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On May 15, 2021, early in the afternoon, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) informed residents of the Al Jalaa tower that it planned to destroy their building. The building had 11 floors,
around 60 residential apartments, and offices for doctors, lawyers, and journalists including Al Jazeera and the Associated Press. Residents grabbed what belongings they could carry and ran
down the stairs. Children and the elderly took turns using the single working elevator. An hour later, the IDF levelled the building and crushed everything inside. The now-former residents
joined more than 77,000 Gazans displaced from their homes amidst ongoing airstrikes and the COVID-19 pandemic. Initially, the IDF claimed that the building “contained military assets
belonging to the intelligence offices of the Hamas terror organization.” Later, the IDF tweeted that Hamas members took “items” out of the building before it was destroyed. The IDF said it
was “willing to pay that price to not harm any civilians.” Officials who were involved in the decision reportedly now “completely regret” it. Hamas operatives simply moved their computers
out, leaving only empty offices behind. The IDF killed at least 230 people, including 62 children, and injured almost two thousand in less than two weeks. Hamas killed at least a dozen
people, including two children, in the same period. Why focus on an airstrike that levelled a building but killed no one? Why not the IDF airstrike on a house in the Shati refugee camp that
killed ten members of the al-Hadidi family, including eight children? Why not the IDF airstrike in Gaza City that killed forty-two people, including ten children? Why not the Hamas rocket
attack that killed a five-year-old boy in Sderot? Given the sheer scale of destruction, suffering, and death, any starting point for legal analysis may seem arbitrary. But the IDF, a former
IDF legal adviser, and one leading scholar publicly defended the legality of the airstrike on Al Jalaa tower. Their legal claims call for a response. The IDF also destroyed four other
residential towers, and hundreds of other residential units across Gaza. Examining the attack on Al Jalaa tower may shed light on these other attacks as well. The airstrike on Al Jalaa tower
was illegal for the simple reason that the tower was not a military objective (a “lawful target”) at the time of the airstrike. The expected harm to civilians and civilian objects was also
excessive (or “disproportionate”) in relation to the military advantage anticipated from destroying any equipment Hamas may have left behind. These conclusions are based on IDF statements
and other publicly available information. More information may emerge, which may reinforce or qualify the legal analysis that follows. But only a fundamental change in the IDF’s explanation
for the airstrike could show that it was lawful rather than unlawful. THE TOWER International law prohibits attacks on civilian objects. Civilian objects are all objects which are not
military objectives. Military objectives are limited to those objects which by their nature, location, purpose or use make an effective contribution to military action and whose total or
partial destruction, capture or neutralization, in the circumstances ruling at the time, offers a definite military advantage. According to the IDF and subsequent reports, Hamas members left
with their equipment before the airstrike. They were not _using_ the building or any part of it when it was destroyed. No one suggests that the tower made any effective contribution to
military action by its _nature_ or _location_. It follows that the tower was a civilian object unless Hamas members had the intent (_purpose_) to use the offices for military purposes in the
future. Only then could the building’s total destruction _in the circumstances ruling at the time_ of the attack offer a definite military advantage. This is doubtful. It was highly
unlikely that Hamas members would return to the tower and resume military activities there. The IDF had just threatened to destroy the tower and would presumably keep it under surveillance.
