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Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft WWU Münster
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Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Die Politik der humanitären Intervention:

politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven

Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult.

Reinhard Meyers

Institut für Politikwissenschaft

WWU Münster

Page 2: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

This file can be downloaded from my website

• http://reinhardmeyers.uni-muenster.de There you can also find further material

to accompany our seminars on International Theory and International Politics

Lost in the maze ??? Send email to

[email protected]

Page 3: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Lebenslauf – Kurzfassung

Reinhard Meyers, Jahrgang 1947, studierte Politikwissenschaft, Anglistik, und Geschichte an der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität 1966 – 1970 mit dem Abschluß Magister Artium. Forschungsstipendiat der Wiener Library, London, an der Graduate School of Contemporary European Studies, University of Reading 1970 – 1972 mit dem Abschluß Master of Philosophy.

Wissenschaftlicher Assistent bei Hans-Adolf Jacobsen und Karl-Dietrich Bracher am Seminar für Politikwissenschaft der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität 1972 – 1984. Promotion zum Dr.phil. 1974; Habilitation im Fach Politikwissenschaft 1986; seit 1987 Professor für Internationale Politik und Außenpolitik an der Westfälischen Wilhelms - Universität.

Page 4: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Die Forschungsinteressen galten ursprünglich der Geschichte der internationalen Beziehungen und der Sicherheitspolitik im 20. Jahrhundert; daneben trat aber schon vor der Habilitation die Wissenschaftsgeschichte der Lehre von den Internationalen Beziehungen sowie deren Epistemologie, Methodologie und Theorie. Seit den achtziger Jahren wird dieser Schwerpunkt ergänzt durch Arbeiten zur Friedens- und Konfliktforschung, seit den neunziger Jahren auch zur Europapolitik.

Seit 1991 mehrfach Prodekan und Dekan des Fachbereichs Sozial-wissenschaften der Westfälischen Wilhelms-Universität, Oktober 1997 Ehrendoktor der Fakultät für Europastudien der Babes-Bolyai Universität Klausenburg; Mai 2007 Ehrendoktor der Universität Novi Sad. Mitgründer und von 1993 - 2010 Mitherausgeber der Zeitschrift für Internationale Beziehungen. Programmbeauftragter für die internationalen Doppeldiplomstudiengänge mit dem IEP Lille, der BBU Klausenburg (RO) und der Universiteit Twente (NL) 1997 – 2008.

Hobbies: Industriearchäologie des Transportwesens, italienische Küche

Page 5: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Structure

► Why theory in the analysis of I.R.

► Consequences of different theories

► From Humantarian Intervention to the Responsibility to Protect

► Open Questions

Page 6: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Structure II

► No simple answer to a complex question► Why ??► Consequences of different theories► Development of recent international legal thought

from Interstate Protection of Sovereignty by Pro- hibition of Use of Force & Nonintervention (UNCh 2,4 & 2,7) via enabling Humanitarian Intervention as reaction to grave and systematic violation of Human Rights (SCR 808,1993) to intrastate Responsibility to Protect as Boundary Condition of Sovereignty (ICISS 2001)

► Resurgence of Just War Debate

Page 7: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Premiss I

• Our knowledge of reality is once removed from reality.

• Social, political – and also academic or scientific – behavior cannot be understood as an immediate reflex reaction in an actual situation.

• Rather, it is formed by the perception of a real situation and by the interpretation, i.e. the image, we have of a particular situation – independent of whether the actual situation is in reality formed in the same way as we see and interpret it (Thomas Theorem).

Page 8: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Premiss II

• Our knowledge of reality is always theory-laden.

• Theory is "the net which we throw out in order to catch the world – to ratio-nalize, explain, and dominate it.“

• Different theories = different nets = different realities

• Karl Popper. Logik der Forschung, 1935: p.26

(The Logic of Scientific Discovery, London: Hutchinson, 1959)

Page 9: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

The Billiard-Ball-Model of international Politics

Attracting forces

Repellent forces

Page 10: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Cobweb model of international Relations

Page 11: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Two Most Different Accounts of International Politics

Realism Idealism

Goals Survival Survival

Actors’

typical

beha-viour

Increase/maximize power to ensure own survival

Follow the national interest

Promote social learning through a) Institutions, b)

Ideas & Education, c) Rational Enlightenment

What forms state beha-viour ?

