What
Is a Nation?
What Is a State?
Exploring
Minority Rights and their
Limits

By
Richard
Falk,
TFF Associate
Albert G. Milbank Professor of
International Law Emeritus, Princeton University;
Visiting Professor, UCSB, 2002-2004 and Chair, Board,
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
Falk is the author, of The
Great Terror War (2003)
and Declining World Order (2004).
See other books by Richard Falk in "The
100 Best Books"
June 17, 2004
This is the text of lecture Falk held on April 9-10
at the City College of Santa Barbara, "Tribes, Sects,
Cultures, & Sovereign States: Group/Minority Rights
or Individual Rights, of Both?")
I welcome this opportunity to
participate in a conference devoted to what has become
one of the two most tormented arenas of political
violence in the world today. The two arenas are
significantly interrelated. Our focus during these two
days on the dynamics of various forms of fragmentation
internal to the sovereign state, can be understood as a
fundamental challenge to the normative program of
establishing an effective human rights regime applicable
to all persons. The resulting tension is generating
multiple crises of identity, authority, and loyalty that
can often not be resolved peacefully. Of course, the
second arena of challenge is associated with issues posed
by 9/11 and the American recourse to a "Great Terror War"
as an inevitable response, the chief characteristics of
which is to define "terror" to encompass all anti-state
political violence and to include a strategy of regime
change to promote the project of global domination under
the anti-terrorist banner.
The Iraq War dramatically
highlights the interaction between domestic fragmentation
in the aftermath of authoritarian rule with the political
impossibilities of imposed democracy as the solution for
nation and state in Iraq as a member of international
society. With deep irony, the American project of regime
change in Iraq has turned a previously Draconian Iraqi
state into a scene of multiple terrorism, associated with
religious extremism, national resistance, and the state
terrorism of the occupiers. The most likely futures for
Iraq under these circumstances are the resumption in some
form of Sunni authoritarianism, the outbreak of civil
war, the emergence of a Shi'ia Islamic Republic, or a
prolonged and bloody American occupation that is likely
to exert unpredictable shocks here in the United States,
making the tumult of the Vietnam Era seem mild by
comparison. In other words, this conference is addressing
issues that are already shaking the foundations of world
order in a manner that I would argue are more profound
than anything that has happened for several hundred years
(with the possible exception of the advent of nuclear
weaponry). We lack an appropriate political language to
understand and a political leadership with the capacity
for creative and constructive response. We confront a
dire set of circumstances in Iraq that do not contain
credible positive options for a favorable end game at
present.
But even before this lethal brew
arising out of 9/11 and its misguided plunge into a cycle
of perpetual warfare, the issues associated with the
conference were made highly relevant by several prominent
developments in the 1990s: the ending of the cold war,
which gave rise to a new surge of nationalism that had
been previously largely concealed within the sinews of
authoritarian states. This was especially the case in the
former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia. In the Soviet
instance, the collapse of Soviet control over its
internal empire of republics containing a variety of
minority peoples was essentially unopposed, but political
violence erupted at the next lower level of political
organization, and persists in a variety of settings,
including Georgia, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, and elsewhere
in Central Asia. In the Yugoslav instance, the tension
between a normative order premised on the territorial
unity of the state and an emergent set of normative
claims associated with the application of the right of
self-determination in non-colonial settings produced a
series of severe ethnic wars during the 1990s with
extensive killing fields, mixed outcomes, persisting
turmoil.
The normative debate surrounding
Kosovo discloses some of the larger issues at stake, as
well as suggesting the elusiveness of solutions dependent
on outside intervention and subsequent occupation under
international auspices. In this instance, under the
combined authority of the NATO KFOR peacekeeping presence
and the United Nations post-conflict administrative
control over political and economic reconstruction of a
Kosovo, producing a continuously tense condition of de
facto independence. It will be recalled that back in 1999
the justification for the Kosovo War, conducted without
any proper prior authorization by the UNSC, was the
protection of the Albanian majority population from
oppressive Serbian domination, which included a variety
of allegation of serious human rights abuses, and the
expectation that far worse was in the offing, designed at
the very least to induce coercively a proportion of the
Albanian population to flee the country.
