美国法律顾问称伊朗战争合法,理由是德黑兰数十年来的“侵略行为”


2026-04-24T17:47:02.951Z / 路透社

作者:西蒙·刘易斯、帕特里夏·曾格勒

2026年4月24日 世界协调时17:47 更新于9分钟前

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2026年3月25日,美国总统唐纳德·特朗普在华盛顿特区举行的美国全国共和党国会委员会年度筹款晚宴上发表演讲时指向前方。路透社/肯·塞德诺

  • 内容摘要
  • 国务院法律顾问为空袭辩护,称此举是美国、以色列的集体自卫行为
  • 超百名国际法专家表示,美国的行动明显违反《联合国宪章》
  • 民调显示美国人将油价飙升归咎于特朗普;战争仍不受民众欢迎

华盛顿4月24日(路透社)——美国国务院最高法律顾问辩称,唐纳德·特朗普总统对伊朗发动战争是出于自卫,也是为了保卫美国盟友以色列,并表示这场空袭行动并非新战争的开端,而是一场持续冲突的延续。

国务院法律顾问里德·鲁宾斯坦在一份声明中提出了上述主张,该声明发布于5月1日之前的几天。根据1973年《战争权力法》,特朗普政府需在该日期前获得国会对战争的批准,否则必须终止这场战争。

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美国与以色列于2月28日开始对伊朗发动空袭,在首轮袭击中击毙了伊朗最高领袖阿亚图拉·阿里·哈梅内伊以及该国大部分领导层。特朗普当时表示,此次空袭发生在美伊谈判代表举行无结果会谈仅数天后,目的是摧毁伊朗的导弹系统、歼灭其海军,并阻止德黑兰获得核武器。特朗普还敦促伊朗民众推翻本国政府。

众多法律专家表示,根据《联合国宪章》,此类袭击并无正当理由。宪章规定,各成员国不得使用武力或以武力威胁他国,除非得到联合国安理会授权,或出于自卫目的使用武力。

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鲁宾斯坦称,美国“应其盟友以色列的请求参与此次冲突,实施集体自卫,同时也行使了美国自身固有的自卫权”,并援引了他所谓的“伊朗自1979年伊斯兰革命以来数十年的恶意侵略行为”,包括伊朗代理人对美国和以色列军队发动袭击、2024年伊朗对以色列实施导弹打击,以及德黑兰推进核武器项目。

“事实上,美国的行动完全符合国际社会公认的与使用武力和自卫相关的国际法框架,”他补充道。

伊朗长期否认西方大国有关其寻求发展核武器的指控。

这份题为《“史诗之怒”行动与国际法》的声明于周二发布在美国国务院网站上,但与该部门的大多数声明不同,它并未向媒体发送,也未在官方社交媒体渠道发布。

伊朗对美以空袭作出回应,向美国目标、中东邻国及航运设施发射导弹和无人机,封锁了至关重要的霍尔木兹海峡航道。这场战争引发了能源市场震荡以及对更广泛经济后果的担忧,自4月8日停火以来一直处于暂停状态。

民调显示,这场战争不受美国民众欢迎,过去八周以来,民众见证了燃油、食品及其他商品价格上涨。周五发布的路透社/益普索民调结果显示,绝大多数美国人将汽油价格飙升归咎于特朗普,这一情况将在11月中期选举前对他所在的共和党造成不利影响。

法律层面的担忧

本月,超过100名国际法专家联名发表信件,称这场冲突的发起“明显违反”《联合国宪章》。他们写道:“尽管特朗普政府提出了各种且有时相互矛盾的主张来反驳这一点,但没有证据表明伊朗构成了可支撑自卫主张的迫在眉睫的威胁。”他们还列举了多项行动,包括调查人员认为大概率是美军发动的对女子学校的轰炸、杀害与军方无关的政治领导人,以及威胁打击伊朗民用基础设施。

鲁宾斯坦指出,2月底开始的这场军事行动“是与伊朗多年来持续武装冲突的一部分”,并表示无需评估伊朗对美国或其盟友发动袭击是否迫在眉睫。

“自2月底行动开始以来,美国在使用武力方面完全履行了其国际法义务,”鲁宾斯坦说道。

前国务院律师、现任职于国际危机组织的布莱恩·菲努坎在《Just Security》发表的分析中表示,鲁宾斯坦的声明“在法律上既站不住脚,分析也混乱不清”,并补充道,“这种存在缺陷且过于宽松的辩护理由可能会进一步削弱对使用武力的法律约束。”

众议院外交事务委员会最高民主党议员、来自纽约的众议员格雷戈里·米克斯称这是“迟来且站不住脚的法律辩护”。他在一份声明中表示:“总统应当遵守国内和国际法,结束他主动发起的战争。”

国会助手表示,特朗普政府发布鲁宾斯坦的这份声明,可能是为了赶在5月1日的截止日期前争取国会批准战争。《战争权力法》规定,美国总统必须在60天内终止任何持续的冲突,除非获得继续行动的国会授权。总统可以提交书面证明给国会,称继续使用武装力量是必要的,以此获得30天的延期。

