Attempt-Doesn't Have To Work
Attempt-Doesn't Have To Work
Attempt-Doesn't Have To Work
EFFECTIVENESS IS NOT THE MAIN CONSIDERATION IN HI LEGITIMACY -HUMANITARIAN ACTION TRUMPS MOST EFFECTIVE ACTION
James Pattison, Senior Lecturer in Politics-University of Manchester, 2010,
Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect: Who Should Intervene?, p. 112
those undertaking humanitarian intervention should follow a number of
principles of external and internal jus in bello. An intervener's likely fidelity to these principles, is I
claim, a key factor in its legitimacy and should guide the decision on who should intervene. The Extreme
We have seen, then, that
Instrumentalist Approach outlined at the end of the last chapter cannot fully account for these principles of just
to determine proportionality in NATO's intervention in Kosovo, NATO would have been permitted to pursue its
primary end of the capitulation of the Milosevic regime unconditionally, regardless of civilian casualties (Heinze
2004: 550).
V: morality
K: Human worth
Arthur Isak
Applbaum Are Violations of Rights Ever Right? Arthur Isak Applbaum. Ethics, Vol. 108, No. 2 (Jan., 1998), pp. 341-2
that, from an impersonal point of view, no one really matters, or we recognize the fact that each life matters to the one who is living it does matter, in
some way, from an impersonal perspective. If one ought to matter to no one but oneself, then one cannot continue to think of oneself that matters very
much at all. Since we think of ourselves as beings that matter, consistency demands that we extend that status to others. Says Nagel, I believe, as did
Kant, that what drives us in the direction of universalizability is the difficulty each person has in regarding himself as having value only for himself, but not
If one wishes
to view and value oneself as a being that is an end in itself, and not as a
means to be used for the ends of others, then the status of an end must be extended to others. The
violation of other personsusing them as meanstherefore is an impersonal bad,
in himself. If people are not ends in themselvesi.e. impersonally valuablethen they have a much lower order of worth.
C1-
a)
united States is universal protector
Shue
89 Professor of Ethics and Public Life, Princeton University (Henry, Nuclear Deterrence and Moral Restraint, pp. 141-2)
another value to be balanced side by side with others in moral calculations. It is the raison detre of Western political, economic, and social institutions.
the responsibility to protect of every State when it comes to people suffering from
avoidable catastrophe. And it tied this notion of shared responsibility to the
Security Council: We endorse the emerging norm that there is a collective
international responsibility to protect, exercisable by the Security Council
authorizing military intervention as a last resort, in the event of genocide and other
large-scale killing, ethnic cleansing or serious violations of international
humanitarian law which sovereign Governments have proved powerless or unwilling
to prevent. Three months later, the Secretary-General endorsed the principle in his
own agenda for UN reform
In the final negotiated document, member states declared that The international
community should, as appropriate, encourage and help states to protect their
populations and that it bears the responsibility to use appropriate diplomatic,
humanitarian and other peaceful means, in accordance with Chapters VI and VIII of
the Charter, to help to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic
cleansing and crimes against humanity.
starvation, or by any other means was permanently to deprive them of the possibility of
enjoying any other right. Similarly, to violate, or threaten to violate, their physical person, through
rape, torture or other abuse -- potentially deprived them of this possibility. For no individual could
fully enjoy any right that was theoretically guaranteed by society if there was a credible
threat of bodily harm of any kind if he or she attempted to exercise such a right. On the other
hand the denial of a civil or political right -- such as the right to vote -- was not per se a denial of personal bodily
integrity.
From this Heinze concluded that it was violation of bodily rights, rather than of civil or
political rights, that could, in some circumstances, warrant intervention. He also sought to identify those
circumstances more precisely by defining the notion of a "gross violation." Quantifying human suffering or
"counting the dead" was unacceptable, for this would imply that a gross violation could not be identified until after
the fact. This would also preclude preventive action when there was good evidence as to what was likely to
a consistent pattern of human rights violations that was the result of an intentional, coherent structure or design;
normally this meant that it would be the policy of the government in question, or tolerated by the government.
Secondly, there needed to be breadth, in the sense that the abusive elements constituted a
consistent pattern with a coherent structure. Thirdl y, the violation needed to occur over
time, with repeated occurrence. This led to an overall definition of gross violations as "The threatened or actual
violations of life or physical bodily integrity perpetuated or tolerated by authorities in a consistent, deliberate, and
widespread manner in order to establish a certain intended social, political, or economic arrangement" (Heinze,
2004, p. 477).
