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Title: Crisis in the Balkans Author: Noam Chomsky Date: May 1999 Language: en Topics: former Yugoslavia, US foreign interventions, Kosovo, NATO Source: Retrieved on 19th June 2021 from https://chomsky.info/199905__/ Notes: Published in Z Magazine.
On March 24, U.S.-led NATO forces launched cruise missiles and bombs at
targets in Yugoslavia, âplunging America into a military conflict that
President Clinton said was necessary to stop ethnic cleansing and bring
stability to Eastern Europe,â lead stories in the press reported. In a
televised address, Clinton explained that by bombing Yugoslavia, âwe are
upholding our values, protecting our interests, and advancing the cause
of peace.â
In the preceding year, according to Western sources, about 2,000 people
had been killed in the Yugoslav province of Kosovo and there were
several hundred thousand internal refugees. The humanitarian catastrophe
was overwhelmingly attributable to Yugoslav military and police forces,
the main victims being ethnic Albanian Kosovars, commonly said to
constitute about 90 percent of the population. After three days of
bombing, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, several
thousand refugees had been expelled to Albania and Macedonia, the two
neighboring countries. Refugees reported that the terror had reached the
capital city of Pristina, largely spared before, and provided credible
accounts of large-scale destruction of villages, assassinations, and a
radical increase in generation of refugees, perhaps an effort to expel a
good part of the Albanian population. Within two weeks the flood of
refugees had reached some 350,000, mostly from the southern sections of
Kosovo adjoining Macedonia and Albania, while unknown numbers of Serbs
fled north to Serbia to escape the increased violence from the air and
on the ground.
On March 27, U.S.-NATO Commanding General Wesley Clark declared that it
was âentirely predictableâ that Serbian terror and violence would
intensify after the NATO bombing. On the same day, State Department
spokesperson James Rubin said that âThe United States is extremely
alarmed by reports of an escalating pattern of Serbian attacks on
Kosovar Albanian civilians,â now attributed in large part to
paramilitary forces mobilized after the bombing. General Clarkâs phrase
âentirely predictableâ is an overstatement. Nothing is âentirely
predictable,â surely not the effects of extreme violence. But he is
surely correct in implying that what happened at once was highly likely.
As observed by Carnes Lord of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,
formerly a Bush Administration national security adviser, âenemies often
react when shot at,â and âthough Western officials continue to deny it,
there can be little doubt that the bombing campaign has provided both
motive and opportunity for a wider and more savage Serbian operation
than what was first envisioned.â
In the preceding months, the threat of NATO bombingâagain,
predictablyâwas followed by an increase in atrocities. The withdrawal of
international observers, sharply condemned by the Serb Parliament,
predictably had the same consequence. The bombing was then undertaken
under the rational expectation that killing and refugee generation would
escalate as a result, as indeed happened, even if the scale may have
come as a surprise to some, though apparently not the commanding
general.
Under Tito, Kosovars had had a considerable measure of self-rule. So
matters remained until 1989, when Kosovoâs autonomy was rescinded by
Slobodan Milosevic, who established direct Serbian rule and imposed âa
Serbian version of Apartheid,â in the words of former U.S. government
specialist on the Balkans James Hooper, no dove: he advocates direct
NATO invasion of Kosovo. The Kosovars âconfounded the international
community,â Hooper continues, âby eschewing a war of national
liberation, embracing instead the nonviolent approach espoused by
leading Kosovo intellectual Ibrahim Rugova and constructing a parallel
civil society,â an impressive achievement, for which they were rewarded
by âpolite audiences and rhetorical encouragement from Western
governments.â The nonviolent strategy âlost its credibilityâ at the
Dayton accords in November 1995, Hooper observes. At Dayton, the U.S.
effectively partitioned Bosnia-Herzegovina between an eventual greater
Croatia and greater Serbia, after having roughly equalized the balance
of terror by providing arms and training for the forces of Croatian
dictator Tudjman and supporting his violent expulsion of Serbians from
Krajina and elsewhere. With the sides more or less balanced, and
exhausted, the U.S. took over, displacing the Europeans who had been
assigned the dirty work much to their annoyance. âIn deference to
Milosevic,â Hooper writes, the U.S. âexcluded Kosovo Albanian delegatesâ
from the Dayton negotiations and âavoided discussion of the Kosovo
problem.â âThe reward for nonviolence was international neglectâ; more
accurately, U.S. neglect.