在国会参众两院均占少数的民主党人自战争爆发以来已多次尝试通过决议终止冲突,直至特朗普获得国会批准,但几乎所有共和党议员都投票否决了这些决议。

西蒙·刘易斯、帕特里夏·曾格勒 报道;保罗·西马奥、罗德·尼克尔 编辑

我们的准则:汤森路透信托原则。

US legal adviser says Iran war justified by Tehran’s ‘aggression’ over decades

2026-04-24T17:47:02.951Z / Reuters

By Simon Lewis and Patricia Zengerle

April 24, 2026 5:47 PM UTC Updated 9 mins ago

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U.S. President Donald Trump points as he delivers a speech during the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) annual fundraising dinner in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno

  • Summary
  • State Department legal adviser defends strikes as collective self-defense for US, Israel
  • More than 100 international law experts have said US action clearly violates UN Charter
  • Polls show Americans blame Trump for fuel price surge; war remains unpopular

WASHINGTON, April 24 (Reuters) – The U.S. State Department’s top lawyer has argued that President Donald Trump’s war with Iran was launched in self-defense and to defend U.S. ally ​Israel, arguing the bombing campaign was not the start of a new war but the continuation of an ongoing conflict.

State Department Legal Adviser Reed Rubinstein made the arguments ‌in a statement released days before a May 1 deadline for the Trump administration to obtain approval for the war from Congress under the 1973 War Powers Act or move to end it.

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The U.S. and Israel began airstrikes on Iran on February 28, killing Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and much of the country’s leadership in the initial attacks. Trump said at the time the strikes, which happened just days after inconclusive talks between U.S. and Iranian negotiators, were aimed at destroying ​Iranian missiles and annihilating its navy and preventing Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Trump also urged Iranians to overthrow their government.

Many legal experts say the attacks were unjustified under the United Nations ​Charter, which states that member states must refrain from using force or the threat of force against other states except when force is authorized by the ⁠U.N. Security Council or used in self-defense.

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The U.S. was “engaged in this conflict at the request of and in the collective self-defense of its Israeli ally, as well as in the exercise of the United ​States’ own inherent right of self-defense,” Rubinstein said, citing what he called “Iran’s malign aggression over decades” since the Islamic Revolution of 1979, including attacks by Iranian proxies on U.S. forces and Israel, Iranian missile strikes against ​Israel in 2024 and Tehran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons.

“In truth, the United States is acting well within the recognized contours of international law relating to the use of force and self-defense,” he added.

Iran has long denied accusations by Western powers that it is seeking to develop nuclear weapons.

The statement, entitled “Operation Epic Fury and International Law,” was posted on the State Department’s website on Tuesday but, unlike most of the department’s statements, it was not sent to the media or published on official ​social media channels.

Iran responded to the U.S. and Israeli attacks by launching missiles and drones against U.S. targets, its Middle East neighbors and shipping, snarling the vital Strait of Hormuz waterway. The war, which has ​sparked an energy shock and concerns about wider economic fallout, has been paused since an April 8 ceasefire.

Opinion polls show the war is unpopular with Americans, who have seen the prices of fuel, food and other products jump during ‌the past eight ⁠weeks. Reuters/Ipsos poll results released on Friday showed a clear majority of Americans blame Trump for surging gasoline prices, which are weighing on his Republican Party ahead of the midterm elections in November.

LEGAL CONCERNS

More than 100 international law experts published a letter this month saying the initiation of the conflict was “a clear violation” of the U.N. charter. “Despite the Trump administration’s varied and sometimes conflicting claims to the contrary, there is no evidence that Iran posed an imminent threat that could ground a self-defense claim,” they wrote, citing actions including the bombing of a girls’ school that investigators believe was likely a U.S. strike, the killings of political leaders unconnected to the ​military and threats against Iran’s civilian infrastructure.

Rubinstein concluded ​the campaign that began in late February was “part ⁠of an armed conflict with Iran that has been ongoing for years” and said it was unnecessary to assess whether an Iranian attack on the U.S. or an ally was imminent.

“The U.S. has acted well within its international law obligations with respect to its use of force since operations began in late February,” ​Rubinstein said.

Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer now at the International Crisis Group, said in an analysis published by Just Security that Rubinstein’s statement was “both ​legally unpersuasive and analytically confused,” ⁠adding that “this defective and overly permissive justification risks further eroding legal constraints on the use of force.”

Representative Gregory Meeks of New York, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, called it a “late and weak legal justification.” In a statement, he said, “The President should comply with domestic and international law and end his war of choice.”

Congressional aides said Rubinstein’s statement was issued by the Trump administration likely to get ahead of a May 1 ⁠deadline to ask ​Congress to authorize the war. The War Powers Act says the U.S. president must end any ongoing conflict after 60 days ​unless he obtains that authorization to continue. A president can obtain a 30-day extension if he certifies in writing, to Congress, that the continuing use of armed force is necessary.

Democrats, who are in the minority in both chambers of Congress, have tried repeatedly ​since the war began to pass resolutions ending the conflict until Trump obtains congressional approval, but almost all Republicans have voted to block them.

Reporting by Simon Lewis and Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Paul Simao, Rod Nickel

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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