Tag: international law

  • US Can Help End Darfur Genocide

    The time is long overdue, but not too late, to stop the active genocide in Sudan. What can we do as Americans?

    The Darfur region of Sudan is in flames. For nearly two years cynical leaders in Khartoum have been seeking to enhance their power by using the country’s armed forces and local militia to suppress the local non-Arab population. They have driven a million and a half people from their homes, holding them in concentration camps and denying them access to adequate food, water, and shelter. More than 30,000 have been killed, and a range of crimes against humanity have been committed, including the mass rape of women and the systematic destruction of villages, livestock, and crops.

    If nothing is done, US officials predict that 350,000 people could be dead of starvation, disease, or murder by the end of this year.

    Does all this sound familiar? Yes – it also happened in Rwanda , Bosnia , and Kosovo. An international convention drafted in 1948 after the Holocaust and ratified by the United States and other countries commits the world “to undertake to prevent” the crime of genocide. Shamefully, in Rwanda that commitment rang hollow in 1994 when 800,000 people were slaughtered in less than three months. In Bosnia and Kosovo the lesson of Rwanda was remembered, although too late for many victims. Intensive diplomatic and military efforts were organized within a UN framework by the United States and other countries in 1995 and 1999. These efforts saved hundreds of thousands of lives and established under international law a new doctrine of humanitarian intervention to stop a genocide in progress.

    What can Americans do to save lives in Sudan?

    First, we must put aside domestic politics. The growing genocide in Darfur is not a partisan issue but one that reaches across a broad range of constituencies, including religious, human rights, humanitarian, medical, and legal communities, among others, all of which are advocating an aggressive international response to the crisis. Many organizations with a conservative bent, particularly within the religious community, have been at the forefront of advocacy for the people of Sudan ; others have been hesitant to link up with them.

    These groups must put aside their differences and join forces to increase pressure to move Sudan to the top of the international agenda. They can do this by stimulating more media coverage, organizing grassroots contacts with members of Congress, seeking support for urgent action from both presidential candidates, and connecting with counterparts in other countries.

    Second, a new push for international action can be mounted on the recent visits to Sudan by Secretary of State Colin Powell and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. Powell now “owns” the issue in the Bush administration, and he should be urged to exercise strong leadership on Darfur both in the administration and in the UN Security Council.

    The council must immediately adopt a resolution authorizing much stronger sanctions against the Sudanese leaders if they fail to carry out their commitment to Powell to disarm the militias.

    The resolution should also create the authority for a multinational military force to secure access by the people of Darfur to the humanitarian relief that the government has blocked. Third, the intervention in Darfur should be built on African support, with logistical, financial, and personnel assistance from the United States and European countries. The African Union , a coalition of African countries, recently sent a small group of observers to monitor the tenuous cease-fire in the civil war in southern Sudan . This initial commitment gives the African Union a stake in resolving the crisis and provides legitimacy to an international presence in Sudan . To be effective, however, the intervention will require a large military force to provide security both to the monitors and, more important, to the massive humanitarian relief operation needed to prevent starvation, disease, and ethnic cleansing from claiming hundreds of thousands of lives in the coming months. That force should be assembled from African countries with US and other backing.

    Finally, we should recognize this as an opportunity for the United States to begin to reestablish its role in the world as a defender of human rights. As a result of the disastrous intervention in Iraq , the scandal over prisoner abuses, and unconstrained US unilateralism, American credibility on the world stage has sunk to its lowest point in a generation. In addition, a decade ago we looked the other way and did nothing as genocide swept through Rwanda . Actions, not words, are now needed to restore our human rights credentials. That’s why the United States should act now within an international framework to help rescue the people of Darfur before it’s too late for them, and for us.

    John Shattuck, author of “Freedom on Fire: Human Rights Wars and America ‘s Response”, is CEO of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation.

    Originally published in the Boston Globe

  • Nuclear Weapons Exact a Terrible Price

    In today’s world, nuclear weapons no longer create security, they threaten it. In 1996, the World Court declared the use of nuclear weapons illegal under international humanitarian law, because these weapons of mass destruction cannot distinguish between combatants and innocent civilians and create unnecessary suffering. Maintaining the current U.S. nuclear arsenal of more than 10,000 warheads is extremely expensive. This year alone, it will cost the U.S. taxpayer $6.5 billion, or $18 million per day.

    If we know that nuclear weapons pose an acute danger to our security; that their use is illegal because of their inhumane and indiscriminate power; and that maintaining them is consuming enormous resources, which could otherwise be used to improve our ailing public schools and universities or strengthen our exhausted conventional military forces, how can we tacitly accept our government’s and the National Weapons Labs’ push for the development of new generations of nuclear weapons and increased nuclear weapons spending of up to $30 billion over the next four years?

    Under the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty of 1970, the United States remains committed to the gradual reduction and eventual elimination of its nuclear arsenal. Article VI of the treaty stipulates that “Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament.” Accordingly, the United States is obliged to disengage from activities that risk fueling a new nuclear arms race, and to continuously reduce its nuclear arsenal. This has been confirmed at the last Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty Review Conference in 2000, when the United States signed on to “An unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon States to accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals leading to nuclear disarmament to which all States parties [to the NPT] are committed under Article VI.”

    The nuclear weapons activities at Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos National Laboratories are in direct violation of these international commitments.

    The ongoing research into new generations of nuclear weapons — so-called bunker busters and mini-nukes — and the related expansion of laboratory capabilities represent vertical proliferation prohibited under the treaty. In addition to providing the other eight nuclear-weapon states, including North Korea, with a powerful incentive to put the reduction of their arsenals on hold and develop similar new nuclear weapons, these activities give the 180 non-nuclear-weapon states an equally powerful incentive to break their non-proliferation commitment under the treaty and start working toward the acquisition of nuclear weapons. Recently discovered nuclear weapons programs in Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and possibly Iran underscore this logic.

    One cannot go around with a cigarette in one’s mouth, asking the rest of the world not to smoke. Yet this is precisely what the United States is doing. Only the total elimination of all nuclear weapons worldwide in compliance with legal commitments under the treaty and under the strict control of the International Atomic Energy Agency can stop nuclear proliferation. New nuclear weapons research and design programs, combined with the expansion of nuclear weapons labs, undermine the international non-proliferation regime, stimulate the spread of nuclear weapons, and enhance the risk of these horrific weapons actually being used.

    The impending expiration of its lab oversight contracts with the Department of Energy offers UC [University of California] a unique opportunity to disengage from aiding and abetting in the violation of international law and the potential commission of genocide, crimes against humanity, and violations of the laws of war. Conversely, successful bids for the continued management of Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos National Labs could mean that UC and its weapons scientists may one day be sued under emerging international criminal law.

    *Urs Cipolat is a lecturer on Law, Ethics and Science at UC Berkeley. He serves as program director at the Global Security Institute in San Francisco.

  • The Iraq War and the Future of International Law

    (From The American Society of International Law’s 98th Annual Meeting, Mapping New Boundaries: Shifting Norms in International Law. March 31-April 3, 2004)

    The timing of this panel, a year after the initiation of the Iraq War, is not too soon to assess, if tentatively, the impact of this globally controversial war upon international law. My assessment is organized around five questions that deserve responses at this point:

    –Should the Iraq War be treated as a defining moment for international law?

    –Should the refusal to endorse the Iraq War be regarded as a triumphant moment for the United Nations, especially the Security Council?

    –Can the Iraq War be interpreted as an illegal, but legitimate war of choice?

    –Should the legal norm of nonintervention in the internal affairs of sovereign states be abandoned?

    –Does the Iraq War provide an occasion for incorporating new norms of international law governing the use of force?

    My response to each of these questions is a resounding ‘no,’ and the remainder of this brief presentation will give the essential reasoning behind the answer.

    I. Should the Iraq War be treated as a defining moment for international law? No.

    There is some temptation to contend that the Iraq War was a defining moment for international law and for the authority of the United Nations. It could be argued, of course, that the Iraq War vindicates non-defensive wars of choice, and that UN opposition has made, as President Bush warned in his speech to the General Assembly of September 12, 2002, the organization “irrelevant.” But such a temptation is easily resisted.

    Recourse to war against Iraq in March 2003 on the facts and allegations that existed at the time is regarded around the world as so flagrantly at odds with international law and the UN Charter as generally understood to have little or no weight as a legal precedent. It is better understood as a prominent instance of a violation of the core obligation of the UN Charter, as embodied in Article 2(4), and as such qualifies as a potential Crime Against Peace in the Nuremberg sense. It provides an occasion to reaffirm the fundamentally sound idea embodied in international law that force can only legally be used under conditions of palpable defensive necessity (or possibly on the basis of an explicit mandate from the Security Council). Note that defensive necessity is broader than “self-defense,” and does take realistic account of the post-9/11 world that could validate preemptive uses of force against under exceptional conditions of demonstrated threat. The Afghanistan War might qualify under such legal reasoning as a valid claim of defensive necessity. It is worth noting that several of the staunchest supporters of the Iraq War as a matter of strategic and moral necessity, such as the British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, and the influential American neoconservative, Richard Perle, have acknowledged that respect for international law was unwarranted to the extent that it would have precluded the Iraq War. In effect, the most articulate advocates of the Iraq War concede, either implicitly or explicitly, either its “illegality” or that if “regime change” of this sort was precluded then it was “bad law.” It is notable in this regard that the Bush administration made only the most minimal effort to provide a legal rationale for the Iraq War, and based its public justifications on a confusing mixture of security and humanitarian rationales. And as for the irrelevance of the UN, the difficulties of the occupation have led increasingly even the Bush administration to seek UN help in bringing stability to Iraq.

    Shifting ground, I would argue that if the Iraq War would have turned out to be successful as a political project, it might well have been a defining moment for American foreign policy and the character of world order. It could become a precedent for American unilateralism within the context of recourse to war and for regime-changing interventions. If this pattern were to be established it would have produced what might be called a geopolitical norm, that is, a use of power in a predictable pattern to achieve specified goals. The main feature of such a norm would be a repudiation of the authority of international law and the UN Charter by state practice that violates a consensus that joins the views of the majority of states and world public opinion.

    At present, the U.S. Government seems to be claiming the role of being the legislative agency for the creation of geopolitical norms, reinforced by ad hoc coalitions of the willing, in at least two areas impinging on the legal norms governing the use of force: (1) intervention in sovereign states to achieve regime change; (2) selective coercive pressure to promote counter-proliferation goals beyond the mandate of the non-proliferation treaty regime. To the extent that these geopolitical norms are acted upon it represents a fundamental shift from world order based on the principles of territorial sovereignty to a world order based on hegemonic edict. Such a world is best denominated as an imperial world order, and would likely be challenged by statist and non-statist forms of armed resistance.

    II. Should the refusal to endorse the Iraq War by the United Nations, especially the Security Council, be viewed as a triumphant moment? No.