Recognition that the U.S. understands only force led to âthe rise of the
guerrilla Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) and expansion of popular support
for an armed independence struggle.â By February 1998, KLA attacks
against Serbian police stations led to a âSerbian crackdownâ and
retaliation against civilians, another standard pattern: Israeli
atrocities in Lebanon, particularly under Nobel Peace laureate Shimon
Peres, are or should be a familiar example, though one that is not
entirely appropriate. These Israeli atrocities are typically in response
to attacks on its military forces occupying foreign territory in
violation of longstanding Security orders to withdraw. Many Israeli
attacks are not retaliatory at all, including the 1982 invasion that
devastated much of Lebanon and left 20,000 civilians dead (a different
story is preferred in U.S. commentary, though the truth is familiar in
Israel). We need scarcely imagine how the U.S. would respond to attacks
on police stations by a guerrilla force with foreign bases and supplies.
Fighting in Kosovo escalated, the scale of atrocities corresponding
roughly to the resources of violence. An October 1998 cease-fire made
possible the deployment of 2,000 European monitors. Breakdown of
U.S.-Milosevic negotiations led to renewed fighting, which increased
with the threat of NATO bombing and the withdrawal of the monitors,
again as predicted. Officials of the UN refugee agency and Catholic
Relief Services had warned that the threat of bombing âwould imperil the
lives of tens of thousands of refugees believed to be hiding in the
woods,â predicting âtragicâ consequences if âNATO made it impossible for
us to be here.â
Atrocities then sharply escalated as the late March bombing provided
âmotive and opportunity,â as was surely âpredictable,â if not âentirelyâ
so.
The bombing was undertaken, under U.S. initiative, after Milosevic had
refused to accept a U.S. ultimatum, the Rambouillet agreement of the
NATO powers in February. There were disagreements within NATO, captured
in a New York Times headline that reads: âTrickiest Divides Are Among
Big Powers at Kosovo Talks.â One problem had to do with deployment of
NATO peacekeepers. The European powers wanted to ask the Security
Council to authorize the deployment, in accord with treaty obligations
and international law. Washington, however, refused to allow the
âneuralgic word âauthorizeâ,â the New York Times reported, though it did
finally permit âendorse.â The Clinton administration âwas sticking to
its stand that NATO should be able to act independently of the United
Nations.â
The discord within NATO continued. Apart from Britain (by now, about as
much of an independent actor as the Ukraine was in pre-Gorbachev years),
NATO countries were skeptical of Washingtonâs preference for force, and
annoyed by Secretary of State Albrightâs âsaber-rattling,â which they
regarded as âunhelpful when negotiations were at such a sensitive
stage,â though âU.S. officials were unapologetic about the hard line.â
Turning from generally uncontested fact to speculation, we may ask why
events proceeded as they did, focusing on the decisions of U.S.
plannersâthe factor that must be our primary concern on elementary moral
grounds, and that is a leading if not decisive factor on grounds of
equally elementary considerations of power.
We may note at first that the dismissal of Kosovar democrats âin
deference to Milosevicâ is hardly surprising. To mention another
example, after Saddam Husseinâs repeated gassing of Kurds in 1988, in
deference to its friend and ally the U.S. barred official contacts with
Kurdish leaders and Iraqi democratic dissidents, who were largely
excluded from the media as well. The official ban was renewed
immediately after the Gulf war, in March 1991, when Saddam was tacitly
authorized to conduct a massacre of rebelling Shiâites in the south and
then Kurds in the north. The massacre proceeded under the steely gaze of
Storminâ Norman Schwartzkopf, who explained that he was âsuckeredâ by
Saddam, not anticipating that Saddam might carry out military actions
with the military helicopters he was authorized by Washington to use.
The Bush administration explained that support for Saddam was necessary
to preserve âstability,â and its preference for a military dictatorship
that would rule Iraq with an âiron fistâ just as Saddam had done was
sagely endorsed by respected U.S. commentators.
Tacitly acknowledging past policy, Secretary of State Albright announced
in December 1998 that âwe have come to the determination that the Iraqi
people would benefit if they had a government that really represented
them.â A few months earlier, on May 20, Albright had informed Indonesian
President Suharto that he was no longer âour kind of guy,â having lost
control and disobeyed IMF orders, so that he must resign and provide for
âa democratic transition.â A few hours later, Suharto transferred formal
authority to his hand-picked vice-president. We now celebrate the May
1999 elections in Indonesia, hailed by Washington and the press as the
first democratic elections in 40 yearsâbut without a reminder of the
major U.S. clandestine military operation 40 years ago that brought
Indonesian democracy to an end, undertaken in large measure because the
democratic system was unacceptably open, even allowing participation of
the left.