It was much more likely that Hamas members would move to a new location where their activities might evade detection—as they presumably did. International law requires that, in case of
doubt, an object which is normally dedicated to civilian purposes must be presumed to remain a civilian object. Some States interpret this “rule of doubt” to mean that it is unlawful to
attack an ordinarily civilian object unless it is _clear_ that the opposing force is using it or intends to use it to make an effective contribution to military action. Other States take the
view that an attack may only be carried out if it is more likely than not that a person or object is a lawful target and, in addition, any remaining doubts are outweighed by the
consequences of not attacking. Even the United States—perhaps the only State that rejects the rule of doubt as formulated above—accepts that attacks may not be directed against civilians or
civilian objects based on merely hypothetical or speculative considerations regarding their possible current status as a military objective. The rule of doubt is extremely important when
doubts exist regarding an ordinarily civilian object’s current use. This rule is absolutely critical when doubts exist regarding an ordinarily civilian object’s intended future use. In most
cases, the intentions of the adversary to use ordinarily civilian objects in the future are matters of conjecture. The military advantage offered by destroying such objects is rarely
definite but instead typically hypothetical or speculative. If attacking forces are allowed to level any building their adversary might intend to use in the future, then the principle of
distinction will lose much of its meaning and legal effect in urban warfare. In this case, it was far from clear that Hamas members intended to resume military operations in the tower. It
was hardly more likely than not that they would do so. The notion that they would do so was merely hypothetical and speculative. It follows that the IDF was required to presume that the
tower was a civilian object and to refrain from attack. Instead, they destroyed it. ABANDONED EQUIPMENT The IDF says that Hamas members removed items from the tower before the attack. The
IDF has been less clear about whether military equipment was left behind. While some reports refer to “empty offices,” these statements may be imprecise. Suppose Hamas members left some
military equipment in some offices, and that this equipment constituted a military objective. Then would the attack have been lawful? No. Based on IDF statements as well as video of the
attack, it appears that the attack was directed at the building’s base, not at particular offices or their contents. Since the building was a civilian object at the time of the attack, it
was unlawful to make the building as such the object of attack. Notably, even if Hamas members left military equipment behind, that would not convert the entire building into a military
objective. Fleeing a building is not a way of using it. Abandoning equipment is not a way of storing it. The military equipment, if any, may have been a military objective. But the building
as such was not. PROPORTIONALITY International law also prohibits attacks on military objectives which may be expected to cause incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, damage
to civilian objects, or a combination thereof, which would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated. Since the tower was a civilian object at the
time of the attack, this “proportionality rule” did not apply. Nevertheless, it is worth explaining why the expected harm to civilians was excessive in relation to the military advantage
anticipated. The civilian residents lost most of their belongings, their homes, and their offices. That much is certain. Many likely sought shelter in UN schools, already overflowing with
tens of thousands of similarly displaced civilians. With COVID-19 spreading, vaccinations stopped, the only testing lab destroyed, and the doctor overseeing Gaza’s pandemic response killed
in another IDF airstrike, these civilians were and remain exposed to greater risk of illness and death. These “reverberating effects” were not certain at the time of the attack, and
hopefully have not occurred. But they were reasonably foreseeable, quite likely to occur, and should carry substantial weight. The military advantage anticipated from the attack is unclear.
The IDF stated that military equipment was removed prior to the attack. Was any left behind? What was its value? Did Hamas members remove the most important equipment, or abandon it? We do
not know. The IDF may not know either. But we know that uncertainty affects proportionality. On one view, a military advantage is “anticipated” only if the attacker reasonably believes that
the attack will probably (more likely than not) obtain the advantage. The IDF says it knew that Hamas members removed equipment prior to the attack. Unless the IDF had information indicating
that the most important equipment was probably (more likely than not) left behind, _no_ military advantage could have been “anticipated” from its destruction. On a second view, a military
advantage is “anticipated” as long as it is reasonably foreseeable. However, the _weight_ of a military advantage depends on whether an attack is certain, likely, or unlikely to obtain it.
Suppose it was reasonably foreseeable that Hamas members left important equipment behind. Nevertheless, the weight of the military advantage anticipated from the attack would be reduced to
reflect the substantial likelihood that such equipment had been in fact removed. The expected harm to civilians and civilian objects was excessive in relation to the concrete and direct
military advantage anticipated. The IDF and its defenders do not argue otherwise. They do not deny that the destruction of dozens of civilian homes and offices would be excessive in relation
to the destruction of whatever military equipment may have been left in the building. They argue that the civilian homes and offices were not civilian objects at all. Shortly after
destroying Al Jalaa tower, the IDF tweeted that “[w]hen Hamas uses a tall building for military purposes, it becomes a lawful military target” and that “[w]hen Hamas places military assets
inside such a building, it becomes a lawful military target.” These statements reflect the IDF’s reported position that, if members of an armed group use _any_ part of a civilian building
for military activities, then the _entire_ building—including _all_ the civilian apartments inside—becomes a military objective. Since the proportionality rule only protects civilian
objects, the IDF argues that expected damage to civilian apartments inside such a building carries no weight in determining the proportionality of an attack. This view is grotesque. The
value of a civilian apartment to the civilians who live there does not suddenly disappear because members of an armed group use some other part of a large apartment building for military
activities. This view also produces absurd results. Destruction of personal belongings inside the civilian apartments counts, but destruction of the apartments themselves does not. Damage to
nearby buildings counts, but total destruction of apartments in the same building does not. Fortunately, a number of States, a majority of experts , and the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC) accept that civilian apartments retain their legal protection under the proportionality rule even if opposing forces put other parts of the building to military use.
