Tag Archives: Kosovo Liberation Army
Richard Falk
Richard Falk is an international law and international relations scholar who taught at Princeton University for forty years. Since 2002 he has lived in Santa Barbara, California, and taught at the local campus of the University of California in Global and International Studies and since 2005 chaired the Board of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. He initiated this blog partly in celebration of his 80th birthday.
Archives
- January 2023
- December 2022
- November 2022
- October 2022
- September 2022
- August 2022
- July 2022
- June 2022
- May 2022
- April 2022
- March 2022
- February 2022
- January 2022
- December 2021
- November 2021
- October 2021
- September 2021
- August 2021
- July 2021
- June 2021
- May 2021
- April 2021
- March 2021
- February 2021
- January 2021
- December 2020
- November 2020
- October 2020
- September 2020
- August 2020
- July 2020
- June 2020
- May 2020
- April 2020
- March 2020
- February 2020
- January 2020
- December 2019
- November 2019
- October 2019
- September 2019
- August 2019
- July 2019
- June 2019
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- August 2017
- July 2017
- June 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- March 2017
- February 2017
- January 2017
- December 2016
- November 2016
- October 2016
- September 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- September 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
Tags
AKP anti-Semitism apartheid Balfour Declaration Barack Obama Biden China citizen pilgrim Climate change Cold War Democracy Democratic Party diplomacy Egypt Erdogan European Union Gaza geopolitics George W. Bush Hamas Hilary Clinton Hiroshima Holocaust Hosni Mubarak Human rights International Criminal Court international law intervention Iran Iraq Iraq War Israel Israel-Palestine Israel/Palestine Israeli apartheid Jerusalem Libya Middle East militarism NATO Netanyahu New York Times Nobel Peace Prize NPT Nuclear disarmament nuclearism nuclear weapons Obama Palestine Palestinian people Palestinian prisoners in Israel Palestinian territories peace process racism Richard Falk Russia Saudi Arabia Snowden Soviet Union Syria Tel Aviv Terrorism Trump Turkey UN United Nations United Nations Security Council United States Vietnam Vietnam War Washington West Bank world order World War II ZionismRecent Posts
Categories
- 'Abnormal' Japan
- 'Fortress World'
- 'New Anti-Semitism'
- 'New' Normal
- 'Normal' Japan
- 'Operation Protective Edge'
- 'Peace Process'
- 'Suspending' Annexation
- 'Voluntary' International Law
- (un)civility
- 13 Demands
- 1915 Genocide
- 1948 War of Independence
- 1967 War
- 1968-69
- 2016 Presidential Election
- 2019
- 2020 Election
- 2020 Presidential Election
- 2020 Presidential Elections
- 2020 Primary
- 2020 U.S. Elections
- 9//12 war(s)
- 9/11 + 9/12
- 9/11 Attacks
- 9/11. 9/12
- A Quiet Heart
- A remebrance
- A Sputnik Moment
- aapartheid
- Abbas
- Abdullah Gul
- Abraham Accords
- Abraham Center for Middle East Peace
- academic freedom
- acadmic freedom
- accountability
- Activism
- Adala Urgent Appeal
- Administrative Detention
- Adorno
- Advisory Opinion
- Afghanistan
- Africa
- Age
- Ageing
- aggression
- Ahed Tamimi
- Ahmet Davutoglu
- Ahmet Davutoğlu
- AK Party
- AKP
- Al Aqsa Mosque
- al Awda Freedom Flotilla
- al-Shayat Airfield
- Alfred Nobel
- Algeria
- Ali Khamenei
- Ali Mazrui
- alliance
- Altamont Speedway Concert
- Alternative Facts
- Ambon
- America
- America as republic
- American Deep State
- American elections
- American Embassy Seuzure
- American Exceptionism
- American foreign policy
- American presidential campaign
- American presidential election
- American racism
- American Sniper
- AMEXIT
- Amos Oz
- Anarchy
- and Opponents
- Andrew Ross
- Animal Rights
- Anit-BDS Summit
- anit-Semitism
- annexation
- Anthropocene
- Anti-colonialism
- anti-Israel bias
- anti-Semitism
- anti-Semitism
- Anti-Turkish Campaign
- Anti-Zionism UN Resolution
- Antisemitism
- Antonina Zabinski
- Antonio Guterres
- Antony Blinken
- apartheid
- Apartheid Convention
- Apartheid State
- Apology
- Aquino
- Arab Spring
- Armenia
- Armenian community
- Armenian Genocide
- arms control
- arms sales
- Article 9
- Asian Economic Growth
- aspirational democracy
- asymmetric warfare
- Ataturk
- atomic attacks
- atomic bomb
- Audre Lorde
- Auschwitz
- authoritarianism
- autobiography
- autocracy
- Autocratic Rule
- Ayatollah Khomeini
- Ayatollah Ruhollah Khpomeini
- Ayça Çubukçu
- Ayça Çubukçu
- Ayelet Shaked
- Azopt
- B'Tselem Report
- Balfour Declaration
- Ban KI-moon
