Project 1133.DONE
Project 1133.DONE
Project 1133.DONE
CONENTS
1. INTRODUCTION..........................................4
WEAKNESSES OF ORDER....................................4
THE SOBERAND..........................................................29
COMMUNITIES............................................................66
CULTURAL SOVEREIGNTY............................................90
3
INTERVENTIONS IN THE.................................126
ETHICAL-CULTURAL RELATIVISM................................126
RELATIVISM...............................................................61
HUMAN RIGHTS................................................93
II. CONSIDERATIONSFINALS.......................187
4
1. INTRODUCTION
HUMANITARIAN
INTERVENTIONS AND THE
WEAKNESSES OF ORDER
Despite the undoubted achievements
made thanks to the San Francisco
Charter,the Universal Declaration of 1948
and the Covenants of 19661, the process
of universalization of human rights is still
far from being completed and, at times,
gives the impression of being condemned
to no more than an ethical and legal
aspiration2 . To a large extent, this is due
to the difficulties involved in getting
States to transcend the rhetoric of
political statements and consistently
assume the obligations derived from the
provision of their consent in international
treaties on this matter. As is well known,
the former may ignore their international
commitments, subjecting the effective
functioning of the mechanisms for the
protection of international human rights
law to the will of the governments. The
truth is that the international community
still lacks a political power to guarantee
the effectiveness of this order, which, as
5
4
Anglo-American literature speaks of a
CNN effect to refer to the influence that
the media, and especially television, have
had in responding to humanitarian
situations. Vine. ROBINSON, P., “The CNN
effect: can the news media drive foreign
policy ?, Review of International Studies,
25, 1999, pp. 301-309; FIXDAL, M. and
SMITH, D., "Humanitarian Intervention
and Just War," Mershon International
Studies Review, 42, 1998, p. 284.
5
IGNATIEFF, M., The honor of the warrior.
Ethnic warfare and modern
consciousness, trad. de P. Linares, Taurus,
Madrid, 1999, p. 89.
7
CAPLAN, R., “Humanitarian
Intervention? Which way fodward?
”,Ethics and international affairs,14, 2000,
pp. 23-28.
fifteen
As Henry Bull states, the recognition
or tolerance of humanitarian
interventions becomes an implicit
recognition or admission of a shared
conception of human rights; and, vice
versa, the refusal of the international
community in this regard, the non-
existence of said doctrine. BULL, H.,
Intervention in world politics, Clarendon
Press, Oxford, 1984, p. 193.
16
Vine. THOMAS, C., "The Pragmatic Case
against Intervention" in FORBER, I. and
HOFFMAN, M., Political Theory,
International Relations and the Ethics of
Intervention, cit ,, pp. 91-103.
17
WHEELER, NJ, "Pluralist or Solidarist
Conceptions of International Society: Bull
and Vincent on Humanitarian
Intervention", Millenium, vol.21, nº3,
1992, p. 468.
18
HOFFMAN, M., «Agency, identity and
Intervention, in FORBES, I., and
HOFFMAN, M., Political Theory,
International Relations and the Ethics of
Intervention, Sant Martin Press, New
York, 1993, p. 194.
vencion ”is understood to be any form of
coercive interference in the internal
affairs of a State. As proclaimed in 1986
by the International Court of Justice in the
Nicaragua case, it includes the threat of
force, armed intervention, either in the
form of direct military intervention or
through support for the activities of
terrorist or paramilitary groups in
another State. , and even economic
sanctions or political measures if it is
proven that they have coercive effects.
Without thereby intending to interfere in
a terminological discussion or stipulative
claim that would further escape my
competence and, at least as regards those
cases in which it can also be classified as
humanitarian, I have chosen to reserve
the expression “intervention” for those
acts of interference in the territory or
affairs of another State that involve the
use of armed force. It seems that, outside
of legal and political language,
intervention is almost always spoken to
refer to an act of armed interference,
speaking in other cases of –simply– the
imposition of sanctions or the practice of
recommendations.
19
For Rawls, from the fact that borders
are historically arbitrary it does not
follow that their function in the law of
nations cannot be justified. The important
thing is not to wonder about this
arbitrariness, but about the values
promoted by the States. RAWLS, J., «Law
of People» in SHUTE, S. and HURLEY, S.
(eds), Of human rights, cit., P. 60. As
Walzer recognizes, it is probable that the
existing borders at a given moment are
arbitrary, poorly drawn, and the product
of old disputes. In any case, these lines
establish a habitable world. WALZER, M.,
Just and injust wars, cit., P. 56.
II. REASONS AGAINST THE INTERVENTION ... 22
twenty
Therefore, a distinction must be
made between the humanization
II. REASONS AGAINST THE INTERVENTION ... 24
102.
small to face certain challenges. However,
there is no other agency capable of
mobilizing the necessary resources and
organizing solutions for the problems that
affect citizens. On the other hand,
although there are those who have
interpreted the increase in the number of
interventions as a sign of the collapse of
the state system, this data could also
indicate a need to strengthen state
sovereignty23.
2. 3
FIXDAL, M. and SMITH, D.,
"Humanitarian Intervention and Just
War", cit., P. 289.
24
Vine. DE ASÍS ROIG, R., The paradoxes
of fundamental rights as limits of power,
Debate, Madrid, 1992, especially, pp. 80-
82. Vid., Also, DONNELLY, J.,
The soberand
27
WALZER, “The moral standing of the
States: A response to Four Critics”,
Philosophy & Public Affairs, Winter, 9, nº
2, 1980 ”, pp. 229-230.
28
Ibid, pp. 226-227.
29
Vine. CHOPRA, J. and WEISS, TG,
“Sovereignity is no longer Sacrosant:
Codifying Humanitarian Intervention”,
cit., Pp. 107-108; REISMAN, WM,
"Sovereignity and Human Rights in
Contemporary International Law", The
American Journal of International Law,
84, 1990, pp. 866-876.
much of the theoretical and practical
difficulties present for the implementation
and justification of humanitarian
interventions. Not in vain, it is frequent to
present the principle of non-intervention as
the indispensable corollary of the
recognition of equal sovereignty and
independence.States30. However, we are
faced with a very elastic concept, which
currently carries different meanings, from
which it is very revealing that it is
referred to as a legal principle, a political
concept, a collective right or a
philosophical category. This diversity of
meanings ends up generating a certain
confusion about the logic and type of
foundation that sovereignty provides for
the duty of non-interference: whether it is
only of a legal and political nature, or also
of a moral nature. Furthermore, the
internal and external dimensions of
sovereignty are not always rigorously and
clearly distinguished, thus producing a
certain confusion as to which is related to
the prohibition of intervention, if with
both or only with one of them.
30
Vine. RAMÓ N CHORNET,C., Necessary
violence? Humanitarian intervention in
International Law, Trotta, Madrid, 1995,
pp. 24 ss.
31
Vine. SCHMITT, C., "Political Theology"
in Political Studies, trans. by FJ Conde,
Doncel, Madrid, 1975.
32
PÉ REZ TRIVIÑ O, JA, The legal limits of
the sovereign, Tecnos, Barcelona, 1998, p.
57.
33
KRATOCHWIL, F., «Sovereignity as
dominium: Is there a right of
humanitarian intervention? », in LYONS,
G. & MASTANDUNO, M. (eds.), Beyond
Westphalia? National Sovereignty and
International Intervention, John Hopkins
University Press, Balttimore, 1995, p. 26.
However, the realist tradition initiated by
Hobbes carries an implicit paradox: if the
overcoming of the state of nature in the
sphere of the different national
communities leads to morally justify the
absolute and unlimited character of the
internal sovereignty of the States, the
situation is far from being the same in
international society made up of different
state units.The States are here in a
prepolitical bellum omnium condition
that, unlike the state of nature between
individuals, is an effective condition and
not purely hypothetical34, there being,
consequently, an unlimited natural right
of the States to invade the states. Borders
of other States35. According to this last
piece of information, it seems more
reasonable to reject that the States enjoy
a true moral personality36. That they end
the battle of opinions and that their
reason and will are the origin of the
justice that makes the existence of a
political society possible, is not a
sufficient reason to recognize them rights
of a similar nature in international
relations. In Hobbes and, above all, in all
the later realist theory clinging to this
anarchic image of the international
order37, State independence can only be
founded on means such as diplomacy,
mutual deterrence, balances of power,
etc., but never on moral principles. The
juridical-political character of
sovereignty, together with the ethical
skepticism that had at first made it
possible to justify its unlimited nature,
makes it unfeasible to establish a moral
right of non-interference.
3. 4
For Hobbes, “it is a fact that, in all ages,
kings and people who have sovereign
authority are, because of their
independence, in a situation of perennial
mutual distrust, in a state and disposition
of gladiators, pointing their weapons,
staring at each other, that is, at their
fortresses, garrisons and installed
cannons, on the borders of their
kingdoms, constantly spying on their
neighbors, in a bellicose attitude… ”.
HOBBES, T., Leviathan, trans. de C.
Mellizo, Alianza, Madrid, 1989, Ch. XIII, p.