Self-help, deterrence, Balance of Power politics because• No world government• Cooperation amongst states unreliable• Security Dilemma & Arms Races

International society as cooperation of free associations of individuals

Idea of human progress = result of progress of forces of production

Logic of internat. politics

Conflictual, zero-sum game

Cooperative, win-win-situations

Page 12: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Grand Theory Actor Milieu Structural Principle

Realism:

Hobbes Nation

State

World of states as an-

archic state of nature

Vertical segmentation, unlimited zero-sum game for

power, influence, ressources

English

School or Rationalism:

Grotius)

World of states as

legally constituted

society

Vertical Segmentation, zero-sum game

regulated by norm and agreement

Idealism:

Kant

Individual

World society as society of

individuals and their

associations

Universalistic

constitution

Grand Theories of International Relations

Page 13: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Consequences of different theoriesfor the discussion of our subject…

Legitimate Grounds for Intervention

Realism Rationalism Idealism

Political International Responsibility Expediency, Legal to protect National appropriateness Just War Doctrine Interest (Grotius ff) Revived

Page 14: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Consensus: what do we talk about ?

H.I. defined as „military intervention in a state, without the approval of its authorities, and with the purpose of preventing wide-spread suffering or death among the inhabitants“ (Adam Roberts 1993)

► use of military force, exclusion of non-forcible action

► absence of the target state‘s permission (incl. situations of weak states, state failure & state collapse)

► aim to help non-nationals► agency question (self-help principle vs. UN

umbrella) still open

Page 15: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Consequences … if you are a Realist…(I)

International humanitarian intervention poses no awkward questions to political decision-makers.

Within a rationally calculated framework of national interests and political expediency, intervention can be regarded as one instrument in a whole battery of means from gentle persuasion to outright warfare.

Reference back to the „ethics of responsibility“ – Verantwortungsethik (Max Weber)

Page 16: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Ethics of responsibility vs.

Ethics of conviction/principle

• Problem: establish a relationship between the strength of your convictions/principles and the consequences/costs of your actions according to convictions/principles

• Ethics of responsibility = optimization of principles and consequences of action

• Ethics of principle = maximization of principles without regard to cost/conse-quences of principled action

Page 17: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Consequences …if you are a Realist (II)

What has to be assured in H.I. is

►a logically cogent definition of aims,

►a clear formulation of a maximizing/ optimizing/satisfying ends - means – relationship,

►Clausewitz: triad of (political) purpose – (military) aims – (necessary) means

Page 18: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

v.Clausewitz: Trias von Zweck, Ziel, Mittel

Entweder bestimmen die verfügbaren Mittel die militärischen Ziele und

politischen Zwecke –

oder

Auf der Grundlage gegebener politischer Zwecke sind die militärischen Ziele und

die zu ihrer Erreichung notwendigen Mittel zu ermitteln.

Vom Kriege, Zweites Kapitel

Page 19: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Consequences …if you are a Realist (III)

What has to be further assured in H.I. is

►a realization of the availability of the ressources mentioned

► a clear calculation of hardware, manpower, and financial ressources needed in order to fulfill specific aims,

► a communicable entry – stay - exit – strategy.

Page 20: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Problem:

Abschreckung (und implizit auch humanitäre Intervention) ist das Produkt,

nicht die Summe ihrer Erfolgsbedingungen:

A bzw. HI = (Cap. x Cred. ) Comm.

Fällt eine der drei Bedingungen aus, muss Abschreckung versagen !

Henry Kissinger: Kernwaffen und auswärtige Politik. Oldenbourg, München 1959.

Konsequenzen für H.I. ??

Problem:

Abschreckung (und implizit auch humanitäre Intervention) ist das Produkt,

nicht die Summe ihrer Erfolgsbedingungen:

A bzw. HI = (Cap. x Cred. ) Comm.

Fällt eine der drei Bedingungen aus, muss Abschreckung versagen !

Henry Kissinger: Kernwaffen und auswärtige Politik. Oldenbourg, München 1959.

Konsequenzen für H.I. ??

Page 21: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Finally … if you are a Realist…

►(legal) form follows (political) function

Page 22: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Consequences…if you are a Rationalist…

Early discussion of intervention backtraced to 16th & 17th Century Internat. Law classics – from Vitoria to Grotius

De Jure Belli ac Pacis 1625 states that states are entitled to exercise the right to H.I. „ves- ted in human society“ on behalf of oppres-sed individuals & to end human suffering

► Grotian Tradition in International Affairs allows full-scale use of force to end human suffering

Page 23: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Rationalist doctrine: developments

Slow change from doctrine of intervention to doctrine of non-intervention in the 19th century and beyond

► Monroe Doctrine 1823►Calvo- & Drago- Doctrines 1868 & 1902►2nd Hague Convention 1907►Briand-Kellog-Pact 1928►UN Charter Art. 2(4) & Art. 2(7); authorization

of H.I. by Security Council under Ch. VII in response to emergencies that constitute a threat to peace & security (Art. 39 UNCh)

Page 24: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Finally … if you are a Rationalist

(political) function

follows (legal) form

Page 25: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Consequences… if you are an Idealist …or, respectively, a Liberal Internationalist, or,

respectively, a Liberal Institutionalist…

• Problem: States, particularly in the Third World, have long seen intervention as a threat to their sovereignty.