- BAN Treaty
- Barack Obama
- Barbara Walters
- Bashar el-Assad
- Basher al Assad
- BBC
- BDS
- BDS Campaign
- BDS-Bashing
- beauty
- Belgium
- Ben Ali Saleh
- Benjiman Netanyahu
- Berlin Wall
- Bernie Sanders
- Berrigan Brothers
- Bibi Netanyahu
- Biden
- Biden's foreign policy
- Biden's Middle East Visit
- Bill Clinton
- Bill Cosby
- Binali Yildirim
- binary thinking
- Bio-Ethical Emergency
- Bio-Political Crisis
- Biopolitical Moment
- Bipartisan Consensus
- Blocking Comments
- blog boundaries
- blog civility
- blog comments
- Blog ethics
- Bob Kerrie
- Bolsonaro
- book burning
- BREXIT
- British colonialism
- British Mandate
- Brzezinski
- Bush family
- C.J. Polychronious
- Caeser Group
- Cambodia
- campaign fundraising
- capital punishment
- Capitalism
- Capitalist Constraints
- Carl Schmitt
- Caterpillar
- Catholicism
- ceasefire
- Ceylan Orhun
- Chaim Weizman
- charismatic resilience
- Charles Blow
- Charlie Hebdo
- Charlottesville
- Chas Freeman
- Chemical Weapons
- Chemical. Weapons
- Cherif Chouachi
- Chernobyl
- child prisoners
- China
- China Rivalry
- Chinese Marxism
- Chomsky
- CHP
- Christian Zionism
- Christmas
- Christopher Kennedy
- citizen pilgrim
- citizenship
- City of
- citzenship
- Ciultural Engagement
- civil disobedience
- civil society
- Civil Society Discourse
- civil society tribunals
- Civil War Scenario
- civility
- Claudia Rankine
- Clean Break
- Climate Change
- climate denial
- climate justice
- Clinton
- Clinton Defeat
- Clinton's belligerence
- Clinton's foreign policy
- CNN
- Coalition for Change
- Coercive Diplomacy
- Cold War
- Colin Kaepernick
- collective punishment
- collective security
- Collective Self-Defense
- Colombia Peace Process
- Colonial Legacies
- colonialism
- Comment Guidelines
- Commentary
- Complexity
- Comprehensive Strategic Partnership
- Conservative Republicans
- Constitutional issues
- consumerism
- contextual and configurative analysis
- Copenhagen failure
- Coronavirus Pandemic
- Corporate responsibility
- Corrupting. Democracy
- cosmic consciousness
- cosmopolitanism
- Council of Foreign Relations
- counter-terrorism
- Counterinsurgency Tactics
- counterinsurgency warfare
- Counterinsurgency Wars
- Counterrevolution
- counterterrorism
- Coup aftermath
- Coup attempt
- Cour failure
- COVID-19
- COVID-19 Pandemic
- COVIS-19
- Craig Hicks
- crime of apartheid
- crime or war
- Crimea
- Crimes against Humanity
- Crimes of State
- Criminal Accountability
- Criminal Law
- Criminality
- Cruelty
- Cruz
- Cuban Revolution
- cultural imagination
- cultural war of aggression
- culture of violence
- cyber attacks
- Dan Ellsberg
- Daniel Berrigan
- Daniel Ellsberg
- Daniel Falcone
- Daniel Pipes
- Dany Danon
- Dautoglu
- David Krieger
- Davutoglu
- Dayan Jayatilleka
- Deal of the Century
- Deal of. the Century
- debate
- Deborah Sills
- Decline of
- decline of democracy
- Decline of International Law
- Deep State
- Deepak Nayyer
- Defamation
- Defamatory Comments
- Demagogic Leaders
- demagogue
- Demagogues
- demilitarization
- democracy
- Democracy
- Democratic Candidates
- democratic elections
- Democratic Paarty
- Democratic Party
- Democratic Party foreign policy
- democratic pluralism
- Demographic Bomb
- denuclearization
- Depolarization
- Derrida
- deterrence
- dialogic humility
- dialogue
- Dieudonne
- digital age
- Digital Divide
- Digital Etiquette
- Digital Home
- Digital India
- Diploamacy
- diplomacy
- Diplomacy v. War
- diplomatic initiative
- Diplomatic Protocol
- dipomacy
- disarmament
- discourse
- dispossession
- Dombas
- Donald Trump
- Dortmund
- double jeopardy
- double standards
- Douma 2018 Attack
- Douma CW attack
- drone warfare
- drones
- drug prices
- Durban Conference 2001
- Durban Process
- Duterte
- dystopia
- early Christianity
- Earth Charter
- Ebrahim Yazdi
- eco-humanism
- eco-insurgency
- eco-politics
- ecological alienation
- Ecological Civilization
- ecological collapse
- Ecological Constraints
- Ecological Ethos
- Ecological Imperatives
- ecological jurisprudence
- ecology
- economic and social rights
- Economic embargo
- education
- educational reform
- Edward Said
- Edward Snowden
- Effective Control
- Egypt
- Egypt (2011) (2013)
- Ekrem Imamoglu
- electability
- Electoral Aftermath
- Electoral College
- electoral politics
- Elizabeth McAlister
- Elizabeth Warren
- Embassy Move
- ending apartheid
- ending occupation
- Enlightenment
- environmment
- Eqbal Ahmed
- Erdogan
- ESCWA
- ESCWA Report
- ESCWA Report (2017)
- espionage
- Ethical Relevance
- Ethics of Apology
- Ethno-nationalist Moment
- ethnocracy
- ethnographhic moment
- Euromed
