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The responsibility to protect – much ado about nothing?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 June 2011

Abstract

Despite its newness, the concept of the responsibility to protect (R2P) looks back at a stellar career. It has been the subject of numerous conferences and academic publications and has been affirmed by the major UN bodies. Indeed, if one were to assess the development of an international norm by the amount of academic attention and general rhetorical support it enjoys, one could be inclined to believe that the responsibility to protect is rapidly evolving into a norm of customary international law.

This article subjects the R2P hype to critical scrutiny and asks probing questions about R2P's viability as a norm. Beneath the thin veneer of rhetorical acceptance of R2P lies a range of hotly disputed issues – in particular but not exclusively regarding the concept's implications for the use of force – which are unlikely to be resolved in the near future. In this article I examine R2P's potential to ‘ripen’ into an international norm. I argue that in the absence of an intersubjective consensus about what R2P actually means, the concept's chances to ‘harden’ into a norm of customary international law are remote. I posit that R2P cannot be considered a ‘new norm’ or an ‘emerging norm’ as it is frequently called, because the vast majority of states simply does not want to be legally bound to save strangers in remote regions of the world.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2010

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References

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36 Kofi Annan, In Larger Freedom: Towards Development, Security and Human Rights for All (New York: UN, 2005).

37 High-level Panel, supra note 8, p. 57.

38 Kofi Annan, supra note 36, pp. 35, 59.

39 See Gareth Evans, ‘The International Responsibility to Protect: The Tasks Ahead’, presentation at the seminar on ‘Africa's Responsibility to Protect’, Centre for Conflict Resolution, Cape Town (23 April 2007), {http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=4801&l=1}.

40 A/RES/60/1 (24 October 2005).

41 Draft Outcome Document, para. 47 (3 June 2005), {http://www.reformtheun.org/index.php/united_nations/991}.

42 Nicholas Wheeler, ‘A Victory for Common Humanity? The Responsibility to Protect After the 2005 World Summit’, paper presented at the conference ‘The UN at Sixty: Celebration or Wake?’ University of Toronto (6–7 October 2005), {http://www.una.org.uk/humanrights/R2P%5B1%5D.pdf}, p. 3.

43 Ibid., p. 7.

44 S/RES/1674 (28 April 2006).

45 S/RES/1706 (31 August 2006).

46 Stahn, supra note 2, p. 99.

47 In its interventions in Iraq 1991, Kosovo, and elsewhere the US – mindful of precedent – never expressly endorsed a right to humanitarian intervention. However, US officials have occasionally referred to humanitarian motives as a policy justification for the use of force, without, however, making a statement of general legal principle. See Murphy, John F., The US and the Rule of Law in International Affairs (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), pp. 151fGoogle Scholar ; see also Stewart Patrick of the US State Department's Policy Planning Staff, ‘The Role of the US Government in Humanitarian Intervention’, Remarks to the 43rd Annual International Affairs Symposium (5 April 2004), {http://www.state.gov/s/p/rem/31299.htm}.

48 See, for example, paras. 15 and 16 of the Final Document of the XIII Conference of Heads of State or Government of the Non-Aligned Movement Kuala Lumpur (24/25 February 2003), {http://www.nam.gov.za/media/030227e.htm}.

49 Jim Hoagland, ‘Tony Blair, Reflecting’, Washington Post (6 March 2005).

50 Feinstein, Lee, Darfur and Beyond. What is Needed to Prevent Mass Atrocities (Washington, D.C.: Council on Foreign Relations, 2007), {http://www.cfr.org/content/publications/attachments/DarfurCSR22.pdf}, p. 28Google Scholar .

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52 Interview (7 December 2007).

54 Interview (27 November 2007).

55 Interview (20 December 2007).

56 At their Kuala Lumpur Summit NAM-governments highlighted the ‘inherent dangers in the emerging trends toward a unipolar world’, a world in which powerful states could trample upon the principles held dear by developing states such as non-interference and sovereign equality. NAM-governments reiterated their criticism of the ‘so-called right to humanitarian intervention’ and voiced suspicion that the concept of the responsibility to protect was merely the doctrine of humanitarian intervention in disguise. They therefore requested their Coordinating Bureau to carefully study the concept and its implications for the principle of non-interference. See supra note 48.

57 S/PV.5781 (20 November 2007).

58 Shulong, Chu, ‘China, Asia and Issues of Sovereignty and Intervention’, Pugwash Occasional Papers, 2:1 (January 2001), {http://www.pugwash.org/reports/rc/como_china.htm}Google Scholar .

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60 Quoted in Ibid.

61 Interview (27 November 2007).

62 Ban Ki-moon, Report of the Secretary-General on the Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict, S/2007/643 (28 October 2007, {http://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N07/573/58/pdf/N0757358.pdf?OpenElement}, p. 19.

63 Interview (27 November 2007).

64 S/PV.5781 and S/PV.5781 (Resumption 1), (20 November 2007).

65 Ibid.

66 See Roth, Brad R., ‘Bending the Law, Breaking It, or Developing It? The US and the Humanitarian Use of Force in the Post-Cold War Era’, in Byers, Michael and Nolte, Georg (eds), US Hegemony and the Foundations of International Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 232263Google Scholar .

