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Smoke rises from an explosion caused by an Israeli strike in Doha, Qatar, on Sept. 9, 2025. AP
Can Israel use self-defence to justify its strike on Qatar under the law?
Published: September 10, 2025 3.52pm AEST
Author Shannon Bosch
Associate Professor (Law), Edith Cowan University
Associate Professor (Law), Edith Cowan University
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Shannon Bosch does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
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Israel launched a targeted airstrike on the Hamas leadership in Doha, the capital of Qatar, on Tuesday. Six people were reported killed, including the son of a senior Hamas figure.
Global condemnation was swift. The Qatari government called the strike a “clear breach of the rules and principles of international law”, a sentiment echoed by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, and others.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres called the attack “a flagrant violation of sovereignty and the territorial integrity of Qatar”. The prime ministers of both the UK and Australia also said the strike violated the sovereignty of Qatar.
Even US President Donald Trump, Israel’s strongest ally, distanced himself from the attack:
Unilaterally bombing inside Qatar, a Sovereign Nation and close Ally of the United States, that is working very hard and bravely taking risks with us to broker Peace, does not advance Israel or America’s goals.
So, what does the law say about this? Was Israel’s attack against Hamas on the territory of another country lawful?
Israel’s justification
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu justified the strike by saying it targeted the political leadership of Hamas in retaliation for two attacks: a shooting in Jerusalem that killed six people and an attack on an army camp in Gaza that killed four soldiers. He said:
Hamas proudly took credit for both of these actions. […] These are the same terrorist chiefs who planned, launched and celebrated the horrific massacres of October 7th.
Netanyahu speaks after the Qatar strike.
What does international law say?
Article 2(4) of the UN Charter prohibits the use of force against the “territorial integrity or political independence” of another state.
Any use of force requires either the authorisation of the UN Security Council, or a justification that force is being used strictly in self-defence and in accordance with Article 51 of the UN Charter.
So, does this mean Israel could claim self-defence against Hamas’ leadership in Qatar, if the group did indeed direct the two attacks against its citizens in Jerusalem and Gaza?
The answer is complicated.
Article 2(4) of the UN Charter prohibits the use of force against the “territorial integrity or political independence” of another state.
Any use of force requires either the authorisation of the UN Security Council, or a justification that force is being used strictly in self-defence and in accordance with Article 51 of the UN Charter.
So, does this mean Israel could claim self-defence against Hamas’ leadership in Qatar, if the group did indeed direct the two attacks against its citizens in Jerusalem and Gaza?
The answer is complicated.
Self-defence against groups like Hamas
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has repeatedly stressed the paramount importance of territorial sovereignty in international law.
As such, it has restricted the use of self-defence to armed attacks that can be attributable to a state, not merely to non-state actors operating from a state’s territory.
After the September 11 2001 terror attacks, the United States and other countries claimed they could use force in self-defence against non-state actors (such as terrorist groups) that are sheltering and operating from another state’s territory, even if that state was not directly involved.
In response to these developments, Sir Daniel Bethlehem, an expert in international law and foreign policy advisor to the UK government, proposed several principles aimed at curtailing this justification within the intent of Article 51.
The “Bethlehem principles”, which remain contested, argue that Article 51 can cover actual or imminent attacks by terrorist groups, but only if necessity (the use of force in self-defence is truly a last resort) and proportionality are satisfied.
Moreover, as a rule, force on another state’s soil requires the consent of that state. The only narrow exceptions are when there’s a reasonable, objective belief the host state is colluding with the group or is unable or unwilling to stop it – and no other reasonable option short of force exists.
Israel argues Hamas’ leadership based abroad in countries such as Qatar, Lebanon and Iran remains part of the command structure that orchestrates hostilities against its soldiers in Gaza and citizens in Israel.
That alone, however, is not enough to justify self-defence according to the Bethlehem principles.
By Netanyahu’s own admission, the objective of the Qatar strike was retaliatory, not to prevent an ongoing or imminent attack.
Questions could also be raised about whether proportionality was observed given the diplomatic context of striking a sovereign state and the potential for disproportionate civilian harm in this part of Doha, which houses many diplomatic residences.