We need not tarry on the plausibility of Washingtonâs discovery of the
merits of democracy in the past few months; the fact that the words can
be articulated, eliciting no comment, is informative enough. In any
event, there is no reason to be surprised at the disdain for non-violent
democratic forces in Kosovo; or at the fact that the bombing was
undertaken with the likely prospect that it would undermine a courageous
and growing democratic movement in Belgrade, now probably demolished as
Serbs are âunified from heavenâbut by the bombs, not by God,â in the
words of Aleksa Djilas, the historian son of Yugoslav dissident Milovan
Djilas. âThe bombing has jeopardized the lives of more than 10 million
people and set back the fledgling forces of democracy in Kosovo and
Serbia,â having âblastedâŠ[its] germinating seeds and insured that they
will not sprout again for a very long time,â according to Serbian
dissident Veran Matic, editor in chief of the independent station Radio
B-92 (now banned). Former Boston Globe editor Randolph Ryan, who has
been working for years in the Balkans and living in Belgrade, writes
that âNow, thanks to NATO, Serbia has overnight become a totalitarian
state in a frenzy of wartime mobilization,â as NATO must have expected,
just as it âhad to know that Milosevic would take immediate revenge by
redoubling his attacks in Kosovo,â which NATO would have no way to stop.
As to what planners âenvisioned,â Carnes Lordâs confidence is hard to
share. If the documentary record of past actions is any guide, planners
probably were doing what comes naturally to those with a strong cardâin
this case violence. Namely, play it, and then see what happens.
With the basic facts in mind, one may speculate about how Washingtonâs
decisions were made. Turbulence in the Balkans qualifies as a
âhumanitarian crisis,â in the technical sense: it might harm the
interests of rich and privileged people, unlike slaughters in Sierra
Leone or Angola, or crimes we support or conduct ourselves. The
question, then, is how to control the authentic crisis. The U.S. will
not tolerate the institutions of world order, so the problems have to be
handled by NATO, which the U.S. pretty much dominates. The divisions
within NATO are understandable: violence is Washingtonâs strong card. It
is necessary to guarantee the âcredibility of NATOââmeaning, of U.S.
violence: others must have proper fear of the global hegemon. âOne
unappealing aspect of nearly any alternativeâ to bombing, Barton Gellman
observed in a Washington Post review of âthe events that led to the
confrontation in Kosovo,â âwas the humiliation of NATO and the United
States.â National Security Adviser Samuel Berger âlisted among the
principal purposes of bombing âto demonstrate that NATO is seriousâ.â A
European diplomat concurred: âInaction would have involved âa major cost
in credibility, particularly at this time as we approach the NATO summit
in celebration of its fiftieth anniversaryâ.â âTo walk away now would
destroy NATOâs credibility,â Prime Minister Tony Blair informed
Parliament. Blair is not concerned with the credibility of Italy or
Belgium, and understands âcredibilityâ in the manner of any Mafia Don.
Violence may fail, but planners can be confident that there is always
more in reserve. Side benefits include an escalation of arms production
and salesâthe cover for the massive state role in the high tech economy
for years. Just as bombing unites Serbs behind Milosevic, it unites
Americans behind Our Leaders. These are standard effects of violence;
they may not last for long, but planning is for the short term.
The Issues
There are two fundamental issues: (1) What are the accepted and
applicable ârules of world orderâ? (2) How do these or other
considerations apply in the case of Kosovo?
(1) There is a regime of international law and international order,
binding on all states, based on the UN Charter and subsequent
resolutions and World Court decisions. In brief, the threat or use of
force is banned unless explicitly authorized by the Security Council
after it has determined that peaceful means have failed, or in
self-defense against âarmed attackâ (a narrow concept) until the
Security Council acts.
There is, of course, more to say. Thus, there is at least a tension, if
not an outright contradiction, between the rules of world order laid
down in the UN Charter and the rights articulated in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (UD), a second pillar of the world order
established under U.S. initiative after World War II. The Charter bans
force violating state sovereignty; the UD guarantees the rights of
individuals against oppressive states. The issue of âhumanitarian
interventionâ arises from this tension. It is the right of âhumanitarian
interventionâ that is claimed by the U.S./NATO in Kosovo, with the
general support of editorial opinion and news reports.
The question was addressed at once in a New York Times report headed:
âLegal Scholars Support Case for Using Force.â One example is offered:
Allen Gerson, former counsel to the U.S. mission to the UN. Two other
legal scholars are cited. One, Ted Galen Carpenter, âscoffed at the
Administration argumentâ and dismissed the alleged right of
intervention. The third is Jack Goldsmith, a specialist on international
law at Chicago Law school. He says that critics of the NATO bombing
âhave a pretty good legal argument,â but âmany people think [an
exception for humanitarian intervention] does exist as a matter of
custom and practice.â That summarizes the evidence offered to justify
the favored conclusion stated in the headline.
