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- Title
INTERVENTION IN LIBYA*, YES; INTERVENTION IN SYRIA, NO: DECIPHERING THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION.
- Authors
Guiora, Amos N.
- Abstract
Deciphering an American presidential administration is truly yeoman's work. It is still too early to judge whether the Obama Administration is significantly distinct from previous administrations. Arguably, the task should be left to historians. Nevertheless, even a casual perusal of President Obama's Middle East policy (perhaps best described as 'policy') reflects a combination of naiveté, inconsistency and murkiness. While perhaps by design, the impact--on the ground--is deeply troublesome. While domestic political considerations are a reality, the implications of the Administration's policy in an area of the world as treacherous as the Middle East are, potentially, staggering. Precisely because international law does not articulate either normative or architectural standards as to when international humanitarian intervention is justified, national leaders arguably have a responsibility to act. The oft-cited phrase "when the cannons roar, the muses are silent" is particularly relevant to this discussion. For a variety of reasons, the international community has determined--whether actively or passively--that the massacre of the Syrian population by the Assad government does not justify international humanitarian intervention. While the human rights violations occurring on a daily basis do not compare to the horrors of Rwanda, Kosovo, or Sierra Leone they are not less compelling than the events transpiring in Libya. If, by metaphorical analogy, the international community is the cannons and the U.S. is the muse; does that mean that the Obama Administration is required to be silent? After all, if the quote were to be rigorously applied, then many of the institutions created to minimize human suffering would neither exist, much less function in wartime. While the distinction-- from the perspective of international humanitarian intervention--between Libya and Syria is as unclear as the criteria that justifies intervention; that must not serve as a misguided basis for the Obama Administration to largely turn its back on the Syrian people.
- Subjects
INTERVENTION (International law); OBAMA, Barack, 1961-; HUMANITARIAN law; LIBYAN Conflict, 2011-; SYRIAN Civil War, 2011-; HUMAN rights violations
- Publication
Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, 2011, Vol 44, Issue 1/2, p251
- ISSN
0008-7254
- Publication type
Article