108.
35
Vine. FERRAJOLI, L., «Sovereignty in the
modern world», cit., Pp. 135-136.
36
McCARTHY, L., "International Anarchy,
Realism and Non-Intervention," in
FORBES, I. and HOFF-MAN, M., Political
Theory, International Relations and the
Ethics of Intervention, St. Martin Press,
New York, 1993, p. 80.
37
Vine. BULL, H., The Anarquical
Society: A study of order in
w o r l d p o l i t i c s , MacMillan, London,
1977.
38
LUBAN, D., "Just Wars and Human
Rights", Philosophy and Public Affairs,
winter 1980, vol.9 (2), p. 166.
39
GARZÓ N VALDÉ S, E., «Interventionism
and Paternalism», cit., P. 388.
Right (understood as a limit and not a
mere vehicle of political will, as a ratio
and not as voluntaries) there is an
insurmountable tension. This is
something that, as we shall see, natural
rights theorists and only a couple of
centuries later internationalist legal
science will quickly grasp. As we know,
for a long time it has not tired of
repeating that human rights, regardless of
the legal basis for the duty of States to
respect them, have ceased to belong to
the category of matters that are
essentially of its jurisdiction. No State can
escape its international responsibility on
the pretext that this matter is essentially
one of its domine reservé40.
40
CHEEK SALCEDO, JA, Sovereignty
of States and Human Rights .., cit., P. 32.
41
Vine. HART, HLA, The Concept of
Law, trans. de G. Carrió , Abeledo-Perrot,
1992, pp. 89-97.
pio of humanitarian intervention42. In De
iure beli ac pacis, Grotius will declare that
if a tyrant makes his subjects victims of
atrocities, it does not follow from the fact
that subjects cannot take up arms that
others in a situation of responsibility
towards humanity as a whole do not. can
take up arms in defense of those: "When
the injustice is as clear as that of Busiris,
Falaris or the one that the Thracian
Diomedes exercised against his subjects,
that no just man would approve of it, then
the right of human society is not
inhibited. ”43. It is the subject of
discussion, however, whether this right of
intervention for humanitarian reasons
defended by Grotius can be seen as the
exercise by a State of the right of rebellion
of a people against tyranny44 or whether,
as Chesterman defends,
42
Vine . LAU TERPATC H, H., "The
Grotian Tradition in International Law",
British Year Book of International Law,
1946, p. 46. H. Vincent considers this
thesis somewhat exaggerated. Vine.
VINCENT, RJ, "Human Rights and
Intervention," in BULL, H., KINSBURY, B.
and ROBERTS, A. (eds), Hugo Grotius and
International Realtions. Clarendon Press,
Oxford, 1992, pp. 242 and 247.
43
GROCIO, H., De iure beli ac pacis, Book II,
chap. XXV, mp. 8.2.
44
TESÓ N, F., Humanitarian
Intervention, Dobbs Ferry, International
Publishers, 1988, p. 56.
Four. Five
CHESTERMAN, S., Just war or just
peace? Humanitarian Intervention and
International Law, Oxford University
Press, 2001, p. fifteen.
46
VATTEL. E., The Law of Nations:
Principles of the Law of Nature Applied to
the conduct and Affairs of the Nations and
Sovereign [1758], Carnegie Institution,
Washington, 1916,
51
Ibid, sec. 257, p. 131.
52
Ibid, p. 256.
53
HEGEL, WF, Philosophy of Law,
trans. by E. Vá squez, New Library, Madrid,
2000, sec. 257., p. 302.
54
TESON, FR, Humanitarian
Intervention: an inquiry intolaw and
morality, cit., p. 57.
arguments of natural law and organicism,
will go so far as to affirm that collective
subjects such as the State have a moral
body, a spirit, a true natural entity, which
can be considered a true moral person
and not a mere analogy of physical
persons55.
55
LÓ PEZ CALERA, NM, Are there
collective rights?
I n d i v i d u a l i t y and sociality in the theory
of rights,Ariel, Barcelona, 2000, p. 126.
56
MILL, JS, "A few words about non
intervention" in Collected Works, vol. XXI,
Es- says on Equality, Law and Education,
University of Toronto Press / Routledge
and Kegan Paul, Toronto / London, 1984,
pp. 109-124. On the anti-interventionism
of Mill Vid. VAROUXA-KIS, G., "John Stuart
Mill on Intervention and non
intervention", Millenium, vol. 26, num. 1,
1997, pp. 57-76. Interestingly, there are
those who have used paternalistic
arguments to reject humanitarian
interventions. This is the case of Elfstrom,
who argues that there is a relationship
between the government and the citizens
similar to that between father and son.
Only governments can interpret what are
the interests of citizens and, when this
does not happen, only they have the
responsibility to act. Thus, The tension
between the sovereignty of States and the
claims of the international community to
protect individual rights are quite similar
to those between the rights of parents to
raise their children and the demands of
society to protect basic rights of children
against parental abuse. ELFSTROM, G.,
“On dilemmas on intervention”, Ethics, 93,
1982-1983, pp. 709 sqq. For a critique of
this theory Vid. TESON, F., Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., Pp. 84-85. pp. 709 sqq.
For a critique of this theory Vid. TESON,
F., Humanitarian Intervention, cit., Pp. 84-
85. pp. 709 sqq. For a critique of this
theory Vid. TESON, F., Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., Pp. 84-85.
However, the analogy between the state
and the individual does not seem to
constitute a minimally solid basis on
which to assert the morality of state
rights. As Beitz has pointed out, states
lack the unity of consciousness and
rational will that constitutes the identity
of people. They are neither voluntary
associations nor organic wholes with the
integrity and unity attributed to people as
persons57. On the other hand, when
speaking of the rights of the States, it is
not specified who is the true holder of
them, the government or the people. The
invariable consequence of the Hegelian
myth is precisely the confusion between
the two58. Mill makes this confusion or
identification and, as we shall see, Walzer
seems to do as well.
57
BEITZ, C., Political Theory and
International Relations, cit., P. 47.
58
TENACITY, F., Humanitarian
Intervention: an inquiry into law and
morality, cit., P. 75.
59
On the domestic analogy vid.
SUGANAMY, H.,The domestic analogy and
world order proposals, Cambridge
University Press, 1989.
60
KRATOCHWIL, F., «Sovereignity as
dominium: Is there a right of
humanitarian intervention? », Cit., P. 3. 4.
61
LUBAN, D., "Just War and Human
Rights", cit., P. 164.
62
ROUSSEAU, JJ, Social contract,
trans. by Fernando de los Ríos, Espasa-
Calpe, Madrid, 1990, Book I, Ch. IV, p. 44.
63
WALZER, M., "The moral standing
of the States", pp. 212-213.
The idea that States enjoy an autonomous
moral meaning and possess international
rights independent of the rights of the
individuals that populate them64 is
misplaced. Tesó n does not clarify the way
in which this connection or derivation of
the rights of the State is produced from
those of the citizens, although it seems
reasonable to think that it is moving in
the coordinates of the liberal tradition
that considers that the State is born and
You have rights to protect the civil and
political liberties of individuals.
64
TESÓ N, F., Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., P. 16.
65
BEITZ, C., Political Theory and
International Relations, cit., Pp. 78-79.
The final part of Beitz's reasoning reveals
the impossibility of morally justifying the
State by invoking a criterion of formal
legitimacy such as the factual consent of
citizens manifested in the exercise of their
political autonomy. The latter would
allow –in Garzó n Valdés's terminology– to
speak of legitimation but not of
legitimacy, that is, of the conformity of
norms and acts with positive morality but
not with principles of critical morality. A
key element to explain it lies in the great
difference that, from an ethical point of
view, exists between the autonomy of the
individual and that of the State. What we
take into account to preach the moral
quality of individuals is the voluntary
acceptance of moral norms and their
compliance for non-prudential reasons.
Hence, respect for this autonomy is also
relevant even in the case of non-virtuous
people. On the contrary, and unlike
people, the legitimacy of a State can be
imposed heteronomously (Garzó n was
thinking of the imposition on South Africa
of the end of apartheid by foreign
pressure), the origin of the laws not being
relevant for the legitimacy judgment.
standards66.
But it is that, even in the event that we
grant to the autonomy of the States, to
their right of self-determination, a moral
status more or less equivalent to that of
individual autonomy, it would be
extremely difficult to protect under it the
violations of individual rights and
consequently, deprive legitimacy of
humanitarian interventions carried out in
defense of the latter. Just as when its
holder is the individual, the right to
autonomy does not confer unlimited
power but is constrained by the rights
and interests of other individuals, it
seems reasonable to assume that the right
to collective self-determination is also
limited by other moral considerations. ,
including individual rights67.
66
GARZÓ N VALDÉ S, E., «Interventionism
and Paternalism», cit., Pp. 388-389.
67
McCMAHAN, J., "Intervention and
Collective Self-Determination",
Ethics and International Affairs, vol.10,
1996, p. 17.