Goldsmithâs observation is reasonable, at least if we agree that facts
are relevant to the determination of âcustom and practice.â We may also
bear in mind a truism: the right of humanitarian intervention, if it
exists, is premised on the âgood faithâ of those intervening, and that
assumption is based not on their rhetoric but on their record, in
particular their record of adherence to the principles of international
law, World Court decisions, and so on. That is indeed a truism, at least
with regard to others. Consider, for example, Iranian offers to
intervene in Bosnia to prevent massacres at a time when the West would
not do so. These were dismissed with ridicule (in fact, generally
ignored); if there was a reason beyond subordination to power, it was
because Iranian good faith could not be assumed. A rational person then
asks obvious questions: is the Iranian record of intervention and terror
worse than that of the U.S.? And other questions, for example: How
should we assess the âgood faithâ of the only country to have vetoed a
Security Council resolution calling on all states to obey international
law? What about its historical record? Unless such questions are
prominent on the agenda of discourse, an honest person will dismiss it
as mere allegiance to doctrine. A useful exercise is to determine how
much of the literatureâmedia or otherâsurvives such elementary
conditions as these.
(2) When the decision was made to bomb, there had been a serious
humanitarian crisis in Kosovo for a year. In such cases, outsiders have
three choices:
(I) try to escalate the catastrophe
(II) do nothing
(III) try to mitigate the catastrophe
The choices are illustrated by other contemporary cases. Letâs keep to a
few of approximately the same scale, and ask where Kosovo fits into the
pattern.
(A) Colombia. In Colombia, according to State Department estimates, the
annual level of political killing by the government and its paramilitary
associates is about at the level of Kosovo, and refugee flight primarily
from their atrocities is well over a million, another 300,000 last year.
Colombia has been the leading Western hemisphere recipient of U.S. arms
and training as violence increased through the 1990s, and that
assistance is now increasing, under a âdrug warâ pretext dismissed by
almost all serious observers. The Clinton administration was
particularly enthusiastic in its praise for President Gaviria, whose
tenure in office was responsible for âappalling levels of violence,â
according to human rights organizations, even surpassing his
predecessors. Details are readily available.
In this case, the U.S. reaction is (I): escalate the atrocities.
(B) Turkey. For years, Turkish repression of Kurds has been a major
scandal. It peaked in the 1990s; one index is the flight of over a
million Kurds from the countryside to the unofficial Kurdish capital
Diyarbakir from 1990 to 1994, as the Turkish army was devastating the
countryside. Two million were left homeless according to the Turkish
State Minister for Human Rights, a result of âstate terrorismâ in part,
he acknowledged. âMystery killingsâ of Kurds (assumed to be death squad
killings) alone amounted to 3,200 in 1993 and 1994, along with torture,
destruction of thousands of villages, bombing with napalm, and an
unknown number of casualties, generally estimated in the tens of
thousands; no one was counting. The killings are attributed to Kurdish
terror in Turkish propaganda, generally adopted in the U.S. as well.
Presumably Serbian propaganda follows the same practice. 1994 marked two
records in Turkey: it was âthe year of the worst repression in the
Kurdish provinces,â Jonathan Randal reported from the scene, and the
year when Turkey became âthe biggest single importer of American
military hardware and thus the worldâs largest arms purchaser. Its
arsenal, 80 percent American, included M-60 tanks, F-16 fighter-bombers,
Cobra gunships, and Blackhawk âslickâ helicopters, all of which were
eventually used against the Kurds.â When human rights groups exposed
Turkeyâs use of U.S. jets to bomb villages, the Clinton adminis- tration
found ways to evade laws requiring suspension of arms deliveries, much
as it was doing in Indonesia and elsewhere. Turkish aircraft have now
shifted to bombing Serbia, while Turkey is lauded for its
humanitarianism.
Colombia and Turkey explain their (U.S.-supported) atrocities on grounds
that they are defending their countries from the threat of terrorist
guerrillas. As does the government of Yugoslavia.
Again, the example illustrates (I): act to escalate the atrocities.
(C) Laos. Every year thousands of people, mostly children and poor
farmers, are killed in the Plain of Jars in Northern Laos, the scene of
the heaviest bombing of civilian targets in history it appears, and
arguably the most cruel: Washingtonâs furious assault on a poor peasant
society had little to do with its wars in the region. The worst period
was from 1968, when Washington was compelled to undertake negotiations
(under popular and business pressure), ending the regular bombardment of
North Vietnam. Kissinger-Nixon then shifted the planes to bombardment of
Laos and Cambodia.
