response to Justin Gabbard and Doug Brooks's post Ruthless Humanitarianism
Doctrine of Enforced Humanitarianism
Commented on September 9, 2007 by - Scottonthespot


I prefer not just to think outside the box, but to make my own box. I don't like labels: Right, Left, Liberal, Conservative etc. I *do* like people who think and can defend their position. Values: honesty; integrity; respect for others, even those you disagree with; tolerence; ideas and action instead of blind reaction and dominence through force. My novels show all this too and require readers as intellectual as the main characters.
Politics
response to Justin Gabbard and Doug Brooks's post Ruthless Humanitarianism
Commented on September 9, 2007 by - Scottonthespot
(The following message is from my blog, where it has been posted for over a year.)
I've been reading articles on Darfur for some time, and those of other "human catastrophe zones" such as nearby Chad may be becoming. I don't think any of the present approaches will solve the current genocide in Darfur. They are all too little, too meek and too badly defined. First, do the nations with the power to change things really care? If not, they should own up to it and say, "well, this is a tragedy, but that's life - for those in that part of the world anyway - and there is not much we can do about it." That wouldn't be a noble position of course, but it would be an honest one. If they do want to do something, there should be a hard and effective policy. I've even come up with a name for such a policy - I call it the Doctrine of Enforced Humanitarianism (DEH).
It would work something like this: in any region or country where there is no rule of law, where there is systemic violation of the most basic human rights not to be tortured, raped or killed, where there is international recognition of these problems and recognition that these conditions will not or cannot be rectified by the government of the area, then the international community has a right, even an obligation, to go in and enforce these basic human rights - even at the point of violating national sovereignty. The last point is key because it gives an international force the authority to set up protected zones where people will be safe, and even be able to function and scratch out some sort of subsistence living. What to do if, in Darfur's case, the Janjaweed attack?
Shoot them.
I'm serious. Let the Sudanese government protest, if they dare. They can't stop the slaughter (I'm being charitable here since it's more like they *won't* stop the slaughter) so the world should. Of course, the U.S. being the biggest military power in the world, would have a disproportionate role in things. We should make clear we are not in there to take over the country under DEH rules - which would be carefully spelled out in the U.N. - but merely to preserve lives and provide stability in those regions where neither can be expected. Some form of village government might have to be set up by local leaders - provided they renounce violence and leave policing and protection to the international force. The DEH would go on as long as necessary.
A de facto "second state" might arise if it went on long enough. So be it. When a government fails in the most basic protection of its citizens, it renounces its right to govern those citizens, according to the Doctrine of Enforced Humanitarianism.
Anything short of a hard and uncompromising solution like this, in my opinion, is destined to fail.