• Humanitarian intervention is regarded as no different [cf.Myanmar May 2008].

• Interventions have to be about regime change if they are to have any chance of accomplishing their stated goal [??]

Page 26: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

H.I. - a post- Cold War dead end ?

• tension between the principle of state sovereignty and evolving international norms relating to human rights and the use of force

• Proponents: imperative action in the face of human rights abuses, over the rights of state sovereignty

• Opponents: often viewed as a pretext for military intervention devoid of legal sanction, selectively deployed and achieving only ambiguous ends – cf. In particular Third World criticism, e.g.non-recognition by group of 77: H.I. a neo-imperialistic tool !

Page 27: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

• The United Nations, formed in the aftermath of World War II to promote peace and stability, recognize the importance of sovereignty…• Cf. Art. 2(7) "Nothing contained in the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state." • The principle does not rule out the application of enforcement measures in case of a threat to peace, a breach of peace, or acts of aggression – cf. Ch. VII.

Page 28: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

• The Genocide Convention of 1948 also overrode the nonintervention principle to lay down the commitment of the world com-munity to prevent and punish – its (non- ) application however is a Cold War problem… same as the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights & the 1966 conventions on civil & political, and economic, social, and cultural rights…

• Rwanda 1994 and Srebrenica 1995 highlight the complexities of international responses to crimes against humanity.

Page 29: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

The dialectic parallel…

Along with the emergence of non-intervention as a universal norm, a UN-initiated parallel development was in conflict with this principle: the development of human rights as a global issue.

Article 1 of the Charter emphasises promoting respect for human rights and justice as one of the fundamental missions of the organisation.

Page 30: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

The UN – defending human rights…

Article 55 states that the UN shall promote and respect the human rights and basic freedoms, and sub-sequent UN initiatives have strengthened these claims.

According to Charter, Geneva Conventions, and ICC Statute (military) intervention justified by: a) geno-cide - b) Crimes against Humanity - c) War Crimes - d) Slavery, Racism, Apartheid (SCR 134, 1960) – e) Humanitarian Catastrophes as consequence of state failure (SCR 794, 1922)

if a threat to peace and international (later also regional) security …

Page 31: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

The idealist‘s quandary…

Humanitarian intervention, as the most assertive form of promoting human rights at a global level, was and is clearly incompatible with norms such as non-intervention and state sovereignty.

Art. 39 UNCh – „The Security Council shall determine the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression and shall make recommendations, or decide what measures shall be taken…to maintain or restore international peace and security.“

Intervention is no automatism, but contingent, in the end, on the political interests of the Permanent Members/Veto Powers of the Security Council

Page 32: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Solution: change of perspective

• In 2000, the Canadian government and several other actors announced the establishment of the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS) – task: to address the challenge of the international community's responsibility to act in the face of the gravest of human rights violations while respecting the sovereignty of states.

• "If the international community is to respond to this challenge, the whole debate must be turned on its head. The issue must be reframed not as an argument about the 'right to intervene' but about the 'responsibility to protect.‘… " (Gareth Evans, Foreign Affairs, 2002)

Page 33: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Background to conceptual change

• The end of the Cold War• The massive rise of intrastate conflict, civil

war, and internal violence in the 1990s• The development of weak & failing states in

the 4th world• NATO intervention in the Kosovo 1999 –

legitimate, but not legal – without UN S.C. mandate (fear of Russian veto)

• The development of the concept of human security stressing limits to sovereignty

Page 34: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

R2P much more than military intervention – a whole continuum

• The responsibility to prevent: to address both the root causes and direct causes of internal conflict and other man-made crises putting populations at risk;

• The responsibility to react: to respond to situations of com- pelling human need with appropriate measures, which may include coercive measures like sanctions, international prosecution, and, in extreme cases, military intervention;

• The responsibility to rebuild: to provide, particularly after a military intervention, full assistance with recovery, reconstruction, and reconciliation, addressing the causes of the harm the intervention was designed to halt or avert.

Page 35: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

…but the main point still is…

…the question of military action remains, for better or worse, the most prominent and controversial one in the debate.