The deaths are from âbombies,â tiny anti-personnel weapons, far worse
than land-mines: they are designed specifically to kill and maim, and
have no effect on trucks, buildings, etc. The Plain was saturated with
hundreds of millions of these criminal devices, which have a
failure-to-explode rate of 20 percent to 30 percent according to the
manufacturer, Honeywell. The numbers suggest either remarkably poor
quality control or a rational policy of murdering civilians by delayed
action. These were only a fraction of the technology deployed, including
advanced missiles to penetrate caves where families sought shelter.
Current annual casualties from âbombiesâ are estimated from hundreds a
year to âan annual nationwide casualty rate of 20,000,â more than half
of them deaths, according to the veteran Asia reporter Barry Wain of the
Wall Street Journal in its Asia edition. A conservative estimate, then,
is that the crisis last year was approximately comparable to Kosovo,
though deaths are far more highly concentrated among children over half,
according to studies reported by the Mennonite Central Committee, which
has been working there since 1977 to alleviate the continuing
atrocities.
There have been efforts to publicize and deal with the humanitarian
catastrophe. A British-based Mine Advisory Group (MAG) is trying to
remove the lethal objects, but the U.S. is âconspicuously missing from
the handful of Western organisations that have followed MAG,â the
British press reports, though it has finally agreed to train some
Laotian civilians. The British press also reports, with some annoyance,
the allegation of MAG specialists that the U.S. refuses to provide them
with ârender harmless proceduresâ that would make their work âa lot
quicker and a lot safer.â These remain a state secret, as does the whole
affair in the United States. The Bangkok press reports a very similar
situation in Cambodia, particularly the Eastern region where U.S.
bombardment from early 1969 was most intense.
In this case, the U.S. reaction is (II): do nothing. The reaction of the
media and commentators is to keep silent, following the norms under
which the war against Laos was designated a âsecret warâ meaning
well-known, but suppressed, as also in the case of Cambodia from March
1969. The level of self-censorship was extraordinary then, as is the
current phase. The relevance of this shocking example should be obvious
without further comment.
President Clinton explained to the nation that âthere are times when
looking away simply is not an optionâ; âwe canât respond to every
tragedy in every corner of the world,â but that doesnât mean that âwe
should do nothing for no one.â But the President, and commentators,
failed to add that the âtimesâ are well-defined. The principle applies
to âhumanitarian crises,â in the technical sense discussed earlier: when
the interests of rich and privileged people are endangered. Accordingly,
the examples just mentioned do not qualify as âhumanitarian crises,â so
looking away and not responding are definitely options, if not
obligatory. On similar grounds, Clintonâs policies on Africa are
understood by Western diplomats to be âleaving Africa to solve its own
crises.â For example, in the Republic of Congo, scene of a major war and
huge atrocities; here Clinton refused a UN request for a trivial sum for
a battalion of peacekeepers, according to the UNâs senior Africa envoy,
the highly respected diplomat Mohamed Sahnoun, a refusal that
âtorpedoedâ the UN proposal. In the case of Sierra Leone, âWashington
dragged out discussions on a British proposal to deploy peacekeepersâ in
1997, paving the way for another major disaster, but also of the kind
for which âlooking awayâ is the preferred option. In other cases too,
âthe United States has actively thwarted efforts by the United Nations
to take on peacekeeping operations that might have prevented some of
Africaâs wars, according to European and UN diplomats,â correspondent
Colum Lynch reported as the plans to bomb Serbia were reaching their
final stages.
I will skip other examples of (I) and (II), which abound, and also
contemporary atrocities of a different kind, such as the slaughter of
Iraqi civilians by means of a vicious form of what amounts to biological
warfare âa very hard choice,â Madeleine Albright commented on national
TV in 1996 when asked for her reaction to the killing of half a million
Iraqi children in five years, but âwe think the price is worth it.â
Current estimates remain about 5,000 children killed a month, and the
price is still âworth it.â These and other examples might be kept in
mind when we read admiring accounts of how the âmoral compassâ of the
Clinton administration is at last functioning properly, in Kosovo
(Columbia University professor of preventive diplomacy David Phillips).
Kosovo is another illustration of (I): act in such a way as to escalate
the violence, with exactly that expectation.
To find examples illustrating (III) is all too easy, at least if we keep
to official rhetoric. The most extensive recent academic study of
âhumanitarian interventionâ is by George Washington University law
professor, Sean Murphy. He reviews the record after the Kellogg-Briand
pact of 1928 which outlawed war, and then after the UN Charter, which
strengthened and articulated these provisions. In the first phase, he
writes, the most prominent examples of âhumanitarian interventionâ were
Japanâs attack on Manchuria, Mussoliniâs invasion of Ethiopia, and
Hitlerâs occupation of parts of Czechoslovakia, all accompanied by
uplifting humanitarian rhetoric and factual justifications as well.
