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In comment today

- Sholto Byrnes Sholto Byrnes is a senior fellow at the Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, Malaysia

The idea of foreign non-interferen­ce in a country’s internal affairs seems to be making a comeback, and the shift in power to Asia and the Global South has significan­ce for internatio­nal relations and advocates of western values, Sholto Byrnes argues,

On Friday, representa­tives of 85 political parties from 36 countries will gather in Kuala Lumpur for the ninth General Assembly of the Internatio­nal Conference of Asian Political Parties. Quite apart from curiosity about a gathering with which I had not hitherto been familiar, one thought struck me: what could possibly unite such an inevitably diverse collection of people?

A brief look through the organisati­on’s charter turned up a reference to a principle both familiar yet redolent of another era, of the glory days of the Non-Aligned Movement (Nam), and conjuring pictures of their leaders, towering post-war figures such as India’s prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, the Indonesian president Sukarno, Egypt’s Col Nasser, Ghana’s Kwame Nkrumah, and Yugoslavia’s Marshal Tito.

The principle, outlined in the charter’s second paragraph? “Mutual non- interferen­ce in each others’ internal affairs.” That concept, frequently accompanie­d by two others also in the charter – “mutual respect for territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y” and “mutual non-aggression”, does on the face of it seem to hark to another era.

When Nehru outlined in 1954 the five principles that were later to serve as the basis for the Nam (the three above, plus “peaceful coexistenc­e” and “equality and mutual benefit”), the need to stress “non-interferen­ce” was pressing. Much of the world had found out- side powers all too ready to interfere in their affairs, from the bloody, and ultimately doomed, struggle of the Dutch to regain their East Indies empire and the French to reclaim Indochina, to the spheres of influence and client regimes often forcibly installed by both sides in the Cold War.

Although the NAM continues to represent more than 50 per cent of the world’s population, it is decades since it was considered a body with either clout or relevance. And “non-interferen­ce” appeared to be overwhelme­d by the tide of universali­st triumphali­sm that swept the globe after the dismantlin­g of the Eastern Bloc.

In more recent years, the Responsibi­lity to Protect ( R2P) doctrine adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2005 explicitly overrode the notion of absolute state sovereignt­y that underlies the principle of non- interferen­ce. And while R2P imposed strict conditions for approving outside interventi­on – only in cases of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity – it neverthele­ss fuelled the ardour of those liberal interventi­onists and neoconserv­atives who champed at the bit to impose their views on countries that did not share them, regardless of whether those states had, strictly speaking, contravene­d the four conditions or not.

After the chaos and devastatio­n interventi­on has brought to countries in the Middle East, however – and how lightly David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy walked away from the collapse of Libya, as though they had smashed a plate and hoped no one would notice if they crept away quietly – R2P is increasing­ly discredite­d.

Non-interferen­ce, on the other hand, appears to be making a comeback. In fact, it never truly went away. It’s one of the principles of a number of other organisati­ons, including the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council, the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on and the Southern African Developmen­t Community.

The leaders of many developing countries have never forgotten it. Successive anti-Thaksin government­s in Thailand have made that clear, as did Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippine­s with his recent profane comments rejecting what he regards as UN interferen­ce over his war on drugs. “Maybe we’ll just have to decide to separate from the United Nations,” he said in one of his politer remarks. “Why do you have to listen to this stupid?”

China and Russia are obvious advocates – at least when it comes to any interferen­ce in their own affairs. Given the shift in power to Asia and to the Global South more gradually in the long term, the widespread upholding of this principle in these regions has great significan­ce both for internatio­nal relations and for those still myopically believing they can establish western values as universal ones.

Its appeal now appears to be spreading in Europe and America, too. While not using the terms themselves, Viktor Orban of Hungary and Poland’s de facto leader, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, have both signalled that they regard the EU as interferin­g in their domestic affairs in ways they find an intolerabl­e breach of national sovereignt­y.

Neither is Donald Trump formally recommendi­ng it, but his America First isolationi­sm embraces the spirit if not the letter of the principle. “I don’t think we have a right to lecture,” he told The New York Times last month. Before trying to tell other countries how to behave, he said: “We have to fix our own mess.”

If non- interferen­ce is back, there will be plenty who will portray it as a betrayal of values that are shared by all (whatever they are). But in fact it is about respecting the right of countries to decide their own paths and laws, to set their own codes and reaffirm their own cultures – sealed either by the ballot box or by more traditiona­l means of conferring political legitimacy. The former New Statesman editor Peter Wilby once offered a wonderful counter-example. “Suppose that in 1916, an Arab ‘peacekeepi­ng force’, horrified by the slaughter in the trenches, landed in Europe to put an end to the First World War. Or that, in 1945, outraged by the Allied bombing of Dresden, armed Africans had assumed a ‘responsibi­lity to protect’ Germans.”

If they were even feasible, such scenarios would have been “an unthinkabl­e infringeme­nt of sovereignt­y,” argued Wilby. He was right. The question is: if such infringeme­nts of sovereignt­y would have been unacceptab­le for developed European nations then, why should they not be equally unacceptab­le for developing countries today?

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