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Dubik’s ‘Just War Reconsidered’ and Schadlow’s ‘War and the Art of Governance’: A double review

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 17:07
As the United States struggles through its sixteenth year of continuous wars two books have come out that should become required leading for national leaders, both civil and military, charged with the responsibility to bring our wars to a successful conclusion — an outcome that so far has eluded them.

The Ghost of Franco Still Haunts Catalonia

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 16:13
Mariano Rajoy’s use of violence against separatists wasn’t an aberration. It was an authentic expression of Spanish conservatism.

Nearly There, but Never Further Away

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 15:57
Europe has outsourced the dirty work of border control to Libyan militias. In doing so, it has turned African migrants into commodities to be captured, sold, and traded like slaves.

The Savior’s Dilemma

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 15:57
Are naval search-and-rescue operations saving migrants’ lives — or just encouraging them to take greater risks?

All for Nothing

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 15:57
Migrants who fail to reach Europe face humiliation, isolation, and impoverishment at home.

SitRep: Green Berets Killed in Ambush in Niger; Trump’s North Korea Decision Looms

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 13:49
Death in Niger. Three U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers were killed and two more wounded after being caught  in an ambush in Niger on Wednesday. The troops were on patrol with local troops near the border with Mali, American military officials said. The two injured Americans have been evacuated to an American military hospital in ...

DARPA Wants Mobile Technologies to Combat Small Drones

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 13:39
The U.S. military needs better tech to fight store-bought drones.

Give the Nobel Peace Prize Posthumously

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 13:00
There’s an easy way to avoid betrayal by winners of the world’s most important humanitarian prize: only give it to dead people.

The Unforgettable Moments of Martyrs

Foreign Policy Blogs - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 12:30

Flags of Catalunya

The focus on an event, movement or death of a leader has always been the rallying cry for many movements that sought to change the status quo. Even in a relatively peaceful country like Canada, the words of a one Lord Durham in a report in the 1800s that suggested the elimination of French Canadian culture in North America has become a touchstone for historic divisions in the country. Even in what some refer to as post-modern societies, the ties to culture, language and history are as strong as ever in those regions that have had to fight for it to exist. To a greater extent, many ancient cultures are facing complete ext ermination because of their language, culture and origin, and are fighting in 2017 just to survive.

The 2017 referendums in Catalonia and the Kurdish region of Iraq may be historic in their push to birth new nations in regions where borders are disappearing. New states may arise from these entrenched cultures in regions where borders may be re-characterized as being a weaker version those traditionally guarded by nation states.

The separation of Catalonia from Spain was not a likely outcome, but recent reaction where force and the denial of the right to vote in an unofficial election may become the rallying cry separatist campaigners needed in their push for independence. Catalonia’s legislative challenges to push for a vote for separation would have likely been dulled in political horse trading and the constitutional courts for decades. Video of Catalans being suppressed in the activity of voting in their own communities may become a historic touchstone for the future of the independent Catalonia movement. The overreach in preventing the vote by the government in Madrid has likely enflamed the already tense divisions between Catalunya and the capital. The feeling that independence and an expression of nationhood may be met by violence, even if it was based on activities that were seen as not completely legal, sets a horrible precedent for those who wish to separate, and even those who wish to remain as part of Spain but are proud of their Catalan heritage. A surprisingly bad policy move, one that may even break up the country if not addressed in an appropriate manner immediately.

The Kurds have recently conducted a referendum on independence where a majority voted to become an independent state. With Iraq and Iranian forces in Iraq pushing to contain any active separation, and Turkey threatening further coercive measures, the Kurds who were a key ally to almost everyone in the region in the fight against ISIS and extremism have now become underserving targets of all power brokers in the region. Despite earning their place through hard fought battle, helping regional minorities not to succumb to a complete genocide and their focus on democratic values, there is little to no recognition of the rights of the Kurdish people in forming a nation state.