- Europe
- European statecraft
- European Union
- European Unity
- Exclusionary Nationalism
- failed coup
- Failed Geopolitics
- failed state
- failing state
- Fakhrizadeh
- False Certainty
- False Consciousness
- fanaticism
- fascism
- Fatah
- Father Miguel D'Escoto
- Fatou Bennssouda
- FDR
- feminism
- Fethullah Gulen
- FETO
- Fetullah extradition
- Fetullah Gulen
- Fidel
- Fidel Castro
- FIFA
- FIFA and Palestinian Football
- Fist Pump Statecraft
- food security
- Force-feedomg
- foreign military bases
- Foreign Policy Magazine
- forever wars
- Forgetting 2019
- forgiveness
- Fouad Ajami
- France and the United States
- Francesca Albanese
- Francis Fukuyama
- Fred Skolnik
- Fredrik Heffermehl
- Freedom Flotilla
- freedom of expression
- friendship
- Fukashima Daiichi
- Fukushima
- Fulbright Vietnam University
- funding terrrorism
- future generations
- Future of Gaza
- G20 Meeting
- G5
- Gandhi
- Gaza
- Gaza
- Gaza Massacre
- Gaza occupation
- Gaza oppressi
- Gaza\/Israel Violence
- Gemeva Convention IV
- Gen. Yasem Soleimani
- General el-Burhan
- General Mark Milley
- General Yair Golan
- Geneva IV
- genocide
- Genocide Controversy
- Genocide Convention
- Genocide-duty to prevent
- Geoffrey Darnton
- Geopolitic bersus International Law
- Geopolitical Bribery
- geopolitical buffoonery
- Geopolitical Crime
- Geopolitical Futures
- geopolitical laws
- Geopolitical Militarism
- Geopolitical Realignments
- Geopolitical Veto
- Geopolitical War
- geopolitics
- geopolitics of decline
- George H.W. Bush
- George McGovern
- George Shultz
- George W. Bush
- Germany
- Gerry Spence
- Gideon Levy
- Giraffes
- glaucoma
- Global autocracy
- Global Battlefield
- Global Capital
- Global Challenges
- global citizen
- global cooperation
- Global Disorder
- global domination project
- global emergency
- Global Governance
- Global Imperial State
- Global Inequality
- global interest
- global justice
- global leadership
- Global Militarism
- Global presidency
- global public order
- global reform
- global risks
- global security
- Global Solidarity
- Global State
- global warming
- Gloria Emerson
- Goodaall
- Governaability
- Grand Inquisitor
- Grand Strategy
- Great March of Return
- Great Return March
- Great Transition Network
- Great Transition Network (GTN)
- Greta Thunberg
- Guantanamo
- Guardian of the Walls
- Gujurat
- Gulf Cooperation Council
- Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
- Gulf Crisis
- Gulf Crisis of 2014
- Gulf Monarchies
- gun culture
- Gunnar Myrdal
- hacking
- Haider Eid
- haiku
- Haim Saban
- Hamas
- Hamas Charter
- Hamas Hezbollah
- Hanan Ashrawi
- Hans Morgenthau
- harmony with nature
- Harrisburg 7
- Harvard University
- hasbara
- Hassan Rouhani
- hate speech
- HDP
- Health
- Heffermehl
- Henry Kissinger
- Henry L. Stimson
- Henry Paulson
- Hersch Lauterpacht
- Hewlett Packard
- hibakusha
- Hilary Clinton
- Hilary Clinton's foreign policy
- Hillary Clinton
- Hiroshima
- Hirosshima
- Hirpshima/Nagasaki
- History
- Hizmet
- Hizmet movement
- Ho Chi Minh
- Holocaust
- HOME FIRE
- Hormuz Peace Endeavor
- House of Commons vote
- Houthis
- Huawei
- human interest
- human interests
- Human Rights
- Human Rights
- Human Rights Council
- Human Rights Watch
- human security
- Human Survival
- humanism
- humanitarianism
- Humanities
- Hunger Strike
- hunger strikes
- ICC
- ICC Decision
- identity
- ideology
- IHRA Definition of New Anti-Semitism
- III
- Ilhan Omar
- Illiberal State
- Illiberalism
- imagination
- Imelda Marcos
- Imperialism
- Implementation
- impunity
- Incitement to Genocide
- inclusiveness
- indefinite detention
- India
- Indian Wells Tennis Tournament
- Indonesia
- Inner Peace
- Insiders v. Outsiders
- Insurrection
- Interational Law
- internal displacement
- Internation Law
- International & Global Law
- International Chaos
- International Court of Justice
- International Court of Justice (ICJ)
- International Crimes
- International Criminal Court
- International criminal law
- International Day of Solidarity with Palestinian People
- international humanitarian law
- international law
- international law
- international lawyers
- International Liberal Order
- International reputation
- intervention
- interview
- Iran
- Iran & 2020 US Elections
- Iran (1979)
- Iran Counter-Measures
- Iran diplomacy
- Iran Nuclear Agreement
- Iran nuclear diplomacy
- Iran Nuclear Program
- Iran Sanctions
- Iran's nuclear program
- Iran/United States
- Iran/US Confrontation
- Iranian democracy
- Iraq occupation
- Iraq War
- Iraq War Tribunal
- Ireland
- Iron Dome
- ISIS
- Islamic Community
- Islamic Republic