Targeting political leaders meeting in a third state — especially one engaged in mediation — also raises questions about whether force was the only means available to address the threat posed by Hamas in this situation.

Then-US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (left) meeting with Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani in Doha, Qatar, in June 2024, to discuss a ceasefire in Gaza. Chuck Kennedy/US Department of State/EPA
Moreover, under these principles, Israel would need to demonstrate that Qatar is either colluding with or is unable or unwilling to stop Hamas – and that there was no other effective or reasonable way to respond to the situation.
Qatar has hosted Hamas’ political offices since 2012 and has been one of the group’s main financial backers since it came to power in Gaza.
At the same time, Qatar has played an important mediation role since the October 7 attacks.
This makes it difficult to argue Qatar is unwilling or unable to neutralise Hamas’ operations from its territory. Its mediation would also suggest there is a reasonably effective alternative to force to counter Hamas’ actions.
Moreover, under these principles, Israel would need to demonstrate that Qatar is either colluding with or is unable or unwilling to stop Hamas – and that there was no other effective or reasonable way to respond to the situation.
Qatar has hosted Hamas’ political offices since 2012 and has been one of the group’s main financial backers since it came to power in Gaza.
At the same time, Qatar has played an important mediation role since the October 7 attacks.
This makes it difficult to argue Qatar is unwilling or unable to neutralise Hamas’ operations from its territory. Its mediation would also suggest there is a reasonably effective alternative to force to counter Hamas’ actions.
Final verdict
Without UN Security Council authorisation, Israel’s strikes on Qatar do appear to be a violation of territorial sovereignty and possibly an act of aggression under the UN Charter.
This is further bolstered by the narrow approach the ICJ has taken on self-defence against non-state actors in third-party states, and its stringent requirements of proportionality and necessity – neither of which appear to have been met here.
Harm-ass leaders based in Qatar celebrated the Oct 7 2023 Nakba.
ReplyDeleteEven the Saudi Foreign Minister accused Qatar of sapoting terrorism.
https://youtu.be/UgnkAbKxqvU?feature=shared
https://youtu.be/cD0L7M5H4no?feature=shared
Saudi and Qatar have very strained relationships - at one point, Saudi had the silly idea of digging a canal to isolate Qatar but ceased when it realised the canal would better protect Qatar from Saudi
DeleteAs a backdrop to next week's UNGA where some countries will recognize a fictitious country with no borders, an anti-semetic corrupted leader with no sapot of his voters (last election was 20 years ago) and whose gomen "pays for slays" Isaacs etc.
ReplyDeleteHillel Neuer from UN Watch presents to Yitalian Senate....how many Resolutions have been adopted by the UN General Assembly between 2015 and 2025 on...
1. China with 1.5 billion people with zero freedom of speech, zero freedom of assembly, zero freedom of religion, posturing to invade Taiwan and already rampassed South China Sea....
Answer: ZERO
2. Cuba - ZERO
3. Qatar - ZERO
4. Turkey, Pakistan, Venezuela, Zimbabwe, Libya - all ZERO
5. Myanmar - 10
6. Syria - 12
7. North Korea - 10
8. Iran - 9
9. Isaac - 173 (repeat - one hundred and seventy three)
We should re-name UN to anti-JewN.....ha3.
mfer, what's the basic core rule of that western defined rule based international order?
DeleteEverything must comply with western values of DemoNcracy!
So what's in yr mfering zeros?
The recent UN Commission on Human Rights.......was clearly a show-trial....
ReplyDelete1. Chief Judge Navi Pillay - already took sides in May 2021 when she blamed Isaac there was a war between Hamas and Isaac. She signed letters to sanction Isaac. How can she be appointed as the Chief Judge in a Commission when she already had a history that is biased against Isaac?
2. Miloon Khotari - who a few years ago said "the Jewish lobby is controlling the social media". He was condemned by Italy, France, Germany, Switzerland....18 countries altogether condemned him for anti-semitism, including the Secretary General of the UN and the President of the UN Human Rights Council. Amazingly he was appointed to be a second judge in this show-trial.
