<italic>[Taken from Green Left Weekly #360 http://www.peg.apc.org/~greenle=
ft]</italic>


<bold><bigger>The rules of the game  


</bold><smaller>     <bold><italic>By Noam Chomsky </italic></bold>


There is a regime of international law and international order, 
binding on all states, based on the United Nations Charter and 
subsequent resolutions and World Court decisions. In brief, the 
threat or use of force is banned unless explicitly authorised by the 
Security Council after it has determined that peaceful means have 
failed, or in self-defence against =93armed attack=94 until the Security 
Council acts.  


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, a 
second pillar of the world order established under US initiative 
after World War II. The charter bans force violating state 
sovereignty; the declaration guarantees the rights of individuals 
against oppressive states.  


The issue of =93humanitarian intervention=94 arises from this tension. It 
is the right of =93humanitarian intervention=94 that is claimed by the 
US/NATO in Kosovo, and that is generally supported by editorial 
opinion and news reports.  


The right of humanitarian intervention, if it exists, is premised on 
the =93good faith=94 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 
ignored; if there was a reason beyond subordination to power, it was 
because Iranian =93good faith=94 could not be assumed.  


A rational person then asks obvious questions: is the Iranian record 
of intervention and terror worse than that of the US? And how should 
we assess the =93good faith=94 of the only country (the US) to have 
vetoed a Security Council resolution calling on all states to obey 
international law? What about its historical record? How do these 
considerations apply in the case of Kosovo?  


There has been a humanitarian catastrophe in Kosovo in the past year, 
overwhelmingly attributable to Yugoslav military forces. The main 
victims have been ethnic Albanian Kosovars, some 90% of the 
population of this Yugoslav territory.  



     <bold><italic>Choices</italic></bold>


In such cases, outsiders have three choices:(i) try to escalate the 
catastrophe, (ii) do nothing, or (iii) try to mitigate the 
catastrophe. The choices are illustrated by other contemporary cases. 
 



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.  


Colombia has been the leading Western hemisphere recipient of US arms 
and training as violence increased through the '90s, and that 
assistance is now increasing, under a =93drug war=94 pretext. The Clinton 
administration was particularly enthusiastic in its praise for 
President Gaviria, whose tenure in office was responsible for 
=93appalling levels of violence=94, according to human rights 
organisations.  


     In this case, the US reaction is (i): escalate the atrocities. 


By very conservative estimates, Turkish repression of Kurds in the 
'90s falls in the category of Kosovo. It peaked in the early '90s; 
one index is the flight of more than 1 million Kurds from the 
countryside to the unofficial Kurdish capital Diyarbakir from 1990 to 
1994, as the Turkish army was devastating the countryside.  


1994 marked two records: it was =93the year of the worst repression in 
the Kurdish provinces=94 of Turkey, Jonathan Randal reported from the 
scene, and the year when Turkey became =93the biggest single importer 
of US military hardware and thus the world's largest arms purchaser=94. 
When human rights groups exposed Turkey's use of US jets to bomb 
villages, the Clinton administration found ways to evade laws 
requiring suspension of arms deliveries, much as it was doing in 
Indonesia and elsewhere.  


Colombia and Turkey explain their (US-supported) atrocities on 
grounds that they are defending their countries from the threat of 
terrorist guerillas. As does the government of Yugoslavia.  


In Turkey, the US reaction is again (i): try to escalate the 
atrocities.  


<bold><italic>`Bombies'  </italic></bold>


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.  


Washington's 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 and Nixon then decided to shift the planes to bombardment 
of Laos and Cambodia.  


The deaths are from =93bombies=94, tiny anti-personnel weapons 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.  


These were only a fraction of the technology deployed, including 
advanced missiles to penetrate caves where families sought shelter. 
Current annual casualties from =93bombies=94 are estimated from hundreds 
a year to =93an annual nationwide casualty rate of 20,000=94, more than 
half of them deaths, according to veteran Asia reporter Barry Wain of 
the Wall Street Journal.  


A conservative estimate, then, is that the crisis this year is 
approximately comparable to Kosovo, though deaths are far more highly 
concentrated among children.  


The British-based Mine Advisory Group is trying to remove the lethal 
objects, but says that the US refuses to provide it with =93render 
harmless procedures=94, which remain a state secret, as does the whole 
affair in the US.  


In this case, the US reaction is (ii): do nothing. And the reaction 
of the media and commentators is to keep silent, following the norms 
under which the war against Laos was designated a =93secret war=94.  


There are much more serious contemporary atrocities, such as the huge 
slaughter of Iraqi civilians by the blockade -- =93a very hard choice=94, 
Madeleine Albright commented in 1996 when asked for her reaction to 
the killing of half a million Iraqi children in five years, but =93we 
think the price is worth it=94.  


In Kosovo the threat of NATO bombing, predictably, led to a sharp 
escalation of atrocities by the Serbian army and paramilitaries. 
Commanding General Wesley Clark declared that it was =93entirely 
predictable=94 that Serbian terror and violence would intensify after 
the NATO bombing. Kosovo is therefore another illustration of (i): 
try to escalate the violence, with exactly that expectation.  


