All Quiet on the Western Intervention Front: A Brave Attempt
to Trace New Routes over Well-Travelled Ground- Book Review;
Philip ALSTON and Euan Mc DONALD, Human Rights, Intervention, and the Use of Force, Oxford, Oxford
University Press, 2008
Ciarán
Burke
I. Introduction
This
collection of eight essays represents a detailed discussion on the legal,
ethical and political framework surrounding the humanitarian intervention
debate. The authors examine various different issues involved in the sphere,
ranging from the impact of intervention and human rights on traditional notions
of state sovereignty to the rules on ‘targeted killing’ and the development of
the responsibility to protect initiative. Their collective work may be useful
as a reference point for any student wishing to broaden his or her knowledge of
this area.
Philip
Alston and Euan McDonald begin with an introduction to the debate, couched in
familiar terms. Noting the changes since the 2001 terrorist attacks, they argue
that we now inhabit “a radically different world in which the sovereignty of
Westphalia and the human rights of the Universal Declaration compete, often
unsuccessfully, with issues of national security as sources of both
international legitimacy and legality” [p. 1]. Nonetheless, they go on to
explain that the issue at hand is vastly more nuanced that security versus
sovereignty simpliciter and that
there are a variety of factors at play which undermine the assertion that
advances in human rights must necessarily undermine sovereignty. They point out
that new labels like ‘preventive self-defence’ and ‘enemy combatants’, which
are anathema to the human rights lobby, may erode classical notions of
sovereignty as much as reinforce them. They note the fact that several
discourses will often surround any one event, since states increasingly justify
their actions in different ways depending on the audience. They further note
the broad acceptance of the United States’ bombardment of Afghanistan, pointing
to just how far away from the classical doctrine of self-defence this was. This
first essay ends with the conclusion that the inevitable ethical and legal
dilemmas arising from the new trends brought about by sovereignty, security and
human rights must be met head-on by international lawyers. Alston and Mc Donald
seemingly revel in the complex web of problems thrown up by the debate,
concluding that “everything is
dangerous; that’s what keeps things interesting” [p. 31].
II. Human rights and state sovereignty
Hélène
Ruiz Fabri, in her contribution, provides insight into the history of state
sovereignty in international law, and how this has been, and is being, reshaped
by human rights. Examining the interplay between the two at an abstract,
conceptual level, she notes that rights are traditionally portrayed in terms of
individual autonomy vis-à-vis the
sovereign, and the two thus become antithetical, whereby a gain for one
represents a loss for the other. Departing from this, she proceeds to chart the
ways in which the state’s freedom may become limited by human rights,
distinguishing between whether a state desires such limitations and whether
they are imposed upon it by external pressure, noting the variety of
constraints in existence and the various modalities of the control mechanisms
and their potential efficacy. Ruiz Fabri presents sovereignty as a legal
fiction, presented as an ideal, but inevitably containing a plethora of
exceptions. This leads her to reject the over-simplistic assertion that a gain
for sovereignty must necessarily entail a loss for human rights or vice versa. Rather states as guardians
of societal structure, must necessarily also be employed as the most effective
guardians of human rights. She notes that the modern state is the subject of
two notable tensions, namely nationalism and globalisation, which weaken the
state itself and therefore are likely to weaken human rights protections and
may often be accompanied by the trivialisation of rights violations. She notes
that human rights law has a long road yet to travel to reach its goal of
universal protection, and calls for a closer co-operation between states and an
international civil society in which sovereignty and human rights are
interlocked, co-dependent and mutual guarantors. Ruiz Fabri’s logic is coherent
in the main part and her reasoning easy to follow. However, her argument is
undermined somewhat by a selective reading of history, ignoring the pioneering
English and Dutch experiences of limiting sovereignty and conferring individual
rights, and beginning her analysis with the oft-discussed American and French
declarations. She also fails to explore some interesting questions, such as
whether only Western democracies can fulfil the necessary criteria to become
‘friends’ of human rights. This point in particular warrants further attention.
