Kosovo, East Timor, R2P, and Ian Williams


Noam Chomsky | August 17, 2009

Editor: John Feffer

 



Foreign Policy In Focus

 <http://www.fpif.org/> www.fpif.org



In a  <http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/6320> discussion of Responsibility to Protect 
(R2P) in Foreign Policy In Focus, Ian Williams vehemently denies my 
uncontroversial observation, well-known to everyone familiar with the Kosovo 
events, that "NATO air raids on Serbia [beginning March 24 1999] actually 
precipitated the worst atrocities in Kosovo." He declares that this familiar 
observation "isn't only untrue but morally unpalatable in its spurious 
causality, like claiming that the British air raids on Germany precipitated the 
Nazi gas chambers."

Williams doesn't explain what he regards as untrue and morally offensive, so 
let us review carefully what he should certainly know well, and ask what might 
support his charges.

There is massive evidence about Kosovo in impeccable Western sources, never 
questioned. That includes two compilations of documents by the State 
Department, detailed reports of the Organization of Security and Cooperation in 
Europe Kosovo Verification Mission monitors, a British parliamentary inquiry, 
reports of NATO, the UN, and more. As I  
<http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/22227> wrote in the paper on R2P to which 
Williams refers, the results are unequivocal: The worst atrocities began as the 
bombing started (to be precise, there was a slight increase a few days earlier 
when the monitors were withdrawn, over Serbian objections, in preparation for 
the bombings). On March 27, NATO Commander General Wesley Clark informed the 
press that the vicious Serbian reaction was "entirely predictable." He added 
shortly after that the sharp escalation of atrocities had been "fully 
anticipated" and was "not in any way" a concern of the political leadership.

Clark clarified the matter further in his memoirs. He reports that on March 6, 
1999, he had informed Secretary of State Madeline Albright that if NATO 
proceeded to bomb Serbia, "almost certainly [the Serbs] will attack the 
civilian population," and NATO will be able to do nothing to prevent that 
reaction. Correspondingly, the Milosevic indictment kept to crimes after the 
bombing, with a single exception, which we know could not have offended the 
consciences of the United States, the United Kingdom, and their supporters, as 
discussed in my R2P paper.

We may ask, then, what is untrue and morally offensive in my repeating 
uncontroversial facts that Williams doesn't happen to like. Was it untrue and 
morally offensive, for example, for General Clark to inform the White House and 
the press that the bombing would precipitate the worst atrocities — correctly, 
as it quickly turned out?

Considerably more remarkable even than these apologetics for NATO is what 
Williams says about the crimes in East Timor at the same time. These crimes 
were far worse than anything reported in Kosovo prior to the NATO bombing, and 
had a background far more grotesque than anything claimed in the Balkans. He 
writes that "Chomsky quite rightly raised the question of why there was no 
intervention in East Timor." It would have been outlandish to raise that 
question, and I did not do so. Since Williams favors Holocaust analogies, it 
would be like raising the question of why Nazis didn't intervene to stop the 
slaughter of Jews by local forces in the regions they occupied.

The question doesn't arise, and for a simple reason: The United States and 
United Kingdom had been intervening for decades, providing decisive support for 
atrocities committed against Kosovars, and continued to do so right through the 
escalation of crimes in 1999, even after the vast destruction in early 
September. There was no secret about the reasons. In my R2P paper I quoted 
National Security Council advisor Sandy Berger who, after the September 
atrocities, dismissed the matter by  
<http://clinton6.nara.gov/1999/09/1999-09-08-press-briefing-by-berger-and-sperling.html>
 saying "I don't think anybody ever articulated a doctrine which said that we 
ought to intervene wherever there's a humanitarian problem" — in this case, a 
"problem" we are directly expediting. Britain and Australia reacted the same 
way. As discussed further in the same paper, there would have been no need for 
any form of intervention: it would have been enough for the United States, 
United Kingdom, and their allies to have withdrawn their decisive participation 
in Indonesia's crimes. That was demonstrated a few days after Berger's 
dismissal of the "problem" when, under strong domestic and international 
pressure, Clinton finally informed the Indonesian generals that the game was 
over and they instantly withdrew, allowing a UN peacekeeping force to enter 
unopposed — a step that could have been taken at any time during the 25-year 
horror story.

It is understandable that Williams doesn't like to look at the blood on his 
hands, but it cannot be so simply washed or wished away.

If Williams really is uninformed about the topics he is addressing, he can find 
easily accessible sources that review them in some detail, including my book  
<http://isbndb.com/d/book/a_new_generation_draws_the_line.html> A New 
Generation Draws the Line (Verso, 2000) and a great deal more since.

On R2P, I have nothing to add beyond what is in the R2P paper. As pointed out 
there, the version of R2P adopted by the 2005 UN summit affirms what had 
already been accepted, at most with a shift of emphasis, which is why it was so 
easily adopted. There is, however, a radically different version of R2P, 
presented by the 2001 Evans Commission, which adds a provision allowing 
"regional" organizations to act without Security Council authorization in their 
"area of jurisdiction." That provision is sharply distinct from the African 
Union (AU) exception, which permits AU intervention within the AU. In practice, 
the Evans extension refers solely to NATO, which claims an extremely broad 
"area of jurisdiction." The Evans version of R2P simply reinstates "the 
so-called 'right' of humanitarian intervention," which has always been 
vigorously opposed by the non-aligned countries, the traditional victims.

Much of the discussion underway evades or obscures this crucial distinction, as 
well as the fact, which I also discussed, that the great powers right now are 
adopting Berger's principle, refusing to exercise the responsibility they like 
to orate about, as could be done in some cases in quite straightforward ways. I 
also discussed the AU exception, and why it differs so radically from the OAS 
Charter. Judging by the irrelevant question on non-intervention he raises, 
Williams did not hear or read that section of my talk. I cannot, of course, 
take responsibility for his baseless beliefs about my views on this and other 
matters.

Noam Chomsky is a noted linguist, author, foreign policy expert, and 
contributor to  <http://www.fpif.org> Foreign Policy In Focus.

 

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