World of faultlines

Hehir, J. Bryan

J. Bryan Hehir WORLD OF FAULTLINES SOVEREIGNTY, SELF-DETERMINATION, INTERVENTION hree riveting and profoundly different situations in the world today testify to the degree of change required in...

...Somalia testifies less to the complexity of policy choices then to the consequences of neglect when a nation and its people do not count on the scales of high politics and new order designs...
...One need not be nostalgic about the cold war to admit that it suppressed the lethal forces now at work in the Balkans...
...J. Bryan Hehir WORLD OF FAULTLINES SOVEREIGNTY, SELF-DETERMINATION, INTERVENTION hree riveting and profoundly different situations in the world today testify to the degree of change required in the way we think about world politics in the 1990s...
...When the struggle for self-determination produces widespread repression, civil war, or threats of genocide, as it has in both Bosnia and Iraq, the international community cannot be a detached observer...
...The cumulative effect of these three developments—one normative, one economic, and one political—point toward a revised understanding of sovereignty...
...The hesitancy to move militarily has not been because of doubts about the legitimacy of such action, but because of fear that it will not succeed...
...The status of sovereignty is a second faultline on the map of international politics in the 1990s...
...more urgently it reminds us that atrocities are not out of fashion even if the cold war is...
...The pervasive economic interdependence of the world 8: 25 September 1992 Commonweal means that participation in the global economy carries with it constraints as well as opportunities...
...In some form or other the international community has been balancing these two principles since the time of the League of Nations, but the discipline of cold-war tension often muted calls for self-determination...
...Finally, when the notion of sovereignty is being altered, it is not surprising that the correlative concept of intervention is also being recast...
...Three different dimensions of international politics place new constraints on sovereign states...
...It is undoubtedly the case that the Iraqi move against Kuwait also reflected the end of the cold war...
...Bosnia forces the rest of Europe and the world to face the question of what the proper political and moral response is to multiple claims of self-determination in the same territory...
...First, the differences: each of the three cases highlights a distinct kind of problem that advocates of international order must address...
...Somalia is not a powderkeg...
...Bosnia most clearly reflects the ending of the cold war...
...The changes are not captured in the phrase "post-cold war," and they were never spelled out in the Gulf War claims about a "new world order...
...The future promises no such constraint...
...The first is the likelihood of persistent conflict and frequent collision between claims of self-determination and calls for respecting sovereignty...
...to anyone contemplating intervention, it presents the sobering prospect of an endless war, with mounting casualties and no diplomatic exit...
...In the face of Bosnia and Somalia, Iraq reflects more "normal" issues of foreign policy: a revisionist state with a repressive regime, arguments about balances of power, proliferation, and trade embargoes...
...The complex legacy of the right of self-determination has stalked the history of Yugoslavia for most of this century...
...Finally, the humanitarian intervention in Somalia—very late and still too limited in scope—also raises the possibility that more intrusive action will be needed to protect food supplies...
...When the drive for self-determination succeeds politically, but produces a state which is not economically viable, the international community or some part of it (like the European Community) is asked to bridge the gap between political success and economic collapse...
...When the demands for self-determination multiply, international institutions and other states have to judge not only the merits of each request for recognition, but also the cumulative impact on international order...
...As Stanley Hoffmann recently observed in the New York Review of Books (April 9,1992), these are equally foundational principles of international order...
...The response to them, however, has pushed beyond conventional measures which, like the Bosnia and Somalia cases, suggests the need to address basic concepts of international life today...
...Somalia is about starvation not self-determination...
...Sovereignty is challenged from below by calls for self-determination, but it also is being reshaped by broad transnational forces...
...integration into the system also means penetration of one's economy by others...
...True, starvation is entwined with tribal warfare, but the military dimensions of Somalia are not threatening...
...But Bosnia is a powderkeg...
...prior to 1989 the Soviets would have restrained such a reckless act and the United States could never have shaped an international response under UN auspices if the invasion had occurred...
...In normative terms, the debate has not been about just-cause but about proportionality and possibility of success...
...In the face of the three cases cited here, however, the dynamic in the international community has been to press for various forms of intervention: political, humanitarian, and military...
...All three of these cases are desperate situations requiring concrete responses...
...Finally, if the Maastricht Treaty is approved by the members of the European Community, it will set a precedent for states to cede or "to pool" sovereignty voluntarily in pursuit of maximizing their foreign policy goals...
...In today's post-cold war and post-Gulf War setting, Iraq's internal policies and external designs pose difficult but familiar choices for policymakers...
...These measures, although justified because of threats posed to Kurds and Shiites, are profound invasions of the traditional notion of sovereignty...
...now a new chapter of the story is being written in blood...
...So now it is necessary not only to confront the specific tragedies of Bosnia, Somalia, and Iraq, but to ask what they say collectively about the world which confronts us in the last decade of the twentieth century...
...The UN human rights regime holds the international community responsible for systematic violations of rights within the boundaries of a sovereign state...
...The first prerogative of sovereignty has been protection against intervention...
...no single definition is possible for them...
...Just below the surface of each situation lies a second need for a long-term systematic effort to recast both the content of sovereignty and the norm of nonintervention to provide a more adequate framework for international order in this decade and the next century...
...it is not politically dangerous, but it is humanly atrocious...
...Somalia is a costly human reminder about other places in Africa and the world whose names and issues have hardly entered the discussion of post-cold war futures...
...In theory, it is possible to conceive of political arrangements that would satisfy most of the aspirations of self-determination, but the political passions of nationalism and ethnic identity do not yield easily to negotiated compromises...
...Bosnia, Somalia, and Iraq could hardly be more different on the surface, yet any response to them tends to drive analysis and planning back to a similar theme, the changing character of international relations...
...The Iraqi case has produced the most decisive results: under UN authorization the Gulf War coalition has effectively removed two sectors of Iraq from the control of the central government...
...At one level the tension between self-determination and sovereignty can be regarded as an internal matter for states, but the distinction between internal and external issues is not hard and fast...
...For forty years the iron rule of Tito and the implicit consensus of the superpowers prevented the eruption of the national, religious, and ethnic passions that now consume the haunt-ingly historic city of Sarajevo...
...In Bosnia, the failure to moderate the conflict through diplomatic and economic measures has led to calls for international military action...

Vol. 119 • September 1992 • No. 16


 
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