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March 28, 2003
Our Kind of Law
If Daniel Patrick Moynihan hadn't died this week of complications from
a burst appendix, he might have died of embarrassment. Not necessarily
over what his country is doing in Iraq but over what his country's leaders
are saying about it. The late senator from New York was a man of policy
passions, and one of them was international law. "In the annals of forgetfulness,"
Moynihan wrote in 1990, "there is nothing quite to compare with the falling
from the American mind of the idea of the law of nations." The leading
examples of the time were a series of U.S. military adventures in Latin
America during the 1980s, which we took less and less trouble trying to
justify under our various treaty commitments.
But when it comes to international law, the United States is a forgetful
old man whose forgetfulness comes and goes with suspicious convenience.
Even as Moynihan's book "On the Law of Nations" was coming out, President
Bush the First was justifying Gulf War I primarily on the basis that Iraq's
invasion of Kuwait was a violation of international law. Grandiose talk
from the previous decade about how petty considerations such as international
borders should not be allowed to impede the spread of democracy and the
flowering of human rights were put aside for the duration. Kuwait is not
a democracy. So our justification for driving the invaders out was that
international law honors borders no matter what kind of government they
protect.
At the beginning of Gulf War II, we forgot . . . we forgot . . . we
forgot . . . oh, yes: international law. We forgot international law once
again. When the U.N. Security Council would not play ball, we declared
that our own invasion of Iraq was justified as a sovereign act of long-term
self-defense against potential weapons of mass destruction, by the human
rights situation in Iraq and by the hope that removing Saddam Hussein
will start a chain reaction of democracy and freedom in the Middle East.
Don't bother us with your petty i-dotting and t-crossing: We're thinking
big here.
But that kind of talk is so very last week. Come to think of it, it
was just last week. Today our head's in a very different space and we're
extremely concerned about violations of international law. Specifically,
we're deeply offended by Iraq's violations of the Geneva Conventions in
showing U.S. prisoners of war on TV. We're also angry that some Iraqi
soldiers are waving the white flag in fake surrenders and violating the
rules of war in other ways.
In a war premised on the belief that Hussein is planning to terrorize
the world with nuclear bombs and invisible disease spores, and that the
niceties can't be allowed to get in the way of stopping him, it is odd
that matters of flags and photographs even come up. We, the United States,
are pretty clearly violating the Geneva Conventions ourselves in our treatment
of Afghan soldiers we've imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay, and we've justified
this (to the extent we've bothered) with the same "don't be naive" arguments
used for ignoring the Security Council about Iraq. So why are we even
raising the issue of international law now? Why do we care?
We care, above all, because we want our soldiers who have been captured
to be treated well. We also care because of the propaganda value. International
law can help by establishing what exactly those minimal standards of war
etiquette are. And even though there are no police to enforce it, international
law can also create a fairly powerful incentive to obey the rules it lays
down.
How does it do that? By creating a web of rules, each of which is stronger
for being part of the web than if it were a single thread dangling alone.
Every nation will have rules it cares more about and rules it cares less
about. But a vested interest in being seen as obeying the rules -- and
in seeing others obey most of the rules most of the time -- can overcome
the temptation to break any individual rule when it suits your purposes.
As the only superpower, the United States needs international law less
than other nations. We can protect our interests with brute force if we
want to, or if we believe that nothing else really matters in the end.
What we cannot do is sneer at international law one day and invoke it
the next. Nor can we pick and choose among the agreements we've signed
and expect other countries not to do the same.
This is not a toasty matter of sentiment or expecting others to follow
a high-minded example. And it does not depend on perfection. Even domestic
law is not an all-or-nothing affair: If most people are law-obeying most
of the time, that's good enough to make the whole system self-reinforcing.
The nations of the world still live in something much closer to the state
of nature, in which it's every player for itself. Without cops, informal
incentives are both more important and harder to come by. But even among
nations, each decision to obey or ignore a particular rule strengthens
or weakens all the other rules.
- Michael Kinsley
source:
Washington Post
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