68
Vine. in this regard CASSESE, A., Self-
determinationf of peoples: a legal
repraisal, Cambridge University Press,
1996; LÓ PEZ CALERA, NM, Are there
collective rights ?, cit., Pp. 37-45; id,
Nationalism: guilty or innocent, Tecnos,
Madrid, 1995, pp. 54 ss; RUIZ RO-
DRÍGUEZ, S., The theory of the right of
self-determination of peoples, Center for
Political and Constitutional Studies,
Madrid, 1998.
individual rights69 or, at the very least,
that it makes their injury preferable to the
loss of political and territorial control.
While from the postula-For two
individualistic philosophical and political
individuals of Western culture, it is very
difficult to sustain a similar thesis, in
recent times it seems to have gained a
certain force outside the West, in
countries born of decolonization. In these,
not only has an interpretation of human
rights favorable to the right of self-
determination of the peoples
predominate or, in any case, more
collectivist or group compared to the
more individualistic of Western
countries70, but also, to At times,
despotic internal control has been
considered preferable to the more benign
and liberal forms of external control71. Of
the latter, it could be said that, like
Trostsky, they would consider the fascism
of a dominated country to be preferable
to the democracy of a dominant country.
69
TESÓ N, F., Humanitarian Intervention,
cit., P. 31.
70
VALLESPÍN, F., “Humanitarian
intervention: moral or political?”,
Western Magazine, nº 236-237, January,
2001, p. 54.
71
MAcMAHAN, J., "Intervention and
Collective Self-Determination", cit., P. 7.
According to Morris, this point of view
would be a relatively recent phenomenon.
Until the last century, the dominant rule
among most peoples - including
Europeans - was to consider a just and
efficient government under a foreign
power to be preferable to an unjust and
inefficient government under its own
government. Vine. MORRIS, C., An Essay
on the Modern State, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, 1998, ch. 8.
72
Vine. REISMAN, M., "Coercion and self-
determination: Contructing Charter
Article 2 (4)", American Journal of
International Law, 78, 1984, pp. 642-644.
73
Vid, CASSESE, A., "The Helsinki
Declaration and Self-Determination" in
BUERGENTHAL, T. (ed), Human Rights,
International Law and The Helsinki
record, Montclair, Allanheld, 1977, pp. 83-
84.
not to determine political freedom, but,
firstly, to interpret it in a quite different
sense, as the affirmation and protection of
community integrity, and, secondly, to
sustain its legitimacy on a relativistic
interpretation of international ethical
pluralism. The combination of these two
novelties makes Walzer's work a must-
see.
74
WALZER, M., Just and injust wars,
cit., P. 53.
75
Ibid, p. 54.
they did not have the moral right to
choose their form of government and
configure the policies that shape their
lives, external aggression would not be a
crime ”76.
76
Ibid.
77
WALZER, M., "The moral standing
of the States", cit., P. 211.
78
Ibid, p. 210.
79
Vine. KYMLICKA, W.,Multicultural
citizenship. A liberal theory of minority
rights,trad. de C. Castells, Paidó s,
Barcelona, 1995, p. 175.
strangers we would have no reason to
form and maintain political
communities80.
80
WALZER, M., The spheres of
justice, A defense of pluralism and
equality, trans. by Heriberto Rubio, Fondo
de Cultura Econó mica, Mexico, 1997, p.
75.
81
WALZER, M., "Responte to Bader",
Political Theory, vol.23, nº2, May, 1995, p.
248.
82
WALZER, M., Just and injut wars,
cit., P. 47.
83
Ibid, p. 51.
84
WALZER, M., The spheres of
justice, cit., P. 41.
more differences than similarities
between states and interpret in a very
specific sense both their rights and the
role of their political institutions. More
specifically, for Walzer, the State is “the
arena in which self-determination is
worked”, a space that provides the
peoples with autonomy and security to
develop and advance on their own, and
the rights of sovereignty are the means to
enforce borders, that is, the barriers that
allow people to feel secure not only in
their life and freedom but, fundamentally,
in their way of life. This communitarian
interpretation of popular sovereignty
rises, as Habermas shows, the aspect of
external sovereignty, moving to a second
term, as we will see in the next section,
the question of the legitimacy of the
internal order. Democratic self-
determination does not mean here the
symmetrical participation of free and
equal citizens in the decision-making and
legislation process, but rather the
collective self-assertion and self-
realization of homogeneous or
sympathetic members of a community85.
Understood as the self-assertion of one's
own way of life in the face of foreigners
who may endanger it, self-determination
would become both an almost
insurmountable barrier against
interventions and the foundation of the
right of States to choose their policies. of
admission of immigrants. This last right
would be found at the core of the
independence of a community as it
"represents the deepest meaning of self-
determination" 86. Democratic self-
determination does not mean here the
symmetrical participation of free and
equal citizens in the decision-making and
legislation process, but rather the
collective self-assertion and self-
realization of homogeneous or
sympathetic members of a community85.
Understood as the self-assertion of one's
own way of life in the face of foreigners
who may endanger it, self-determination
would become both an almost
insurmountable barrier against
interventions and the foundation of the
right of States to choose their policies. of
admission of immigrants. This last right
would be found at the core of the
independence of a community as it
"represents the deepest meaning of self-
determination" 86. Democratic self-
determination does not mean here the
symmetrical participation of free and
equal citizens in the decision-making and
legislation process, but rather the
collective self-assertion and self-
realization of homogeneous or
sympathetic members of a community85.
Understood as the self-assertion of one's
own way of life in the face of foreigners
who may endanger it, self-determination
would become both an almost
insurmountable barrier against
interventions and the foundation of the
right of States to choose their policies. of
admission of immigrants. This last right
would be found at the core of the
independence of a community as it
"represents the deepest meaning of self-
determination" 86. but rather the
collective self-assertion and self-
realization of homogeneous or
sympathetic members of a community85.
Understood as the self-assertion of one's
own way of life in the face of foreigners
who may endanger it, self-determination
would become both an almost
insurmountable barrier against
interventions and the foundation of the
right of States to choose their policies. of
admission of immigrants. This last right
would be found at the core of the
independence of a community as it
"represents the deepest meaning of self-
determination" 86. but rather the
collective self-assertion and self-
realization of homogeneous or
sympathetic members of a community85.
Understood as the self-assertion of one's
own way of life in the face of foreigners
who may endanger it, self-determination
would become both an almost
insurmountable barrier against
interventions and the foundation of the
right of States to choose their policies. of
admission of immigrants. This last right
would be found at the core of the
independence of a community as it
"represents the deepest meaning of self-
determination" 86. Self-determination
would become both an almost
insurmountable barrier against
interventions and the foundation of the
States' right to choose their policy of
admitting immigrants. This last right
would be found at the core of the
independence of a community as it
"represents the deepest meaning of self-
determination" 86. Self-determination
would become both an almost
insurmountable barrier against
interventions and the foundation of the
States' right to choose their policy of
admitting immigrants. This last right
would be found at the core of the
independence of a community as it
"represents the deepest meaning of self-
determination" 86.
85
HABERMAS, J., The inclusion of the
other, trans. de C. Velasco and G.Vilar,
Paidó s, Barcelona, 1999, pp. 127-129.
86
WALZER, M., The spheres of
justice, cit., P. 73.
87
KYMLICKA, W., Multicultural
Citizenship, cit., P. 174.
san your rights. The same is basedin a
special mode of consent that gives life to a
communitarian state: “over a long period
of time, shared experiences and different
kinds of cooperative activities form a
common life (common life). The contract
is a metaphor for a process of association
and reciprocity whose underlying
character is intended to defend the State
against external aggressions. This
protection does not extend only to
individual life and liberties but also to
common life and liberty, to the
independent community that they have
formed for which individuals are
sometimes sacrificed ”88. As he will also
say later, “the community is sustained in
the deepest way in a contract, a Burkian
contract between the living, the dead and
those who have not yet been born” 89. So
there is no what - subscribing to a
terminology coined by H. Arendt - Luban
calls a vertical contract between the
people and the State90. On the contrary,
on which the rights of the States rest is
the same that gives life to a community: a
tacit contract, which is simply a metaphor
to refer to the way in which, for years and
centuries, a human group, a people , a
nation, acquires its own identity, its
common life91.
88
WALZER, M., Just and injust wars,
cit., P. 54.
89
WALZER , M., "The moral standing
of the States", cit., P. 211.
90
LUBAN, D., "Just War and Human
Rights", cit., P. 169.
91
On the contract as a metaphor Vid.
JI MARTÍNEZ GARCÍA, The judicial
imagination, Debate, Madrid, 1990, pp.
175-76.
92
WALZER, M., The spheres of
justice., Cit., P. 12.
Existence and singularity in the
antagonistic role of sovereign subjects of
international law93.
217.
95
BÉ JAR, H., "The folds of openness:
pluralism, relativism and modernity" in
Cultural sovereignty
103
Mill only recognizes the validity of the
principle of non-intervention in relations
between civilized nations such as that of
European Christianity, admitting on the
contrary the conquest of barbarian
nations such as Algeria or India. Ibid, pp.
118-119.