- Islamic Revolution
- Islamophobia
- Israel
- Israel elections
- Israel Palestine
- Israel prisons
- Israel's Arms Industry
- Israel's Obligations under IHL
- Israel-Palestine
- Israel/Palestine
- Israel/Palestine
- Israel/United States
- Israeli 'Democracy'
- Israeli apartheid
- Israeli Apologists
- Israeli assassinations
- Israeli Belligerence
- Israeli Entitlements
- Israeli impunity
- Israeli jurisprudence
- Israeli Law
- Israeli Lobby
- Israeli one-state
- Israeli One-State Solution
- Israeli one-state unilateralism
- Israeli Prisons
- Israeli Security Establishment
- Israeli soul searching
- Israeli war crimes
- Istanbul
- Italy
- Jacob Mchangama
- Jacques Derrida
- Jakarta
- James Douglass
- James Zogby
- January 6th
- Japan
- Japanese poetry
- Jared Kushner
- JCPOA
- Jean Bricmont
- Jeff Halper
- Jeremy Corbyn
- Jeremy Hammond
- Jerusalem
- Jerusalem Resolution
- Jerusalem UN Resolution
- Jerusalem US Embassy Move
- Jewish exceptionalism
- Jewish identity
- Jewish Voices for Peace
- jihadism
- Jill Stein
- Joan Mellen
- Joe Biden
- John Bolton
- John Ikenberry
- John Kasich
- John Kerry
- John Pilger
- Joint Declaration on International Law
- Joint Statement of Opposition
- Jokowi Wadido
- Jonathan Pollard
- Joseph Nye
- Joshua Angrist
- Joshua Oppenheimer
- journalistic ethics
- Juan Manuel Santos
- Julian Assange
- July 15th
- July 15th Coup Attempt
- justice
- Justice & Development Party (AKP)
- Kader Asmal
- Kamila Shameis
- Kamila Shamsie
- Kashmir
- Kashmir
- Kellyanne Conway
- Kenneth Roth
- Kerry Diplomacy
- Khan Sheikhoun
- Khomeini
- Kim Jung-un
- Kissinger
- Kneeling
- knowledge
- Kosovo
- Kurdish conflict
- Kurdish Issues
- Kurdish movement
- Kurdish struggle
- Kurdish victory
- Kurds
- Kyoto
- Laos
- Law and Politics
- Law Enforcement
- Lawfare
- Lawfare Project
- leadership
- leadership crisis
- League of Nations
- Legacies of racism
- Legal Sophistication
- Legitimacy
- Legitimacy War
- Legitimacy War
- Legitimacy Wars
- Legitimating Apartheid Israel
- Leila De Lima
- liberal
- Liberal Democrats
- Liberal Economic Order
- Liberal Zionism
- liberalism
- Libya
- Lidia Yuknavitch
- lockdown sanctuary
- logic of reciprocity
- lost causes
- luxury
- Macro-corruption
- Macron
- Madrid train bombings
- Mahmoud Abbas
- Majoritarian Democracy
- Makarim Wibisono
- Managerial Approach
- Marc Lamont Hill
- Marc Nerfin
- Marco Rubio
- Marcos
- Mario Savio
- Marjorie Cohn
- Marsahll Islands nuclear zero litigation
- Martin Luther King
- Martin Niemoller
- Marwan Barghouti
- Mattes Letter
- Max Blumenthal
- Max Havelaar
- Mazin Qumsiyeh
- McCain
- ME Disengagement
- ME Nuclearism
- media
- meditative intelligence
- Mega-Terorism
- megaterrorism
- Melvin L. Oliver
- memoir
- Memories
- Mendlovitz
- Mental Health
- Mexico
- Michael Moore
- Michael Oren
- Michael Walzer
- Michelle Bachelet
- Michelle Obama
- Micro-Corruption
- Middle East
- Middle East Forum
- Middle East geopolitics
- Middle Easy
- Miguel d'Escoto
- Mika Brzezinski
- Mike Pompeo
- Mikhail Gorbachev
- militarism
- Military Council
- military intervention
- military technology
- Mira Regev
- Mission for Growth
- Modernity
- Modi
- Mohamed Mahathir
- Mohammed Omer
- Money
- Moral Revolution
- Morning 'Joe'
- Moscow Pro-Trump
- Mossadegh
- Motorola Solutioons
- Muharram Ince
- Multituli
- Muslim Brotherhood
- My Lai Massacre
- Myanmar genocide
- Nadia Murad
- Nagasaki
- Nakba
- Nakba as Process
- Naomi Klein
- Naomi Osaka
- NAPF
- Naphtali Bennett
- Narendra Modi
- Nasser
- Natanz Facility
- national interest
- national liberation
- National Review
- National Security
- national security legislation
- nationalism
- NATO
- NATO Membership
- Nazi Past
- Nazi period
- Nazism
- Nebraska
- Necessary Utopianism
- needs based development
- Nelly Sachs Prize
- Neoliberal Capitalism
- neoliberalism
- Netanyahu
- netizenship
- New Anti-Semitism
- New Cold War
- new geopolitics
- New New Anti-Semitism
- New Wars
- new world order
- New York Times
- NGOs
- Nicaragua
- Nikki Haley
- no first use
- No Fly Zone (NFZ)
- Nobel Peace Forum
- Nobel Peace Prize
- Nobel Prize
- Nobel Prize in Economic
- Nobel Prize in Literature
- Non-intervention
- Non-violent Struggle
- nonproliferation
- nonproliferation
- nonproliferation treaty
- Nonviolence
- Nonviolent Global Solidarity
- Nonviolent Resistance
- Nora Erakat
- Normalization Agreements
- normative democracy
- North Carolina murders
- North Korea
- north/south divide
- Noura Erakat
- NPT
- NPT Article IV
- NPT Geopolitics
- NPT Regime
- NPT Review Conference
- NPT Review Conference. TPNW, Ukraine Geopolitics, China, Russia, U,S.