    Many opponents of the Iraq War have praised the UNSC for remaining steadfast in the face of formidable U.S. pressure to provide a formal mandate for the initiation of a regime-changing war against Iraq. I agree that the Security Council deserves some credit for this result, but I would argue that it did only about 25% of the job entrusted to it by the UN Charter. If the American-led claims against Iraq were evaluated from the perspective of international law or by reference to the war prevention goals of the Charter, then the UN performance was still 75% or so deficient.

    There are several dimensions of this deficiency: (1) The UN imposed on Iraq a punitive peace via SC Res. 687 (3 April 1991) comparable in the setting of the Gulf War to the discredited Versailles approach to Germany after World War I; (2) The UN lent its authority to twelve plus years of punitive sanctions against Iraq (1991-2001) despite evidence of indiscriminate, severe harm to the Iraqi civilian population; (3) The UN did not censure the United States or the United Kingdom for repeated threats and uses of force that intruded upon the sovereign rights of Iraq in this same period; (4) SC Res. 1441 (8 Nov 2002) adopted the main premises of the American geopolitical norms relating to counter-proliferation and regime change, seemingly suggesting that if Washington had been more patient the endorsement of recourse to war would likely have been forthcoming.

    In the background of the UN role with respect to the Iraq War are some important issues of an admittedly hypothetical character. Suppose that the UNSC had authorized the Iraq War, would that make it ‘legal’? Is the UN legally entitled to endorse what would be otherwise considered to be a war of aggression without such an endorsement? Who is authorized to make such a determination if there is no judicial review of Security Council decisions, as seems to be the implication of the World Court judgment in Lockerbie? It seems reasonable that only the General Assembly has some sort of residual responsibility to assess whether the Security Council has acted beyond the constitutional limits imposed by the UN Charter, but it lacks the power of decision, and its judgment would be only an expression of opinion.

    III. Can the Iraq War be interpreted as an illegal, but legitimate war of choice? No.

    In my view, as suggested, the illegality of recourse to war against Iraq in 2003 was clear. It was also clear before and after the war that there was no reasonable basis for invoking the “illegal, but legitimate” formula developed by the Independent International Commission for Kosovo to deal with an exceptional circumstance of humanitarian emergency. With respect to Iraq, the worst humanitarian abuses were associated with the campaign against the Kurds in the late 1980s, and against the Kurds and Shi’ia in southern Iraq immediately following the Gulf War in 1991. Perhaps, a case for humanitarian intervention could have been credibly made in these earlier settings. But the Kosovo exception was bases on the imminence of danger associated with the feared ethnic cleansing of the Albanian population, made credible by Serb behavior in Bosnia just a few years earlier and by the rising tide of atrocities in Kosovo in the months preceding recourse to war under the NATO umbrella, but without a Security Council mandate.

    Given the failure to find weapons of mass destruction of any variety in Iraq and considering the intense resistance to the occupation, there is also no way to maintain convincing that either a condition of defensive necessity or humanitarian emergency existed in Iraq as of 2003. If there was such an emergency it was not attributable to the Baghdad regime, however dictatorial its record, but as a result of UN sanctions and numerous uses of force against Iraq.

    IV. Should the legal norm of nonintervention in internal affairs of sovereign states be abandoned? No.

    The Iraq War along with other experience with interventionary diplomacy suggests that respect for the norm of nonintervention, along with accompanying respect for territorial sovereignty, continues to represent a prudent guideline for statecraft. If the US Government had adhered to such a guideline over the course of the last several decades it would have avoided its two worst foreign policy disasters: The Vietnam War and the Iraq War. Additionally, if it had refrained from regime-changing covert interventions in Iran (1953) and Guatemala (1954), it might have avoided the Iranian Revolution and the years of atrocity and brutality in Guatemala.

    The Iraq War confirms the wisdom of avoiding interventionary diplomacy unless genuine conditions of defensive necessity or humanitarian emergency exist, and even then caution is appropriate. As the Iraqi resistance confirms, interventionary wars are primarily ‘political’ phenomena, not ‘military,’ and are decided by the play of nationalist, ethnic, and religious passions. It is best to await the dynamics of self-determination to achieve transformative changes in dictatorial states. The experience with Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union, and South Africa is both instructive and encouraging.

    IV. Does the Iraq War suggest the need for adapting international law to the new conditions of international conflict in the aftermath of 9/11? No.

    From the argument made above, the simple conclusion here is that the Iraq War is an occasion for reaffirming the continuing viability and validity of the legal prohibition on non-defensive uses of force that is contained in the Charter. At the same time, the grave threats posed by the sort of mega-terrorist attacks of 9/11 do justify stretching the right of self-defense to validate uses of force, as necessary, to remove threats associated with non-state actors in the event that the territorial government is unable or unwilling to address the situation decisively and with due urgency. The Afghanistan War, with qualifications, arguably fits within such an expanded conception of self-defense.

  • Interview with Richard Falk

    1. Is there any basis in international law for recourse to “preemptive war”?

    Most interpretations of international law deny states the right to wage a preemptive war, although international practice is more ambiguous, especially in extenuating circumstances. There were few international objections raised when Israel initiated The Six Day War in 1967, convincingly claiming that it was confronted by an imminent attack by its Arab neighbors, and that its action was justified on the basis of defensive necessity to ensure its survival as a state.

    The invocation of an alleged right to wage preemptive war by the US Government is particularly troubling from the perspective of international law. First of all, the United States has expressed this right in highly abstract language rather than in a specific setting of the sort that led Israel to act in 1967. Secondly, the application of this doctrine of preemptive war was unconvincing to most governments, including most US allies, and to world public opinion, lacking the elements of an imminent threat and defensive necessity. Thirdly, in the aftermath of the Iraq War the failure to find weapons of mass destruction that were the essence of the alleged war-justifying threat has undermined American credibility, leading to re-arguing the rationale for the war on the basis of liberating the Iraqi people from an oppressive ruler. And fourthly, the US Government, despite the absence of urgency, insisted on its right to wage and initiate a non-defensive war against Iraq without receiving any authorization from the UN Security Council.

    The doctrine of preemptive war is not itself destructive of international law, but its dubious applications definitely are. It seems a matter of common sense that if a foreign country had mobilized for war, possessed the capabilities to launch missile attacks on population centers, and was governed by extremists, it would be rational to engage in a preemptive war, and most of the UN would either endorse the response or ignore the stretching of international law under such circumstances. But recourse to preemptive war against Iraq cannot be reconciled with the duty of respect for international law and the UN Charter, and has contributed a dangerous precedent.

    2. Is it possible for any war to be just?

    There is an important difference between just war thinking and international law. International law devotes itself to issues of legality, while just war thinking concentrates on matters of justice and morality, especially as to recourse to war and the means by which it is waged. The just war tradition derives from a religious background, and its guidelines were developed by the great Catholic theologians St. Augustine and St. Thomas Acquinas. The principles of just war, involving just cause and the proportionate and discriminate use of force, have helped to shape the modern law of war, and continue to be treated as valid.

    When asking about whether it is possible for a particular war to be deemed a just war there is no definitive answer. It is a matter of interpretation and judgment. From a strictly pacifist or Gandhian outlook no war is just as political violence is never justified. Many specialists on just war agree that World War II was just as it was a defensive response to German and Japanese aggression, and its outcome removed from power fascist regimes that were guilty of mass atrocities, and what has come to be known as crimes against humanity. But even this war was waged in a manner deemed unjust with respect to means, especially the strategic and indiscriminate bombing of German and Japanese cities causing massive civilian casualties, culminating in the use of atomic bombs against Hiroshima and Nagasaki under conditions in which Japan was already a beaten country. More recently, there have been debates about the wars in Kosovo, Afghanistan, and most significantly, Iraq.

    Although each case is complex, and the facts can be understood in different ways, I will briefly indicate my assessments from a just war perspective. The Kosovo War was a just war because it was undertaken to avoid a likely instance of “ethnic cleansing” undertaken by the Serb leadership of former Yugoslavia, and it succeeded in giving the people of Kosovo an opportunity for a peaceful and democratic future. It was a just war despite being illegally undertaken without authorization by the United Nations, and despite being waged in a manner that unduly caused Kosovar and Serbian civilian casualties, while minimizing the risk of death or injury on the NATO side.

    The Afghanistan War was again controversial in relation to the just war tradition. It seems to qualify as an instance of defensive necessity in view of the high risks of harm associated with the heavy al Qaeda presence in the country, and its demonstrated capacity and will after September 11 to inflict severe harm on the United States in the future. Again, as with Kosovo, the means used and the ends raised serious doubts about the just means and just ends of the war. The American failure to assume the risks of ground warfare in order to carry out the mission of destroying the al Qaeda presence, as well as the failure to convert the battlefield outcomes into a durable peace, raise doubts about the overall justice of the war.

    When it comes to the Iraq War there seems to be little doubt that the war is generally regarded as an unjust war, despite its effect of freeing the Iraqi people from the oppressive rule of Saddam Hussein. The reasons for viewing it as unjust in origin are the following: the absence of defensive necessity, the refusal of the UNSC to authorize war, the dangerous uncertainties associated with recourse to war, the manipulation of evidence relating to the alleged presence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, the reluctance in the aftermath of the fighting to respect the aspirations of the Iraqi people to achieve political independence and exercise their rights of self-determination. For all of these reasons it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the Iraq War is a clear example of an unjust war.

    As this analysis suggests, it is possible to view a particular war as a just war provided it satisfies the standards of just cause, just means, and just ends. No modern war entirely meets these standards, but those with a just cause and just ends are widely treated as just wars even if the victorious side relied to some extent on unjust means. In this respect, World War II remains the exemplary example of a just war.

    3. Are today’s terrorists tomorrow’s patriots if they win? Does the end justify the means?

    Often it is true that those who are treated as the worst criminals if their violent challenge of the established order fails, are celebrated as the greatest patriots and heroes if their struggle ends in success. Surely, the leaders of the American Revolution would have been hung as traitors if their 18th century efforts to be freed from Britain colonial rule had ended in defeat. As victors, they are hailed without even the slightest doubt as exhibiting the ideals of patriotic virtue. In our own time, most spectacularly, we have witnessed the sudden transformation of Nelson Mandela from being South Africa’s permanent political prisoner, held in jail for 27 years, to the man most admired and celebrated in South Africa, and in the world as a whole.