3. Francesca Albanese - who on Oct 7 2023 texted "today's violence must be put in context" and was quoted as saying to Hamas "you have the right to fight Israel".....clearly she is also biased and cannot be a judge. The countries who have com=ndemned her for anti-semitism: USA, Canada, Netherlands, Argentina, Hungary, France, Germany. She also accepted money from pro-Hamas group for trips to Australia etc
https://youtu.be/OP7gqQ5VK6o?feature=shared
Ooop… u have forgotten many similar incidents happened with the plays of EU, Yank, pommieland etc etc.
DeleteYr f*cking 照妖镜 can only pointing outwardly!
Here is UN Watch's Rebuttal to the Pillay Commission Report:
ReplyDeletehttps://unwatch.org/un-watch-rebuttal-legal-analysis-of-pillay-commissions-september-2025-report-to-human-rights-council/
1. Failure to prove dolus specialis: The specific intent to destroy a protected group is the central and extremely high bar in any genocide case. The Commission’s claim of genocidal intent fails on this threshold alone, relying on tortured parsing of statements, selective quotations, and conjecture rather than unambiguous evidence.
2. Erasure of Hamas as a belligerent: The report never acknowledges that the IDF is engaged in combat with an estimated 30,000-strong Hamas force in Gaza as well as thousands of fighters from other militant groups. A reader would come away believing the war has the IDF deployed against only women and children, with Hamas erased from the narrative. The Commission makes no attempt to analyze the war itself, because in its alternative version of reality, there is none.
3. Silence on Hamas’s military infrastructure: There is no mention of Hamas’s 17-year military buildup in Gaza, including its vast tunnel network, booby-trapped buildings, and massive arms buildup. By ignoring this reality, the report strips the conflict of its military context and recasts lawful military targets as evidence of genocide.
4. Erasure of Hamas’s use of civilian infrastructure: The Commission ignores Hamas’s openly acknowledged human shield strategy,including its use of mosques, schools, residential buildings, and hospitals to conceal tunnels and weapons. Instead, damage to these sites is consistently portrayed as deliberate targeting of civilians by Israel.
5. No recognition of the hostage crisis: The report omits the fact that Hamas took Israeli hostages and continues to hold them, starve them, and rape them. This omission is consistent with the broader erasure of Hamas as an active actor in Gaza, removing essential context from the Commission’s narrative.
6. Reliance on Hamas-supplied fatality data: Despite Hamas’s long record of exaggerating civilian deaths and its status as a US and EU-designated terrorist organization, its figures are treated as fact while IDF data on combatants killed is ignored.
7. Civilian deaths distorted as evidence of genocide: The report presents civilian casualties as prima facie proof of genocidal intent rather than as tragic and unavoidable consequences of urban warfare, exacerbated by Hamas’s human shield strategy. The Report cites numerous incidents where civilians were killed as intentional and targeted acts by Israel without evidence.
8. Normal wartime consequences treated as crimes: Regular and expected wartime impacts on civilians, such as mental health impacts, difficulty accessing medical care and displacement, are depicted as evidence of genocide rather than inevitable outcomes of urban conflict.
9. Urban devastation portrayed as extermination: Large-scale damage is cited as proof of genocide, ignoring that urban combat inherently produces extensive destruction, particularly when military forces are embedded within civilian areas.
The Commission also ignores the obvious: the suffering of Gazans could be significantly reduced or even ended if Hamas released all hostages and relinquished control of Gaza. The idea that the population experiencing the claimed genocide has the power to stop it but refuses to is unprecedented in the history of actual genocides and exposes a deliberate blind spot in the Report. This omission mirrors the Commission’s broader erasure of Hamas as an active party in the conflict, a group with agency and responsibility, leaving readers with the false impression that all suffering in Gaza is solely Israel’s responsibility.
The Report is riddled with factual errors and assertions made with no credible evidence. A complete catalog of these mistakes and their corrections would be longer than the Report itself. This rebuttal highlights key factual errors and significant omissions that the Commission relies on to underpin its thesis of genocide.
wakakakaka…
DeleteWho the f*ck is unwatch?