- nuclear age
- Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
- Nuclear Apartheid
- Nuclear Ban Treaty
- nuclear civil disobeidence
- Nuclear Complacency
- Nuclear Disarmament
- Nuclear disarmament
- nuclear education
- Nuclear Famine
- nuclear power
- nuclear securitization
- nuclear war
- Nuclear Weapons
- Nuclear Weapons Policy
- nuclearism
- Nuremberg
- Nuremberg Human Rights Award 2017
- Nuremberg Judegment
- Nuremberg Judgment
- Nuremberg Laws
- Nuremberg Obligation
- Nuremberg Principles
- Nuremburg
- NY Times
- Obama
- Obama on nuclear policy
- Obama's foreign policy
- Obama's Irvine Commencement Address
- Obstacle to Peace
- occupation
- Occupied Palestine
- Ohio State memories
- oil
- Okinawa
- Old City of Jerusalem
- old geopolitics
- Omar Barghouti
- Omar el-Bashir
- One-Israel-State-Solution
- One-state
- one-state solution
- One-State Solutions
- One=state Solution
- ONUMAsan
- OPCW-CWC
- OPEC
- OPEc+
- Open Letter to Trump
- Operation Spring Peace
- oppression
- Oppressive Occupation
- Oren Ben-Dor
- Orientalism
- Oslo Approach
- Oslo diplomacy
- Oslo Peace Process
- Oslo Process
- Outlaw State
- P-5
- P5
- P5 +1 Agreement
- Pacification
- Palestine
- Palestine
- Palestine Authority
- Palestine Prisoners
- Palestine statehood
- Palestine/Ireland
- Palestine/Israel
- Palestinian Authority
- Palestinian children prisoners
- Palestinian people
- Palestinian Rights
- Palestinian Self-determination
- Palestinian solidarity
- Palestinian statehood
- Palestinian stone quarries
- Palestinian struggle
- Palestinians
- pandemic
- Paris 2015
- Paris Agreement
- Paris Attacks
- Paris Climate Change Agreement
- Paris Preamble
- partition
- Partition Resolution
- Partition War
- Patriotism
- Paul Findley
- Paul Raskin
- peace
- Peace and Justice
- Peace Diplomacy
- peace journalism
- Peace process
- Peace Scenario
- Peace Talks
- Peace Through Diplomacy
- Peaceful World
- Pearl Harbor
- PEN Ameriica
- Pentagon
- Peres Funeral
- Permanent Occupation
- Persian Gulf
- Personal Background
- Pete Buitigeig
- Peter Handke
- petropolitics
- Philip
- Philip Berrigan
- Philippines
- Phyllis Bennis
- Pitzer College
- Pivot away from Middle East
- Pivot to Asia
- PKK
- Plan B: Colonial Retreat
- Plan C: A Just Peace
- planetary movement
- Planetary Realism
- PLO
- Plowshares 8
- Poems
- Poetic Wisdom
- Poetry
- poetry & war
- Poetry as Knowledge
- polarization
- Police Brutality
- Police State
- political assassinations
- political community
- Political Community?
- Political correctness
- political extremism
- political fundraising
- political leadership
- Political Parties
- political prisoners
- political style
- political violence
- Political Will
- Politics of Apology
- Politics of Impossibility
- Politics of Language
- Pompeo
- Pope Francis
- Popular Mobilization
- Popular Vote
- populism
- Populist Representation
- Port Huron Statement
- Portfolio Democrats
- post-colonial colonialism
- post-COVID
- Post-Pandemic
- Post-Pandemic World Order
- Power
- Power as Crime
- Pragmatic Authoritarianism
- Pramoedya
- prayer
- Pre-Facsism
- Pre-Fascism
- Precautionary Principle
- Predatory Capitalism
- Presbyterian Divestment
- President Erdogan
- Presidential Campaign
- Presidential System
- Primary Campaign
- Princeton
- Princeton memories
- Princeton Senior Thesis
- Princeton Thesis
- Princeton University
- procedural democracy
- progressive
- Progressive Lawfare
- Progressive politics
- Progressive Populism
- Progressiveness
- Protection of Holy Sites
- Protective Edge
- public intellectual
- Punitive Peace
- Putin
- Qaddafi
- Qassim Soleimani
- Qatar
- QGOs
- R2P
- R2P Diplomacy
- racialized language
- racism
- Radical Humanism
- Rafael Lemkin
- Rainforests
- Ralph Nader
- Ramsey Clark
- ran
- Rashida Tlaib
- Razan al-Najjar
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan
- reconciliation
- red lines
- Reflections
- Reform
- refugee law
- refugees/migrantss
- regime change
- regional conflict
- Regional Disengagement
- regional governance
- Regressive Lawfare
- Religion
- religious counterrevolution
- Religious Zionism
- Remembering Mueller
- reparations
- representation
- republican democracy
- Republican Party
- republicanism
- Resistance
- Responsibility to Protect (R2P)
- Restorative Diplomacy
- Retreat from Globalization
- Reuven Rivlin
- Revolution
- Richard Fa;lk
- Richard Falk
- Richard Goldstone
- Richard Haass
- Richard Kemp
- Right to Food
- Rima Khalaf
- risk management
- Risky Business
- Robert Faurisson
- Robert Kaplan
- Robert Mueller
- Robert O Paxton
- Robin Nisblett
- Roger Cohen
- Roger Federer
- rogue states
- Rome
- Ronald Reagan
- Rosemary Tylka
- Rouhani
- rule of law
- rules of the game
- Rules-Based-International-Order
- Russell Tribunal
- Russia
- Russian hacking
- Ryōkan
- Sakamoto
- Salmon Rushdie
- Samer Issawi
- Samuel Huntington
- Sanctions
- Sanders
- Sanders and Warren
- Sanders' Revolution
- Santa Barbara Fires
- Sarin Gas
- Saudi Arabia
- Saudi Royal Family
- SC Res. 242
- Science of Peace
- Scientific Consensus
- Sean MacBride
- Second Axial Age
- Second Cold War
- Secretary General
- sectarian warfare
- Sectarianism
- Secular one-state
- secular Zionism
- secularism
- security
- Security Council
- Security Council veto
- Security Councull veto
- Selection Process
- self-determination
- Self-Immolaation
- Self-reflections
- Selma
- semantics
- Separation Wall
- Sepp Blatter
- Serbia
- Serena Williams
- Settlement Outposts
- Settlements
- settler colonialism
- sexism
- Shaman Peres
- Sharpevile
- SHEEL-SHOCKED
- Shimon Peres
- Shinzo Abe
- Shireen Abu Akleh
- Shireen Issawi
- Shlomo Sand
- Shooting the Messenger
- Silicon Valley
- Sisi
- Smearing BDS
- Social & Economic Rights
- social welfare
- Socialism
- Soft Power Balances
- South Africa
- South African apartheid
- Sovereignty
- Special Counsel
- Special Rapporteur
- Special Rapporteur on Palestine