    Perhaps, the case of Yasir Arafat is most interesting and revealing of arbitrary shifts of perception and treatment. As founder of the Palestinian Liberation Organization and leader of Fatah, Arafat was viewed for years by Israel and the United States as the world’s leading terrorist, a criminal beyond redemption. Then came the Oslo Peace Process in 1993, and Arafat arrives in Washington and appears with Yitzak Rabin and Bill Clinton on the White House lawn. Later on, Rabin is assassinated, and Israeli politics moves sharply to the right, Ariel Sharon becomes Prime Minister, an armed intifada of Palestinian resistance commences, and Arafat is once more condemned as a terrorist and discarded as a representative of the Palestinian people, although elected to be such. Sharon, reinforced by Clinton, and even more so by his successor as American president, George W. Bush, discredited Arafat, holding him responsible for the suicide bombers that caused such harm to Israeli civilian society, and shifting attention away from Israel’s prolonged illegal occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.
    And once again, Arafat was treated by the United States as an illegitimate political leader. But now with “the roadmap” relied upon as a basis for reaching a peaceful solution between the two peoples Arafat reemerges as political leader, although subordinated to his subordinate, Mahmoud Abbas, who has been accepted more readily in Washington and Tel Aviv (than in the West Bank and Gaza) because he has more convincingly repudiated violence as a path to self-determination and statehood for the Palestinian people and seems ready to play the Israeli/American game of one-sided diplomatic negotiations. Arafat continues to be treated as a crucial Palestinian leader in much of Europe and throughout the non-Western world, and of course by the Palestinians themselves.

    In many respects, the treatment of Hitler bears some resemblance to that of Arafat. Hitler emerged from obscurity in the mists of German right wing politics during the 1920s, being imprisoned for his association with violent political tactics. But then, with help from the economic depression of the 1930s that hit Germany particularly hard and from the bitterness instilled in the German people due to their defeat in World War I, followed by the humiliating punitive peace imposed at Versailles, Hitler and his Nazi Party, became the elected government of Germany. Hitler solidified his dictatorial rule, but this did not prevent him from hosting the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, a legitimating bonanza for Nazi propaganda. Hitler became the ultra-national German patriot while at the same time he preached a racist message, persecuting Jews, Romas, and others, and preparing Germany for an orgy of aggressive warfare. Of course, Hitler personally did not survive World War II, but had he done so, there is little doubt that he would have been prosecuted as the star war criminal in the course of the Nuremberg trials held in 1945 to impose punishments on the surviving Nazi leadership. No doubt if the war had ended differently, Hitler would have continued to be treated as the legitimate leader representing the German state by most other governments.

    There is an important issue of political language present. The current way of branding the armed enemies of the established order is to call them “terrorists,” focusing on the violence directed at civilian targets. For decades such enemies were more often treated in the West as “Communists,” or Communists were automatically branded as “terrorists” even if they refrained in theory and practice from violence. In South Africa advocacy of racial equality was equated with Communism, and criminalized, or being engaged in trying to promote racial justice was punished as “terrorism.” Also, these days, when Palestinian resisters kill civilians it is called “terrorism,” but when Israeli Apache gunships kill civilians it is called “security.” Language is politics, coloring our imagination, shaping our responses of approval and condemnation.

    What do learn from this chamelon-like experience of political figures who lead revolutionary struggles and initiate aggressive wars against particular arrangement of political power in the world, seeking to liberate an oppressed people or change the structure of world order? Of course, we learn that outcomes matter, that history is largely written by the winners, validating their results and repudiating or ignoring the exploits of the losers. We also learn that those who prevail in conflicts often rely on highly dubious forms of political violence to destroy their current enemies, denying them any respect by calling them “evil.” This process of exaggerating the moral differences between the state and its enemies is also part of the picture. It is not only the “terrorists” that act often as if the end justifies the means, but the legitimate political order, as embodied in the state, as well. Are there limits to this disturbing insight into world politics that seems to count only the result and not whether it was achieved in morally and legally acceptable ways? The only honest answer is, at this point, “not many,” and even these, are not consistently respected despite several century of effort by international law. It is true that admiration for Mandela reflects an appreciation of the way he used his influence to promote a politics of reconciliation in negotiating a bloodless end to racist South Africa during the apartheid era. And on the other side, whatever the Palestinian future, it seems doubtful that Arafat’s rehabilitation can proceed very far, not because of the accusations of terrorism, but because he is widely disavowed even by Palestinians as corrupt, authoritarian, and incompetent.

    At the same time, we should not become altogether cynical about efforts to impose limits on political behavior. It is generally true that the price of entry to the halls of diplomacy is a credible renunciation of violence against civilians, just as it is true that a violent challenge to the existing order will be denied such access if it can be defeated at an acceptable cost. This is how the IRA (Irish Revolutionary Army) finally achieved a measure of acceptance even from its bitter rivals in Northern Ireland, that is, both by avoiding defeat and then by expressing a willingness to reach a solution by peaceful means. It is also true that the UN and world public opinion have gradually, although inconsistently, relied on human rights standards and the practice of democracy, to make judgments for and against particular political outcomes. There are war crimes trials going on in The Hague and Arusha that are punishing certain types of behavior as international crimes, and in 2002 a permanent International Criminal Court was established by a widely ratified treaty. It remains true that the more powerful governments, including the United States and China, refuse to submit their actions to the Rule of Law, but it is also true that sovereignty no longer gives a blank check to political rulers.

    4. International law has been developing since the time of Grotius in the 17th century, and the International Court of Justice has declared on a number of occasions that diplomatic relations among sovereign states should be governed by adherence to international law. But how can international law be enforced in the absence of a world government? There has been a tendency in recent years to rely on sanctions as a means of international enforcement, but their record is not impressive. They do not seem to have achieved their goals, and may be based on dubious premises of punishing governments or leaders that are seen as threatening to the geopolitical status quo.

    There is no doubt that the absence of effective procedures for enforcement are a major obstacle to the achievement of a law-oriented world order. At the same time all political systems, including well-governed societies, struggle with enforcement. The United States, proud of its constitutional order, has a huge prison population, and has found it very difficult to achieve effective enforcement in some critical areas of behavior, including the use and distribution of hard drugs and the actions of some of its leading corporations (for example, the Enron scandal). And so the problems of enforcing international law is one of degree, not of kind.

    It is also important to recognize that many areas of international life are based on legal regimes that are consistently upheld and enforced. Tourism, diplomacy, and trade all proceed on this basis, and the world would be chaotic without this underpinning of international law for many of the daily interactions that take place throughout the world. The United States and Europe are presently resolving their disputes over genetically modified foods and steel subsidies by accepting the legal procedures of the World Trade Organization. Most enforcement difficulties arise either in relation to challenged uses of international force or attempted interferences with the internal affairs of sovereign states.

    Sanctions are sometimes seen a preferred alternative to war in the event that an international dispute cannot be resolved peacefully. Much attention has recently been given to the role of sanctions in relation to Iraq over the past decade or so. It is necessary to make some distinctions when evaluating sanctions as a means of enforcement. Sanctions were initially imposed on Iraq in 1990 after its conquest of Kuwait, and were seen as a way of inducing Saddam Hussein’s regime to withdraw from Kuwait without a war. Such an approach to enforcement had it succeeded would have been hailed as a political and moral victory. The failure of sanctions to achieve this goal in Iraq has been variously interpreted as indicating the irrational stubbornness of the Baghdad leadership or as a cover for an American-led insistence on “a preventive war” so as to eliminate Iraq as a regional threat for years to come. Diplomatic historians in future work will undoubtedly help us to resolve this issue of interpretation. The Gulf War in 1991 can be seen as “enforcement,” authorized by the Security Council, including all of its Permanent Members, and effectively restoring Kuwaiti sovereign rights.

    Sanctions were then applied to a defeated Iraq for the next twelve years, supposedly to coerce Baghdad to comply with the terms of a ceasefire in 1991 that had been embodied in Security Council Resolution 687. This reliance on sanctions was much more controversial than the pre-war sanctions. They were imposed on a devastated defeated country, which almost certainly meant that the Iraqi people would be particularly vicitimized. Iraq’s water purification system had been deliberately destroyed during the Gulf War, exposing the entire population to disease and death. Early respected studies by a Harvard medical team and by UNESCO reported on the resulting humanitarian catastrophe, producing hundreds of thousand of deaths among children in Iraq. At the same time, the political goals of the sanctions were not being achieved: Saddam Hussein’s regime was not weakened in relation to opposition groups and UN resolutions were not being respected. Sanctions increasingly became understood as aspects of a punitive peace imposed on Iraq after the Gulf War. As such, it seemed to be repeating the mistake after World War I when the Versailles Treaty imposed strong sanctions on a defeated Germany, contributing to a subsequent rise of German political extremism. Sanctions imposed on Iraq between 1991 and 2003 failed as “enforcement” and were widely condemned, despite UN backing, as tantamount to crimes against humanity because of their destructive impact on the civilian population of Iraq.

    Sanctions as a means of enforcement are neither good or bad, effective or futile. It all depends on context, and effects. To the extent that sanctions have the unified backing of the international community and avoid wars, their role is beneficial. Sanctions seemed to have played a constructive role in persuading the Afrikaaner leadership of South Africa to abandon apartheid, and work with Mandela to produce a peaceful transition to a multi-racial constitutional order.

    In the 1990s, and to some extent currently, “humanitarian intervention” became an enforcement tool of choice. The NATO Kosovo War can be understood in that light, as can interventions in sub-Saharan Africa. The present call for American intervention in Liberia, as well as the UN role in the Congo, proceed on such premises. Humanitarian intervention is generally viewed with suspicion as a tool available only on behalf of the strong to be used against the relatively weak. It is unavailable to help the Chechens in their struggle with the Russian government or to assist the Tibetans or Uighers in their resistance efforts with regard to the Chinese government.

    And so enforcement is, at best, uneven, and needs to take account of the realities of power. At the same time, efforts to hold leaders accountable for their crimes of state, patterns of humanitarian intervention, and some instances of UN peacekeeping suggest that there is a growing trend to take international standards more seriously and to disregard the barriers of sovereignty in efforts to produce compliance with such standards.

    5. You opposed the Iraq War of this spring by arguing that its justifications were based on grounds that were legally and constitutionally dubious. Would you discuss some of these grounds? Unlike Iraq, in the debate about the Afghanistan War you found yourself in disagreement with linguist Noam Chomsky and other American left peace activists, why was this?

    As I indicated when discussing the preemptive war doctrine, I remain convinced that there never existed an adequate legal basis for recourse to war against Iraq. The government of Iraq, weakened by sanctions and by the UN inspection process, posed no threat except to its own people. The UNSC alone possesses the legal authority to mandate a war in circumstances other than self-defense. The idea of liberating the Iraqi people from the brutal dictatorship of Saddam Hussein does not provide a legal foundation for war without UN authorization, and this rationale has only been put forth as a sufficient justification for war after the fact and as a result of a failure to produce evidence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction that had previously been the overriding justification given by Washington for the war. The difficulties that the occupation forces have been experiencing in Iraq and the opposition to a long-term American presence is likely to compound these problems, inducing either a prolonged occupation and a rising tide of violent resistance or a forced withdrawal that leads either to a sense of political defeat by bringing to power anti-Western undemocratic forces or produces a civil war among the divergent political, religious, and ethnic constituencies in the country. In essence, the Iraq War cannot be reconciled with the core rules of international law governing the use of force to resolve conflicts between sovereign states.

