From the Los Angeles Times
Save us from the rescuers
Calls for military action to force aid on
Myanmar march us down a dangerous road.
By David Rieff
May 18, 2008
The decision by the government of Myanmar not to admit foreign
humanitarian relief workers to help the victims of Cyclone Nargis has
been met with fury, consternation and disbelief in much of the world.
With
tens of thousands of people dead, up to 100,000 missing and more than a
million displaced and without shelter, livelihood or possibly even
sufficient food, the refusal of the military rulers of the country to
let in foreign aid organizations or to open airports and waterways in
more than a token way to shipments of aid supplies seems to be an act
of sheer barbarism.
In response, Gareth Evans, the former
Australian foreign minister who heads the International Crisis Group,
made the case last week that the decision by Myanmar's authorities to
default on their responsibilities to their own citizens might well
constitute "a crime against humanity," and suggested that the United
Nations might need to consider bringing aid to Myanmar non-consensually,
justified on the basis of the "Responsibility to Protect Resolution"
adopted at the 2005 U.N. World Summit by 150 member states.
To
be sure, R2P (as the resolution is colloquially known) was not
envisaged by the commission that framed it (and that Evans co-chaired)
as a response to natural disasters, but rather as a way of confronting
"genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity."
To extend its jurisdiction to natural disasters is as unprecedented as
it is radical. But as Evans put it last week, "when a government
default is as grave as the course on which [Myanmar's] generals now
seem to be set, there is at least a prima facie case to answer
for their intransigence being a crime against humanity -- of a kind
that would attract the responsibility-to-protect principle."
Evans'
warning was clear. Myanmar's generals should not delude themselves into
thinking that the international community would allow them to act in
any way they wished -- not if it meant turning a blind eye to the
dangers the cyclone's survivors faced. These dangers, according to the
British charity Oxfam, threatened an additional 1.5 million lives.
And
a number of European governments took the same line. British Foreign
Secretary David Miliband stated that military action to ensure that the
aid got to where it needed to go might be legal and necessary. And
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner echoed this argument, saying
that France was considering bringing a resolution to the U.N. Security
Council allowing for such steps to be taken.
For Kouchner, a
co-founder of the French relief group Doctors Without Borders, this was
familiar ground. He was a leading, and controversial, figure in the
relief world long before joining Nicolas Sarkozy's government last
year, and he is one of the originators of the so-called right of
interference -- a hawkish interpretation of humanitarianism's moral
imperative and an operational license that basically held that outside
aid groups and governments had a presumptive right to intervene when
governments abused their own people.
At first glance, the
arguments of Evans, Miliband, Kouchner and the leaders of many
mainstream relief organizations may seem like common-sense humanism.
How could it be morally acceptable to subordinate the rights of people
in need to the prerogatives of national sovereignty? In a globalized
world in which people, goods and money all move increasingly freely,
why should a national border -- that relic of the increasingly
unimportant state system -- stand in the way of people dedicated to
doing good for their fellow human beings? Why should the world stand by
and allow an abusive government to continue to be derelict in its
duties toward its own people?
Surely, to oppose this sort of humanitarian entitlement is a failure of
empathy and perhaps even an act of moral cowardice.
This
has been the master narrative of the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis. It
has dominated the speeches of officials and most of the media coverage,
which has been imbued with an almost pornographic catastrophism in
which aid agencies and journalists seem to be trying to outdo each
other in the apocalyptic quality of their predictions. First, the U.S.
charge d'affaires in Yangon, Myanmar's capital, without having left the
city, told reporters that though only 22,000 people had been confirmed
dead, she thought the toll could rise as high as 100,000. A few days
later, Oxfam was out with its estimate of 1.5 million people being at
risk from water-borne diseases -- without ever explaining how it
arrived at such an extraordinarily alarming estimate.
In
reality, no one yet knows what the death toll from the cyclone is, let
alone how resilient the survivors will be. One thing is known, however,
and that is that in crisis after crisis, from the refugee emergency in
eastern Zaire after the Rwandan genocide, through the Kosovo crisis, to
the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, to the 2004 South Asian tsunami,
many of the leading aid agencies, Oxfam prominent among them, have
predicted far more casualties than there would later turn out to have
been.
In part, this is because relief work is, in a sense, a
business, and humanitarian charities are competing with every other
sort of philanthropic cause for the charitable dollar and euro, and
thus have to exaggerate to be noticed. It is also because coping with
disasters for a living simply makes the worst-case scenario always seem
the most credible one, and, honorably enough, relief workers feel they
must always be prepared for the worst.
But whatever the
motivations, it is really no longer possible to take the relief
community's apocalyptic claims seriously. It has wrongly cried wolf too
many times.
We should be skeptical of the aid agencies' claims
that, without their intervention, an earthquake or cyclone will be
followed by an additional disaster of equal scope because of disease
and hunger. The fact is that populations in disaster zones tend to be
much more resilient than foreign aid groups often make them out to be.
And though the claim that only they can prevent a second catastrophe is
unprovable, it serves the agencies' institutional interests -- such
interventions are, after all, the reason they exist in the first place.
Unwelcome as the thought may be, reasonable-sounding
suggestions made in the name of global solidarity and humanitarian
compassion can sometimes be nothing of the sort. Aid is one thing. But
aid at the point of a gun is taking the humanitarian enterprise to a
place it should never go. And the fact that the calls for humanitarian
war were ringing out within days of Cyclone Nargis is emblematic of how
the interventionist impulse, no matter how well-intended, is extremely
dangerous.
The ease with which the rhetoric of rescue slips
into the rhetoric of war is why invoking R2P should never be accepted
simply as an effort to inject some humanity into an inhumane situation
(the possibility of getting the facts wrong is another reason; that too
has happened in the past). Yes, the impulse of the interveners may be
entirely based on humanitarian and human rights concerns. But lest we
forget, the motivations of 19th century European colonialism were also
presented by supporters as being grounded in humanitarian concern. And
this was not just hypocrisy. We must not be so politically correct as
to deny the humanitarian dimension of imperialism. But we must also not
be so historically deaf, dumb and blind as to convince ourselves that
it was its principal dimension.
Lastly, it is critically
important to pay attention to just who is talking about military
intervention on humanitarian grounds. Well, among others, it's the
foreign ministers of the two great 19th century colonial empires. And
where exactly do they want to intervene -- sorry, where do they want to
live up to their responsibility to protect? Mostly in the very
countries they used to rule.
When a British or French minister
proposes a U.N. resolution calling for a military intervention to make
sure aid is properly delivered in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans,
then, and only then, can we be sure we have put the specter of
imperialism dressed up as humanitarianism behind us. In the meantime,
buyer beware.
David Rieff is the author of many books,
including "At the Point of a Gun: Democratic Dreams and Armed
Intervention" and "A Bed for the Night: Humanitarianism in Crisis."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times