Japan was going to establish an âearthly paradiseâ as it defended
Manchurians from âChinese bandits,â with the support of a leading
Chinese nationalist, a far more credible figure than anyone the U.S. was
able to conjure up during its attack on South Vietnam. Mussolini was
liberating thousands of slaves as he carried forth the Western
âcivilizing mission.â Hitler announced Germanyâs intention to end ethnic
tensions and violence, and âsafeguard the national individuality of the
German and Czech peoples,â in an operation âfilled with earnest desire
to serve the true interests of the peoples dwelling in the area,â in
accordance with their will; the Slovakian President asked Hitler to
declare Slovakia a protectorate.
Another useful intellectual exercise is to compare those obscene
justifications with those offered for interventions, including
âhumanitarian interventions,â in the post-UN Charter period.
In that period, perhaps the most compelling example of (III) is the
Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in December 1978, terminating Pol Potâs
atrocities, which were then peaking. Vietnam pleaded the right of
self-defense against armed attack, one of the few post-Charter examples
when the plea is plausible: the Khmer Rouge regime (Democratic
Kampuchea, DK) was carrying out murderous attacks against Vietnam in
border areas. The U.S. reaction is instructive. The press condemned the
âPrussiansâ of Asia for their outrageous violation of international law.
They were harshly punished for the crime of having ended Pol Potâs
slaughters, first by a (U.S.-backed) Chinese invasion, then by U.S.
imposition of extremely harsh sanctions. The U.S. recognized the
expelled DK as the official government of Cambodia, because of its
âcontinuityâ with the Pol Pot regime, the State Department explained.
Not too subtly, the U.S. supported the Khmer Rouge in its continuing
attacks in Cambodia. The example tells us more about the âcustom and
practiceâ that underlies âthe emerging legal norms of humanitarian
intervention.â
Another illustration of (III) is Indiaâs invasion of East Pakistan in
1971, which terminated an enormous massacre and refugee flight (over ten
million, according to estimates at the time). The U.S. condemned India
for aggression; Kissinger was particularly infuriated by Indiaâs action,
in part it seems because it was interfering with a carefully staged
secret trip to China. Perhaps this is one of the examples that historian
John Lewis Gaddis had in mind in his fawning review of the latest volume
of Kissingerâs memoirs, when he reports admiringly that Kissinger
âacknowledges here, more clearly than in the past, the influence of his
upbringing in Nazi Germany, the examples set by his parents and the
consequent impossibility, for him, of operating outside a moral
framework.â The logic is overpowering, as are the illustrations, too
well-known to record.
Again, the same lessons.
Despite the desperate efforts of ideologues to prove that circles are
square, there is no serious doubt that the NATO bombings further
undermine what remains of the fragile structure of international law.
The U.S. made that clear in the debates that led to the NATO decision,
as already discussed. Today, the more closely one approaches the
conflicted region, the greater the opposition to Washingtonâs insistence
on force, even within NATO (Greece and Italy). Again, that is not an
unusual phenomenon: another current example is the U.S./UK bombing of
Iraq, undertaken in December with unusually brazen gestures of contempt
for the Security Council even the timing, coinciding with an emergency
session to deal with the crisis. Still another illustration, minor in
context, is the destruction of half the pharmaceutical production of a
small African country a few months earlier, another event that does not
indicate that the âmoral compassâ is straying from righteousness, though
comparable destruction of U.S. facilities by Islamic terrorists might
evoke a slightly different reaction. It is unnecessary to emphasize that
there is a far more extensive record that would be prominently reviewed
right now if facts were considered relevant to determining âcustom and
practice.â
It could be argued, rather plausibly, that further demolition of the
rules of world order is by now of no significance, as in the late 1930s.
The contempt of the worldâs leading power for the framework of world
order has become so extreme that there is little left to discuss. A
review of the internal documentary record demonstrates that the stance
traces back to the earliest days, even to the first memorandum of the
newly-formed National Security Council in 1947. During the Kennedy
years, the stance began to gain overt expression, as, for example, when
the highly respected statesperson and Kennedy adviser Dean Acheson
justified the blockade of Cuba in 1962 by informing the American Society
for International Law that a situation in which our countryâs âpower,
position, and prestigeâ are involved cannot be treated as a âlegal
issue.â
The main innovation of the Reagan-Clinton years is that defiance of
international law and solemn obligations has become entirely open. It
has also been backed with interesting explanations, which would be on
the front pages, and prominent in the school and university curriculum,
if honesty and human consequences were considered significant values.