    From the point of view of American constitutional law, the war was also dubious. True, a bipartisan majority in Congress authorized the war by resolution, but one passed months before the start of the war, and before indications of opposition at the UN, on the part of many of America’s closest allies around the world, at a grassroots level, and even in the United States. The quality of the Congressional authorization was thus weakened by its failure to show “a decent respect” for the opinion of others. Beyond this, Congress lacks the authority to mandate an illegal war. The Constitution in Article VI makes validly ratified international treaties “the supreme law of the land.” The UN Charter is such a treaty. Recourse to war was a violation of the Charter, and hence a violation of the Constitution.

    On Afghanistan I differed with Chomsky and others who opposed the war, and insisted that a reliance on criminal law enforcement was adequate to address the terrorist menace. I did not then believe that any government could withstand the al Qaeda attacks without making a maximal response on behalf of its national security. Relying on law enforcement was not such a response, and indeed had proved an utter failure in the past as a way of dealing with large-scale terrorist activity, including earlier al Qaeda strikes. I felt that given the severity of the harm inflicted on September 11 and the continuing al Qaeda presence in Afghanistan, a defensive necessity existed, and that the Charter could be properly interpreted to validate recourse to war by the United States. The international community agreed. The opposition to the war never provided a convincing account of how to uphold American security in view of the threats posed by al Qaeda. At the same time, in retrospect, it must be acknowledged that America did not use the occasion of the Afghanistan War to minimize the continuing risks posed by al Qaeda. It allowed leaders and cadre to go free and fight on another day because of its unwillingness to put enough Americans on the ground to close off escape routes. It has failed to invest resources and energies in post-war Afghanistan to avoid its territory from again becoming a potential haven for transnational terrorist activity.

    6. In light of the Iraq War and prior sanctions policy has the UN been undermined in relation to its role as an institution committed to war prevention and the development of international law?

    To some extent earlier responses dealing with the Iraq War and the enforcement of international law have covered the issues raised by this question. I will limit my response here to generalities about the future of the United Nations.
    First of all, attitudes toward the UN move quickly from hope to despair, and back again. If the US/UK occupation of Iraq is superseded by comprehensive international administration of the country under UN auspices, the UN will be upgraded as a dimension of world order. Similarly, if the UN plays an increasing role in dealing with African turbulence, then the importance of the UN will be acknowledged anew, especially if its missions are generally seen as helpful.

    Contrariwise if the United States engages in subsequent unilateral non-defensive wars against Syria or Iran, or even North Korea, then the UN is likely to decline still further with respect to the maintenance of global peace and security.

    The United Nations, is neither more nor less, than what its principal members want it be. The Organization when established in 1945 was intended to be an instrument of statecraft, not a supranational alternative to it. This was underscored by giving the lead victorious powers in World War II a veto in the Security Council, which meant that the organization acknowledged from the outset that it would be unable to act if opposed by its most powerful member states, and that world peace rested not on law or collective security under the UN, but on the ability of the Permanent Members to agree on the nature of world order challenges, and to act accordingly.

    The United States is where the UN headquarters are located, as well as being the leading financial contributor and the host country, and as a result plays a decisive role in either facilitating a strong organization or shaping global policy beyond the reach of the UN. So far, during the Bush presidency, the UN has not been entrusted with a major responsibilities, and the White House signature attitude of unilateralism has been partly expressed by acting outside the organization whenever it feels like doing so. At the same time, the magnetic pull exerted by the UN has brought President Bush to the organization on several key occasions to seek legitimizing support at crucial moments in American foreign policy. This occurred immediately following the September 11 attacks and again in the lead up to the Iraq War.

    The world needs a strong and confident United Nations to cope with the various manifestations of globalization. If the US fails to encourage such an evolution, then other member countries should feel challenged to do so.

    The UN arose out of the ashes of World War II, just as the League of Nations had arisen after World War I. Both organizations reflected the idea of “one-worlders,” a unified arrangement for global governance. Today such ideas are discussed as “globalization.” But why “predatory globalization”? Are there not positive aspects of globalization?

    Yes, it is true that both world wars gave the impetus for the establishment of global organizations supposedly dedicated to war prevention. Both arose from the basic horror of devastating wars leaving tens of millions dead in their aftermath, and the conviction that states left on their own would plunge the world into yet another war of major proportions. At the same time, ideas of sovereignty and nationalism remained too strong to empower either the League or the UN with the capabilities it would need to uphold the security of states confronted by aggressive adversaries. The UN recognized this unwillingness to overcome the centrality of sovereign states by giving the leading members a veto power assuring that the UN would never be used against the most powerful states, but it is precisely these states that are likely to enter into a rivalry that produces a third world war. In this sense, the promise of world peace by relying on the League or UN was an empty promise from the start. At the same time the UN has done many useful things, has become so indispensable that no state remains by choice a non-member with the special exception of Switzerland, emphasizes the role of international law in relation to world peace, and continues to offer the peoples of the world a beacon of hope for the future.

    But these preliminary and very limited experiments with global governance should not be confused with has since the end of the cold war been called “globalization.” Although the term is ambiguous, it has been most widely understood as the process by which time and space have been compressed with respect to the operation of the world economy. Globalization incorporates the rise of market forces as sources of policy guidance, as well as the significance of computers and the Internet for more networked forms of economic organization on a global scale. I have referred to this capital-driven orientation of globalization as “predatory globalization” to highlight its negative aspects: widening disparities between rich and poor, disappointing efforts to reduce world poverty, neglect of regions that seem unpromising from the perspective of trade and investment such as Africa, a failure to protect global public goods such as environmental quality and pollution prevention in the oceans. At the same time, I have argued that these predatory effects are not intrinsic to globalization, but are a byproduct of the neo-liberal ideas of unregulated markets and the reliance on capital efficiency to solve social problems, that is, of an ideology of economic development that became a consensus position after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and was reflected in the approaches to development favored by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. Globalization has made important positive contributions, including giving some Asian countries excellent opportunities for rapid economic growth that has benefited a large number of people in some of the poorest countries.

    The future and ideology of globalization is now in doubt. The Asian Financial Crisis of 1997 shook the confidence of those who were managing the world economy as did the rise of the anti-globalization movement that entered world consciousness in late 1999 with street demonstrations in Seattle protesting IMF ministerial meetings. Then came September 11, and a renewed preoccupation with war/peace issues and global security. Whether these concerns will subside in the years ahead is not clear, and so it is not certain that globalization will seem as descriptive of the world setting as it seemed to be in the 1990s.

    7. When you write about the Middle East sometimes Turkey is included, sometimes not. Is the Middle East best understood geographically or in some other way? How do you explain your inconsistent approach to Turkey’s place in the region?

    The contours of a region are always arbitrary, and can be understood inconsistently depending on the purpose of classification. Looking at a map suggests an uncertainty as to whether to conceive of Turkey as belonging to the Middle East or to Europe. Sometimes, the Middle East is regarded as essentially “the Arab world,” but more often it is regarded as also including Israel, Turkey, Iran. The idea of multiple identities has informed recent discussions of changing patterns of individual citizenship. Why not for countries, as well? Potential membership in the European Union would certainly qualify Turkey as “European,” but it is difficult to conceive of the future of “the Middle East” without taking account of Turkey’s role as a presence in relation to regional security, the status of secularism and democracy, and the overall interplay between Israel and the rest of the region. Turkey’s Islamic identity and rich cultural and political traditions, including its Ottoman past, ensure the prominence of its role in the Middle East for as far ahead as we can see.

    But let’s not forget that the term “Middle East” is itself a geopolitical curiosity reflecting a Eurocentric image of the world. In India the region is generally depicted as “West Asia.” Perhaps, it is notable that of all the regions in the world it is only this one that bears such a signature of the colonial era, and most endures the torments of unresolved struggles of decolonization, whether in relation to Palestinian self-determination or with respect to the overt military presence of the dominant hegemonic power in the world. The Middle East has replaced Europe as the fulcrum of geopolitics, the zone wherein the shape and form of world order is being forged.

    8. Should Turkey have become involved in the Iraq War in the ways that the US Government requested? Now Turkey is considering sending troops to Iraq as part of the post-war effort to bring stability to that country. Do you think this is a wise move on Turkey’s part to get so involved?

    First of all, I believe it is premature to speak of the situation in Iraq as “post-war.” The steady stream of American and Iraqi casualties on a daily basis suggest to me that the Iraq War continues, and that only its conventional battlefield phase is over. Even the American military commander in Iraq has recently referred to the present situation as best understood as a classic instance of “guerrilla warfare.”

    Looking back, I think Turkey made the right decision by denying the use of its territory to mount an invasion of northern Iraq by American ground forces. The Iraq War, as suggested above, was a non-defensive war lacking UN approval, and in violation of international law. It seemed to many, as well, to be an imprudent war that was not helpful in dealing with the genuine persisting threats associated with the al Qaeda network. In such circumstances, especially given the anti-war sentiments of the Turkish people, the Turkish Parliament is to be congratulated for reaching a decision that upheld Turkish national interests, demonstrated its political independence, and was consistent with the promotion of world public order.

    Looking forward, I would think Turkey should not expose itself to the uncertainties of developments in Iraq, or needlessly put itself on the side of what appears to be an increasingly unpopular American/British occupation that could go on for years. It is important for Turkey to maintain positive relations with the United States, but on the basis of mutual respect. It is not in Turkey’s interest to become engaged directly in the peacekeeping operations going on in Iraq, at least not at this stage. By staying on the sidelines, Turkey will improve the prospects of entering into a positive relationship with an independent and reconstructed post-occupation Iraq, which in the long run is likely to contribute most to the stability of the region.

    9. How do you perceive the Kurdish-Turkish debate within the wider context of the Middle East?

    Aside from the Palestine-Israel conflict, the unresolved future of Kurdish-Turkish relations is the greatest single challenge to the political leadership of Turkey, and to the society as a whole. It is a matter of supreme importance to avoid any serious renewal of the sort of armed encounter that existed in prior years. A humane approach to Kurdish aspirations will also help decisively in advancing the case for Turkey’s membership in the EU. But what exactly does a humane approach entail?

    This is, of course, an ultra-sensitive matter of internal Turkish politics. As an outsider I am hesitant to comment on this most delicate question beyond offering the most superficial idea that the cultural rights of the large Kurdish minority needs to be fully acknowledged, and that to the extent that Kurdish areas seem poorer than the rest of the country, a major priority should be accorded by Ankara to the economic development of Kurdish regions (primarily Eastern Anatolia) and the rapid reduction of Kurdish poverty. It should be also recognized that there are significant numbers of impoverished Turkish and non-Turkish individuals living in Eastern Anatolia who would also benefit from the recommended approach. The problem of minority rights cuts in many different directions, and the Turkish government has shown its own concerns about the treatment of the Turkish minority in Bulgaria, as well as the somewhat problematic future for the large Turkamen minority in northern Iraq.