There were many ambiguities
associated with this NATO undertaking, especially the
irony of embracing the KLA, which in the subsequent
Bush/Sharon period would qualify without doubt as a
"terrorist organization." But there were other disturbing
aspects of recourse to war in Kosovo: deep suspicions
that the US Government was not interested in achieving a
diplomatic solution, indications of mixed motives in
Washington, including finding a role for NATO in the
period after the cold war, and assurances that the US
would stay involved in European affairs. Beyond this, the
conduct of the Kosovo War by its reliance on
high-altitude bombing, the extension of the target list
to include civilian targets in Belgrade, the provocative
bombing of the Chinese Embassy, the use of depleted
uranium ordinance, the absence of any combat casualties
on the NATO side were among the elements that cast a long
dark shadow across the humanitarian pretensions of the
operation.
Since the end of the active
hostilities, there have been a series of difficulties,
but most relevant for our purposes, has been a pattern of
what has been called "reverse ethnic cleansing" in which
the new category of victims have become the remnants of
the Serb minority that continues to live in Kosovo, and
were ethnically identified with the former perpetrators.
The persistence of de facto independence for Kosovo also
seems to violate an earlier UN pledge that its engagement
with Kosovo would not challenge the sovereign unity of
Serbia, which had been the lead republic in the former
federated state of Yugoslavia. Kosovo is an example of
third-order self-determination claims, considering
movements against alien or colonial rule as first-order
claims, independence for the autonomous units in a
federal state as second-order claims, and positing
sovereignty claims by indigenous peoples as fourth-order
claims. Although it is dangerous to be dogmatic, and not
sensitive to context, third-order self-determination
claims seem to be fraught with difficulties, especially
if the proposed independent territorial community
includes an important minority that is ethnically or
religiously associated with the former sovereign state.
The conceptual issue can be
understood as follows: when does 'a minority' qualify as
'a nation' or 'a people' (the language used to designate
the holder of the right of self-determination in
international law) and when should 'a nation' be entitled
to form 'a state' even at the cost of fragmenting a
former state? And there is the related issue posed
relating to humanitarian intervention or, as the
International Commission on Intervention and State
Sovereignty, phrased it, an exercise of "The
Responsibility to Protect" by the organized international
community, that is, the United Nations?
Kosovo illuminates the dilemmas
associated with this theme of nationhood verse statehood
as the basis of political community. If a minority feels
beleaguered and discriminated against, and does not
succumb to assimilation, it will often tend to form a
defensive nationalism as a mode of cultural survival.
This is especially true if the minority is geographically
distinct, speaks a separate language, adheres to a
different religion, and has sufficient numbers to
consider itself capable of becoming a viable independent
political entity. Under these circumstances, the unity of
the state is likely to be drawn into question, and the
dominant elites will be inclined to tighten their control
over such a restive minority, which in turn radicalizes
still further separatist tendencies. As a result, quite
often armed struggles occur, which can produce prolonged
political violence with much suffering and bloodshed.
Looking around the world at places such as Sudan,
Kashmir, Sri Lanka, Colombia, parts of Indonesia, to
mention a few of the more prominent instances, it is
obvious that this tension between national consciousness
and state unity is one of the great divisive forces
active in the world with no happy ending in sight.
Whether the engagement of the
international community is a plus or minus depends on the
circumstances. There seems to be little doubt that from
an Albanian perspective, the NATO intervention was
welcome, ending the Serb oppressive rule, attracting back
almost all of the hundreds of thousands of Albania
refugees who had fled the country, producing a UN
presence that created space in Kosovo for a potential
economic recovery and the possible construction of a
political democracy. To date, these hopes have not been
realized. Further, even if the record in Kosovo after the
intervention had been more encouraging we need to pose a
decisive question from the perspective of shaping global
policy: did the Kosovo War produce a precedent that can
give rise, with adjustments for circumstances, to a
principled framework that would operate in other roughly
comparable settings?