     <bold><italic>Official rhetoric</italic></bold>


To find examples illustrating (iii) is all too easy if we keep to 
official rhetoric. A recent academic study of =93humanitarian 
intervention=94 by Sean Murphy reviews the record after the Kellogg-
Briand Pact of 1928 which outlawed war, and then since the UN 
Charter, which strengthened and articulated these provisions.  



In the first phase, he writes, the most prominent examples of 
=93humanitarian intervention=94 were Japan's attack on Manchuria, 
Mussolini's invasion of Ethiopia and Hitler's occupation of parts of 
Czechoslovakia. All were accompanied by uplifting humanitarian 
rhetoric and factual justifications.  


Japan was going to establish an =93earthly paradise=94 as it defended 
Manchurians from =93Chinese bandits=94. Mussolini was liberating 
thousands of slaves as he carried forth the Western =93civilising 
mission=94. Hitler announced Germany's intention to end ethnic tensions 
and violence, and =93safeguard the national individuality of the German 
and Czech peoples=94 in an operation =93filled with earnest desire to 
serve the true interests of the peoples dwelling in the area=94.  


Compare those obscene justifications with those offered for 
interventions, including =93humanitarian interventions=94, in the post-UN 
Charter period.  


Perhaps the most compelling example of (iii) is the Vietnamese 
invasion of Cambodia in December 1978, terminating Pol Pot's 
atrocities, which were then peaking. Vietnam pleaded the right of 
self-defence against armed attack, one of the few post-Charter 
examples when the plea was plausible: the Khmer Rouge regime 
(Democratic Kampuchea, DK) was carrying out murderous attacks against 
Vietnam in border areas.  


The US press condemned the =93Prussians=94 of Asia for their outrageous 
violation of international law. They were harshly punished for the 
crime of having terminated Pol Pot's slaughters, first by a (US-
backed) Chinese invasion, then by US imposition of extremely harsh 
sanctions.  


The US recognised the expelled DK as the official government of 
Cambodia, because of its =93continuity=94 with the Pol Pot regime, and 
supported the Khmer Rouge in its continuing attacks in Cambodia. The 
example reveals the =93custom and practice=94 that underlie =93the emergin=
g 
legal norms of humanitarian intervention=94.  


   <bold><italic>  Contempt for international law</italic></bold>


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 US made that entirely clear in the discussions leading to the 
NATO decision.  


Apart from the UK, NATO countries were sceptical of US policy. France 
had called for a UN Security Council resolution to authorise 
deployment of NATO peacekeepers.  


The US flatly refused, insisting on =93its stand that NATO should be 
able to act independently of the United Nations=94, State Department 
officials explained. The US refused to permit the =93neuralgic word 
`authorise'=94 to appear in the final NATO statement, unwilling to 
concede any authority to the UN Charter and international law; only 
the word =93endorse=94 was permitted.  


Similarly, the bombing of Iraq was a brazen expression of contempt 
for the UN.  


A review of the internal documentary record demonstrates that the 
stance traces back to the first memorandum of the newly formed 
National Security Council in 1947. During the Kennedy years, the 
stance began to gain overt expression.  


The main innovation of the Reagan-Clinton years is that defiance of 
international law and the UN Charter has become entirely open. The 
highest authorities explained with brutal clarity that the World 
Court, the UN and other agencies had become irrelevant because they 
no longer follow US orders, as they did in the early postwar years.  


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 March, in the leading establishment journal 
Foreign Affairs, Samuel Huntington warned that in the eyes of most of 
the world, the US is =93becoming the rogue superpower=94, considered =93th=
e 
single greatest external threat to their societies=94. Realist 
=93international relations theory=94, 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 call 
for a reconsideration on other than pragmatic grounds. In Kosovo, the 
US has chosen a course of action which escalates atrocities and 
violence -- =93predictably=94; a course of action that also strikes yet 
another blow against the regime of international order which does 
offer the weak at least some limited protection from predatory 
states.  


As for the longer term, one plausible observation is that =93every 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 peace=94 (Financial Times, March 27).  


A standard argument is that we had to do something: we could not 
simply stand by as atrocities continue. That is never true. One 
choice, always, is to follow the Hippocratic principle: =93First, do no 
harm=94. If you can think of no way to adhere to that, then do nothing. 
Diplomacy and negotiations are never at an end.  


The right of =93humanitarian intervention=94 is likely to be more 
frequently invoked in coming years -- maybe with justification, maybe 
not -- now that Cold War pretexts have lost their efficacy.  


Respected international affairs scholar Leon Henkin writes that the 
=93pressures eroding the prohibition on the use of force are 
deplorable, and the arguments to legitimise the use of force in those 
circumstances are unpersuasive and dangerous ... Violations 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.  


=93Human 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 principle advance in 
international law, the outlawing of war and the prohibition of 
force.=94  


Recognised principles of international law and world order, solemn 
treaty obligations, decisions by the World Court, considered 
pronouncements by the most respected commentators -- these do not 
automatically solve particular problems. Each issue has to be 
considered on its merits.  


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 carefully -- in particular what we 
understand to be =93predictable=94. And the reasons for the actions also 
have to be assessed.  


[Abridged from an article originally posted on March 27 on Znet.]  






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