    I find generally encouraging the degree to which there is a growing intellectual and political interest throughout Turkey in undertaking a positive reevaluation of the Ottoman legacy and heritage. In relation to the Kurdish challenge, this means a shift from a rigid modernist view of Turkish national identity to pride and tolerance in the multi-ethnic makeup of the Turkish nation. Just as Kemal Ataturk in a different historical moment freed Turkish destiny from negative aspects of the Ottoman past, the challenge of the present generation of Turkish leaders is to recover its positive aspects, allowing Turkey to benefit more fully from its incredibly rich cultural, spiritual, and political traditions.

    10. Turkey has come under a lot of fire over the years because of its treatment of minorities. The Turkish government is now enacting harmonization legislation as part of its larger effort to qualify for full membership in the European Union. This new legislation is likely to have a major impact on how Turkey deals with its minorities. Would you give your opinion on these developments?

    My response to the prior question relating to the Kurdish issue also applies to this question. The pressures associated with preparing Turkey for the EU are complementary to recovering the multi-ethnic spirit of diversity associated with the Ottoman past. By emphasizing minority rights, a secular path to tolerance and group rights is cleared for a less rigid conception of national identity than has prevailed during Turkey’s 20th century nation- and state-building phases.

    Minority rights and humane treatment of minorities is one element in the wider setting of human rights, which itself needs to be understood as fulfilling for all citizens the promise of constitutional democracy. All countries, including my own, need to be constantly vigilant with respect to the protection of human rights, particularly when the state claims a strong security interest. In the United States since September 11, the treatment of Muslim males, especially of Arab origins, has been a matter of growing concern from a human rights perspective. One instructive way to assess the commitment of a country and its leadership is to examine carefully the way it treats its most vulnerable members, which in the case of both Turkey and the United States, means how it deals with minorities, addressing their fears and hopes and overcoming their insecurities.

    11. Recently there have been debates about the influence that television has had over the way stories are handled in the print media. And during the Iraq War we have seen journalists “embedded,” or as some would say “in bed with” troops on the move in a combat zone. The war was televised in an unprecedented real time way. Was this a positive development? Did it discourage or encourage a war mentality back home in the United States? What do you think about the media?

    Overall, I think the American mainstream media has had the effect during the Iraq War of bringing Americans closer to the war, and allowing the citizens back home to share in the victorious march through Iraq on the way to Baghdad. Of course, if Iraqi resistance had been stiffer, and bloody battles taken place that produced heavy American casualties, reactions might have been very different. It is worth remembering that many supporters of the Vietnam War in the US blamed the media for bringing the war into “the living rooms” of Middle America, and thereby stimulating a robust anti-war movement that led to an American defeat. The Iraq War was special, at least in its battlefield phase, as it was quick and successful, and produced very few body bags. In the Vietnam case it was the media and the body bags that eventually turned the country against the war that had dragged on and on.

    Learning from Vietnam, the Pentagon did its best to keep the media from covering the Gulf War in 1991 too closely. This adjustment produced its own line of criticism, turning the war into an arcade video game by its emphasis on the bombing raids directed at Baghdad. In the Iraq War, probably anticipating an easy victory, a different and novel approach was adopted, that of “embedding.” From a pacifist perspective the practice was unfortunate, making the war into a kind of soap opera, with each evening bringing a new installment, engaging the citizenry in the excitement and tensions of the battlefield. Again, this could have backfired had the American military efforts been successfully resisted; bloody battlefield scenes could easily have produced a strong anti-war climate of opinion.

    Evaluating the media approaches, requires an understanding of the political context. In this regard, it needs to be related to the media, especially TV, approach to the American response to the September 11 attacks. TV has helped sustained a patriotic climate of opinion in America that tends to avoid criticism of the government and its leadership. In the months preceding the Iraq War critics of the Bush Administration were not invited to give their views on TV, conveying the false impression to the public that there was no serious disagreement in the society. And yet throughout the country there was considerable opposition to waging a war against Iraq for the purpose of regime change. In other words, TV, and to a lesser extent, the print media, did not reflect the divided sentiments of the country, especially on the crucial issues of war and peace. Night after night retired military officers appeared on network TV to give their views as to why the war was necessary and how it would be fought and won. In this sense, embedding of journalists in combat units was a continuation of this partisan TV role, not an objective source of evaluation, but essentially part of the cheerleading chorus.

    The media plays an essential role in shaping the democratic spirit. It needs to distance itself from official views of the government, particularly at times of controversy. America, as the most powerful state in the world, especially needs public debate on critical policy issues, both for its own sake and in relation to its role as global leader.

    12. Your analyses of world issues are cogent and carefully thought out. But do you ever proceed from analysis and criticism to propose possible solutions to these world order challenges?

    Much of my academic work has been devoted to depicting positive solutions for immediate problems and for longer term responses. For instance, I have long advocated a solution for the Palestine/Israel conflict by the application of international law principles to the respective rights of both peoples rather than rely on a geopolitical bargaining process between the grossly unequal sides mediated by the United States, no innocent bystander. A geopolitical roadmap will not lead to a just and stable solution, and represents a diversion from the search for a genuine peace, although it may function as a temporary truce. An international law roadmap, in contrast, would produce a two-state solution based on mutual recognition and equal sovereign rights, which would mean a shared Jerusalem, the elimination of the Israeli settlements, and some measured right of return for Palestinian refugees.

    On a different plane, I have written consistently, including on several occasions in the International Herald Tribune, on the case for a Global Peoples Parliament as an essential step in the establishment of a global democracy. Such a step would acknowledge the increasing activism of transnational civil society, and help give the peoples an arena to express their concerns alongside the existing organs of the United Nations that allow governments to represent the membership consisting only of states.

    On a still different plane, I have worked for many years within the framework of the World Order Models Project, a transnational group of scholars that has tried to promote global reforms, and has worked together since the late 1960s. The basic perspective has been a realization that different regions have different priorities and approaches in relation to global reform, but that there is a shared commitment to achieving global governance in forms that diminishes the role of war, promotes the economic well being of all persons, supports human rights and democracy, favors global extensions of democracy, is committed to environmental protection and ecological stability, and accepts human nature as essentially spiritual.

    13. What topics are you working on now?

    I am currently working on several projects with the goal of producing three books. The first is concerned with the American global role since September 11, emphasizing the importance of avoiding the temptation on the part of Washington to establish the first global empire. The struggle between the United States and al Qaeda represents the first post-modern war, as my earlier book The Great Terror War argues, being waged between two non-territorial adversaries: a global state that overrides the sovereign rights of other states and a concealed transnational network that relies on extreme political violence directed against civilians. In contrast, modern warfare involved conflicts between territorial sovereign states. The new book will argue that it is important, in my view, that the United States not pursue an imperial approach to global security, but rely on international cooperation and a show of respect for international law and the procedures of the United Nations, and work toward a system of democratically organized global governance, a constructive globalization.

    My second project is to deal with the complicated and confused American relationship to international law, at once its principal champion and also currently its main detractor. To some extent, this is not a new problem, but goes back at least as far as Woodrow Wilson’s vision of collective security under the authority of the League of Nations. Wilson sold his vision to the world but not to the US Senate that refused to ratify the Versailles Treaty setting up the League, and the US never became a member. The story is somewhat more complicated in relation to the United Nations, but essentially the same. The United States has played the dominant role in shaping the organization, but it has also tried to manipulate and control its operations, and when it has been frustrated, it has acted alone in defiance of UN authority. The Iraq War is perhaps the most flagrant example, but it is only one of many.

    My third project is more personal and may never see the light of day. It is to do a political memoir that tries to combine narratives of my outer journeys with an overview of my inner travels, combining the political with the personal.

    14. If you would like to add anything, please feel free to do so.

    I would only say that I feel privileged to have spent so much time in Turkey over the course of the last decade under the guidance of my Turkish wife. It is such a vibrant country, exhibiting great cultural depth and such warm hospitality, and its promise connects so profoundly with the present historical moment. I see Turkey as having the opportunity to create for the region and for the Islamic world a new political model of reconciliation between the enlightened secularism of the modern state and the religious values and cultural attitudes of traditional societies. Such an evolution presents a formidable challenge that can only be met by drawing on the resources of Turkey’s Ottoman past while sustaining and carrying forward the modernizing ideas of the Kemal Ataturk. In doing so, Turkey would be carrying out a creative experiment in combining its identity as a European and Middle Eastern country, as well as having the benefit of participating in regional arrangements while retaining its separate identity as nation and state. Such an inspirational possibility can only be achieved, however, if the unresolved problems of minority relations are dealt with by Turkey in a manner that satisfies human rights commitments.

  • Freedom or Force on the High Seas? Arms Interdiction and International Law*

    North Korea’s withdrawal from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Regime and announcement of a nuclear weapons program was an unfortunate development, which the international community must work to reverse. Some US officials are, however, advocating for a policy of interdicting [1] North Korean ships – a policy that would do more harm than good to international stability by undermining the International Law of the Sea.

    The International Law of the Sea is one of the most comprehensive and well-established bodies of international regulatory norms in existence. The Law of the Sea regime (LOS) is buttressed by longstanding international norms, and formal legal agreements, critical to creating a more secure international environment. [2]

    The Law of the Sea grants several freedoms, including the right to navigation on the high seas and rights to transit [3] through international straits, exclusive economic zones (EEZ), and the territorial and archipelagic waters of another state. The regime does bar a select number of illegal activities, including piracy, slave trade, illicit traffic in narcotic drugs or psychotropic substances, and unauthorized broadcasting, and grants states the right to intervene in such activities. [4]

    There is nothing in the LOS regime that explicitly prohibits transit of weapons of mass destruction or gives States rights to interdict such transit. On the contrary, a number of States, including the United States, have actively opposed the development of such prohibitive norms or interpretations of international law that would inhibit the transit of weapons of mass destruction by the seas or air, and cite the rights and privileges established in the Law of the Sea to affirm their unhindered military use of the oceans. Nuclear weapon states such as the US, UK and France have continuously worked to ensure that their ability to transit nuclear weapons is not hindered by regional nuclear weapons free zones or UN efforts to create a Nuclear Weapon Free Southern Hemisphere. The US, UK and France, along with Japan, have also asserted their rights to transit nuclear materials – in particular reprocessed plutonium – through the high seas and through the EEZ’s of coastal States. In addition, a number of States, including the United States, France, Israel, China, Russia and Italy, export missile technology transiting through the oceans to do so.

    In contrast to this general assertion of rights to transit nuclear weapons, missile technology [5], fissile materials and other materials related to weapons of mass destruction, the US is currently advocating for the selected interdiction of such materials to and from certain states of concern to the Bush Administration as a means to stem proliferation. Ten countries have now joined what is known as the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI), which met in Madrid, Spain in early June and in Brisbane, Australia in the beginning of July 2003 [6]. Members of PSI include: Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, and the United Kingdom.