This past week was the tenth
anniversary of the terrible genocide that took as many as
800,000 mainly Tutsi lives in Rwanda while an authorized
UN protective presence stood by paralyzed and
unaugmented, despite strong advance warnings of what was
being contemplated by the Hutu rulers. It is
well-documented that the great champions of humanitarian
intervention earlier in the Balkans and more recently in
Iraq, Great Britain and the United States, used the full
extent of their political leverage to inhibit a UN
protective role in Rwanda as the genocidal pattern
started to unfold back in 1994. In this respect, the
Rwandan case stands out as the clearest case where there
existed an international responsibility to protect, a
duty to respond to imminent humanitarian emergencies, if
at all possible, on the basis of a proper mandate from
the UN Security Council. As a practical matter, to avoid
the Kosovo dilemma, it would be a beneficial reform in
such situations in the future, if the Permanent Members
of the UN Security Council, would formally, or at least
informally, waive their right of veto in circumstances of
humanitarian emergency. Of course, there is an inevitable
gray area. Opponents of the Kosovo intervention argue to
this day that no such humanitarian emergency existed at
the time, that the allegations of atrocity were partially
fabricated, and that diplomatic options had not been
tried with due diligence by the US Government, which
evidence shows was hell bent on war.
It is also important to mention the
case of Somalia, where a humanitarian undertaking, with
UN backing, was quickly terminated in 1993 when a
firefight in Mogadishu cost 18 American lives. In that
instance, the American-led peacekeepers had initially
been welcomed by the people of the country when it
appeared that the UN mission was to bring food and
medicine to a suffering population in what was then
described as "a failed state." Failed or not, when the
Clinton presidency expanded the original mission
undertaken two years earlier by Bush, Sr. to include
state-building, which meant choosing political leaders.
The unresolved struggle for power in Somalia among the
ethnic factions that suddenly felt marginalized and
threatened quickly morphed into a frenzy of opposition
against the international presence recast as "intruders."
At the time, American officials tried to invalidate this
opposition by calling the resistance to the US-led
presence as the work of corrupt and greedy "war lords,"
which seemed a way of denying the people of Somalia
first-order self-determination in the face of chaotic
circumstances. Interestingly, in the setting of Iraq we
seek increasingly to invalidate the growing resistance by
describing its partisans as "remnants of the Baathist
regime," "dead-enders," "thugs and criminals," and
whatever other delegitimizing labels our leaders can
conjure up to justify the persistence of an occupation
that is more and more deeply resented by all sectors of
Iraqi society, with the possible exception of the
Kurds.
It is not plausible to discuss this
range of concerns without a few comments on the
Israel/Palestine conflict, whose persistence has for so
longer challenged the conscience of humanity. From the
perspective of the conceptual concerns of this essay the
conflict passed through a series of phases, omitting any
discussion of its deeper historical roots that stretch
back to biblical times, yet give resonance to conflicting
present expectations of the right to the contested land.
The present shape of the struggle evolved out of a period
following World War I when Palestine was a Mandate of the
League of Nations, administered as a unified territory
under British administrative control in their role as
Mandatory authority. Within the mandate, there lived a
Palestinian nation and a rather small Jewish minority,
aspiring to become a 'homeland' for world Jewry in
accordance with the promise given by the Balfour
Declaration to the world Zionist movement in 1917. In
1948, amid growing tensions between the two peoples,
greatly aggravated by the spillover into Palestine of the
wider effects of The Holocaust, the United Nations
decreed a partition of Palestine that would have provided
two states for the two nations. This plan was repudiated
by the Arab governments that launched a war designed to
resist Israeli statehood, but leading to an Israeli
victory and the expulsion from a large part of the
Palestinian territory of its Palestinian residents,
producing a huge refugee population. In this period, the
Palestinians lived in the area of the West Bank under
Jordanian administrative control, in effect, a captive
nation, with a residual number of Palestinians living as
a minority in Isreal.
Since 1967, the Palestinian nation
in the West Bank and Gaza has been living under harsh
conditions of a prolonged occupation, agitated by the two
intifadas and the Israeli repressive responses. From time
to time a "peace process" has been initiated, most
notably for seven years during the 1990s, with the aim of
producing, or in effect, resurrecting the two-state
solution proposed decades earlier by the UN, but now
confining the Palestinian state to some 22% of the
original mandatory territory, restricting drastically the
rights of Palestinian refugees, and sustaining the great
majority of Israeli settlements established in occupied
Palestine in violation of international humanitarian law.