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68 Ibid.

69 Interview (21 November 2007).

70 S/PV.5781 (20 November 2007).

71 Supra note 69.

72 S/PV.5319 (Resumption 1), (9 December 2005).

73 S/PV.5476 (28 June 2006).

74 Akehurst, Michael, ‘Custom as a Source of International Law’, British Year Book of International Law 1974–1975 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1977), pp. 153 (p. 39)Google Scholar .

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76 ICISS, supra note 4, p. xii.

77 Supra note 48.

78 Supra note 71.

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87 Sudan ‘Backs’ Darfur Force Plan', BBC News (17 November 2006), {http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6153208.stm}.

88 S/RES/1769 (31 July 2007).

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91 S/PV.5784 (27 November 2007).

92 Los Angeles Times, ‘Helicopters for Darfur’ (13 December 2007).

93 Interview (21 December 2007).

94 S/PV.5784 (27 November 2007).

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97 ‘Bush Toughens Sanctions on Sudan’, BBC News (29 May 2007, {http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6699479.stm}.

98 S/RES/1593 (31 March 2005).

99 Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, ‘The Crisis in Darfur’, written remarks, Senate Foreign Relations Committee (9 September 2004), {http://www.whitehouse.gov/interactive/sudan_gen.html}.

100 Ibid.

101 Supra note 1.

102 Assistant Secretary for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer, ‘Stopping Genocide in Darfur: Ongoing US Efforts and Working with the UN Security Council’ (24 August 2006), {http://www.state.gov/p/af/rls/rm/2006/71515.htm}.

103 Interview (12 December 2007).

104 S/RES/1591 (29 March 2005).

105 Flint, Julie, ‘Darfur's Outdated Script‘, International Herald Tribune (9 July, 2007)Google Scholar .

106 Hoge, Warren, ‘Sudan Flying Arms to Darfur, Panel Reports’, New York Times (18 April 2007)Google Scholar .

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108 Interview (12 December 2007).

109 Flint, supra note 105.

110 Interview (10 December 2007).

111 Interview (7 December 2007).

112 There may be room for debate over whether the ICISS indeed intended to legitimise unauthorised intervention. In the event of Security Council deadlock the ICISS suggested intervention by regional organisations subject to their seeking subsequent authorisation from the Security Council. ‘Seeking’ authorisation after the fact, however, does not mean that such authorisation is actually granted – a possibility which the ICISS must have been aware of. I therefore interpret the passage in the report to mean that the ICISS accepted the possibility of regional enforcement action which the Security Council refused to authorise post hoc.

113 See Hilpold, Peter, ‘Humanitarian Intervention: Is There a Need for a Legal Reappraisal?’, European Journal of International Law, 12:3 (2001), pp. 437468 (p. 452)CrossRefGoogle Scholar .

114 See, for example, Institut de Droit International – Session de Santiago, 10th Commission. Present Problems of the Use of Force in International Law. B. Sub-group on Humanitarian Intervention, Rapporteur: W. Michael Reisman (Paris: Edition A. Pedone, 2007).

115 When justifying the bombing of Serbia in 1999, NATO states – with the exceptions of Belgium and the UK – did not justify the war in legal terms. Instead of making statements of general (legal) principle, the intervening states mainly relied on moral and political arguments, as the case brought by Yugoslavia against NATO before the ICJ shows. Yugoslavia had instituted proceedings against NATO states after the start of the air campaign. Although the Court ultimately declined to exercise jurisdiction on the merits, a hearing on the preliminary measures application took place, in which the respondents had an opportunity to elaborate on the justifications for the bombardments. The vast majority of the intervening states did not seize this opportunity to clarify the legal basis of their action. During the hearings only Belgium justified the air strikes by invoking a legal right to humanitarian intervention. See International Court of Justice, Legality of Use of Force Case (Provisional Measures), CR 1999/15 (10 May 1999), {http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/105/4513.pdf} and International Court of Justice, Legality of Use of Force Case (Provisional Measures), CR 1999/24 (11 May 1999), {http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/114/4577.pdf}.

116 Ibid. For the British position, see also Tony Blair's Sedgefield speech (5 March 2004), {http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2004/mar/05/iraq.iraq}: Declaring that ‘we do not accept […] that others have a right to oppress and brutalise their people’, Blair went on to frame the war against Iraq as a logical extension of the R2P doctrine. This, however, was clearly not the intention of the founders of the concept and is one of the reasons why R2P continues to be viewed with suspicion by many developing nations.

117 D'Amato, supra note 18, pp. 61f.

118 International Court of Justice, ICJ Reports 1969 ('s-Gravenhage: Sijthoff), p. 43.

119 See Murphy, supra note 47.

120 Interview (10 December 2007).

121 ICISS, supra note 4, pp. 6, 49, 51, 75.

122 Art. 4h of the Constitutive Act of the African Union.

123 Supra note 99.

124 I thank an anonymous reviewer for alerting me to this possibility.

125 Supra note 70.

126 Reisman, W. Michael, ‘Unilateral Action and the Transformation of the World Constitutive Process: The Special Problem of Humanitarian Intervention’, European Journal of International Law, 11:1 (2000), pp. 318 (p. 15)CrossRefGoogle Scholar .