    However, there are limitations to the transit that countries can legally inhibit in their territorial waters and EEZs and even stricter limitations on what can be intercepted on the High Seas.
    The legal implications of arms interdictions on the oceans depend greatly on the nature of interdictions and the way the interdictions are undertaken. Some States have agreed to export controls amongst themselves, such as those laid out in the Missile Technology Control Regime. However, the States of concern to the US, such as North Korea, China, Pakistan and Iran, are not members and so are not bound by these controls. It might be legal to interdict shipments on the High Seas that have been deemed by the Security Council or the Law of the Sea Tribunal to violate the Law of the Sea and to constitute a threat to the peace. This option is pursued in a recent strategy issued by the Council of the European Union calling on the EU to support a Security Council Resolution that would arms interdictions “when appropriate.” [7] Also, in territorial waters it might be possible for the coastal State to determine the transit of missiles or WMD to be a threat to its security and thus prohibit such transit deeming it to be non-innocent passage.
    Any interdictions outside those explicitly allowed in the existing International Law of the Sea regime would clearly violate the freedom of navigation on the high seas and the right of innocent passage through territorial waters.

    Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer has recognized that there is a “very real difficulty in terms of vessels that might be going through the high seas because international law requires that those ships should not be intercepted,” [8] and that there might therefore “need to be some change to international law to facilitate these types of interdictions, to stop illicit trade.”[9] However, changing the Law of the Sea would be a long process requiring extensive negotiations and would unlikely yield the discriminatory approach desired by the PSI of allowing transit by certain States but not others.

    The likelihood that the US and PSI will thus develop an interdiction strategy outside international law is reinforced by the current trend in US policy towards dismantling norms that prevent the US from exercising its military dominance. The US has moved away from multi-lateral non-proliferation solutions, withdrawn from the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty, abandoned START II, failed to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and stalled efforts to improve the Biological Weapons Convention regime. The controversy over the UK and US use of intelligence in Iraq will also bring into question the legitimacy of intelligence information used to justify interdictions regarding the existence of arms and material shipments and their intended destination and/or use.

    Restricting the transit of weapons of mass destruction would be a positive development in furthering arms control and stemming proliferation, if such norms were carefully developed by the international community and applied uniformly. International law cannot, however, maintain its integrity if applied whimsically or discriminately, or if defined by a small “coalition of the willing.” While PSI membership may appear to be an easy way for leaders of certain countries to get back into the good graces of the Bush administration after disagreements over Iraq, if they contribute to the degradation of LOS it will likely come back to haunt them. If leaders of the states participating in the PSI attempt to exchange LOS norms for selective nonproliferation measures, they should realize that such a trade-off could eventually restrict their own country’s access to international waters. If members of the international community begin to allow the erosion of the Law of the Sea to suite the policy goals of the sole existing superpower, they should not expect that such concessions would be easily reversed.
    * This article is a summary of a longer piece pending publication in Science for Democratic Action, the newsletter of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research.

    **Devon Chaffee is the Research and Advocacy Coordinator of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation


    1. Interdicting: intercepting ships and ensuring that no proscribed activities are being conducted.
    2. Such formal agreements include the four 1958 Conventions that resulted from the Geneva Conference on the law of the sea, to which the US is a party, and the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which President Ronald Reagan decided not to sign onto for fear that it could interfere with certain US sovereign prerogatives. The US has however signed the 1994 Agreement relating to the Implementation of Part XI of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.
    3. Transit through territorial waters is limited to innocent passage. According to the 1958 Convention on the Territorial Sea “Passage is innocent so long as it is not prejudicial to the peace, good order or security of the coastal state.”
    4. In addition to their codification into the law of the sea through the 1958 and the 1982 Conventions, the prohibition of these activities has been codified by a series of multilateral treaties including: 1965 Agreement for the Prevention of Broadcasts Transmitted from Stations outside National Territories; General Act for the Repression of the Slave Trade, 1890;
    5. See UN Register of Conventional Arms, http://disarmament.un.org/UN_REGISTER.nsf and Nuclear and Missile Trade and Developments, The Nonproliferation Review, Center for Nonproliferation Studies,http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/npr/vol05/53/db53.pdf
    6. Chairman’s Statement, Proliferation Security Initiative, Brisbane Meeting, July 9-10, 2003.http://www.dfat.gov.au/globalissues/psi/
    7. Strategy against Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction and its corresponding Action Plan adopted by the Council of the European Union on April 14, 2003.
    8. “N Korea Ships Face more Scrutiny,” BBC, June 11, 2003.
    9. Sonni Efron and Barbara Demick, “11 nations to Discuss Blocking Shipments of Weapons Materials,” Los Angeles Times. June 12, 2003.

  • The Bloodstained Path

    Originally Published in The Progressive

    Unilateral military action by the United States against Iraq is unjustified, unwarranted, and illegal. The Administration has failed to make the case that Iraq poses an imminent threat to the United States. There is no credible evidence linking Iraq to 9/11. There is no credible evidence linking Iraq to Al Qaeda. Nor is there any credible evidence that Iraq possesses deliverable weapons of mass destruction, or that it intends to deliver them against the United States.

    When Iraq possessed and used weapons of mass destruction, quite sad to say, it did so with the knowledge of, and sometimes with materials from, the United States. During the Administration of Ronald Reagan, sixty helicopters were sold to Iraq. Later reports said Iraq used U.S.-made helicopters to spray Kurds with chemical weapons. According to The Washington Post, Iraq used mustard gas against Iran with the help of intelligence from the CIA.

    Iraq’s punishment? The United States reestablished full diplomatic ties around Thanksgiving of 1984.

    Throughout 1989 and 1990, U.S. companies, with the permission of the first Bush Administration, sent to the government of Saddam Hussein mustard gas precursors and live cultures for bacteriological research. U.S. companies also helped to build a chemical weapons factory and supplied the West Nile virus, fuel air explosive technology, computers for weapons technology, hydrogen cyanide precursors, computers for weapons research and development, and vacuum pumps and bellows for nuclear weapons plants. “We have met the enemy,” said Walt Kelly’s Pogo, “And he is us.”

    Unilateral action on the part of the United States, or in partnership with Great Britain, would for the first time set our nation on the bloodstained path of aggressive war, a sacrilege upon the memory of those who fought to defend this country. America’s moral authority would be undermined throughout the world. It would destabilize the entire Persian Gulf and Middle East region. And it would signal for Russia to invade Georgia; China, Taiwan; North Korea, the South; India, Pakistan.

    The United States must recommit itself to the U.N. Charter, which is the framework for international order. We have a right and a duty to defend ourselves. We also have an obligation to defend international law. We can accomplish both without going to war with Iraq.

    There is a way out.

    It must involve the United Nations. Inspections for weapons of mass destruction should begin immediately. Inspectors must have free and unfettered access to all sites. The time has come for us to end the sanctions against Iraq, because those sanctions punish the people of Iraq for having Saddam Hussein as their leader. These sanctions have been instrumental in causing the deaths of hundreds of thousands of children. Emergency relief should be expedited. Free trade, except in arms, must be permitted. Foreign investments must be allowed. The assets of Iraq abroad must be restored.

    And a regional zone free of weapons of mass destruction should be established.

    The only weapon that can save the world is nonviolence, said Gandhi. We can begin this practice today by calling upon the Administration in Washington to stop the talk of war, and stop the planning for war.

    In their heart of hearts, the American people do not want war on Iraq. The American people want peace.

    There is no reason for war against Iraq. Stop the drumbeat. Stop sending troops and supplies to Kuwait and Qatar. Pull back from the abyss of unilateral action and preemptive strikes.

    We know that each day the Administration receives a daily threat assessment. But Iraq is not an imminent threat to this nation. Forty million Americans suffering from inadequate health care is an imminent threat. The high cost of prescription drugs is an imminent threat. The ravages of unemployment is an imminent threat. The slowdown of the economy is an imminent threat, and so, too, the devastating effects of corporate fraud.

    We must drop the self-defeating policy of regime change. Policies of aggression and assassination are not worthy of any nation with a democratic tradition, let alone a nation of people who love liberty and whose sons and daughters sacrifice to maintain that democracy.

    The question is not whether or not America has the military power to destroy Saddam Hussein and Iraq. The question is whether we destroy something essential in this nation by asserting that America has the right to do so anytime it pleases.

    America cannot and should not be the world’s policeman. America cannot and should not try to pick the leaders of other nations. Nor should America and the American people be pressed into the service of international oil interests and arms dealers.

    We must work to bring Iraq back into the community of nations, not through destruction, but through constructive action worldwide. We can help negotiate a resolution with Iraq that encompasses unfettered inspections, the end of sanctions, and the cessation of the regime-change policy.

    We have the power to do this. We must have the will to do this. It must be the will of the American people expressed through the direct action of peaceful insistence.

    If the United States proceeds with a first strike policy, then we will have taken upon our nation a historic burden of committing a violation of international law, and we would then forfeit any moral high ground we could hope to hold.

  • Address on the International Criminal Court Delivered by His Excellency Arthur N.R. Robinson, President of Trinidad and Tobago

    At a Nuclear Age Peace Foundation Symposium entitled International Law and the Quest for Security held at the University of California at Santa Barbara

    Thank you, Dr. Krieger, for this exposition on the basis on which the International Criminal Court came into being. You had, I understand, a very enlightening discussion on aspects of International Law, International Criminal Law specifically, this morning and that, together with what Dr Krieger has said, will form a very informative, useful background against which I will speak.

    I will deal more with the historical aspect of the attempts at unified action by the International Community to establish rules of behavior and in saying so, I recall the words of a notorious Nazi criminal. He was Hitler’s most gifted technician who did more than anyone else to assist Hitler in his ravages and destruction of different parts of Europe and other parts of the world. He was caught along with others, both military and business (people). He was tried by the Tribunal of Nuremberg, as it has come to be known, convicted and sentenced to twenty years imprisonment in Spandau. It was after his conviction, when reality dawned upon him, Albert Speer bared his soul to the tribunal and said, among other things, that “It is necessary that rules must be devised whereby mankind can learn to live with one another because, with the advances that would take place in science and technology, a new war of this kind will result in the destruction of civilization.”

    And that is what, fundamentally, an International Criminal Court is about: the creation of rules by the International Community, establishing standards of behaviour where anyone will be held accountable for violation of such standards where the most egregious offences are involved.

    With the tremendous advances that Albert Speer foresaw in science and technology, it is clear that what is before us now, and I speak particularly to the youth in this audience, what is evolving before our very eyes and in our very presence, is a new civilization which science and technology have developed around us, the beginnings of a new civilization in which we humans are involved whether we like it or not.

    How are we going to make use of this tremendous advance in science and technology is a matter not so much for the scientists like Albert Speer, it is a matter for all of us. For the consequences of abuse of this new power that is being placed in the hands of some would have enormous results for all. So what touches all, as was said decades ago in a different context, must be approved by all. And this is how you are brought into the picture to be involved in the decision: shall we establish rules which will apply to all, rich and poor, high and low, powerful and powerless? Shall we establish rules whereby we all can abide and learn to live with one another? Or shall we allow this enormous power that is being placed in the hands of some by science and technology to run away and act in accordance with its own rules?