104
Vine. CHOMSKY, N., "" In the name of
principles and values "" in The new
military humanism, Common Rough
Press, Monroe, 1999, pp. 1-23.
105
FERRAJOLI, L. "Guerra" etica "e
diritto", Ragion Practica, 13, 19L99, p.
124.
106
SEBRELI, JJ, The siege of modernity.
Critique of cultural relativism, Ariel,
Barcelona, 1992, p. 66.
that the protection of human rights
belongs to its internal jurisdiction107,
and to reject, therefore, the possibility of
a right of humanitarian interference.
Hence, in favor of the rule of non-
intervention a certain recognition of the
right to difference is adduced, while, on
the contrary, in the current trend of
generalizing the right of interference
there is a reappearance of Eurocentrism
that confuses the western with the
universal108.
107
BAYEFSKY, AF, “Cultural Sovereignity,
Relativism, and International Human
Rights: New Excuses for Old Strategies”,
Ratio Juris, vol.9, nº1, March, 1996, p. 43.
108
VELASCO ARROYO, JC, "Yesterday and
today of Kantian cosmopolitanism",
Isegoría, 16, 1997, p. 106. Along these
lines, it has been stated that, in the
absence of an agreement on the principles
that would govern the right to
humanitarian intervention, to allow
humanitarian intervention in such
circumstances is to accept that “the
interventions would always be based on
the cultural preferences of those who
have the power to carry them out ”.
BROWN, C., International reations theory:
New Normative Approaches, Harvester
Wheat sheaf, Hemel Hempstead, 1992, p.
113.
109
FELIÚ MARTÍNEZ, L., «Islam and
Human Rights: From the Umma to the
Individual» in BLANC ALTEMIR, A. (ed),
The Mediterranean: A common space for
cooperation, development and
intercultural dialogue, Tecnos, Madrid ,
1999, p. 163.
ethical and philosophical, they would
have continued to grow day by day110.
For this reason, Hun- tington considers
that the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights and international Covenants are
less relevant to much of the planet than
during the immediate post-World War II
era111
115
HUNTINGTON, SP, The clash of
civilizations and the reconfiguration of
the world order, cit., P. 65.
116
SCARTEZINI, R., "The reasons for
universality and difference", cit., P. 32.
117
CONTRERAS PELÁ EZ, F., "Three
versions of ethical-cultural relativism",
Person and Law, 38, 1998, p. 71.
118
GARZÓ N VALDÉ S, E., «Interventionism
and Paternalism», cit., P. 397.
for our own culture and societyin order to
discover them (normative relativism)
119.
119
Vid, among others, FRANKENA, WF,
Ethics, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey,
1973, p.
109.
120
RENTELN, AD, “Relativism and the
search for Human Rights”, American
Anthro-
127
Ibid, p. 214-215.
128
Ibid, p. 226.
129
Luban considers that it is legitimate to
intervene whenever there is a massive
violation of what Shue considers socially
basic human rights. LUBAN, D., "Just Wars
and Human Rights", cit., P. 175. For his
part, Tesó n defends a right of interference
as a remedy not only for egregious cases
of violation of human rights, such as
genocide, slavery or mass murder, but
also to put an end to situations of serious
oppression even - that it does not become
a genocide. TESÓ N, F., Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., P. fifteen.
Other types of reasons could have come
up: either utilitarian arguments, such as
the need to preserve international order
and security, which - if interventions are
admitted simply due to a deterioration or
lack of democratic freedoms - could be
seriously threatened, or the seriousness
that always - Pre involves the use of
force130; or to the proportionality that
must mediate between the degree of
seriousness of human rights violations
and the type of intervention to sustain - as
Eusebio Ferná ndez does - that military
interventions should be reserved
exclusively to prevent "the triumph of
what is radically intolerable ”131.
However, his correct conviction of Walzer
that not any kind of injustice or violation
of human rights is a sufficient reason to
intervene ends up being enveloped by the
language and the categories of normative
relativism, or more specifically, a
variation of the same that we could
qualify prima facie. According to this,
tolerance of the different forms of
political legitimacy would be justified by
our inability to know sufficiently the
history of other communities. This would
disable us to make concrete judgments of
their conflicts and harmonies, of their
historical choices and cultural affinities, of
their loyalties and resentments. Hence - at
least prima facie - the conduct of a
community can neither be known nor
judged132. of a variation of the same that
we could qualify prima facie. According to
this, tolerance of the different forms of
political legitimacy would be justified by
our inability to know sufficiently the
history of other communities. This would
disable us to make concrete judgments of
their conflicts and harmonies, of their
historical choices and cultural affinities, of
their loyalties and resentments. Hence - at
least prima facie - the conduct of a
community can neither be known nor
judged132. of a variation of the same that
we could qualify prima facie. According to
this, tolerance of the different forms of
political legitimacy would be justified by
our inability to know sufficiently the
history of other communities. This would
disable us to make concrete judgments of
their conflicts and harmonies, of their
historical choices and cultural affinities, of
their loyalties and resentments. Hence - at
least prima facie - the conduct of a
community can neither be known nor
judged132. of their historical choices and
cultural affinities, of their loyalties and
resentments. Hence - at least prima facie -
the conduct of a community can neither
be known nor judged132. of their
historical choices and cultural affinities, of
their loyalties and resentments. Hence - at
least prima facie - the conduct of a
community can neither be known nor
judged132.
130
Vine. BEITZ, C., “Non-intervention and
communal integrity”, cit., Pp. 389-391.
131
FERNÁ NDEZ, E., “Cosmopolitan loyalty
and humanitarian war interventions”, Re-
view of the West, 236, January, 2001, p.
63
132
WALZER, M., "The moral standing of
the states", cit., P. 212. For a critique of
this argument, see. LUBAN, D., “The
romance of the Nation State”, Philosophy
& Public Affairs, 9, nº4, 1980, pp. 392-
397.
They were combined with a reassuring
invocation of cultural relativism.
TheInternational peace was, from this
perspective, better guaranteed by
adopting a relativist rather than a
universalist perspective. The impression
is that this combination of caution and
relativism would be unacceptable today.
As Feyerabend asserts, peace efforts no
longer need to respect a presumed
cultural integrity that is often nothing
more than the rule of a tyrant133. It gives
the impression that, at present, rather
than representing a threat or denial of the
legitimacy of humanitarian interventions,
ethical-cultural relativism has ended up
unleashing a discourse that is more
favorable than damaging to them. This
has to do, without a doubt, with the
transformations of the world order that
have occurred in the last decade, and
even with the quenching of the relativistic
fury in both anthropology and moral
philosophy. But, in part, it is also the
product of its own success, of the
acceptance both on the legal-political and
philosophical levels, that the
predominantly Western version of human
rights enshrined in international texts
required a more or less profound
correction than make its observance
compatible with respect for cultural
diversity. The truth is that, as this revision
would not cover all rights but primarily
those that could be considered as more
“western” and, therefore, ignorant of the
different contexts and particularities
(absolute prohibition of differences by
reason of sex or confession, political
freedoms, freedoms of expression,
association, etc.), the rest would have
emerged strengthened and, apparently,
definitely immunized from the threat of
relativism. And, among these last rights,
would be those that constitute the most
direct foundation of humanitarian
interventions: the right to life and
personal liberty.
133
FEYERABEND, P., «Against cultural
ineffability. Objectivism, relativism and
other chimeras ”in GINER, S. and
SCARTEZINI, R. (eds), Universidad y
difference, cit., P. 41.
2. A JUSTIFICATION FOR
HUMANITARIAN
INTERVENTIONS IN THE
MINIMUM HUMAN RIGHTS
134
SEBRELI, JJ, The siege of modernity,
cit., P. 47.
135
On the relationships between
relativism and personal identity, vid.
GUTMANN, A., “The challenge of
Multiculturalism in Political Ethics”,
Philosophy and Public Affairs, vol.22, n.3,
summer, 1993, pp. 182 sqq.
136
RAWLS, J., Political Liberalism,
Columbia University Press, 1993, pp. 30-
32.
137
PAREKH, B., "Non-ethnocentric
universalism" in DUNNE, T. and
WHEELER, N. (eds), Human rights in
global politics, Cambridge University
Press, 1999, pp. 133-135.
3) On the other hand, it is totally
unjustified that the logic of relativist
discourse necessarily implies the defense
of tolerant attitudes towards foreign
moral systems. The value of tolerance
does not derive from relativism but is a
universal moral imperative. The relativist,
as such, cannot say anything for or
against tolerance from a moral point of
view since, from the moment he did so, he
would cease to be an observer of morality
and would become a defender of her. And,
in addition to being based on
contradictory reasoning, the thesis of the
link between normative relativism and
tolerance is discredited by historical
experience, making it possible to speak of
a psychosociological connection between
it and totalitarian ideology139.
141
NAGEL, T., Equality and partiality,
trans. by JF Alvarez, Paidó s, Barcelona,
1996, p. 172.
142
We could speak like this, following a
distinction that Peces-Barba applies to
the process of specifying rights but that
we could also transfer to that of their
internationalization, of the universality of
human rights as a point of arrival rather
than as a point. PECES-BARBA, G., "The
Universality of Human Rights", Doxa, 15-
16, 1994, p. 626.