The highest authorities explained that international law and agencies
had become irrelevant because they no longer follow U.S. orders, as they
did in the early postwar years, when U.S. power was overwhelming. When
the World Court was considering what it later condemned as Washingtonâs
âunlawful use of forceâ against Nicaragua, Secretary of State George
Shultz derided those who advocate âutopian, legalistic means like
outside mediation, the United Nations, and the World Court, while
ignoring the power element of the equation.â Clear and forthright, and
by no means original. State Department Legal Adviser Abraham Sofaer
explained that members of the UN can no longer âbe counted on to share
our view,â and the âmajority often opposes the United States on
important international questions,â so we must âreserve to ourselves the
power to determineâ how we will act.
One can follow standard practice and ignore âcustom and practice,â or
dismiss it on some absurd grounds (âchange of course,â âCold War,â and
other familiar pretexts). Or we can take custom, practice, and explicit
doctrine seriously, departing from respectable norms but at least
opening the possibility of understanding what is happening in the world.
While the Reaganites broke new ground, under Clinton the defiance of
world order has become so extreme as to be of concern even to hawkish
policy analysts. In the current issue of the leading establishment
journal, Foreign Affairs, Samuel Huntington warns that Washington is
treading a dangerous course. In the eyes of much of the world probably
most of the world, he suggests the U.S. is âbecoming the rogue
superpower,â considered âthe single greatest external threat to their
societies.â Realist âinternational relations theory,â he argues,
predicts that coalitions may arise to counterbalance the rogue
superpower. On pragmatic grounds, then, the stance should be
reconsidered. Americans who prefer a different image of their society
might have other grounds for concern over these tendencies, but they are
probably of little concern to planners, with their narrower focus and
immersion in ideology.
Where does that leave the question of what to do in Kosovo? It leaves it
unanswered. The U.S. has chosen a course of action which, as it
explicitly recognizes, escalates atrocities and violence; a course that
strikes yet another blow against the regime of international order,
which does offer the weak at least some limited protection from
predatory states; a course that undermines, perhaps destroys, promising
democratic developments within Yugoslavia, probably Macedonia as well.
As for the longer term, consequences are unpredictable.
One plausible observation is that âevery bomb that falls on Serbia and
every ethnic killing in Kosovo suggests that it will scarcely be
possible for Serbs and Albanians to live beside each other in some sort
of peaceâ (Financial Times). Other possible long-term outcomes are not
pleasant to contemplate. The resort to violence has, again predictably,
narrowed the options. Perhaps the least ugly that remains is an eventual
partition of Kosovo, with Serbia taking the northern areas that are rich
in resources and have the main historical monuments, and the southern
sector becoming a NATO protectorate where some Albanians can live in
misery. Another possibility is that with much of the population gone,
the U.S. might turn to the Carthaginian solution. If that happens, it
would again be nothing new, as large areas of Indochina can testify.
A standard argument is that we had to do something: we could not simply
stand by as atrocities continue. The argument is so absurd that it is
rather surprising to hear it voiced. Suppose you see a crime in the
streets, and feel that you canât just stand by silently, so you pick up
an assault rifle and kill everyone involved: criminal, victim,
bystanders. Are we to understand that to be the rational and moral
response?
One choice, always available, is to follow the Hippocratic principle:
âFirst, do no harm.â If you can think of no way to adhere to that
elementary principle, then do nothing; at least that is preferable to
causing harm. But there are always other ways that can be considered.
Diplomacy and negotiations are never at an end. That was true right
before the bombing, when the Serb Parliament, responding to Clintonâs
ultimatum, called for negotiations over an âinternational presence in
Kosovo immediately after the signing of an accord for
self-administration in Kosovo which will be accepted by all national
communitiesâ living in the province, reported on wire services worldwide
but scarcely noted here. Just what that meant we cannot know, since the
two warrior states preferred to reject the diplomatic path in favor of
violence.
Another argument, if one can call it that, has been advanced most
prominently by Henry Kissinger. He believes that intervention was a
mistake (âopen- ended,â quagmire, etc.). That aside, it is futile.
âThrough the centuries, these conflicts [in the Balkans] have been
fought with unparalleled ferocity because none of the populations has
any experience with and essentially no belief in Western concepts of
toleration.â At last we understand why Europeans have treated each other
with such gentle solicitude âthrough the centuries,â and have tried so
hard over many centuries to bring to others their message of
non-violence, toleration, and loving kindness.