    I give an illustration of centuries ago: A country in the region of Alsace in Europe where a ruler by the name of Peter Von Hagen Bach got out of control and he wreaked havoc among the villagers of the region of Alsace and there were no rules and there was no established power to bring him to account. So what did they do? They made use of their numbers. That was the power that they had, numbers. They gathered together in their numbers from everywhere they could collect. They captured him. They brought him to the market place, and they executed him. After that, there were efforts towards creating such rules of behaviour. There were the Geneva Conventions of 1864 and 1865. And then, after the First World War, the victims of the war got together. There was a proposal to establish a permanent court to try Kaiser Wilhelm. That proposal, however, was rejected in favor of an ad hoc tribunal. But before the tribunal could be established, Kaiser Wilhelm escaped to a neutral country, The Netherlands. In those days you could not take action against countries. You could not bring a country to court for harboring a man who had committed the most egregious crimes against humanity. And if you managed to bring the country to court and convicted the country, you could not send the country to jail. And so the people were powerless because countries stood in the way to defend their sovereignty.

    So it was necessary to establish rules and this was done for the first time in the Tribunal of Nuremberg where one of the principles established was: Since it is individuals who commit crimes, however powerful they may be—they may be kings, they may be presidents, they may be generals, they may be field marshals—they are individuals. Therefore you do not hold their countries to account, you hold them to account.

    Individuals must be brought to account. And there must be no impunity. No one must escape. So, even if they belong to a distant country, they can still be tried, if necessary, in absentia and convicted and sentence imposed and countries may be required to impose those sentences. Wherever those individuals went they would be subject to the charges and the sentences that were imposed. So they could be forever in search of a home because wherever they went, they would be subject to the sentence of the court and imprisoned.

    That is the importance of a permanent Court. One of the great principles that would apply in the case of a permanent Court is that it is no respecter of persons. Whoever you may be, you may be President, you may be Secretary for Foreign Affairs, you may be Secretary of Defence, you may be Commander in Chief, you will still be subject to trial and sentencing. So humans wherever you may be would then be able to have a sense of security that if anyone, however powerful that person may be, invades your security or destroys your humanity or commits any of these crimes against humanity, any of these egregious crimes, the permanent Court is there for the purpose of trial, conviction and sentencing.

    Nuremberg however, was a tribunal, an ad hoc tribunal formed by the victors of the First World War to try the vanquished, and there were many persons who felt it should have been a permanent court. I was a student at that time in the University of Oxford, engaging in debates in the Students’ Union and in one debate on the United Nations, the actual subject of the debate was “The United Nations has failed”, because it was clear that the United Nations had really no power to do anything to anyone; had no power of implementation of action, sentencing and imprisonment of persons.

    And in that debate also was another young man and he was from the Boston area- the University of Boston. He had a Doctorate in History and International Law and was reading for another Doctorate in International Law. His subject was the Nuremberg Trials in International Law. We had extensive discussions and after that debate, we were both recognized as the two best debaters in the debate and became very friendly after that. We had numerous discussions on International Affairs and felt that the way forward, at a time subsequent to the Second World War, when there were doubts about the future of the world, having regard to the experiences of the Nazis, (we were discussing in what direction the world should go, as young people and I hope that young people are engaging in these discussions these days) – we came to the conclusion that we should seek to establish that the world should go in the direction of universal human rights. And since there were no established institutions for the enforcement of those rights, we felt that in the most serious cases, an institution should be developed that has enforcement powers and therefore Nuremberg was the way to go.

    But Nuremberg was ad hoc; it was for the specific purpose and when it was done, it was finished. But what we felt was that there should be a permanent court, a court establishing that everybody should know it is there and if these crimes are committed they could be brought to account to that court and that would be a means of bringing some influence on persons in refraining, some deterrent influence, on persons against the commission of those crimes.

    If, for example, we had such a permanent court they would not have had to establish a tribunal in Bosnia Herzegovina, in Rwanda, and so on and maybe those crimes not have been committed because the persons who are now before those tribunals would have known that they could be brought to account for the commission of those crimes and the people around them would have known that those persons could be brought to account. So this could be a tremendous deterrent – if one is to have a permanent court, rather than have to resort to tribunals – to doing something after the act has been done rather than having provision so that action could be taken.

    Everyone should know that action could be taken. This would be a tremendous deterrent influence. And since the rules would apply to all, there would be no impunity for persons who feel, because of their positions or some special situation that; they could commit crimes and escape. So this is the position that is placed before us in building this new civilization. Whether we like it or not, the civilization is being built for us.

    Look at the tremendous developments taking place in communications. As I speak, I could be heard in Japan or in China on in India or in any of these places, even as I speak. That is the importance of the communications revolution where every individual could use the internet and express his opinion and that opinion could be known throughout the world. An individual is no longer isolated, which is a tremendous revolution that has developed around us and the question is, shall we or shall we not establish rules for the most egregious offences, for the worst forms of behaviour, that they could be dealt with in a manner provided for in law and according to justice, that is to say, all rules of justice should prevail. They should be heard, they should have the opportunity to be heard, to put up their defence against charges against them. For example, they should be tried, and tried in accordance with the principles of a court of law and no harsh penalties be imposed because of the conviction if they are guilty. They would have to be proven guilty in a court of law where all the principles in the civilized world that apply will be applied and no one would have punishments imposed because of his or her political conviction or because of their religious convictions.

    Those matters will not apply in an International Court. The Statute of the court makes that kind of provision. It gives protection. Whereas it provides for penalties which would apply in all cases, it also makes provision for protection of individuals so that they could not be subject to arbitrary rules and penalties according to the whims and fancies of those who possess the powers.

    So this innovation of a permanent court has been described as the second most important development in International Law since the United Nations Charter.

    It is true that I moved the motion in the United Nations in 1989, but as I said last night, there is a great deal of substance in the utterance of the most distinguished user of the English language, the most distinguished poet and playwright who made one of his characters say, “There is a divinity that shapes our ends rough hew them how we will.” And as I stand here, I can say there is a divinity that shaped my life. That is the only explanation for the fact that I stand here before you this afternoon and I speak. For it easily could have been otherwise; that I received the award that I received last night. For in the year 1990 there was a revolt in my country. I was the Prime Minister. A fanatical group of Muslims decided that they wanted to take over the government. They invaded the Parliament in which I sat and in which other members of Parliament, Ministers of Government were. They held us, they bound us. I was bound hand and foot and as I lay bleeding on the floor of the Parliament, they called on me to instruct the troops to withdraw from their assault and to lay down their arms, that is to say the Government troops, and tell them that the Government had fallen. And as they put the microphone to my mouth to carry out their instructions, I shouted in the microphone: “These are murderers and torturers. Attack with full force.” And this of course astonished my assailants. They were in shock; they withdrew; they pulled back. But one of them who was some distance away fired the gun. It caught me in the knee. I could have been lame for life. The doctor said half an inch in a different way and the main artery would have been severed and in minutes I would have gone. This was 1990. I made reference to the event last night and this morning, I awoke to hear my wife who is somewhat ill saying, “1990, 1990, 1990.” That is all she was saying.

    That reinforces what I said. How did I escape? There is a divinity that enabled those assailants, those villains to be caught and captured and tried. So when I stood in the United Nations and moved that motion, with all the background that I had and all the preparation, I was able to do it because I was then Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago. I had great assistance from some of the most experienced and learned experts in the world in the field of International Law, including Dr Woetzel himself.

    I moved the motion. I brought them together and had the motion prepared and I moved the motion. How different it could have been. I happened to be Prime Minister. I was in the place to do it—in the United Nations. I was in the position to do it. I was Prime Minister and I was able to incorporate the expertise and experience of the most learned in the world. I was able to do it and that is why I am regarded as the person who is the virtual author, the father, as it is put, of the International Criminal Court. It so easily could have been someone else, but nobody else was in the position to do it.

    So University students, I emphasise this in order to let you understand how history is made and unless historians delve into the factors that produced events, the events describing the events themselves are of little use. True knowledge has to be based on understanding and evaluation of events, surrounding events, events that have led to the conclusion that is arrived at. So one has to be careful with one’s history and with what historians say. And it is of extreme importance that one should understand the meaning of an International Criminal Court and the nature of the opposition that comes for the International Criminal Court. It is important to delve into the origin of that opposition, for unless one understands the basis of that opposition and the manner in which that opposition has evolved and the situation that has led to that opposition, one would not understand and one would not be prepared for the necessary campaign to deal with any campaign of opposition. And as the people of Alsace dealt with Peter Von Hagen Bach by a combination of numbers—their power came from numbers, they did not have the influence that he had, they brought together numbers—in the same way, dealing with any campaign against the International Criminal Court, a necessary campaign must be a mobilization of the numbers in the world. The numbers in the world must speak and you have the internet. You have the communications revolution now which makes every individual a potent actor.

    So I am happy to speak to you in this University of California in Santa Barbara. It is the first time I have had the opportunity to do so and it is an occasion I can assure you I shall never forget, for the attentiveness with which you have listened. An occasion where clearly there has been a response which I understand. For all these reasons, I shall never forget this occasion and I wish you progress and prosperity in your lives as students and hope that you will be a decisive influence in anything that involves the benefit of humanity and there is no doubt about it, the International Criminal Court is a matter for the benefit of all humanity.

    I thank you.

  • Measuring the Rule of Law Statement delivered by James Herman, President of the State Bar of California

    At the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation Symposium International Law and the Quest for Security held at the University of California at Santa Barbara

    I am honored to speak to a this group of activists dedicated not to peace in theory but peace in practice. I congratulate David Krieger on the good work of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. As a 1971 graduate of this University, it is ironic I stand here more than thirty years after that time of turmoil to address a new generation studying old problems.

    Benjamin Franklin has said “They that can give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” This was brought into special focus during a Peace Foundation gathering my wife, Judge Denise deBellefeuille, and I hosted shortly after the September 11 tragedy last year.

    I am a lawyer. The lawyers of the world are dedicated to the peaceful resolution of disputes between citizens and disputes between governments.

    I have dedicated my career to the rule of law. I have been to the Hague as a civil trial lawyer practicing under the Hague convention. I was a fellow of the New York University Law School’s Criminal Law Education and Research Center affiliated with the United Nations Crime Prevention Section. When I hear of the International Criminal Court, I know we are substituting law fare for warfare. Our work will be completed not only when weapons are beaten in to plowshares but when battlefields are converted to courtrooms.

    I recently—along with my wife, Judge deBellefuille who is a strong supporter of our organization—led a group of lawyers to the Peoples Republic of China. Although known for its human rights abuses, I was gratified that the Chinese Legal Profession is hungry for the rule of law. I was gratified that the government of China has opened over 2500 legal aid offices throughout the country. I was gratified the Women’s Legal Center at Beijing University is doing impact litigation throughout China on women’s and children’s legal issues. I was gratified when a Chinese lawyer said that perhaps China needed fewer party secretaries and more lawyers.