143
BOBBIO, N, The time of rights, trans.
from R. De Asís, Sistema, Madrid, 1991, p.
60.
144
Vine. RUBIO CARRACEDO, J., «Liberal
Rights or Human Rights?», In RUBIO
CARRA-CEDO, J., TOSCANO, M. and
ROSALES, JM, Citizenship, Nationalism
and Human Rights, cit., Pp. 167-168.
a) To considerthe expression “human
rights” is a concept recognized in all
societies and cultures, but which they
define in terms of their own particular
values145. From this perspective, it
would be defended the possibility and
need for human rights (whose scope and
significance is universal) to be translated
and interpreted in the categories and
values of each culture.
twenty-one.
151
LUKES, S., "Five fables about human
rights", cit., P. 45. And it is that, as
153
SHUE, H., Basic rights: Subsistence,
Affluence and Us Foreign Policy, Pricenton
Uni-versity Press, 1980, pp. 74-78.
154
VINCENT, RJ, Human rights and
international relations, cit., P. 126.
155
RAWLS, J., The Law of Peoples,
Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
1999, p. 3.
156
Vine. RAWLS, J., «Derecho de Gentes»
in SHUTE, S. and HURLEY, S. (eds), On
human rights, cit., Note 2, p. 47.
157
“Within the political conception of
justice, we cannot define truth as given by
beliefs defined even in an idealized
consensus, regardless of how broad it
may be (…) Once we accept the fact that
reasonable pluralism is a permanent
condition of public culture under free
institutions, the idea of the reasonable is
more adequate as part of the basis of a
public justification ”. RAWLS, J., Political
Liberalism, cit., P. 129.
nable leads to obtaining a public basis for
justification having to adopt an impartial
point of view between the points of view
of reasonable general doctrines. The
combination of pluralism, the idea of
reasonableness and the search for a
public basis for justification translates
into the adoption of a strategy consisting
of starting with implicitly shared ideas
and converting them, through reflective
equilibrium, into a political conception
that can serve as axis of an overlapping
consensus. Therefore, like what happened
in Political Liberalism, The Law of Peoples
“is marked by a dominant concern for the
possibility and practicability of political
ideals when faced with cultural and
ideological pluralism (…) Rawls wants to
assure and assure us that his political
conception of international justice can be
the axis of an overlapping consensus,
because such a thing would show that it is
not only a modus vivendi, but that it can
gain reasoned support (in various ways)
from free and equal agents as rational and
reasonable ”158. The Law of Peoples
would thus be presided over by the
search for a middle ground between
liberalism and the acceptance of cultural
and ideological pluralism, between
factuality and validity, between realism
and utopia. rather, it can gain reasoned
support (in various ways) from free and
equal agents as rational and reasonable
”158. The Law of Peoples would thus be
presided over by the search for a middle
ground between liberalism and the
acceptance of cultural and ideological
pluralism, between factuality and validity,
between realism and utopia. rather, it can
gain reasoned support (in various ways)
from free and equal agents as rational and
reasonable ”158. The Law of Peoples
would thus be presided over by the
search for a middle ground between
liberalism and the acceptance of cultural
and ideological pluralism, between
factuality and validity, between realism
and utopia.
158
McCARTHY, T., “Unity in difference:
Reflections on cosmopolitan law”,
Isegoría, 16, 1997, p. 44.
159
RUBIO CARRACEDO, J., «International
Justice and Human Rights», cit., P. 198.
160
RAWLS, J., The Law of Peoples, cit., Pp.
65 and 79.
subsistence and security (rights tolife),
freedom from slavery, servitude and
armed occupation, personal property and
formal equality expressed in rules of
natural justice161. Thus, for example,
hierarchical societies (confessional
states) are not required to recognize
complete freedom of conscience but to
admit a certain amount, even if such
freedom is not, as is the case in liberal
regimes, the same for all individuals.
members of society 162.
161
Ibid, p. 79.
162
RAWLS, J., «Law of People», cit., P. 67.
163
Ibid, p. 75; id, The Law of Peoples, cit.,
p. 80 (italics added).
164
RAWLS, J., «Law of People», cit., P. 72.
theoretically irreducible165. The most
outstanding product of this process is a
restricted version of internationally
recognized human rights, but which, in
turn, can be predicated of not only formal
but also practical validity. Although, in the
opinion of his critics, the price may be an
excessive concession to the status quo
and the marginalization of the second
principle of "justice as fairness" 166,
there is no doubt that one of the real
advantages of his theory of international
justice lies in making the universality of a
hard core of rights and freedoms much
less questionable in whose defense it is
possible to resort, if necessary, even
through armed intervention.
165
MAcCARTHY, T., "Unity in
difference ...", cit., P. 46.
166
Vine. POGGE, T., "An egalitarian Law of
Peoples", Philosophy & Public Affairs, 23,
1994, pp. 195-224.
167
WALZER, M., Just and injust wars, cit.,
P. 107.
168
About the predominance of
communitarian elements over
individualists in Walzer's justification of
humanitarian intervention, Vid. RUIZ
MIGUEL, A., "The humanitarian war
interventions", Keys of Practical Reason,
68, 1996, pp. 17-18.
turns savagely against its members, we
must doubt the very existence of a
political community to which the idea of
self-determination could be applied. To
speak in these cases of community or self-
determination - concludes Walzer - seems
cynical and irreverent169.
169
WALZER, M., Just and Injust wars, cit.,
Pp. 100-101.
170
WALZER, M Moralidad en el local y
internacional, translation and preliminary
study by R. del Aguila, Alianza, Madrid,
1996, p. 42.
171
Vine. HAMPSHIRE, S., Innoncence and
Experience, Harvard University Press,
Massachusetts, 1989, esp. pp. 72-78.
172
WALZER, M., Morality at the local and
international level, cit., P. 47.
173
Ibidem, p. 49.
But what would be the content of this
minimal morality? Walzer is clear that the
international moral consensus will be
more evident if it is posed in a negative
way, noting that it is very likely that the
result of such effort is a group of negative
mandates against murder, lies, torture,
oppression and tyranny175. As can be
seen, these standards largely coincide
with the minimal content of Hart's
Natural Law and with the type of moral
agreement that, according to Raz, can be
appreciated in many advanced industrial
societies176. But Walzer is speaking of a
moral minimum that is not domestic but
universal, and, at this point, he recognizes
that the presumption of non-intervention
(and of the legitimacy of States in
international society) could be considered
a feature of that moral minimum. .
However,
174
Vine. BOBBIO, N., «The
modeliusnaturalista », in Studies in the
History of Philosophy. From Hobbes to
Gramsci, trans. de JC Bayó n, Debate,
Madrid, 1985, p. 86.
175
WALZER, M., Morality at the local and
international level, cit., P. 49.
176
RAZ, J., "The politics of the Rule of
Law", in Ethics in the public domain:
essays on morality of law and politics,
Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1995, p. 372.
177
WALZER, M., Morality at the local and
international level, cit., Pp. 48-49.
178
M. WALZER, The spheres of justice,
cit., P. 13.
countries in the USSR, Cambodia, Rwanda,
etc. So dramaticEpisodes in our more
recent history would explain, in Ignatieff's
view, that modern moral universalism “is
based not so much on hope as on fear, not
so much on the optimism that awakens
the human capacity for good, as on the
panic produced by its capacity for evil,
not so much in the man who created his
own history as in the enemy that may
result for his own species ”179.
181
As Vincent and Wilson argue, the basic
aspect of basic human rights is that they
impose duties on everyone and not just
on governments. VINCENT, RJ and WIL-
SON, P., "Beyond non-intervention" in
FORBES, I. and HOFFMAN, M., Political
Theory, International Relations, and the
Ethics of Intervention, cit., P. 123. On the
correlation between rights and duties in
basic human rights vid. PANICHAS, GE,
"The structure of basic human rights",
Anuario de Derechos Humanos, 7, 1990,
pp. 113-140.
IV. THE COST OF WARS IN DEFENSE OF HR. 68
182
TESÓ N, F., “Collective Humanitarian
Intervention”, Michigan Journal of
International Law, 17, winter, 1998, p.
323.
183
RUIZ MIGUEL, A., "Humanitarian war
interventions", cit., Pp. 19-20.
184
IGNATIEFF, M., Virtual war. Kosovo
and Beyond, Metropolitan Books, New
York, 2000, p. 6.
rias, has been especially criticized by
advocates of a renewed version of the just
war tradition. As is well known, the origin
of this doctrine dates back to Agustín de
Hipona (The City of God), but its concepts
were not elaborated until the 13th
century by the work of Thomas Aquinas.
The greatest development and application
of the doctrine will take place in the 16th
and 17th centuries by Vitoria (Relectio de
Indis) with its theory of ius
comunicationis185 and, later, by Grotius,
who will give it a more legalistic imprint.
Although it is a theory enlightened by
Christian theology and, therefore, of
Western origin, there are those who
advocate Jihad as a comparable Islamic
version186.
