中美 "制裁战 "后单边制裁的合法性

Joshua Andresen
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摘要

尽管拜登总统和习近平主席在 2022 年 11 月的 G20 峰会上会晤,许多人认为中美关系出现缓和,但两国仍在继续制定和部署针对彼此的制裁措施。美国最近采取的行动包括继续使用出口管制,特别是限制中国获得先进的计算芯片。与此同时,中国继续利用制裁来打击美国公司,最近的形式是对美国芯片制造商美光公司进行国家安全调查,以及对雷神公司和洛克希德-马丁公司等美国主要军火制造商采取 "反制措施"。本文探讨了中美两国已经采取和可能采取的一系列经济制裁措施、这些措施的合法性,以及这些制裁措施对未来国际制裁法可能产生的影响。尽管单方面实施的经济制裁仍是国际法中一个极具争议的领域,但世界上最大的两个经济体越来越多地使用制裁的一个意想不到的后果将是使制裁的使用具有合理性和合法性。尽管中美制裁战的经济代价将是惊人的,但这种战争只会进一步巩固单边制裁作为国家安全和外交关系基本工具的地位。本文描述了国际法可能如何因制裁的扩散而发展,认为国家实践的增加非但不会削弱制裁的合法性,反而会支持单方面实施制裁的习惯规范。
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The Lawfulness of Unilateral Sanctions in the Wake of a US-China “Sanctions War”
Despite what many saw as a détente in US–China relations as presidents Biden and Xi met at the G20 Summit in November 2022, both countries have continued to develop and deploy sanctions against one another. Among the most recent actions by the US is the continued use of export controls, particularly to limit China’s access to advanced computing chips. Meanwhile, China has continued to use sanctions to target US firms, recently in the form of a national security investigation into US chip maker, Micron, and “countermeasures” against major US arms manufacturers such as Raytheon and Lockheed Martin. This Article examines the range of economic sanctions that the US and China have and could deploy against one another, the lawfulness of these measures, and the likely effects of these sanctions for the future of international sanctions law. Although unilaterally imposed economic sanctions remain a deeply contested area of international law, an unintended consequence of the increasing use of sanctions by the world’s two largest economies will be to lend legitimacy and legality to their use. Although the economic costs of a US–China sanctions war would be staggering, such a war would only further entrench unilateral sanctions as a fundamental tool of national security and foreign relations. This Article describes how international law is likely to develop as a consequence of the proliferation of sanctions, arguing that, far from undermining their lawfulness, increased state practice will support a customary norm of unilaterally imposed sanctions.
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