Whatever else it encompasses, the re-sponsibility to protect implies above all else a responsibility to react - where necessary, coercively, and in extreme cases, with military coercion - to situations of compelling need for human protection.

(Evans 2006, 709)

Page 36: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

R2P – a continuing story…

Report by the High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges, and Change, December 2004 [ A more secure world: Our shared responsibility]

Resolution by the World Summit, Sept. 2005:„ Each individual State has the responsibility to protect

its populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. This re-sponsibility entails the prevention of such crimes, including their incitement, through appropriate and necessary means. We accept that responsibility and will act in accordance with it…“

R2P accepted into customary international law ? ?

Page 37: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

R2P – the question of legitimacy

ICISS identified five criteria of legitimacy to be applied by the Security Council to any intervention decision:

(1) Just Cause: Is there “serious and irreparable harm occurring to human beings, or imminently likely to occur, of the following kind:

A. Large-scale loss of life, actual or apprehended, with genocidal intent or not, which is the product either of deliberate state action or state neglect, inability to act, or a failed-state situation; or

B. Large-scale ethnic cleansing, actual or apprehen-ded, whether carried out by killing, forced expulsion, acts of terror, or rape.”

Page 38: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

R2P legitimacy (2)

(2) Right Intention: Is the primary purpose of the proposed military action to halt or avert human suffering, whatever other motives may be in play?

(3) Last Resort: Has every non-military option for the prevention or peaceful resolution of the crisis been explored, and are there reasonable grounds for believing lesser measures will not succeed?

(4) Proportional Means: Is the scale, duration, and intensity of the planned military action the minimum necessary to secure the defined human protection objective?

Page 39: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

R2P legitimacy (3)

(5) Reasonable Prospects: Is there a reaso-nable chance of the military action being successful in meeting the threat in question, and are the consequences of action not likely to be worse than the consequences of in-action?

Problem: subcutaneous revival of the Just War doctrine ??

Page 40: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Just War Concept

War

ius ad bellum ius in bello

** iustus finis

** causa iusta rules of

** legitima auctoritas engage-

Judged by Politics ment

Page 41: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Just War criteria I

• Just cause– The reason for going to war needs to be just and cannot

therefore be solely for recapturing things taken or punishing people who have done wrong; innocent life must be in imminent danger and intervention must be to protect life. "Force may be used only to correct a grave, public evil, i.e., aggression or massive violation of the basic human rights of whole populations."

• Comparative justice– While there may be rights and wrongs on all sides of a

conflict, to overcome the presumption against the use of force, the injustice suffered by one party must significantly outweigh that suffered by the other..

• Legitimate authority– Only duly constituted public authorities may wage war.

Page 42: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Just War criteria II

• Right intention– Force may be used only in a truly just cause and solely for that

purpose—correcting a suffered wrong is considered a right intention, while material gain or maintaining economies is not.

• Probability of success– Arms may not be used in a futile cause or in a case where disproportionate

measures are required to achieve success;

• Last resort– Force may be used only after all peaceful and viable alternatives

have been seriously tried and exhausted or are clearly not practical. It may be clear that the other side is using negotiations as a delaying tactic and will not make meaningful concessions.

• Proportionality– The anticipated benefits of waging a war must be proportionate to

its expected evils or harms.

Page 43: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Open problems… political

• Have humanitarian interventions to be about regime change if they are to have any chance of accomplishing their stated goal ??

• Should the international community develop, parallel to R2P doctrine, the concept of an obligation to accept help ??

• Would it be advisable to regionalize the production of security and make the regions – under the general umbrella of the UN – primarily responsible for good humanitarian governance ??

Page 44: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Open problems …technical

► centralization or decentralization of the provision of humanitarian inter-vention/assistance ?

► a humanitarian assistance general staff for the United Nations ?

► and finally „Wer soll dat bezahlen, wer hätt dat bestellt…??“ (Willy Ostermann)

Page 45: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Helpful literature

• Herfried Münkler/Karsten Malowitz (Hrsg.): Humanitäre Intervention. Ein Instrument außenpolitischer Konfliktbearbeitung. Wiesbaden: VS-Verlag 2008

• Gareth Evans: From Humanitarian Inter-vention to the Responsibility to Protect, in: Wisconsin International Law Journal Vol.24 No.3 (2006), pp 703 - 722

Page 46: Die Politik der humanitären Intervention: politikwissenschaftliche Perspektiven Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c.mult. Reinhard Meyers Institut für Politikwissenschaft.

Thank You for yourpatience…