185
Vine. In this regard, PÉ REZ LUÑ O, AE,
“Interventions for reasons of humanity.
An approach from the Spanish classics of
the philosophy of law ”, Revista de
Occidente, nº 236-237, January, 2001, pp.
71-90; RAMÓ N CHORNET, C., Necessary
violence? .., cit., Pp. 29 sqq.
186
Vine. RAMSBOTHAM, O., “Islam,
Christianity, and Forcible Humanitarian
Intervention”, Ethics and International
Affairs, 12, 1998, pp. 88-89; JOHNSON, JM,
"Historical Roots and Sources of the Just
War Tradition in Western Culture" in
KELSELY, J. and JOHNSON,
187
FIXDAL, M. and SMITH, D., “Just War
and Humanitarian Interventions”, cit., Pp.
287-288.
188
TESON, F., Humanitarian Intervention,
cit., P. 117; BEITZ, C., Political Theory and
International Reations, cit., P. 91.
189
WALZER, M., On tolerance, trans. by F.
Alvarez, Paidó s, Barcelona, 1998, p. 36.
190
DWORKIN, R., Serious Rights,
trans. by M.Guastavino, Ariel,
Barcelona,1984, pp. 279 sqq.
191
HARE, RM, Moral thinking: Its Levels,
Methods and Points, Claredon Press,
Oxford,1981, pp. 26 sqq.
They would be strong enough to know
that, without having to provide factual
information or having to deliberate, know
that it is correct to intervene.
192
However, it is not appropriate to
exaggerate the moral entity of this effect.
Like Comet Ignatieff, some psychologists
have pointed out that exposure to
suffering through television contributes
to increasing distance and ends up
generating a “compassion fatigue”:
“Television personalizes, humanizes, but
also depoliticizes moral relationships, and
in doing so weakens the understanding
on which empathy and moral
commitment depend. The virtual vices of
television therefore deserve some space
in our explanation of the “fatigue of
compassion” and the “fatigue of charity”,
of the growing little predisposition of the
rich and well-fed public to give
humanitarian aid or support foreign aid
from governments. The actual distance
has been drastically reduced by visual
technology, but the moral distance
remains intact. If we are fatigued, it is
because we feel assailed by heterodox
and promiscuous appeals and requests
for help from all corners of the world. The
moral narratives have been trivialized by
a repetition as a consequence of which
they have lost their impact and force ”.
IGNATIEFF, M., "The Stories we tell:
Television and Human Aid" in MOORE, J
(ed), Hard Choices. Moral Dilemmas in
Humanitarian Intervention, Rowman and
Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, 1999, p.
295. The moral narratives have been
trivialized by a repetition as a
consequence of which they have lost their
impact and force ”. IGNATIEFF, M., "The
Stories we tell: Television and Human
Aid" in MOORE, J (ed), Hard Choices.
Moral Dilemmas in Humanitarian
Intervention, Rowman and Littlefield
Publishers, Lanham, 1999, p. 295. The
moral narratives have been trivialized by
a repetition as a consequence of which
they have lost their impact and force ”.
IGNATIEFF, M., "The Stories we tell:
Television and Human Aid" in MOORE, J
(ed), Hard Choices. Moral Dilemmas in
Humanitarian Intervention, Rowman and
Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, 1999, p.
295.
193
Ibid, pp. 35-39.
14
Ibid, p. 43. As Waldron argues, if rights
themselves collide then the spectrum of
exchanges is reintroduced. It may happen
that, when identifying those interests that
should not be sacrificed to the profit
calculation, we are still selecting interests
that
Ultimately, human rights, their massive
and serious violation, may not be enough
to justify an act of humanitarian
interference. There is no doubt that a)
they make up a set of principles of justice
endowed with universal validity and b)
that the principle of non-intervention
does not have a higher moral or legal
value than that of human rights. As
Garzon Valdés points out, it is obvious
that statement a) implies the prohibition
of violating said principles and that from
statement b) it can be inferred c) that is,
that armed intervention is not only not
prohibited in some cases, but also it may
be permitted and even mandatory. But, as
the Argentine philosopher rightly insists,
between a), b) and c) there is no
relationship of implication:
Humanitarian consequences.
Proportionality,just cause, last resort
and humanitarian outcome
198
As Beitz points out, the seriousness of
military intervention is not that it is
intervention, but that it is military, thus
endangering the lives and well-being of
citizens. BEITZ, C., "Justice and
International Relations", Philosophy and
Public Affairs, 1975, p. 389.
199
GARZON VALDES, E., "Guerra e diritti
humani", cit., P. 47.
unsustainable nests, both ethically and
legally, due to the changes that have
occurred in the last century. The
phenomenon of contemporary warfare,
with the extremely powerful destructive
means created by military technology, has
a different nature from traditional warfare
from which the idea of “just war” takes
shape. Not only the atomic but also the
conventional one consisting of the
launching of missiles and bombing, has
turned war into a meansof inordinate and
uncontrollable destruction. Consequently,
after the great massacres of the century
just ended, the war seems, by its intrinsic
characteristics, an absolute evil with
respect to which all the old naturalistic
limits have ended up being
insufficient200.
200
FERRAJOLI, L., “Guerra“ etica ”e
diritto”, cit., Pp. 121-123.
201
IGNATIEFF, M., Virtual war, cit., Pp. 6-
7 and 213-214.
202
See in this regard BROWN, C., “A
qualified defense of the use of force for
humanitarian reasons”, in BOOTH, K. (ed),
The Kosovo tragedy. The Human Rights
Dimensions, The International Journal of
Human Rights, vol.4, nums. ¾, Autum-
Winter, 2000, p. 288.
Thus, the answer of the iustum bellum
doctrine is that the deaths caused by the
intervention can be assumed from a
moral perspective if they meet certain
requirements.
210
GARZÓ N VALDÉ S, E: "Guerra e diritti
humani", Ragion Practica, 1999, 13, p. 46.
211
Hence, Vincent locates the future of
humanitarian interventions in the
development of cosmopolitan moral
sentiments between states and their
respective civil societies. VINCENT, RJ,
Human rights and International Relations,
cit., P. 127. For his part, Wheeler
considers that the acceptance by the
world community of a right to
humanitarian intervention would require,
among other factors, that those who work
for human rights in NGOs, universities
and the media mobilize opinion publishes
towards a new and practical moral
consensus for the protection and
promotion of human rights. WHEELER,
NJ, Saving stangers, cit., P. 310.
212
HASSNER, P, "From War and Peace to
Violence and Intervention" in J. MOORE
(ed), Moral Dilemmas in Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., P. 24.
moral diction. On the contrary, warsrisk
assumes that our lives concern us more
than those of those for whose salvation
we intervene213, and also contains the
danger pointed out by Ignatieff that those
who are safe from danger are no longer
constrained by the consequences of their
actions, to the point of turning war into a
sport “that allows the pleasure of the
spectacle with the added emotion that it
is real for some but not, happily, for the
spectator214.
213
KAHN, P, “War and Sacrifice in
Kosovo”, Philosophy and Public Policy, 19,
Spring-Summer, 1999.
214
IGNATIEFF, M., Virtual War, cit., P.
161.
215
CAVANAGH HODGE, P, "Casual war:
Nato's Intervention in Kosovo", Ethics and
International Affairs, 14, 2000, pp. 49 and
53. A harsh criticism of the media used by
NATO in Kosovo and of the humanitarian
consequences of this intervention can be
seen in RE- MIRO BROTONS, A, “A new
order against international law: the case
of Kosovo”, Magazine Electronics of
International Studies, 1, 2000, pp. 8-9.
Web address: http: //www.reei.org/.
216
GARZÓ N VALDÉ S, E: "Guerra e diritti
humani", cit., P. 46.
The problem of collateral damage has,
however, traditionally been overcome
thanks to the finalist conception of
interventions predominant in
internationalist literature. According to it,
what must be addressed in order to
consider an intervention as humanitarian
is not so much its results as its
humanitarian intention is certified. This is
what the just war doctrine knew as
straight intentio. Hence, among other
things, collateral damage is justified using
the Thomist "double effect" theory,
consisting of justifying any harm caused
to non-combatant civilians, arguing that
the author's intention was not to cause it
but to achieve a good. Namely,
220
CALLINICOS, A., «The ideology of
humanitarian Intervention» in TARIQ, A.,
Masters of the Universe? Nato's Balkan
Crussade, Verso, London, 2000, pp. 175-
189.
221
These critics humanitarian
interventions do not exclude the possible
legitimacy of all interventions but only
oppose the particular forms of North
American and European diplomacy that
have emerged after the end of the Cold
War and the emergence of the unipolar
world order. For these authors,
hegemonic democracies selectively use
the rhetoric of humanitarianism to
validate the protection of their military
power and economic hegemony.
MERTON, J., “Legitimizing the Use of
Force in Kosovo”, Ethics and International
Affairs, 2001, p. 135.
222
HAMMOND, P. and HERMAN, ES (eds),
Degraded Capability. The Media and the
Kosovo Crisis, Pluto Press, Sterling, 2000,
pp. 7-8; ALI, T., Masters of the Universe?