Unfortunately, at least one State agrees with the IDF as a matter of law, though it instructs its forces “to recognise damage to the non-military ‘share’ of the [] object as collateral
damage when the non-military share is of particular and direct importance to protected persons.” Some scholars also agree with the IDF as a matter of law, though at least one suggests that
the law is morally defective on this point and armed forces should look elsewhere for moral guidance. To my knowledge, no one thinks it is morally acceptable to destroy dozens of civilian
apartments to obtain a minor or uncertain military advantage by destroying military equipment that the adversary has abandoned but may retrieve. The IDF may think it has found a loophole in
the law. It hasn’t. But it is worth remembering that basic moral principles have no loopholes. This question should be settled once and for all. But there is no need to do so here. No part
of Al Jalaa tower, let alone all of it, was a military objective at the time of the attack. Hamas was not using any part of it, and it is highly unlikely that it intended to use any part of
it while hostilities were ongoing. If Hamas left military equipment behind, then that equipment may have been a military objective. But the building was not. The civilian apartments remained
civilian objects. Their _certain_ destruction carried its full weight under the proportionality rule—more than enough to outweigh the _uncertain_ military advantage anticipated from
destroying whatever military equipment may or may not have been left behind. CONCLUSION The attack on Al Jalaa tower was so obviously illegal that one wonders how the IDF could have thought
otherwise. The only answer that comes to mind is not reassuring. The IDF emphasized that it notified the civilian residents that it planned to attack. The IDF may have thought that the
tower, or part of it, was a military objective _at the time of the notification_ and therefore it must remain a military objective _at the time of the attack_. This inference is obviously
invalid. Attacking forces do not acquire a legal right to carry out an attack at one moment in time, which they then retain even if circumstances change. The law of armed conflict applies at
all times, but never more than at the moment an attack is carried out. Suppose the Al Jalaa tower was a military objective at the time of the notification. While the total or partial
destruction of a military objective may offer a definite military objective, so may its _neutralization_. The notification itself achieved that neutralization. Hamas members left the
building, unlikely to return. The building made no effective contribution to military action. Its total destruction offered no definite military advantage. The IDF destroyed it anyway. It
was an unlawful attack. One of many, and not the worst, I suspect. Editor’s note: For a contrasting view, readers may be interested in Brian L. Cox, “The IDF Attack on Al Jalaa Tower:
Criticisms Are Correct on the Law, But Mistaken in Applying It,” Just Security, May 28, 2021. _PHOTO CREDIT: AERIAL VIEW TAKEN ON MAY 21, 2021, SHOWS THE AL-JALAA TOWER IN GAZA CITY, THAT
WAS LEVELLED BY AN ISRAELI AIR STRIKE. (MAHMUD HAMS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES)_ FEATURED IMAGE: This aerial view taken on May 21, 2021, shows the Al-Jalaa Tower in Gaza City, that was levelled by
an Israeli air strike during the recent military conflict between Israel and the Palestinian enclave ruled by Hamas, after a ceasefire brokered by Egypt. - A ceasefire between Israel and
Hamas, the Islamist movement which controls the Gaza Strip, appeared to hold today after 11 days of deadly fighting that pounded the Palestinian enclave and forced countless Israelis to seek
shelter from rockets. (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS / AFP) (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS/AFP via Getty Images)