Abstract

Humanitarian interventions have often been employed to promote the intervener’s political and economic interests. Given the issues around intervention’s morality, this article explores Michael Walzer’s humanitarian intervention theory in order to unravel the practical difficulties of legitimating humanitarian interventions in multisided conflicts. After exploring Walzer’s arguments as they relate to unilateral and multilateral interventions, this article explains why, according to the self-determination principle, intervening countries must share the victim’s cause. Later, the article uses the Syrian Civil War to exemplify the conundrum of crafting a legitimate humanitarian intervention in multisided conflicts where the victims are internally divided and have opposing political, economic, and/or religious views. This case study evidences how, in such contexts, humanitarian interventions simultaneously protect the population and promote the group that best represents the intervening state’s interests, thus turning internal conflicts into foreign proxy wars. Finally, the article argues that, despite Walzer’s proposal for a consistent theory of unilateral and multilateral humanitarian interventions, unilateral interventions should be replaced in multisided conflicts by multilateral interventions able to halt atrocities and provide a stable solution for internal conflicts.

Highlights

  • When the world order is disrupted by atrocities such as enslavement or genocide, the international community cannot remain indifferent

  • Recent conflicts—some of them still ongoing—have different circumstances: In Syria, Yemen, or Libya we find that the conflicts develop among several factions divided by political, religious, or ethnic elements, some of them fighting for the control of the territory and others committing crimes against the civilian population in order to gain power

  • Despite Walzer’s affirmation of interventions headed by countries with particular interests, there seem to be good reasons to take into consideration the unfortunate consequences that can result from states unilaterally intervening in multisided civil wars

Read more

Summary

Introduction

When the world order is disrupted by atrocities such as enslavement or genocide, the international community cannot remain indifferent. This article combines the theoretical work developed by Walzer with the practical conundrums of intervening in the Syrian Civil War. How do we craft an intervention that rescues people from danger without actively benefiting one of the sides in the conflict? In this case, the Syrian population is undergoing a self-determination process entangled with the emergence of Islamic State of. This research article is centered on assessing Walzer’s theory and limits when applied to multisided conflicts where the combatants are fighting for self-determination, and human rights are being violated by one, or several, of the factions. The article’s main aim is to answer the following question: What are the limits—both theoretical and practical—of Michael Walzer’s theory of humanitarian intervention when applied to multisided conflicts?

The Concept of Humanitarian Intervention
Humanitarian Intervention and Self-Determination
Unilateral and Multilateral Interventions
The Problem of Unilateral Intervention in Multisided Conflicts
The Syrian Civil War
Foreign Interventions in the Syrian Civil War
Michael Walzer’s Considerations of the Syrian Civil War
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call