Heinze argued that if other threshold criteria were met, there was a moral case for
intervention. But a particular strength of his argument was that he maintained that there was also the basis for
a legal case. This arose from the very substantial agreement about both the hierarchy of rights and the definition of
"gross violations" in the overwhelming body of international law and jurisprudence. This included definitions from
the principle of universal jurisdiction, the Convention on Torture, the Genocide Convention, the Geneva Convention
and additional Protocols, and also jurisprudence and rulings and statuses of the post-war Military Tribunals, the
Yugoslav and Rwanda Tribunals and the International Criminal Court.
b) Everyone
FAILURE TO INTERVENE TO STOP HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES -- SUCH AS IN
RWANADA-- UNDERMINES HUMAN RIGHTS VALUE FOR EVERYONE
Amy Gutmann, Political Science Professor and President of University of
Pennsylvania , 2001, Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry, ed. A. Gutmann, p. xvi
The most controversial -- and sometimes the only potentially effective -- response to persistent human
rights violations by states is intervention. Under what conditions, Ignatieff therefore asks, is intervention
justified to reverse human rights abuses within states? Like nationalism, intervention is a double-edged
sword. It must be used sparingly lest it become an unintended excuse for human rights
violations on the part of intervening states. Yet it must be used when it can be effective to
stop (or at least significantly reduce) systematic and pervasive human rights abuses. This standard is
far harder to apply than it is to articulate, and it is controversial in both theory and application. " Human rights
may be universal, but support for coercive enforcement of their norms will never be
universal." If this is realism, it is no recipe for isolationism. The failure to intervene in Rwanda, for
where many lives could have been saved, was far from inevitable or justifiable. Such
failures have "undermined the credibility of human rights values in zones of danger around
the world."
example,
RIGHTS ABUSES
James Pattison, Senior Lecturer in Politics-University of Manchester, 2010,
Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect: Who Should Intervene?, p 19
From an interactional cosmopolitan approach, Carla Bagnoli (2006) argues that the duty to
intervene stems from the moral obligation to respect humanity, independent of any consideration of
special relationships. To flesh this out further, we can say that there is a duty to prevent, to halt, and to
decrease substantial human suffering, such as that found in large-scale violations of basic
human rights. This duty to prevent human suffering is not dependent on high levels of
interdependence. Instead, it is universal, generated from the fundamental moral premise that human
suffering ought to be tackled. This duty to prevent human suffering translates firstly, into an
unassigned, general duty to intervene for sufficiently legitimated interveners (i.e. for those that
meet the threshold level). Second, it translates into an assigned duty for those whose intervention would possess
the greatest legitimacy according to the Moderate Instrumentalist Approach.
At the international level, until very recently, the suffering of individuals and some groups --whether the cause be
famine, civil war or pestilence -- tended to be discounted as misfortunes, for international society could only admit
potentially cosmopolitan in enabling us to recognize the suffering of the exile, refugee, enemy and stranger.
c) Ourselves
continue to press those things; we would not be American if we did not." In practical terms, we continue to raise human rights issues at the highest levels of governments worldwide and
of which everyone may feel a part. At the very least, the brutality of the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and the fact that it was completely unprovoked suggest that
models based on what we used to call the "rational actor" are far from fully comprehensive -- unless, of course, you are willing to take Clausewitz one step further and suggest that not
only is war politics by another means, but so, too, is terrorism. But that would be to give it a legitimacy that it clearly does not merit. Even so, what drives individuals -- not states, but
men, individual, independent actors -- to assume the cloak of moral or religious rectitude and declare holy war on a country?
Obviously, we need to learn how to fight the perceptions and misperceptions that lie behind all that better than we do. The question that
we all are asking ourselves since that terrible day last month is this: how do we, who have the responsibility for promoting and protecting the values that underpin civil society at home
and throughout the world, pick our way through all the causes and effects of that and make sure that it does not happen again? Obviously, there is much we can do: in intelligencegathering and information sharing, in civil defense and homeland security, in diplomacy and economic leveraging, in international cooperation and coalition-building, in pressure and in
force. All this the Administration is doing, and much, much more. My point is not to venture into the realm of military strategy. That is not my responsibility in this administration.
Fortunately for all of us, the President has assembled a very experienced and capable team for that. This country is not the cause of all the problems of this world -- quite the contrary.
attacks. Let me begin by outlining the general principles that I think will guide us. First, over the past 20 years, both political parties -- Republicans and Democrats -- have firmly
embraced the belief that
Thus human rights have the deep and strong backing of both parties, all branches of government, and, most importantly, the American people. This will not change. In a multilateral
sense, the United States has been the unquestioned leader of the movement to expand human rights since the Second World War. We pushed it in the UN Charter, the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and into the conventions and treaty bodies that have ensued. And when I say "we," I do not just mean the U.S. government. For it was our people,
Americans from every walk of life, who gave the international non-governmental organization (NGO) movement so much of its intellectual force, its financial muscle, and its firm