Nato's Balkan Crusade, cit., P. IV.
The incongruity manifested between
attitudes in the case of China and that of
Kosovo also raises serious doubts about
the real intentions of the intervening
parties and - what is more serious -
weakens confidence in the effectiveness
of human rights as a guide for political
action. of the States223.
223
GARZÓ N VALDÉ S, E., "Guerra e diritti
humani", cit., P. 41.
224
WHEELER, NJ, Saving stangers, cit, pp.
38-39.
225
Ibid, p. 40.
Today it is not easy in western
democracies to endanger soldiers,
humanitarian interventions are, above all,
military actions that are directed against
people who use force and violate the
peace, so they “will be ineffective if they
do not there is a willingness to accept the
risks that military actions entail:
bloodshed, soldiers' casualties, etc. ”226.
226
WALZER, M, "The reasons to
intervene", Letter International, 40,
September-October, 1995, p. 18. This
article is the Spanish translation of "The
Politics of Rescue", Dissent, Winter, 1995,
pp. 35-41.
227
DUPI (Danish Institute of International
Affairs), Humanitarian Intervention: Legal
and Political Aspects, Copenhagen, 1999,
p. 106. Web address:http:
//www.dupi.deca/webxt/ humint /.
228
Vine. DUNNE, T., and KROSLAK, D.,
“Genocide: Knowing what it is that we
want to remerber, or forget of forgive”, in
BOOTH, K. (ed), The Kosovo tragedy. The
Human Rights Dimenssions, The
International Journal of Human Rights,
vol. 4, nums. ¾, Autum-Winter, 2000, pp.
27-46.
229
Vine. CARRILLO SALCEDO, JA,
Sovereigntyof States and Human Rights
in Contemporary International Law, cit., p.
118.
Minimizing humanitarian
consequenceslike those outlined, it would
also seem to demand that military
intervention be the last resort available to
put an end to massive human rights
violations. According to this requirement,
all political and diplomatic means must
have been previously exhausted before
deciding to intervene. The use of force can
sometimes be necessary and therefore
legitimate, but if a just cause can be
achieved through non-violent methods,
the parties have a moral and prudential
obligation to prefer those means. We are
surely facing one of the conditions for
interventions that raises the greatest
difficulties and dilemmas both for the
intervening States and for the
international community.
230
In the opinion of P. Andrés, after the
appearance of a simple political
agreement, the Rambouillet Accords
contain the harshest conditions that have
been imposed on a State after the end of
World War II, with the aggravating
circumstance that they are not the result
of a post-war imposition. The depth of
Rambouillet's implications makes what
was presented as an unacceptable
Yugoslav rejection more understandable.
ANDRÉ S SAÉ NZ DE SANTA MARÍA, P.,
“Kosovo: everything for International Law
but without International Law”,
Meridiano Ceri, August, 1999, pp. 2-4.
231
BRIAN HEHIR, J., "Military Intervention
and National Sovereignity" in MOORE, J.
(ed), Moral Dilemmas in Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., P. Four. Five.
232
On this point Vid. WHEELER, N.,
Saving stangers, cit., P. 35.
humanitarian opportunity cost, that is, the
lives that would be lost and the human
rights that would cease to be protected by
choosing to intervene in one
humanitarian setting rather than another.
For example, one might wonder about the
lives and rights that would have been
rescued and protected if, instead of
intervening in a country where the
population is being the victim of genocide
or ethnic cleansing, the same human and
economic means are used to end poverty
or underdevelopment that is leading so
many or even more people to death and
misery233. If, applying a well-known
argument of P. Singer, we admit that
intervening is a requirement imposed by
the duty of assistance towards those who
suffer massive and systematic violation of
their rights and most basic needs without
sacrificing anything of comparable moral
significance234 , It would seem of
minimal coherence that situations such as
those indicated should have an
international response as strong or even
stronger than the one that takes life in
humanitarian war operations235. A
contradiction that, as we have seen,
Parekh attributes to the cultural
specificity of our conception of
humanitarianism, but which could also be
attributed to the apparently greater
helplessness in which those who are
victims of genocide find themselves
compared to those who are victims of
poverty. or underdevelopment.
239
TESÓ N, F., Humanitarian Intervention,
cit., Pp. 120-121.
240
LUCKES, S., "Five fables about human
rights", cit., P. 33
241
IGNATIEFF, M., Virtual war, cit., P. 76.
242
WALZER, M., "The moral standing of
the states", cit., Pp. 213-214, footnote 7.
Finally, we can contemplate the political
and moral consequences that, for those
who are in a position to do so, would
derive from not intervening. But are there
really such consequences? If these
situations only have effects outside our
borders, how can doing nothing to save
those who are victims of their own rulers
or compatriots affect us? Ignatieff
attributes the lack of a more supportive
response to those who find themselves in
these or similar situations to the deeply
rooted idea that "their" security and
"ours" can be separated, to the fact that
their destiny and ours are differentiated
by history, chance and good luck 243.
Feeling moral compassion for the victims
has not been enough to embark on a
stronger commitment to their suffering.
Just the realization that, Sooner or later,
these acts will end up having
repercussions on our “safety zone” and
may cause us to perceive the need to
leave it and intervene in its “danger zone”.
In this sense, Walzer has pointed out that,
although the civilized world can, without
a doubt, coexist with behaviors of the
most uncivilized, behaviors of this kind
tend to spread, to be imitated or repeated
if they are not combated. Therefore, “if
the moral price of silence and insecurity
is paid, the political price of disorder and
illegality will soon have to be paid in
places closer to us” 244. And, in addition
to being politically disadvantageous in the
medium or long term, adopting a passive
attitude in the face of barbarism carries
the risk of disengagement, of non-
involvement that threatens the self-
respect and moral character of the
population245.
243
IGNATIEFF, M., The honor of the
warrior, cit., P. 105.
244
WALZER, M., "The reasons to
intervene", cit., P. 19.
245
VALLESPÍN, F., "Intervention
humanitarian: political or moral ?, cit., p.
59. Vid. LUTT-WAK, E., "Toward Post-
heroic Warfare", Foreign Affairs, 1995, pp.
109-122 .;
246
Vine. GARRETT, SA, Doing good and
doing well. An examination of
humanitarian intervention, Praeger
Publishers, Westport, 1999, p. 8.
newer of this order, such as human rights.
However, it is stated that despite their
unquestionable reforming and utopian
power, neither at the time of writing the
UN Charter247, nor even today, would
they seem to have acquired sufficient
status to establish themselves under the
protection of such operations.
Furthermore, the protection of human
rights could be seriously undermined
throughout the world by the escalation of
violence and by the disorders and
disagreements that almost always
accompany interventions248.
247
Vine. MURPHY, SD, Humanitarian
Intervention. The United Nations in an
Evolving World Order, University of
Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1996,
pp. 66 et seq.
248
CHARNEY, JI, “Anticipatory
H u m a n i t a r i a n I n t e r v e n t i o n in
Kosovo ”, American Journal of
International Law, 93, 1999, p. 835.
249
UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY, Resolution
2625 (XXV), October 24, 1970.
domaine I reservedof a State250 Do both
concur in the case of interventions for
reasons of humanity? If we pay attention
to the very consolidated opinion both
among the doctrine and in the
declarations of the last secretaries
general of the UN, today almost no one
doubts that human rights are no longer a
matter of the internal jurisdiction of the
States. . The presumed illegality of
humanitarian interventions could not
arise, therefore, from the fact that they
are acts that interfere with the
sovereignty of a State. The coercive
nature of the interventions –not so much
their damaging nature to the sovereignty
of other States– thus becomes not only
their main ethical and political problem
but also their greatest legal weakness. It
is therefore in this dimension of the same
where the question must be placed about
their conformity or not with international
law. It will therefore be necessary to
determine, once the general prohibition
of the use of force in article 2.4 has been
established. of the Charter, if this form of
violence, which are humanitarian
interventions, can be covered by some of
the exceptions to this principle.
The Charter only contemplates two
exceptions to this rule: self-defense,
individual or collective in the event of an
armed conflict against a Member State
(Article 51) and the implementation,
under authorization by the Security
Council, of measures destined to maintain
or restore international peace and
security (Chapter VII, arts. 39 ff.). Could
humanitarian interventions be included
under either of these two exceptions? The
answer will depend on how concepts such
as “internal jurisdiction”, “territorial
integrity” or “threat to international
peace” are interpreted and the powers
that are recognized by the Security
Council, and the truth is that one thing
and another They are closely linked to the
different international scenarios that have
been taking shape since the approval of
the Charter until today. As is known, In
these, the possibilities of humanitarian
interventions, their risks and political and
military effects have varied, as well as the
place that human rights occupy in the
configuration of the legal and political
(we cannot say the same of the economic)
world order. In this sense, it is necessary
to differentiate between the effects of the
interventions on the international order
before and after the bipolar epoch, that is,
between the period of time that elapses
between 1945 and 1989 and the one that
begins in this annus mirabilis until today.
