Ntb welcome to the fray, some salient points - I have avoided repeating them, though I agree whole-heartedly.
Walrusbear I must confess a deep curiosity as to what it was you said...
Terrible Spellor said:
you seem to forget that the law applies to politicians/public servants just as much as it does to regular people. if they formulate a policy that is illegal then they can be held to account.
This dodges the issue.
Please explain some plausible scenario where George Bush is arrested and tried for war crimes.
Have a glance at history and you will see that it is the loosers who are 'held to account' take for instance the Nuremburg trials of Nazi war criminals and contrast to the unpunished intentional fire-bombing of civilian targets in both Germany and Japan by the Allies. In fact Robert MacNamara (who crewed a bomber over Japan) holds that had they lost they would've been up for war crimes considering what they were doing.
Lets move abit more recently say Vietnam war; napalm, agent orange, carpet bombing, operation phoenix, etc. Did we see General Westmorland, Nixon or Kissinger up on War Crimes charges? How about we look at the former yugoslavia, the loosers have been indicted on war crimes.
The problem with your idealism is that nobody cares. The socialist alternatives may get fired up about Bush's 'illegal war' but it hasn't toppled governments, Bush, Blair and Howard were all returned.
can you provide some examples of unilateral action that were legitimate perhaps, to illustrate your argument?
Another straw man, do you have nothing else is your arsenal?
I said it was a "legitimate option" meaning it was a valid option to take. You want examples that were legitimate meaning legal. Well I'm not falling in this trap - because simply it is illusory, it is a trap based on law when law is not applicable the trap has no teeth.
My response then is that every single exercise of unilateral action has been legitimate in that it served the percieved interests of the initiating state.
it is only in the last hundred years that humans have recognised women and black people to be equal to men and white people, so clearly things do change. the point is that these 'basic principles' have meant a shameful history of wars and violence.
Can anyone else say straw man? So now realism is like racism and sexism congratulations this is a conceptual leap not many have been able to make, please enlighten those of us who could not make the leap of faith ourselves, please explain the link here.
This comparison bears almost as much weight as saying that only in the last hundred years has sanitation been widespread in the western world or that only in the last fifty years have we been able to buy affordable cars therefore things change therefore realism will change.
Congratulations you have proved that things change, you have not proven that the principles that underly realism will change.
I on the other hand have offered a fairly comprehensive reason that realism will fade because the international system as we know it will fade as neo-liberalism reaches ascendency.
I have presented a solid programme of change and comprehensivley asserted its how and why it will triumph. You have held up some lofty notions of internationalism and suggested that somehow the entire population will gasp with suprise at the international system when some friendly left-wing intelligensia lift the wool from their eyes and then promptly declare they will be good international citizens etc etc utopia eventuates.
also it is only in modern times that technology has meant powerful states have lost their monopoly on violence. weak individuals and groups have the potential to cause damage to the strongest states. this is perhaps one of the primary strategic arguments for creating an international system based on cooperation and perceiving all injusticies to be problems, even in other states.
Well in this case a revitalised UN touting a 'global defence force' is just around the corner. It will send out fact finding missions from on high into states across the globe. Trample their soveriegnty if they resist and then after much deliberation and a veto or three will reach a conclusion that the solution to africa is to throw truckloads of condoms and money at despots until evrything is fixed. Or upon discovering that China is oppressing Falun Gong practioners an invasion will be launched China occupied and the civil rights of its populace enforced by the global defence force...
if Bush breaks the law then why would he not be punished? it would only take the creation of a norm that international obligations signed and agreed to by states must be adhered to (a resolution that the US vetoed after being found guilty of terrorism against nicaragua by the world court).
Oh so it just needs a new norm of behaviour to be in place, well how about you hammer out the finer details of this norm and meet me back here in half an hour. We'll both bring along some politically active friends and I reckon we can have this new norm applied by tea-time.
I've outlined, explained, bludegeoned, etc the reasons why this will never work in precis:
*It hasnt worked before.
*The incentive to break the norm is to big.
*The disincentive for a strong state is negligible.
*The general populace is quite happy the way things are.
*etc
*etc