There had been a great deal of coalition rhetoric in claiming support for Kurdish forces in fighting ISIS. Unfortunately, the constant minimal level of military support from Western allies has done nothing to earn the minimal amount of respect they deserve in being the tip of the spear against radicalism and genocide in Iraq and Syria. The main catalyst any society would claim as their fight for independence for the Kurdish people comes from fighting the most powerful fascist army since the end of the Second World War. The war the Kurdish people have helped win for most of the world might be forgotten in Western media, but it is doubtful Kurdish society will ever forget their victory. Denying them freedom from future incursions and the determination of their own safety and security is something no society would tolerate after years of hard fought conflict. For both regions and their people in 2017, there is now a point in history that will never be forgotten, and with that generations of independent thought and literature encouraging strong, free and independent nations.

The post The Unforgettable Moments of Martyrs appeared first on Foreign Policy Blogs.

Indispensable ONU

Politique étrangère (IFRI) - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 09:30

Cette recension a été publiée dans le numéro d’automne de Politique étrangère (n°3/2017). Morgan Larhant propose une analyse de l’ouvrage de Jean-Marc de La Sablière, Indispensable ONU (Plon, 2017, 288 pages).

Souvent décriée, rarement admirée, l’Organisation des Nations unies (ONU) est le plus souvent ignorée. Au-delà de l’image coutumière du fer à cheval du Conseil de sécurité qui s’invite périodiquement sur nos téléviseurs, rares sont ceux qui connaissent cette organisation. Plus rares encore ceux qui cherchent à la faire comprendre.

Qui mieux qu’un ancien ambassadeur de France auprès de l’ONU, témoin direct du labyrinthe onusien depuis sa première affectation à New York au début des années 1980 aurait pu montrer l’organisation telle qu’elle est, dans ses échecs et ses succès ?

La lecture de cet ouvrage, simple d’accès et structuré en huit chapitres aussi précis que didactiques, nous fait ainsi entrer dans le fonctionnement concret de l’ONU. De l’action du Conseil de sécurité pour « éviter les guerres » à l’œuvre normative d’universalisation des droits de l’homme, de l’assistance humanitaire dépêchée aux quatre coins du monde aux mille détails de notre vie quotidienne réglés par une galaxie d’institutions spécialisées, l’ONU apparaît comme le lieu de toutes les frustrations, mais également comme celui de tous les progrès.

Le chapitre consacré au développement et à la lutte contre les changements climatiques mérite à cet égard d’être souligné, car si « 40 ans après la vague de décolonisation l’échec [de la politique de développement] est collectif », les avancées réalisées depuis le sommet du millénaire de l’an 2000, et le « grand succès » que constitue la COP21, montrent la nature profonde de cette organisation : une enceinte où « on ne “renverse pas la table” ; mais on peut y creuser un sillon ».

Ce bilan critique de 70 années ­suffit-il à justifier le titre de l’ouvrage ? Assurément non et c’est là l’autre intérêt de la présentation faite par celui qui est devenu ces dernières années un enseignant de l’organisation. L’ONU est indispensable car elle a su sans cesse s’adapter, pousser plus loin le champ du droit international, comme avec le développement du concept de la « responsabilité de protéger ». Elle est indispensable, car elle sait dans les grandes occasions se transcender, « toucher les peuples » et, comme le disait Adlai Stevenson lors de la crise des missiles de Cuba, « devenir ce tribunal de l’opinion publique» internationale. Elle est indispensable parce qu’elle seule réunit trois attributs consubstantiels à toute régulation internationale : l’universalité, la légitimité et le temps long. Elle est indispensable, enfin, parce que son existence même force les États à s’auto-discipliner, à introduire de la retenue dans une « société internationale » qui n’est jamais vraiment sortie de l’état de nature.

