hollowed out to the point where any claim that elected MPs have a say on military action is essentially a deception of British civil society,鈥 says Fikfak, a Fellow of Homerton College.

鈥 探花直播War Powers Convention initially looked like it might level the playing field between parliament and government. However, our analysis reveals repeated exceptions created by successive governments even prior to the recent unilateral strikes in Syria.鈥

探花直播convention has its origins in the House of Commons vote sanctioning the Iraq invasion in 2003, although some argue this was a fait accompli given the thousands of troops already in the region.

Nevertheless, a convention requiring parliamentary support for armed conflict was solidified through a series of votes in the years following Iraq 鈥 most significantly with 2013鈥檚 decisive vote on Syria, when the government was defeated.听听听听

Heralded by the media as a milestone in British democracy, the convention sees a 鈥測es or no vote鈥 put to MPs, rather than the government of the day invoking Royal Prerogative: the traditional legal right to declare war in the name of the Crown.

Plans to enshrine the convention in law were shelved in 2016, although Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has renewed discussions of a possible War Power Act since the recent Syria airstrikes.

探花直播convention has, however, been a fixture of the Cabinet Manual 鈥 an official guide to the UK鈥檚 uncodified constitution 鈥 since 2011, with successive Defence Ministers recommitting to it both in principle and, to some extent, in practice.听听听

Yet the recent circumvention of this potential check on power is arguably only the latest, as the convention has already been subject to 鈥渁 myriad of exceptions鈥 controlled by government 鈥 explored in depth by the new book.

For example, in 2015 a British member of Da鈥檈sh was killed by drones in Syria, despite parliament making it clear on two previous occasions that it did not support use of force in Syrian territory.

Justified by the then government as a 鈥榥ew departure鈥, and couched in language of 鈥榠mmediacy鈥 and 鈥榙irect threat鈥, this was interpreted 鈥済enerously鈥 by the Joint Committee on Human Rights as an 鈥榚mergency鈥 that didn鈥檛 breach convention 鈥 a precedent for the exception of drone warfare.听听听听

Also in 2015, British military took part in ground raids on Syrian territory with US forces. 探花直播government response was to state that the convention apparently 鈥渄oes not apply [to those] embedded in the armed forces of other nations鈥, despite the non-emergency situation.

探花直播researchers argue that undermining of the convention is compounded by 鈥渟elective disclosure鈥 of vital information to parliament, often under the guise of state secrecy. This was the current government鈥檚 primary justification for disregarding the convention with the recent Syrian strikes.

鈥淚n the wake of Iraq, the position that 鈥榃hitehall knows best鈥 is constitutionally untenable,鈥 says Hooper, now a Fellow at Christ Church College, Oxford. 鈥淪ources of intelligence should never be revealed, but reports of the Joint Intelligence Committee could be considered by parliamentarians in secure premises.鈥

探花直播researchers argue that the nature of war has changed, now limited for the most part to drone and air strikes. 鈥淭o exclude the majority of military interventions from parliamentary scrutiny risks undermining the accountability of government,鈥 says Hooper.听

Adds Fikfak: 鈥淚n addition to the non-application of the convention to Special Forces deployments, the embedding of British forces in foreign countries鈥 armies, and the use of drones, there is now room for significant doubt as to whether the War Powers Convention applies to air strikes.鈥澨



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