250
TESÓ N, F., "Collective Humanitarian
Intervention", cit., Pp. 325-329.
they had. During these decades, the
reaction to the horror of totalitarian
domination, of genocide within the
borders of States such as the USSR, China,
Cambodia, etc., was paralyzed by the fear
of the even greater genocide of the atomic
war, which it would have meant the death
of hundreds of millions of people and the
almost certain complete destruction of
the planet251. The force of these fears
was added to the fact that, during this
period, a large number of current UN
member states - those that emerged from
the decolonization of Africa, Asia and
Oceania - will see the light of day. show as
strong defenders of the principle of non-
intervention. Besides being unrealistic
and reckless, Any attempt to undertake a
humanitarian armed operation in this
context would have necessarily failed due
to the veto power that Chapter VII of the
Charter attributes to the five permanent
members of the Security Council: the
United States, China, Great Britain, France
and the USSR. (today Russia). The greater
or lesser possibilities contained in the
Charter to authorize a humanitarian
armed intervention were thus barely
glimpsed.
The end of bipolarity created a much
more favorable scenario for humanitarian
interventions, as supported by the
different operations that have taken place
since then: Iraqi Kurdistan (1991),
Somalia (1992-1993), Haiti (1994),
Rwanda (1994) , Bosnia (1995), Kosovo
(1999), and East Timor (1999). Beginning
in the 1990s, China and Russia adopted a
posture of abstention rather than veto of
Security Council decisions. The
possibilities contained in Chapter VII of
the Charter were then shown to make
possible an organized and
institutionalized response by the
international community to humanitarian
crises of the first order such as those
indicated.
251
HASSNER, P, "From War & Peace to
Violence & Intervention", in MOORE, J.
(ed),
252
TESÓ N, F., “Collective humanitarian
Intervention”, cit., P. 338-339.
253
MURPHY, SD, Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., P. 285.
254
DUPI, Humanitarian Intervention, cit.,
P. 69.
people. The evidence in this regard
indicates that quantitatively said well-
being is much more threatened by
massive violations of human rights by the
governments themselves than by
international armed conflicts. The second
reason to justify a flexible interpretation
by the Security Council is based on the
greater propensity to embark on acts of
aggression towards its neighbors of the
States within whose borders there are
massive and systematic violations of
human rights255.
255
MURPHY, SD, Humanitarian
Intervention, cit., Pp. 290-292.
256
DUPI, Humanitarian Intervention, cit,
p. 74.
257
REMIRO BROTONS, A. and others,
International Law, MacGraw-Hill, Madrid,
1997, pp. 943-944.
uncertainties about the events that cause
them, the motives of the States to
intervene, the possible consequences that
these would have, etc. Hence, what beats
behind the requirement of the collective
of interventions is the moral and political
conviction that we are in the presence of
trials and decisions that cannot be
entrusted to a State but to all nations258 .
260
GUTIÉ RREZ ESPADA, C., «The use of
force, humanitarian intervention and free
determination (the Kosovo war)» in
BLANC ARTEMIR, A, The international
protection of human rights fifty years
after the universal declaration, Tecnos ,
Madrid, 2001,
p. 1.
262
ANDRÉ S SÁ ENZ DE SANTA MARÍA, P.,
“Kosovo: Everything for International Law
264
CHARNEY, J., “Anticipatory
Humanitarian Intervention in Kosovo ”,
cit., P. 839-840; CHOMSKY, N., A new
generation draws the line. East Timor and
the Standard of the West, Verso, New
York, 2001, p. 36. During the bombing
campaign, the US Secretary of Defense,
Willian Cohen, put the number of victims
at at least 100,000. However, the forensic
teams of the International Criminal Court
in The Hague had failed in August 2000 to
find more than 2000 or 3000. The
number of alleged victims of the ethnic
cleansing carried out by the Serbs against
Kosovar Albanian citizens was
exaggerated by the high command of
NATO to justify their intervention. Vine.
the information collected in El Mundo,
Saturday August 16, 2000, p. 12.
265
DUNNE, T. and KROSLAK, D.,
“Genocide: Knowing what it is that we
want to recall, or forget, or forgive”, cit.,
Pp. 37 and 41.
266
Vine. WESTENDORP, C., "Kosovo, The
Lessons of Bosnia", Foreign Policy, XIII,July-
August, 1999, nº 70, pp. 45-58.
267
CHARNEY, J., "Anticipatory
Humanitarian Intervention", cit., P. 841.
In the same sense ANDRÉ S SÁ ENZ DE
SANTA MARÍA, P., “Kosovo: everything for
international law…”, cit., P. 8.
268
CASSESE, A., “Ex iniuria oritur: Are we
Moving towards International
Legitimation of Forcible Humanitarian
Countermeasures in the World
Community?”, Europan Journal of
International Law, 10, 1999, p. 25. On the
nature of the moral dilemmas present in
humanitarian interventions, Vid.
JOHNSON, P, "Intervention and moral
dilemmas" in FORBES, I. and HOFFMANN,
M., Political Theory, International
Relations and the Ethics of Intervention,
cit., Pp. 61-72.
Referring in a case like this to an eventual
and necessary reform of the decision-
making mechanisms of the United Nations
can be, as Virgilio Zapatero points out, a
way of escaping the dilemma of choosing
legality or morality. In the meantime, this
reform does not take place. Will humanity
helplessly assist policies of genocide or
ethnic cleansing given the inability of the
Security Council to make certain decisions
in this regard? 269
269
ZAPATERO, V., "Presentation", cit., Pp.
10-11.
270
General Report of the UN Secretary
General to the General Assembly,
September 20, 1999.
271
On this aspect Vid. ARCOS RAMÍREZ, F.,
Legal certainty: a formal theory,
Dykinson, Madrid, 2000, pp. 403-409.
272
CHARNEY, "Anticipatory
Humanitarian Intervention", cit., P. 838.
273
FARER, TJ, “Human Rights in Law's
Empire: The Jurisprudence War”, The
American Journal of International Law,
85, 1991, pp. 117 sqq.
international, interventionhumanitarian
would not be covered by the state of need.
The following two reasons could be
adduced in favor of this conclusion. The
first, that the doctrine of the state of
necessity has a very restricted scope,
requiring for its concurrence the presence
of an essential interest of the intervening
State not comparable to the violated
interest of the State object of the
intervention. The second, that it is highly
debatable that the state of necessity can,
in any case, justify the use of armed force
against another State, a possibility that
seems to be reserved exclusively for
legitimate defense274.
274
lDUPI, Humanitarian Intervention.
Legal and Political Aspects, cit., P. 94.
275
ROLDÁ N BARBERO, J., Democracy and
International Law, Civitas, Madrid, 1994,
p. 174.
ble with article 2.4. insofar as it is based
on a subsidiary responsibility of member
states to maintain international peace and
security that would come into operation
when the Security Council is unable to
fulfill its responsibilities under article 2.4
and chapter VII of the Charter 276. An
attempt has also been made to defend the
legality of NATO's intervention in the
existence of a gap in the collective
security system of the Charter,
specifically, the absence of a normative
solution in the event that the UN is
blocked, not being able to then authorize
or direct a necessary action. For Weckel,
this void should be filled by recognizing
the right of States to do what they deem
to maintain threatened international
peace and security277.
280
RIPOLL CARULLA, S., “The Security
Council and the defense of human rights.
Reflections from the case of Kosovo ”,
Spanish Journal of International Law, LI,
1999, p. 61.
281
Ibid, p. 94.
282
WHEELER, N., Saving Stangers, cit., Pp.
297-298.
the concurrence of such formally illegal
acts as an evolution towards something
better.
287
GURIÉ RREZ ESPADA, C., «Use of force,
humanitarian intervention and free
determination», cit., P. 217.
288
CASSESE, A, "Ex inuria oritur ...", cit., P.
26.
289
GUTIÉ RREZ ESPADA, C., «The use of
force, humanitarian intervention and free
determination», cit., Pp. 216-217. The TIJ
resolution is the judgment of July 11,
1996, issue on the application of the
Convention on the prevention and
punishment of genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Yugoslavia), ICJ Recueil,
1996, pp. 595 ss, mp. 31, in fine (p. 616).
290
ANNAN, K., Millennium Report, 2000,
pf. 219. Web address:http://www.un.org/
spanish / millennium / sg / report /.
aggravated states. This empowers other
States and international organizations to
make use of responses other than those
contemplated for criminal
responsibility291.
291
CASSESE, A., "Ex inuria oritur ...", cit., P.
26..
how many more alternatives existto
armed intervention, the more solidly
established the legitimate authority must
be found292.
292
FIXDAL, M and SMITH, D,
"Humanitarian Intervention and Just
War", cit., P.
d) Once the intervention has fulfilled
its objective, the foreign troops must
withdraw unless the intervened State
consents to their permanence or the
Security Council so authorizes it in
accordance with Chapter VII of the
Charter.
II. CONSIDERATIONSFINAL
S
293
REMIRO BROTONS, A., "A new order
against international law", cit., P. 1.
that a poor selection of means can end up
damaging the ends for which it
intervenes.