Certes l’ONU peut être décevante, son fonctionnement suranné, sa bureau­cratie étouffante. Le chapitre consacré à sa réforme aurait ­d’ailleurs pu davantage approfondir la question essentielle des finances de l’organisation. Mais, comme le note très justement l’auteur, « il ne faut pas demander à l’ONU d’être un gouvernement du monde, étroitement uni par un projet commun de société ». Celui qui « derrière ses lunettes en écaille » a assisté aux premières loges au discours de Dominique de Villepin contre la guerre en Irak sait que l’ONU est indispensable simplement parce qu’elle est. Et cette seule existence est, en soi, un « bien commun trop précieux pour que nous n’ayons pas l’ambition de le défendre et de le réformer ».

Morgan Larhant

S’abonner à Politique étrangère

Shinzo Abe Just Pulled a Theresa May

Foreign Policy - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 05:34
Japan's prime minister called an early election to strengthen his mandate — and gave an opening to a serious new challenger.

The Economy of Secession (II)

German Foreign Policy (DE/FR/EN) - Thu, 05/10/2017 - 00:00
(Own report) - As can be seen in an analysis of the separatist movements in Catalonia, Lombardy and Flanders, the deliberate promotion of exclusive cooperation between German companies and prosperous areas in countries with impoverished regions has systematically facilitated the autonomist-secessionist movements in Western Europe. According to this study, Flanders, as well as Lombardy - two already economically prosperous regions - have been able to widen the gap between themselves and the impoverished regions of Belgium and Italy, also because they have played an important role in the expansion of the German economy, the strongest in the EU. Through an exclusive cooperation with the state Baden Württemberg, Catalonia and Lombardy have been able to expand their economic lead over more impoverished regions of Spain and Italy, which has spurred their respective regional elites to seek to halt their financial contributions for federal reallocations through greater autonomy or even secession. The consequences of deliberate cooperation - not with foreign nations - but only with prosperous regions, can be seen with Yugoslavia.

The U.N. Can’t Enforce Its Sanctions on the North Korean Arms Trade

Foreign Policy - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 22:31
Fortunately, the United States can.

Draft U.N. Report Calls Out Saudi Arabia for Yemeni Children’s Deaths

Foreign Policy - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 21:20
The Gulf kingdom is on a blacklist of countries that harm children in conflict.

Senate Probe Gets ‘Clearer Picture’ of Possible Trump, Russia Collusion

Foreign Policy - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 19:40
Sen. Richard Burr said his committee’s investigation has “expanded slightly.”

Les frontières incertaines du Kurdistan

Le Monde Diplomatique - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 19:31
Entre Arabes et Kurdes irakiens, la fracture n'a rien de nouveau : elle découle des promesses faites au lendemain de la chute de l'Empire ottoman. Les dirigeants kurdes et fédéraux devront bientôt prendre une décision : conclure un accord ou, en cas d'échec, se préparer à une prochaine et très (...) / , , , - 2010/03

Are Parking Spaces the Next Casualty of the U.S.-Russian Diplomatic Spat?

Foreign Policy - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 18:52
Russia has 11 spots in D.C. Where they are, nobody knows, but perhaps they could soon go.

Tillerson Says He’s Never Considered Resigning, Calls Trump ‘Smart’

Foreign Policy - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 18:09
The secretary of state reaffirmed his commitment to “America First” policy but sidestepped questions about calling president a “moron.”

A book I contemplated writing, but it’s already been done: ‘Grant and Sherman’

Foreign Policy - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 17:36
Assessing two books on Grant and Sherman

Pour un nouvel ordre économique mondial

Le Monde Diplomatique - Wed, 04/10/2017 - 17:31
« L'attitude des syndicats des pays développés à l'égard d'un nouvel ordre économique » : c'est sur ce thème que l'ONU a organisé à Vienne (Autriche), les 23 et 34 octobre, un colloque au cours duquel se produisirent de vifs affrontements entre syndicats des pays riches et représentants du tiers-monde. (...) / , , , , , , , , , , - 1978/11

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