III. Human rights and collective security
In
the third essay, Olivier Corten questions whether there is an emerging right of
humanitarian intervention. Framing his piece in terms of traditional
international law, he identifies two notable trends of scholarly opinion,
namely those who claim that gross human rights violations can constitute a
threat to the peace, thereby allowing Chapter VII action by the UN Security
Council, and those who hold that the importance of human rights is so great
that traditional sovereignty rules may be cast aside whenever a state is guilty
of gross abuses of the rights of its nationals. Despite the absence of any real
consensus on the issue, Corten focuses on the possibility that such a right has
developed, either as a customary norm, or as a reinterpretation of the UN
Charter. By means of an examination of past purportedly humanitarian
interventions, such as those in Iraqi Kurdistan and Rwanda, Corten compares the
practice and opinio juris of the
states involved. Despite arguing that such evidence offers little to affirm the
existence of a right of humanitarian intervention, and thus may not be used in
order to support future interventions, he nonetheless notes that such trends
may serve as proof that human rights ensure that international law is no longer
oblivious to states’ treatment of their own nationals. He cites the 1999 NATO
operation in Kosovo as a prime example of this, exploring in detail the reasons
given by the intervening states for their action. He notes the myriad of
ethical and political rhetoric advanced in various fora, but is careful to point out that the legal basis was often
rather unclear. While Security Council Resolutions were offered in support,
Corten opines that this indicates a reluctance to stray too far from
traditional conceptions of the international law on the use of force, and
certainly no real enthusiasm for a new right of humanitarian intervention.
Since Kosovo, little has changed in this regard. Corten finds meagre evidence
of support for such a new right, with most states holding firmly to the idea of
Security Council primacy in matters concerning the use of force. He fails to
discuss self-defence in any detail here, and dismisses the responsibility to protect
initiative as adopted in the 2005 World Summit Outcome Document, since it
merely “reiterates the rules on the use of force as they appear in the Charter”
and “leaves no doubt as to the rejection of any unilateral initiative taken in
response to extreme situations” of human rights abuses [p. 128]. Overall,
Corten casts a gloomy picture of the prospects for change in this sphere,
noting that institutional change is quasi-impossible, and that states lack the
requisite appetite for unilateral humanitarian intervention to receive support.
IV. The implications of Kosovo for international human rights law
Richard
B. Bilder, in his contribution, assesses the implications of NATO’s Kosovo
intervention for international human rights law. Supporting Corten’s thesis,
Bilder concludes that there is little to support the claim that a right to
humanitarian intervention exists. Again returning to a familiar theme, Bilder
highlights the many challenges which arise due to the interaction and conflict
between human rights and state sovereignty. He strikes a conservative note,
counselling against throwing caution to the wind with regards intervention,
noting the value of the existing UN institutions, and the damage which may be
visited upon them if states follow the knee-jerk reaction to ‘do something’,
even against the law, when this is demanded by conscience and morality.
Interestingly, however, Bilder notes that the language of the Charter
prohibition upon the use of force by states may in fact permit humanitarian
intervention if it is specifically in furtherance of the human rights purposes
of the Charter. However, this is mentioned only as a passing thought, and
Bilder avoids opening this particular Pandora’s Box. Instead, Bilder goes on to
challenge the traditional separation of ius
ad bellum and ius in bello,
arguing that a requirement of proportionality must necessarily be a component
of any potential right of humanitarian intervention, and that this may only be
assessed with reference to the actual conduct of the operation itself, and its
conformity with international humanitarian law. This being the case, the
less-than overtly humanitarian conduct of NATO’s forces in Kosovo must
necessarily inflict serious damage upon the legitimacy of the operation, and
may thereby have lost any tentative claim to legal justification which might
have been advanced. He also notes that the intervention deepened already bitter
divisions in Serbian society, further fuelling regional instability, and thus
reducing the action’s effectiveness on the ‘more harm than good’ scale.
Further, this mismanagement by NATO can, per
Bilder, only create insecurity for small states and a further incentive to
develop weapons of mass destruction for their own protection. Bilder curiously
posits that the great disparity of forces between the two sides during NATO’s
Kosovo intervention is ‘troubling’. However, this would seem to be an illogical
conclusion, unless one is yearning for a re-hashing of the Clausewitzian ‘iustes et eguales hostes’ model. If
anything, in theory at least, an intervening force ought ideally to be
manifestly superior in order to quickly bring an expedient end to the conflict
with a minimum of damage. As noted by Bilder himself, and by Alston and Mc Donald,
this chapter concludes with more questions raised than answered. This is,
indeed, a common trend throughout the volume.
