Hindustan Times (Patiala)

A DANGEROUS GAME

An insider’s view of the Security Council’s decisionma­king process in relation to major global crises in 20112012, when India was a member and the author represente­d the country in the UN

- Muchkund Dubey letters@hindustant­imes.com Muchkund Dubey is a former Foreign Secretary. He is a professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University.

The most important task that Hardeep Puri took up after relinquish­ing charge as Permanent Representa­tive of India to the United Nations in New York was to write a book giving an insider’s view of the Security Council’s decision-making process in relation to major global crisis situations during the twoyear period of 2011-2012 when India was a member of the Security Council and Puri its representa­tive there. The product in the form of this volume, Perilous Interventi­ons, vindicates his decision. Perilous interventi­ons, as Hardeep Puri puts it, reflect whimsical and reflexive decisionma­king with far-reaching consequenc­es, without thinking through them. Most of these armed interventi­ons have been made to achieve regime changes to serve ill-conceived short-term national and strategic interests. This book is about the origin, consequenc­es and lessons to be derived from such interventi­ons, which are at the root of some of the gravest problems confrontin­g the world today. These threaten to tear asunder the post-Second World War internatio­nal order.

The book presents five case studies of perilous interventi­ons, ie Libya, Syria, Yemen, Crimea/Ukraine and Sri Lanka. To these are added chapters dealing with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the Arab Spring, Policy-induced Migration and the Doctrine of the Responsibi­lity to Protect (R2P). All these relatively brief chapters are so complete in themselves, so well structured, so succinct and precise and so brilliantl­y analysed that they can substitute the volumes that have been written on each of these topics. Each chapter contains the background to the event leading to the present crisis, a blow-byblow account of what happened or did not happen in the UN, in tandem with the unfolding of the situation on the ground, of misconceiv­ed external interventi­ons and the arming of rebels, including those linked to al-Qaeda and the ISIS, and of the interplay of internal and external political factors complicati­ng the situation and generally putting it beyond the realm of solution.

The author conveys his message in a forthright, frank and forceful manner. He spares none, including his own country. He strongly criticises the United Nations for its ‘inertness’ and ‘passivity’ in the case of Syria, Crimea/Ukraine and Sri Lanka. In the case of Syria, the Security Council has been unable to adopt any resolution of operationa­l significan­ce. In the case of Crimea, the author underlines that the Russian interventi­on ought to have had the prior permission of the Security Council. In the case of Sri Lanka, the UN did not take any collective action in a decisive manner to protect civilians from mass atrocities. He holds the three Western powers, UK, France, and the United States, responsibl­e for using the Security Council as a fig leaf for armed interventi­on in order to carry out their design for regime change in Libya. He holds Saudi Arabia responsibl­e for the unfolding of one of the greatest human tragedies in the world today ie in Yemen. He advances forceful arguments to demonstrat­e the illegitima­cy of the Saudi interventi­on there and unequivoca­lly blames the United States for supporting the Saudis in the attack against the Houthis. He takes objection to the reference in the Indian statement on Ukraine to legitimise Russian interest and sarcastica­lly brings out its implicatio­n that “If the powerful have interest, ‘interventi­on’ and ‘take over’ are understand­able”.

The author’s analysis of the Doctrine of R2P is significan­t in that it was during the period of his functionin­g as India’s repre- sentative in the Security Council that the doctrine was first put in practice with the interventi­on in Libya. It may be recalled here that the Western powers first wanted the acceptance of the doctrine of ‘humanitari­an interventi­on’ as a part of the reform of the United Nations, but this was rejected by the majority of the UN member countries on grounds of being too open-ended and hence carrying the danger of opening the floodgates of interventi­ons. What was included in perhaps the most comprehens­ive package on UN reforms adopted by the General Assembly in December 2005 was the Doctrine of R2P. This was, however, the thin end of the wedge.

The General Assembly has, no doubt, sought to circumscri­be the use of R2P to cases of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. But as the author has brought out in chapter after chapter, the determinat­ion of the existence of such situations has been distorted, particular­ly in the case of Libya, with horrendous consequenc­es for that country, the region, and the world. As the author points out, the trend, which has facilitate­d interventi­ons by crossing the red lines laid down by the General Assembly, is the decline of the Westphalia­n concept of sovereignt­y with internatio­nally recognised borders. The Western countries supported by their academic community, other think tanks, and the media have played the principal role in bringing it about.

The author, however, regards the doctrine of R2P as essential to prevent mass atrocities and offers suggestion­s for its appropriat­e and effective applicatio­n. These include making such interventi­ons with the full knowledge of their consequenc­es and integratin­g R2P with RwP ie Responsibi­lity While Protecting. These are laudable objectives but in the present circumstan­ces unlikely to be realized. The right course of action for protecting Third World countries including India from mindless interventi­ons under R2P would have been to reject this doctrine altogether and, in its place, insist on the fuller utilizatio­n of Chapter 6 of the UN Charter of provisions other than the use of force, of Article 42 and the expansion of the scope of Article 39 relating to the determinat­ion of the existence of threat to peace, breach of peace and act of aggression.

The defining features of the book include its perceptive conclusion­s, salutary warnings and valuable suggestion­s for future action. One of the author’s most important suggestion­s is to reform the Security Council in order to democratiz­e and make more effective its decision making. The author quotes from an article by General Satish Nambiar, who played a leading role in UN peacekeepi­ng operations, to drive home the point that “Nonaction was not due to lack of warning, resources or the barrier of state sovereignt­y, but because of strategic, political or economic considerat­ions…”

In taking such a limited view of UN reform, it is forgotten that the overriding reason for the United Nations’ inability to act in most of the areas under its jurisdicti­on is the systematic, conscious and wellplanne­d decimation of its capacity over the last few decades. This deficiency is of a structural nature going beyond the process of decision-making. After all, what is the point of India or any other country becoming a Permanent Member of the Security Council when the UN as a whole has lost its capacity to act? Proposals to halt this process and strengthen UN capacity were never seriously put on the UN reform agenda. For the most part of the reform process, India did not bestir itself to do anything about it and devoted all its diplomatic energy and resources to the issue of Security Council reforms in order to become its Permanent Member. This is no less an improbable propositio­n than restoring to the UN its lost functions and capacity.

The above difference of opinion does not in any way detract from the significan­ce of the book. It is written in a forceful and direct style. The prose is elegant and the analysis is perceptive. Above all, it is not a mere collection of random reflection­s of one of the most brilliant and astute Indian diplomats who has distinguis­hed himself in many positions and handled several sensitive situations but an outstandin­g tome of great academic value, based on meticulous research, which draws upon material from unimpeacha­ble resources. It is, therefore, rewarding reading for all those interested in the present crisis in the world and an extremely useful source of reference for students and scholars engaged in research in this area.

 ?? AFP ?? Syrians fleeing violence in Aleppo’s alSalihin neighbourh­ood on December 12, 2016
AFP Syrians fleeing violence in Aleppo’s alSalihin neighbourh­ood on December 12, 2016
 ?? PATUL YADAV/PTI ?? Hardeep Singh Puri
PATUL YADAV/PTI Hardeep Singh Puri
 ??  ?? Perilous Interventi­ons; The Security Council and the Politics of Chaos Hardeep Singh Puri ~599, 280pp Harper Collins
Perilous Interventi­ons; The Security Council and the Politics of Chaos Hardeep Singh Puri ~599, 280pp Harper Collins

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India