- Special Relationship
- Special Relationship (Israel)
- Special Relationship (Saudi Arabia)
- Special Relationships
- Special Relationships-Israel/Saudi Arabia
- Species Idenity
- species survival
- Spirituality
- sportsmanship
- Spyware
- state building
- State of the Union Address
- state system
- state terrorism
- State-Building
- state-centric versus earth-centric
- State-centric world
- State-Centricism
- State-Centriism
- Statism
- Stefan Andersson
- Stephen Rappp
- Stephen Zunes
- Steven Salaita
- Stockholm Agreement
- Stuart Rees
- Study Abroad Program
- Sub-Species Identity
- Subsiding Iron Dome
- substantive democracy
- Sudan
- Suharto
- Sukarno
- superdelegates
- suppression
- Supreme Grace
- Surveillance
- sustainability
- sustainable peace
- Swedish initiative
- Swedish recognition pledge
- Sykes-Picot
- Sykes-Picot Agreement
- Symbolic Politics
- Syria
- Syria Withdrawal
- Syrian ceasefire
- Syrian Dilemma
- Syrian Visits
- Syrian war crimes
- Syrian Withdrawal
- Tahrir Square
- Taliban
- Targeted Killing
- Technological Competition
- Ted Cruz
- Tedros Adhanan Grebreyerus
- Temple Mount and Western Wall
- Temple University
- tennis
- TEPCO
- Terrorism
- terrorism
- terrorist
- Thanksgiving
- The Deal of the Century
- The Economist
- The Orwellian State
- Third Parties
- Thomas Friedman
- Thomas Jefferson
- Threats of Force
- Three Pillars
- Three Pillars of American foreign policy
- Timothy Brennan
- Timothy Snyder
- Titanic
- Tom Friedman
- Toni Morrison
- torture
- TPNW
- traitor
- Transcivilizational Approach
- Transformational Approach
- Transformational Horizons
- Transhuman
- Transnational Activism
- travel ban
- treason
- Treaty of Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons
- tribalism
- Trumism
- Trump
- Trump Criminal Accountability
- Trump Diplomacy
- Trump Era
- Trump Foreign Policy
- Trump nationalism
- Trump obsession
- Trump Presidency
- Trump's 'Maximum Pressure'
- Trump's Deal
- Trump's Deal of the Century
- Trump's demonic worldview
- Trump's foreign policy
- Trump's geopolitics
- Trump's Inaugural Address
- Trump's worldview
- Trumpism
- Trumpt
- Tsitsipas Generation
- Tsutomu Yamaguchi
- Tulsi Gabbard
- Tunisia
- Turkey
- Turkey
- Turkey-Yemen
- Turkish Coup Attempt
- Turkish domestic politics
- Turkish Elections
- Turkish Electiuons
- Turkish foreign policy
- Turkish leadership
- Turkish Municipoal Elections
- Turkish November elections
- Twitter tweets
- two-state consensus
- Two-State Solution
- Two-State-Solution
- Two-states
- U.S. Congress
- U.S. Constitution
- U.S. Constitutionalism
- U.S. Foreign Policy
- U.S. Global State
- U.S. Government role
- U.S. Sanctions
- U.S. State Department
- U.S./Israel Alliance
- U.S./Russia Relations
- UAE
- UDHR
- Ukraine
- Ukraine War
- Ukraine War Geopolics
- Ukraine Wars
- ultra-nationalism
- UN
- UN 'shame list'
- UN Anti-Racism
- UN Balance Sheet
- UN Charter
- UN Commission of Inquiry
- UN funding
- UN Human Rights Council
- UN Multilateralism
- UN Reform
- UN Responsibility
- UN Secretary General
- UN Security Council
- UN Security Council Veto
- UN Treaty on Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons
- UN veto
- UN Watch
- Uncategorized
- Uncertainty
- underground homes
- UNESCO
- Unipolarity
- United Nat
- United Nations
- United States
- United States
- United States alliance
- United States Congress
- United States foreign policy
- United States response
- Uniting for Peace Resolution
- Unity Government
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- universal jurisdiction
- University of Illinois
- Unjust World
- UNSC 2334
- Updating ESCWA Report
- US 'Special Relationships'
- US Congress
- US interference
- US-Israel Special Relationship
- US/Iran Relations
- US/Saudi Relations
- USS Liberty
- utopianism
- Vanunu
- Venus Williams
- Versailles Peace Treaty
- Veto Power
- Victors' Justice
- Victory Caucus
- Victory Scenario
- Vienna Talks
- Vietnam
- Vietnam and Palestine
- Vietnam Lessons
- Vietnam Syndrome
- Vietnam War
- Virginia Tilley
- Vision of Prague
- Voluntary Agreement
- Wahabbism
- Wahabism
- Walden Bello
- Wall Street
- war crimes
- War Dangers
- war journalism
- war making
- War on Terror
- war prevention
- Warsaw Ghetto
- Warsaw Zoo
- Weaponizing Lawfare
- Weinberger Doctrine
- Wesphalian Model
- West
- West Point
- Westphalia
- Westphalian Representation
- whistleblowing
- WHO
- William Barr
- William Schabas
- William Sullivan
- wisdom
- Women's March
- WOMP
- Woodrow Wilson
- world citizen
- World Court
- World Economy
- world government
- World Government Research Network
- world order
- World Order Models Project
- World Parliament
- World Politics
- World War I
- World War I diplomacy
- worldview
- Xi Jinping
- Yazidi people
- Yeats
- Yemen
- Yemen Intervention
- Yenkapi Rally
- Youth
- YPG
- Zbigniew Brzezinski
- Zelensky
- Zionism
- Zionisrt Regimes of Thought Control
- Zionist Pressure
- Zionist Project
- Zombie Solution
- zoo animals
Education
Newspapers
Join 7,873 other subscribers
Qaddafi, Moral Interventionism, Libya, and the Arab Revolutionary Moment
20 MarQaddafi, Moral Interventionism, Libya, and the Arab Revolutionary Moment
Long ago Qaddafi forfeited the domestic legitimacy of his rule, creating the moral and political conditions for an appropriate revolutionary challenge. Recently he has confirmed this assessment by referring to the disaffected portion of his own citizenry as ‘rats and dogs’ or ‘cockroaches,’ employing the bloodthirsty and vengeful language of a demented tyrant. Such a tragically criminal imposition of political abuse on the Libyan experience is a painful reality that exists beyond any reasonable doubt, but does it validate a UN authorized military intervention carried out by a revived partnership of those old colonial partners, France and Britain, and their post-colonial American imperial overseer?