V. Legality versus legitimacy
In
the fifth contribution, Anthea Roberts tackles the central question of the
humanitarian intervention debate: what to do when the law forbids what our
morality commands. Of course, this is a familiar theme, and one, again, which
has divided opinion throughout the ages. She notes that the antimony is
reflected here in the ambivalent reaction of many in the legal community to the
Kosovo intervention: that it was illegal but legitimate. She labels the
approach as “intuitively attractive” but “ultimately not a sustainable position
given the role of state practice in shaping international law” [p. 180]. She
notes that describing such violations as merely ‘technically’ illegal is
inappropriate given the norms with which we are dealing, namely important norms
of international law dealing with the use of force. She undertakes an extensive
review of the leading scholarly literature in the field, examining the various
tacks which have been employed by authors to make their support for illegal
action seem justified. She notes that most of these employ the language of
legitimacy as a counterpoint to that of legality, and cites three reasons
underpinning this discourse: firstly using legitimacy as a complete escape from
the strictures of law allowing flexibility to powerful states, secondly as a
tool to supplement strict notions of legality in an attempt to maintain the
law’s integrity while doing justice in individual cases and thirdly as a means
to critique and progressively develop the law. Roberts highlights the inherent
subjectivity of moral standards, however, and warns that any attempt to set
down criteria of ‘legitimacy’ that stray from international law may give rise
to uses of force which are far from humanitarian and abuse of the doctrine. She
herself argues for a more flexible interpretation of legality as a spectrum,
ranging from fully legal to fully illegal, with many less clear cases in between.
In such cases, to a varying degree, legitimacy might be useful as a
(non-exclusive) means of determining where on the spectrum certain actions
should be placed. Roberts’ article, while admittedly open to criticism over its
conclusions, is extremely well-researched and provides excellent insight into
the legality versus legitimacy
debate. Nonetheless, her ‘legal spectrum’ model cannot be left unchallenged.
The idea of ‘semi-legality’ smacks of the same logic that brought about phrases
like ‘acting off the Charter’.[1]
In attempting to criticise the mistakes of previous scholars, Roberts has, to
some extent, fallen into the same trap.
VI. Intervention in a divided world
Nathaniel
Berman examines the rhetorical construction of international law’s legitimacy
in cases of armed intervention and their aftermath. He argues “for an
understanding of international legitimacy which is less foundational and more
vulnerable, less static and more tentative, less certain and more messy” [p.
218]. ‘Messy’ is indeed apt to describe Berman’s reasoning, which, although
interesting, is written in a haphazard way, and which is by no means easy to
follow. He draws parallels between international law’s colonial past and the
mandates and protectorates of the interbellum and the human rights protection agenda which
represents international law’s future. Berman claims that the paternalistic
initiative to protect and civilise savage peoples is being repeated, in effect
by external interference in war-torn, peripheral, states by the western core.
Berman’s paper “seeks to understand international law’s attempts to achieve
legitimacy in response to three kinds of challenge - attacks on the status of
its identity, critiques of the coherence of its words as well as its deeds, and
attempts to associate it with spectres from its unsavoury past” [pp. 220-221]. He
cites the historical precedents of the Sudetenland and Abyssinia -based on
(then) international norms such as minority rights and international tutelage-
as a counterpoint for the modern Kosovo debate. Here, Berman makes an
interesting comparison, and it is perhaps a shame that his piece chooses to be
so ‘messy’, launching into divisions of legitimacy as a concept and thereby
losing clarity, as otherwise this could be a valuable contribution. However,
the essay as it is fails to meet such a billing. The clarity which is pervasive
throughout most of the essays in this volume is alien to Berman, who fails to
adequately communicate with his reader. One is left wondering whether it is his
choice of rhetoric or his choice of reasoning which so clouds the argument, but
in either case, Berman’s piece is probably the least convincing and
well-delivered contribution.
VII. States of exception
Nehal
Bhuta, in the penultimate chapter, detaches himself from the main debate, and
focuses on the regulation of targeted killings. Borrowing heavily from Carl
Schmitt’s Theorie des Partisanen,[2]
Bhuta argues that while the lex specialis model is superficially
attractive as a means of conceiving of international humanitarian law, it is
unsuitable in its present form for dealing with suspected terrorists. As with
the partisan, to satisfy the laws of war, a terrorist “would have to give up
his strongest weapons, secrecy and opacity” [p. 244]. Plainly, since he will
not do so, the modern terrorist cannot be made to neatly fit into any of the
Geneva Conventions’ various distinctions, which seek to protect ‘regular’
combatants. The application of either human rights law or humanitarian law to
the exclusion of the other in order to carry out targeted killings is one which
entails risks, whichever course is taken. He argues that perhaps a more
flexible approach to the lex specialis principle might reveal a better
model on which to proceed, speculating that human rights provisions might, for
example, be used to ‘fill out’ the “indispensable judicial guarantees”
mentioned in common Article 3 § 1 of the
Geneva Conventions. As Bhuta notes, the problem of targeted killings in general
is that it is something of a ‘vanishing point’ for the two regimes, and thus
the logic of ‘the exception’ tends to expand and intrude upon the normal. He
concludes by suggesting a pragmatic, fundamental human rights-based
proportionality approach, balancing risks with rights to whatever extent possible.