One can always count on Kissinger for some comic relief, though in
reality, he is not alone. He is joined by those who ponder âBalkan
logicâ as contrasted with the Western record of humane rationality. And
those who remind us of the âdistaste for war or for intervention in the
affairs of othersâ that is âour inherent weakness,â of our dismay over
the ârepeated violations of norms and rules established by international
treaty, human rights conventionsâ (historian Tony Judt). We are to
consider Kosovo as âA New Collision of East and West,â a Times think
piece is headlined, a clear illustration of Samuel Huntingtonâs âClash
of Civilizationsâ: âa democratic West, its humanitarian instincts
repelled by the barbarous inhumanity of Orthodox Serbs,â all of this
âclear to Americansâ but not to others, a fact that Americans fail to
comprehend (Huntington, interview).
Or we may listen to the inspiring words of Secretary of Defense William
Cohen, introducing the president at Norfolk Naval Air Station. He opened
by quoting Theodore Roosevelt, speaking âat the dawn of this century, as
America was awakening into its new place in the world.â President
Roosevelt said, âUnless youâre willing to fight for great ideals, those
ideals will vanish,â and âtoday, at the dawn of the next century, weâre
joined by President Bill Clintonâ who understands as well as Teddy
Roose- velt that âstanding on the sidelinesâŠas a witness to the
unspeakable horror that was about to take place, that would in fact
affect the peace and stability of NATO countries, was simply
unacceptable.â One has to wonder what must pass through the mind of
someone invoking this famous racist fanatic and raving jingoist as a
model of American values, along with the events that illustrated his
cherished âgreat idealsâ as he spoke: the slaughter of hundreds of
thousands of Filipinos who had sought liberation from Spain, shortly
after Rooseveltâs contribution to preventing Cubans from achieving the
same goal.
Wiser commentators will wait until Washington settles on an official
story. After two weeks of bombing, the story is that they both knew and
didnât know that a catastrophe would follow. On March 28, âwhen a
reporter asked if the bombing was accelerating the atrocities,
[President Clinton] replied, âabsolutely notââ (Adam Clymer). He
reiterated that stand in his April 1 speech at Norfolk: âHad we not
acted, the Serbian offensive would have been carried out with impunity.â
The following day, Pentagon spokesperson Kenneth Bacon announced that
the opposite was true: âI donât think anyone could have foreseen the
breadth of this brutality,â the first acknowledgment by the
Administration that âit was not fully prepared for the crisis,â the
press reported a crisis that was âentirely predictable,â the Command-
ing General had informed the press a week earlier. From the start,
reports from the scene were that âthe Administration had been caught off
guardâ by the Serbian military reaction (Jane Perlez, and many others).
The right of âhumanitarian interventionâ is likely to be more frequently
invoked in coming years maybe with justification, maybe not now that
Cold War pretexts have lost their efficacy. In such an era, it may be
worthwhile to pay attention to the views of highly respected
commentatorsânot to speak of the World Court, which ruled on the matter
of intervention and âhumanitarian aidâ in a decision rejected by the
United States, its essentials not even reported.
In the scholarly disciplines of international affairs and international
law it would be hard to find more respected voices than Hedley Bull or
Louis Henkin. Bull warned 15 years ago that âParticular states or groups
of states that set themselves up as the authoritative judges of the
world common good, in disregard of the views of others, are in fact a
menace to international order, and thus to effective action in this
field.â Henkin, in a standard work on world order, writes that the
âpressures eroding the prohibition on the use of force are deplorable,
and the arguments to legitimize the use of force in those circumstances
are unpersuasive and dangerousâŠViolations of human rights are indeed all
too common, and if it were permissible to remedy them by external use of
force, there would be no law to forbid the use of force by almost any
state against almost any other. Human rights, I believe, will have to be
vindicated, and other injustices remedied, by other, peaceful means, not
by opening the door to aggression and destroying the principal advance
in international law, the outlawing of war and the prohibition of
force.â
Recognized principles of international law and world order, treaty
obligations, decisions by the World Court, considered pronouncements by
the most respected commentators these do not automatically yield
solutions to particular problems. Each has to be considered on its
merits. For those who do not adopt the standards of Saddam Hussein,
there is a heavy burden of proof to meet in undertaking the threat or
use of force in violation of the principles of international order.
Perhaps the burden can be met, but that has to be shown, not merely
proclaimed with passionate rhetoric. The consequences of such violations
have to be assessed carefullyâin particular, what we take to be
âpredictable.â For those who are minimally serious, the reasons for the
actions also have to be assessed on rational grounds, with attention to
historical fact and the documentary record, not simply by adulation of
our leaders and their âmoral compass.â