Alphen, Netherlands, 11 March. Thucydides, the great-great grandfather of
unforgiving International Relations once said, “The strong do
what they have to do and the weak accept what they have to accept”.
British Foreign
Secretary Hague’s announcement last week in Parliament that Britain will send
armoured vehicles and bullet-proof vests to support the Syrian National
Coalition came just at the moment when the UN declared one hundred thousand
Syrians refugees. The level of human
suffering in that benighted country is now biblical in its proportions. In a twist of fate the decision comes almost
ten years to the day British troops joined US and other coalition forces in the
March 2003 Iraq invasion which rent the international community asunder. Just how far has humanitarian interventionism
come in those ten years?
Humanitarian interventionism goes back to the end of the Cold War. It was a brief moment in history which
reached its zenith in 2001 when two contrasting 'evangelical champions’ came together to form an
unlikely alliance between an American conservative and a British social democrat – George W. Bush and Tony Blair. Bush was at war fighting Al Qaeda; Blair
believed deeply in Just War.
The Americans wanted to eradicate 'AQ’ which to many on the Washington right would be only achieved by 'modernising' the Middle East after America’s image.
A mission that was in no small way linked to the security of Israel. Blair was haunted by the
tragedies of the 1990s in the Balkans and
Rwanda in which millions perished for want of action.
At America’s brief unipolar moment the judicious use of force made everything
seem possible. In 1995 the US had
finally led NATO to end the Bosnian Serb assault on the Bosnian capital
Sarajevo and in 1999 Blair successfully persuaded US President Bill Clinton to
force the Serb military out of Kosovo. Finally, in 2000 Blair ordered Britain’s armed
forces to intervene in Sierra Leone to prevent a genocidal massacre in its
capital Freetown. The blueprint for
humanitarian interventionism was established.
Come 911 American power, Bush’s war and Blair’s creed came together as
neo-conservatism met humanitarianism.
First came Afghanistan in November 2001 when the two creeds deployed
side-by-side. The Americans led the robust counter-terrorism whilst
Europeans sought hearts and minds. Then
came Iraq. The 2003 invasion not only
split Europe down the middle and diverted effort from Afghanistan but forced Tony Blair and Britain to make a terrible
choice between war-fighting America and peacekeeping Europe.
In fact there were deep differences between Bush and Blair. An exchange I had at the time with Richard
Perle in the International Herald Tribune
reflected the tension. Perle suggested that
Iraq was just the beginning of US efforts to transform the Middle East with
Iran the one-day objective. The UK would be
willing to support the US over the issue of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction,
I countered, but London would never support some wider American ‘crusade’.
With bucket-loads of hindsight what became Blair’s tragedy is now Syria’s. To bridge the immense political
gulf between Bush and Blair London had to find some ‘legal’ justification to
make the Iraq invasion ‘just’, – hence the Europe-splitting controversy over
UN-mandate. For Blair only a Saddam that
posed a very real and present danger could possibly bridge the ideological
divide between Bush, Blair and sceptical European public opinion.
In effect Blair placed the entire future legitimacy
of Western interventions on the existence of Iraqi WMD.
The subsequent failure to find any WMD in effect destroyed not only
Blair but the very cause of humanitarian interventionism that he had championed
and which still has much to commend it.
Worse, the Iraq disaster critically undermined belief that Afghanistan
could be stabilised amongst many of America’s closest allies and impressed upon
the West’s adversaries a sudden vulnerability. That vulnerability has now been compounded by
economic disaster and a widespread and exaggerated belief that the West is in terminal
decline.
Yes, small-scale interventions have been tried since in Libya and now Mali,
but none of them have anything like the Responsibility to Protect ambition that
grew out of the the Balkan and Rwandan tragedies. They are more strike, hope and withdraw
operations and as likely to lead to one set of monsters replacing another than
offer any real hope to ravaged peoples.
Ten years on from Iraq the British decision must be seen it that
light. A genuine but half-hearted
attempt to offer a little support to a brutalised people that is far too little, far, far too late. Tragically, in its half-heartedness such
'intervention' becomes non-intervention. It also effectively marks the grave of Blair’s humanitarian interventionism.
So, the strong will do what they always do and the weak will suffer what
they always suffer whilst the declining will wring their collective hands and
feign strength, as they have always done.
How far has interventionism come? It
has come as far as Syria but is now trapped on the rocky, grave-pitted road between Sarajevo and
Baghdad.
Julian Lindley-French
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.