In these circumstances, a two-state solution does not
offer the Palestinians a fair solution. The alternative
that has been discussed at various points has been the
establishment of a single, secular bi-national state
covering the entire territory of Palestine as it existed
under the mandate. Israel refuses to consider such an
outcome, both because it would mean the end of the
Zionist conception of a Jewish state, and because it
would cede too much authority to the Palestinians,
especially in view of their demographic
majority.
The outside role of the United
States has been decisive, but not helpful from the
perspective of finding a sustainable peace. The US
approach, rooted as much in domestic ethnic politics as
in grand strategy, has accentuated the disparity in power
between the two parties, and has made it seem unnecessary
for Israel to base peace on the 'rights' of the
Palestinians under international law rather than on 'the
facts on the ground' and their military superiority and
diplomatic leverage. The ordeal of this unresolved
conflict underscores the dependence of global justice on
geopolitical circumstances.
What stands out from a review of
these instances is precisely the primacy of geopolitics,
by which is meant the way in which the particular
struggle relates to the strategic designs of major
political actors. In a unipolar world, geopolitics has
become virtually indistinguishable from US foreign
policy. Somalia was of marginal or no strategic interest,
and the intervention was hence very shallow, and easily
reversed in the face of national resistance. Rwanda, even
more so, was not viewed as strategically relevant, and
against the background of the Somalia experience of a
year earlier, all the incentives were to turn aside the
humanitarian emergency. Kosovo was, as earlier suggested,
a mixed case, with strategic incentives sufficient to
provide a realist underpinning to what was proclaimed to
be a humanitarian intervention. At the time, a critic
such as Noam Chomsky voiced his dissent by repudiating
the humanitarian rationale, calling the operation
"military humanism," arguing that if the humanitarian
motivations were genuine then the US would have flexed
its muscles with respect to the embattled Kurdish
minority in Turkey, and elsewhere.
I think an assessment of this
pattern of action and inaction is more complicated than
Chomsky would have us believe. I would differ from
Chomsky on Kosovo, regarding the factual circumstances in
Kosovo that existed in 1999, especially against the
background of the Bosnian experience culminating in the
Srebrenica massacre of 1995, as presenting the
international community with a genuine humanitarian
emergency. I would further argue, which is admittedly
controversial, that the mixed motives associated with
American strategic interests in keeping NATO alive and
Europe stable, made it more likely that the
interventionary undertaking would not be as shallow and
fragile as in Somalia and elsewhere in subSaharan Africa,
and therefore it had a reasonable prospect of being
effective.
Applying this reasoning to Iraq, we
notice, first of all, that there was no current
humanitarian emergency, and that the humanitarian
rationale was almost entirely a post-hoc effort to divert
attention from the false security claims associated with
alleged Iraqi possession of illicit stockpiles of WMD.
But we further notice that the strategic stakes for the
United States in Iraq are huge, and that however
formidable the resistance to the American-led occupation
has become, it is dismissed as irrelevant to the American
engagement. The United States is suffering increasingly
heavily casualties, but we have yet to hear a single
mainstream voice utter a word in support of a Somalian
exit strategy, or even a Vietnam exit strategy based on
some sort of negotiated phased withdrawal.
The aftermath of the Iraq War has
brought to the turbulent surface the various tensions
that I have been describing and commenting upon. It
illustrates the degree to which nationalism under siege
from alien sources can produce a strong unifying effect
even in the face of deep religious and ethnic cleavages,
at least temporarily, among internal groupings that had
previously viewed each other as implacable and hostile
adversaries. A cartoon in the LA Times by Mike Keefe
makes this point rather vividly. The visual parts of the
cartoon shows Sunnis and Shiites fighting together
against the American occupiers. The caption reads: "Hey,
Mission Accomplished..We've unified Iraq!" A primary
lesson of the Vietnam War, apparently unlearned so far in
the Iraq setting, is that whenever a national resistance
becomes unified and resolved, it will over time prevail
over even a militarily superior and determined
intervening great power. Of course, the strategic motives
were always suspect in Vietnam, causing leading realists
of the day such as Hans Morgenthau and George Kennan to
oppose the war from the outset. With respect to Iraq,
too, there was a chorus of realist opposition in the
period leading up to the Iraq War, but because the
strategic consequences are so large, there is a far
greater uncertainty at least at this stage as to what to
do next. And also, with Vietnam, there was a coherent
alternative to the American presence. In Iraq there has
been an assumption that any hasty removal of the American
presence would lead to a bloody struggle for power that
would produce dangerous regional effects.