This may well be a sensible proposal, given the legal problems surrounding
targeted killings, and the fact that neither legal framework can adequately
deal with this issue, but it obviously raises the possibility of abuse and
subjectivity of judgment and raises questions about supervision. Yet again,
legality and legitimacy come face-to-face. Unfortunately, yet again, the author
seems unable to offer an adequate reconcilement of the two.
VIII. The schizophrenias of R2P
In the concluding article, José E. Alvarez
discusses what he dubs “the schizophrenias of R2P”, that is, of the responsibility
to protect doctrine, warning against the transforming of R2P into a legal norm
[p. 274]. He notes the wide, and above all diverse, array of supporters of the initiative,
and says that instinct “should warn us there must be something wrong as well as
right with an idea that can be endorsed by such strange bedfellows” [p. 277].
Noting, further, that the discourse has strayed far from where the original
report’s drafters intended, he recounts the ‘horror’ of many of the R2P’s
initial proponents, including ICISS co-chair Gareth Evans, at the
bastardisation of their project. He notes further that the concept reduces
sovereignty to ‘abuse it and lose it’; an instrumental value, rather than an
intrinsic one, which can lead down the slippery slope to the Bush
administration’s controversial notions of the pre-emptive use of force.
Alvarez’s argument has much to commend it, calling as it does for a return to
the language of humanitarian intervention and a move away from a new concept
which has already in the few short years since its inception, developed a
variety of problems. Indeed, as the R2P has grown in renown, it has shrunk in
stature, becoming progressively less and less useful to the causes which it was
supposed to protect and progressively more and more a tool which can be
perverted by the unscrupulous. His logic in this regard is convincing, and his
citing of the ‘founding fathers’ as rejecting their own creation due to its
abusive employment by governments opposed to the ideals for which it initially
stood is a welcome wake-up call to many of those who have blindly jumped on the
R2P bandwagon.
IX. Conclusion
All in all, this collection is a useful tool for
the student who wishes to garner a broader understanding of humanitarian
intervention and related issues, although it must be said that while it
purports to represent a state-of-the-art, it falls short in a number of key
spheres. While deducing trends from the volume is difficult due to the
diversity of the offerings, one may nonetheless tentatively proffer a few
comments.
Firstly, as
works in this particular field are frequently wont to do, this book leaves many
key questions unanswered. The same old issues are re-hashed and re-discussed by
another series of authors, who, as is often the case, fail to say anything new,
criticising their predecessors but often making the same elementary mistakes
which have been made before. This, is, however, hardly surprising, given the
material which is being discussed, and the difficulties with which even the
foremost international lawyers have experienced in dealing with the interaction
of general international law concerning the use of force and human rights
norms. The humanitarian intervention debate, in particular, is far from
settled, and this book, while being far from a significant milestone on the
journey to the resolution of the issues at hand, is a useful yardstick by which
we may measure how far we have come.
Secondly, the legality / legitimacy dichotomy
remains the central point of contention throughout the volume, and little
consensus is reached here either. Again, the fact that this is not a new trend
may be evinced as a defence of the book, but it is nonetheless discouraging to
see so little progress or evidence of fresh ideas in this area.
Finally, the various authors come down surprisingly
firmly for a reaffirmation and in some cases even a positive strengthening of
state sovereignty to protect human rights, and for a somewhat conservative,
traditionalist reading of international law. This theme may be seen to run
throughout the broad mass of the contributions in this volume. Given the
conflict raised in the early chapters between human rights and sovereignty, this
would seem remarkable, since many would argue that protecting human rights
implies increased state accountability and ergo decreasing the effect of
sovereignty as a doctrine. Nonetheless, the authors manage to present a fairly
coherent defence of this position throughout, arguing that sovereignty may
imply duties as well as rights, and that state power must be the primary tool
in effecting actual human rights protection.
This book will find favour with the student of
international law who wishes to broaden his or her knowledge of the conflicts
arising between human rights and the regime governing the use of force. In this
respect, it is a useful book, encompassing a variety of viewpoints, but
nonetheless settling upon a clear message. The work is coherent in this regard,
and the authors clearly had knowledge of one another’s views before writing, so
that a structured document emerges. This is something which is found lacking in
many other volumes of this kind, and warrants praise. However, despite the structure
and clarity of voice, the authors deliver a message which is not new or
original and which occasionally borders on the stale, and this is certainly to
be regretted.