From a personal perspective, my hopes are with the Libyan rebels, despite their reliance on violence and the opaqueness of their political identity. As many credible exile Libyan voices attest, it would seem highly likely that a rebel victory would benefit the people of Libya and would be a step in the right direction for the region, especially the Arab world, but does this entail supporting Western-led military intervention even if it is backed by the United Nations? I believe not.
Let us begin with some unknowns and uncertainties. There is no coherent political identity that can be confidently ascribed to the various anti-Qaddafi
forces, loosely referred to as ‘rebels.’ Just who are they, whom do they represent, and what are their political aspirations? It is worth observing that unlike the other regional events of 2011 the Libyan rising did not last long as a popular movement of a spontaneous character, or unfold as a specific reaction to some horrific incident as in Tunisia. It seemed, although there is some ambiguity in the media reports, that the Libyan oppositional movement was armed and reliant on military force almost from the start, and that its political character seems more in the nature of a traditional insurrection against the established order than a popular revolution in the manner of Tahrir Square inspired by democratic values. This violent political reaction to Qaddafi’s regime seems fully justified as an expression of Libyan self-determination, and as suggested deserves encouragement from world public opinion, including support from such soft power instruments as boycott, divestment, and maybe sanctions. By and large, the international community did not resort to interventionary threats and actions in Libya until the domestic tide turned in favor of Tripoli, which means that the intervention was called upon to overcome the apparent growing likelihood that Qaddafi would reestablish order in his favor, and therefore this international intrusion on the conflict represents a coercive effort to restructure a country’s governing process from without.
The main pretext given for the intervention was the vulnerability of Libyan civilians to the wrath of the Qaddafi regime. But there was little evidence that such wrath extends beyond the regime’s expected defense of the established order, although admittedly being here undertaken in a brutal manner, which itself is not unusual in such situation where a government and its leadership is fighting for their survival. How is this Libyan response different in character than the tactics relied upon by the regimes in Yemen and Bahrain, and in the face of far less of a threat to the status quo, and even that taking the form of political resistance, not military action. In Libya the opposition forces relied on heavy weapons, while elsewhere in the region the people were in the streets in massive numbers, and mostly with no weapons, although in a few instances, with very primitive ones (stones, simple guns) that mainly were used in retaliation for regime violence.
It may have been the case that the immediate Libyan governmental response was predictably brutal and militarist, and that the rebel opposition felt that it had no choice. But it should have been clear from the experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan that military intervention against a hated and brutal regime is not the end of the story, and before the ending is reached violence cascades to heights far beyond what would have likely resulted had there been no intervention. In the process heavy casualties are inflicted and massive displacements occur causing immense suffering for the entrapped and innocent population. In effect, overall historical trends vindicate trust in the dynamics of self-determination despite the fact that short-term disillusioning disasters may and do occur from time to time. These trends similarly underscore the inherently problematic character of intervention, even given the purest of motivations, which rarely, if ever, exists in world politics on the side of intervening parties.
But it can be asked, what about Rwanda, Bosnia (especially, the massacre at Srebrenica)? Are not these instances where humanitarian intervention should have been undertaken and was not? And didn’t the NATO War in Kosovo demonstrate that humanitarian intervention does sometimes spare a vulnerable population from the ordeal of genocidal ethnic cleansing? With respect to Rwanda and Bosnia, the threat of genocidal behavior was clearly established, and could likely have been prevented by a relatively small-scale intervention, and should have been undertaken despite the uncertainties. The facts surrounding the alleged genocidal threat in Kosovo remain contested, but there was a plausible basis for taking it seriously given what had happened a few years earlier in Bosnia. But just as the Libyan rebels raise some suspicion by seeking Euro-American military intervention, so did the KLA in Kosovo engage in terrorist provocations that led to violent Serb responses, allegedly setting the stage in 1999 for NATO’s ‘coalition of the willing.’ NATO went ahead in Kosovo without the benefit of a Security Council mandate, as here, for military action ‘by all necessary means.’ But with respect to Libya there is no firm evidence of a genocidal intention on Qaddafi’s, no humanitarian catastrophe in the making, and not even clear indications of the extent of civilian casualties resulting from the fighting. We should be asking why did Russia signal its intention to veto such authorization in relation to Kosovo, but not with respect to Libya. Perhaps, the Russian sense of identification with Serb interests goes a long way to explain its opportunistic pattern of standing in the way on the earlier occasion when interventionary forces gathered a head of steam in the late 1990s, while standing aside in 2011 in deference to the Euro-American juggernaut.