In another important respect, the
Iraq conflict increasingly illustrates the confusing
reality of "nationalism." If we look at Turkey, we can
easily posit the 12 million Kurdish minority as "a
captive nation" (especially, the six million or so Kurds
living in eastern Anatolia); that is, a nationalism that
is suppressed by the state. This reality is somewhat
disguised by the misleading juridical claim that the
Turkish state confers a Turkish nationalist identity on
the entire population regardless of their preferred
nationalist and ethnic identity. The great Turkish
nation-builder, Kemal Ataturk, insisted in this vein that
the Kurds were "mountain Turks," and should be
assimilated into the general population without any
deference to autonomy claims or even cultural rights
associated with language and traditions. There is thus a
tension between nationalist aspirations of minorities and
the statist aspirations of Turkish Kemalism. There is
some prospect that the current less statist leadership in
Turkey, the soft Islamic Ak Party, can revive the Ottoman
practices of internal tolerances toward minorities,
allowing Kurdish cultural rights to flourish and granting
a strong measure of regional autonomy and
self-administration in eastern Anatolia where at least
half of the Kurdish minority is geographically
concentrated.
But if we now look back at Iraq one
last time, we can take some account of the various
religious and ethnic factions that supposedly divide the
country. Under Saddam Hussein, Iraq was governed as an
authoritarian state that oppressed both its Shi'ia
majority and its Kurdish and Turkaman minorities. There
was surely a Kurdish nationalist tendency seeking a
separate political reality or, at minimum, internal
self-determination based on an autonomous status, but
these aspirations were opposed not only by Baghdad, but
by regional forces threatened by Kurdish independence
movements. Nationalism as a psycho-political reality was
at odds with juridical nationalism handed down from above
at the level of the state. Oddly, at this point, in the
face of the American occupation, there is the possibility
that juridical nationalism will command the loyalties of
the entire Iraqi population, with the probable notable
exception of the Kurds, and create in Iraq that
previously unimaginable stabilizing fusion between the
state and the nation at least for as long as the
interventionary presence of the United States remains the
defining preoccupation of the Iraqi people and their most
influential leaders.
If this fusion should occur, it
will convert the Iraq War from its notorious status of
last May of "mission accomplished" to a new tragic
circumstance from a Washington perspective of "mission
impossible." Whether and how soon the United States
discovers the reservoirs of moral and political
imagination to extricate itself from this mission
impossible remains to be seen. It may in the end depend
on the oppositional prudence of the American citizenry
rather than upon their elected representatives, who
continue to act as sheep, not as responsible upholder of
American interests, custodians of constitutional
obligations, and promoters of the public good at home and
abroad.
In summary, I would like to offer
several briefly stated conclusions:
(1) It is important to acknowledge
that the national aspirations of abused minorities (or in
some instances of majorities) will not be realized by the
benefits of juridical nationalism conferred on all
citizens by the legal fiat of the territorial
government;
(2) The emergence of human rights
as a focus of international concern poses a subversive
challenge to the territorial supremacy of sovereign
states;
(3) The option of humanitarian
intervention on behalf of abused minorities is unlikely
to be effectively undertaken in the absence of
accompanying strategic interests, and should be endorsed
by the United Nations and world public opinion only in
extreme cases;
(4) The main justification for such
protective international action should be premised on a
condition of a current humanitarian emergency, which is
not established by a record of past abuses, even if
severe, or by the present fact of dictatorial
rule;
(5) In the absence of such a
humanitarian emergency, interventions that claim
humanitarian goals are likely to clash with nationalist
goals, even those at the level of the state, and provoke
nationalist resistance;
(6) Nationalist resistance,
especially if unified and coherently led, is not
susceptible to military defeat, although the resisters
and the civilian population may endure huge casualties
and prolonged suffering;
(7) The future of democracy and the
promotion of individual and collective human rights
should depend on the internal political processes of
sovereign states, encouraged by educational
'intervention' in support of the values of human dignity
for the foreseeable future;
(8) Adherence to the norm of
non-intervention, including by regional international
institutions and the United Nations, seems desirable
outside of the exceptional circumstances of a
humanitarian emergency.
©
TFF & the author 2004

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