    This reminds me of the often repeated but misunderstood line from Henry the VI, part 2, “First thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.” Many people, many lawyers think Shakespeare was being anti-lawyer. The context of this line is much different, however. Jack Cade, a would-be revolutionary is plotting to overthrow the government and is looking for suggestions from his gang. Dick the Butcher, recognizing the importance of the rule of law to social stability, responds, “First thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.”

    Although there are those who say California could use more party secretaries and fewer lawyers, I say trial by jury is a far superior social safety valve than trial by combat. The rule of law is the original alternative dispute resolution.

    I was unhappy when the Presidential election was decided by the Supreme Court rather than the voters. But I have realized since that the Supreme Court’s decision was a triumph of the rule of law. Although there was both grumbling and celebration over the decision, there was no violent coup, there was no overthrow of the government by the politically disappointed. There was respect for the rule of law. And as the leader of 186,000 lawyers in this state, I am proud of the role lawyers play in making this a country ruled by law rather than by force.

    But I am concerned when we exchange liberty for safety. I am concerned when we deny basic due process to the least among us, to those whom we dehumanize and label as “the other.” I am concerned when we ignore international tribunals in favor of unilateral force. Beware when any government seeks to diminish the role of lawyers in any tribunal because that signals efficiency, not justice.

    Child advocate Marian Wright Edelman has written, “the future which we hold in trust for our own children will be shaped by our fairness to other people’s children.” Our fairness to other people’s children. This, above all else, is the measure of the rule of law.

  • A Nuclear Age Peace Foundation Symposium on International Law and the Quest for Security

    As the future of the international legal order hangs in the balance in the United Nations Security Council, it is necessary for government officials, academics, activists and citizens to engage in constructive dialogue about the role that the global legal order is to play in global security. The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation sponsored a symposium entitled International Law & the Quest for Security enabling such timely discussion to take place at the University of California at Santa Barbara on October 25, 2002.

    The keynote speakers were Richard Falk, professor Emeritus of International Law and Practice at Princeton and Chair of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, his Excellency Arthur N.R. Robinson, President of Trinidad and Tobago, and John Burroughs, Executive director of the Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy. They were accompanied by a variety of panelists with varying backgrounds in international law. The resulting conversation was constructive and cutting edge as the participants proceeded to challenge one another’s assumptions about the future of the world legal order.

    Detoured or Derailed?

    Professor Falk set the tone for the first half of the symposium by expounding upon the crisis of security that the international community is currently suffering. He illustrated how US policies on Iraq challenge the very notion the territorial state and threaten to undermine the legitimacy of the United Nations Security Council. Falk ended his initial remarks by posing the question of whether Sept. 11 and the events that have ensued have derailed or simply detoured the post-Cold War progress in fortifying a global legal order.

    The four members of the panel that followed, monitored by Professor Peter Haslund, Director of International and Global Studies Program, Santa Barbara City College, approached the issues addressed by Falk from a variety of perspectives. Jackie Cabasso, Executive Director of Western States Legal Foundation and a nuclear weapons abolition activist, drove home the severity of the US military’s enthusiasm for nuclear weapons by quoting from various military documents and speeches. She also urged the audience to organize around a set of values that differ from this militaristic approach instead of focusing on particular issues or weapon systems.

    Cecelia Lynch, an associate professor of political science at UC Irvine, commented on historical trends of social movements and described the tensions between the environmental, peace, humanitarian, and anti-globalization movements today. Professor Lynch also emphasized the need to increase the responsibility of the state for welfare and to decrease the emphasis on militarism.

    Though many of those at the symposium concentrated on evaluating recent US policy, particularly its aggressive stance against Iraq, Professor Manou Eskandari, Chair of the Department of Political Science at Santa Barbara City College, pointed out that, “unilateralism is not just an American problem.” Eskandari also criticized the Security Council as being less than a truly a global forum, and called for democratization of the United Nations.

    Marc McGinns, a senate lecturer in Environmental Studies at the UC Santa Barbara, took an environmentally-based approach to the issues of human and global security. McGinns addressed the tensions between manmade international legal systems and the law of nature claiming that “we are making war against the earth” with our consumption habits. Highlighting the stark inequalities in world consumption, and its destabilizing effects on world security, McGinns put forth the questions, “What’s it to be? Justice or just us?”

    Debating the International Criminal Court

    In the afternoon session of the Symposium the discussion focused on the International Criminal Court (ICC), the statute of the Court having come into force this past July.

    His Excellency President Robinson, who was instrumental in getting the ICC back on the U.N. agenda in 1989, started off the afternoon by delivering a powerful speech delineating his personal involvement in the struggle to establish the ICC. Identifying the Court as a means of establishing standards of behavior he stated, “it is necessary that rules must be devised whereby humankind can live with one another because, with the advances that will take place in science and technology, a new world war of this kind will result in the destruction of humanity.”

    Dr. Burroughs began his talk on opposition to the ICC by pointing out the accuracy of Professor Eskandari’s position that there are other nations besides the US the establishment of the Court. Burroughs pointed out that China, India, Indonesia, Russia, and the United States—the five most populated countries in the world—have not ratified the ICC statute. He then went through the major objections to the court that Marc Grossman, US Under secretary of State, has outlined, displaying the pitfalls of each objection.

    Burroughs’ remarks were followed by an engaging discussion of the value of the ICC as a new element of international law. While panelists such as Judge Paul Egly supported the ICC as a “wonderful document,” Professor Lisa Hajjar, assistant professor of the Law and Society Program at UC Santa Barbara, challenged the ICC approach to international criminal law. Hajjar favored the use of universal jurisdiction in national courts, such as was used in the case against ex-Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. She described this approach as being a more decentralized and democratic and suggested that the establishment of the ICC could actually impede the pursuit of universal jurisdiction in national courts.

    In his remarks, Stan Roden, a practicing attorney from the local community, described how the ICC was consistent with the rights guaranteed in the US constitution. Professor Eskandari questioned this somewhat nation-centric approach asking if the ICC would be any less legitimate if it did not adhere to US constitutional rights.

    Dr. J. Kirk Boyd, a Visiting Professor at UC Santa Barbara, spoke mainly about the Bill of Rights Project, which is working to create an international composition of human rights, consolidating existing documents. Boyd described this project as part of an effort to prevent crimes such as those to be tried under the ICC, creating an international environment where such crimes would become less likely.

    As the symposium wound down, participants enthusiastically welcomed an unexpected appearance by Daniel Ellsburg, releasing the Pentagon Papers to the press during the Vietnam War. Ellsburg voiced his opinion that we are at much risk of nuclear weapons going off in the next weeks or months than we were during the Cold War, emphasizing the need for a long-term approach to weapons proliferation.

    The symposium was wrapped up with the conclusions of David Krieger, President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation and Richard Falk who synthesized the varying points made throughout day. Falk also left the audience with the hopeful idea of “politics as the art of the impossible,” reminding participants of the importance of continuing to engage in dialogue and action to promote peaceful solutions to conflicts in the face of extreme militarism.
    Devon Chaffee is the Research and Advocacy Coordinator at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

  • Policies Rooted In Arrogance Are Certain To Fail

    Policies Rooted In Arrogance Are Certain To Fail

    These are difficult times for peace. Since the Bush administration assumed power in the United States, there has been a steady beating on the drums of war accompanied by a systematic undermining of the foundations of international law. The September 11th terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon bolstered the Bush administration’s plans to secure US global military dominance through increased military budgets, deployment of missile defenses, development of more usable nuclear weapons and the weaponization of space. Congress has largely acquiesced in supporting these plans.

    The United States has always held to a double standard with regard to nuclear weapons. This double standard was given legal form in the 1970 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), in which five countries were designated as nuclear weapons states (United States, Soviet Union, United Kingdom, France and China), and the rest were designated as non-nuclear weapons states. The latter agreed in the treaty not to develop or acquire nuclear weapons in exchange for a promise by the nuclear weapons states to pursue good faith negotiations to achieve nuclear disarmament.

    Throughout the life of the NPT, the non-nuclear weapons states have called for more tangible signs of progress toward achieving the nuclear disarmament promise of the nuclear weapons states. They were successful in 2000 in getting the nuclear weapons states to commit unequivocally to undertake the elimination of their nuclear arsenals. However, the nuclear weapons states, and particularly the United States, have broken this promise as well as a string of other promises with regard to their NPT obligations.

    Now the United States has gone even further. It has developed policies for the preemptive use of nuclear weapons. In its secret 2001 Nuclear Posture Review, which was leaked to the media in March 2002, the United States outlined its intention to develop contingency plans for the use of nuclear weapons against seven countries (Iraq, Iran, Libya, Syria, North Korea, Russia and China). Five of these are non-nuclear weapons states, which at a minimum contradicts the spirit of the NPT as well as previous US security assurances to non-nuclear weapons states.

    President Bush, flush with popularity from his war against Afghanistan, continues to threaten war against Iraq. The principal reason he gives for attacking Iraq is to replace its leader, Saddam Hussein, and to preemptively strike Iraq for its refusal to allow UN inspectors to assess whether or not it is developing weapons of mass destruction.

    Prior to the Bush administration, the US had a policy of nuclear deterrence, far from a policy that provided the United States with security from nuclear attack. The Bush administration has criticized deterrence policy but yet maintained it, while at the same time promoting policies of preemption.

    Preemption is the new catch-word of Bush’s nuclear policy. It is a means of assuring that a nuclear double standard continues to exist. It is a policy of nuclear apartheid in which select states are bestowed (or bestow upon themselves) nuclear privilege while others are attacked for seeking to enter the elite club of nuclear powers.

    Ironically, Bush’s nuclear policy makes it more likely that terrorists will obtain nuclear weapons or materials. The fraudulent arms control agreement that was signed in May 2002 by Bush and Putin, the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT), allows thousands of nuclear warheads to be put in storage rather than destroying them. These stored nuclear warheads will be tempting targets for terrorists as will be the thousands of tons of nuclear materials available throughout the world that could be fashioned into nuclear or radiological weapons. The Bush administration is spending only approximately one-third of the three billion dollars per year called for by the US blue ribbon commission to prevent Russian nuclear materials from falling into the hands of terrorists.

    Bush’s withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty and his advances toward deployment of missile defenses are compelling China to substantially strengthen its nuclear forces aimed at the United States, as China forewarned it would do in these circumstances. Under Bush’s leadership, US allies in Europe and Asia will be brought in as “partners” in a global missile defense system that will be hugely expensive, unlikely to be effective and provide no protection against terrorists who would initiate their attacks, nuclear and otherwise, without launching missiles.

    Mr. Bush is squandering US leadership potential for global cooperation under international law, and instead pursuing policies that are based on military dominance, uncertain technology and nuclear apartheid. They are policies rooted in arrogance and certain to fail. They are, in fact, already failing by their allocation of resources to increasing the militarization of the planet rather than to meeting existing basic human needs that would help eradicate the fertile breeding grounds for continued terrorism and hatred of the United States.