One of the mysteries surrounding UN support for the Libyan intervention is why China and Russia expressed their opposition by abstaining rather than using their veto, why South Africa voted with the majority, and why Germany, India, and Brazil were content to abstain, yet seeming to express reservations sufficient to produce ‘no’ votes, which would have deprived the interventionist side of the nine affirmative votes that they needed to obtain authorization. Often the veto is used promiscuously, as recently by the United States, to shield Israel from condemnation for their settlement policy, but here the veto was not used when it could have served positive purposes, preventing a non-defensive and destructive military action that seems imprudent and almost certain in the future to be regarded as an unfortunate precedent.
The internal American debate on the use of force was more complex than usual, and cut across party lines. Three positions are worth distinguishing: realists, moral interventionists, moral and legal anti-interventionists. The realists, who usually carry the day when controversial military issues arise in foreign policy debates, on this occasion warned against the intervention, saying it was too uncertain in its effects and costs, that the U.S. was already overstretched in its overseas commitments, and that there were few American strategic interests involved. The moral interventionists, who were in control during the Bush II years, triumphantly reemerged in the company of hawkish Democrats such as Hilary Clinton and Joseph Biden, prevailing in the shaping of policy partly thanks to the push from London and Paris, the acquiescence of the Arab neighbors, and the loss of will on the part of Moscow and Beijing. It is hard to find a war that Republicans will not endorse, especially if the enemy can be personalized as anti-American and demonized as Qaddafi has been, and it always helps to have some oil in the ground! The anti-interventionists, who are generally reluctant about reliance on force in foreign policy except for self-defense, and additionally have doubts about the effectiveness of hard power tactics, especially under Western auspices. These opponents of intervention against Qaddafi were outmaneuvered, especially at the United Nations and in the sensationalist media that confused the Qaddafi horror show for no brainer/slam dunk reasoning on the question of intervention, treating it almost exclusively as a question of ‘how,’ rather than ‘whether,’ and once again failing to fulfill their role in a democratic society by giving no attention to the full spectrum of viewpoints, including the anti-intervention position.
Finally, there arises the question of the UN authorization itself by way of Security Council Resolution 1373. The way international law is generally understood, there is no doubt that the Security Council vote, however questionable on moral and political grounds and in relation to the Charter text and values, resolves the legal issue within the UN system. An earlier World Court decision, ironically involving Libya, concluded that even when the UN Security Council contravenes relevant norms of international law, its decisions are binding and authoritative. Here, the Security Council has reached a decision supportive of military intervention that is legal, but in my judgment not legitimate, being neither politically prudent nor morally acceptable. The states that abstained acted irresponsibly, or put differently, did not uphold either the spirit or letter of the Charter. The Charter in Article 2(7) establishes a prohibition on UN authority to intervene in matters ‘essentially within the domestic jurisdiction’ of member states unless there is a genuine issue of international peace and security present. Here there was not the basis for an exception to non-intervention as even the claim was supposedly motivated solely to protect the civilian population of eastern Libya, and hence was squarely within the domestic jurisdiction of Libya.
Besides, the claim to intervene as stated was patently misleading and disingenuous as the obvious goals, as became manifest from the scale and nature of military action as soon as the operation commenced. The actual goals of the intervention were minimally to protect the armed rebels from being defeated, and possibly destroyed, and maximally, to achieve a regime change resulting in a new governing leadership for Libya that was friendly to the West, including buying fully into its liberal economic geopolitical policy compass. The missile attacks in the vicinity of Tripoli, especially the early missile hits on the Qaddafi compound are unmistakable signatures of this wider intention. As the Gulf War in 1991 demonstrated, once the Security Council authorizes military action of an unspecified character, it gives up any further responsibility for or effort to maintain operational control and accountability.
Using a slightly altered language, the UN Charter embedded a social contract with its membership that privileged the politics of self-determination and was heavily weighted against the politics of intervention. Neither position is absolute, but what seems to have happened with respect to Libya is that intervention was privileged and self-determination cast aside. It is an instance of normatively dubious practice trumping the legal/moral ethos of containing geopolitical discretion in relation to obligatory rules governing the use of force and the duty of non-intervention. We do not know yet what will happen in Libya, but we already know enough to oppose such a precedent that exhibits so many unfortunate characteristics. It is time to restore the global social contract between territorial sovereign states and the organized international community, which not only corresponds with the outlawry of aggressive war but also reflects the movement of history in support of the soft power struggles of the non-Western peoples of the world.
If ordinary citizens were allowed to have foreign policy doctrines mine would be this: without high levels of confidence in a proposed course of military action, the UN should never agree to allow states to engage in violent action that kills people. And if this cautionary principle is ignored, governments should expect that their behavior would be widely viewed in the public as a species of international criminality, and the UN is likely to be regarded as more of a creature of politics than law and morality. For these reasons it would have been my preference to have had the abstainers in the Security Council voting against Resolution 1973. It is likely that the coalition of the willing would have gone forward in any event, but at least without the apparent UN seal of approval.
Tags: Humanitarian intervention, Kosovo, Kosovo Liberation Army, Libya, Muammar al-Gaddafi, NATO, United Nations, United States