Rezensiertes Werk: Ronellenfitsch, Michael: Louis L'Amour und das Völkerrecht (Public International Law). - Berlin : Duncker & Humblot, 2008. - 389 S. (Tübinger Schriften zum internationalen und europäischen Recht ; 89) ISBN: 978-3-428-13005-4
In: Forthcoming as Chapter 2 in Between the Lines of the Vienna Convention: Canons of Construction and Other Interpretive Principles in Public International Law: A Practitioners' Handbook (Joseph Klingler, Yuri Parkhomenko, and Constantinos Salonidis, eds.) (Wolters Kluwer)
In response to the Russian Federation's purported 'annexation' of Crimea and the conflict between separatists in the Donbass region and the central government of Ukraine, the United States, the European Union, Japan, and Australia, the principal countries, have imposed economic sanctions upon Russian officials, firms, and private individuals. The economic sanctions imposed upon the Russian Federation violate public international law on three grounds: 1) lack of authorisation under the United Nations Charter; 2) inapplicability of Art. XXI GATT ('Security Exceptions'); and 3) lack of legal authority based on the International Law Commission's Draft Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts. Fidelity to the 'rule of law' requires an immediate withdrawal of all economic sanctions. By contrast, the international community 'ought to' condemn Ukraine's indiscriminate killing of innocent citizens living in the Donbass region and support the efforts of the Russian Federation to provide humanitarian aid to the region.