Cosmopolitan dystopia: International intervention and the failure of the West
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Philip Cunliffe
Philip Cunliffe is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at the University of Kent, which he joined in 2009. He has written widely on a variety of political issues ranging from Balkan politics to Brexit, with a particular focus on international efforts to manage violent conflict since the end of the Cold War.
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Cosmopolitan dystopia - Philip Cunliffe
Cosmopolitan dystopia
In loving memory
Nada Milić
(1933–2015)
Cosmopolitan dystopia
International intervention and the failure of the West
Philip Cunliffe
Manchester University Press
Copyright © Philip Cunliffe 2020
The right of Philip Cunliffe to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Published by Manchester University Press
Altrincham Street, Manchester M1 7JA
www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 1 5261 0572 1 hardback
ISBN 978 1 5261 0573 8 paperback
First published 2020
The publisher has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for any external or third-party internet websites referred to in this book, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.
COVER IMAGE: Women and children evacuated from the Islamic State group’s embattled holdout of Baghouz arrive at a screening area held by the US-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, in the eastern Syrian province of Deir ez-Zor, on 6 March 2019. © BULENT KILIC/AFP/Getty Images
Typeset in Palatino and Gibson
by R. J. Footring Ltd, Derby
Contents
List of figures
Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction: the rise of cosmopolitan dystopia
1Inverted revisionism and the subversion of the liberal international order
2Through the looking-glass: the new critics of intervention
3What should we do? The politics of humanitarian exceptionalism
4Failed states, failed empires and the new paternalism
Conclusion: waiting for the Americans
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Figures
3.1 Mapping international exceptionalism
3.2 Locating cosmopolitan liberalism
Preface and acknowledgements
This is a book about the character of liberal international order over the last thirty years of the post-Cold War era and how it came to be characterised by repetitive military interventions that effectively collapsed into an era of permanent war.
There are many ways in which this story could be told. For example, both Emmanuel Todd and Yanis Varoufakis see the era of permanent war as a function of the enormous and abiding US trade deficit. Exemplary conflicts, they argue, were needed to maintain the US position at the centre of the world system, both in supporting confidence in the dollar as the global reserve currency and by way of justifying a system of global ‘protection’ that ensured other states would provide the necessary inflow of capital that would in turn allow the US to continue consuming more than it produces. Drawing on Greek myth, Varoufakis dubbed the massive scale of US borrowing the ‘tribute’ that was paid to the Minotaur – the US – at the centre of the international system.¹ John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt see permanent war as the outcome of ‘liberal hegemony’, a catastrophically overambitious grand strategy born of US victory in the Cold War and locked into place by a self-serving foreign policy elite.² At the grandest level perhaps, it is a tale that could be told in terms of the contradictions of globalisation, which, by spreading growth and development around the world market, has given rise to new challengers who threaten to fragment and undermine that very same global market.
However it is told, it must also at some level be a story about our ideas of international order. In addition to trade talks and global integration and so on, ‘liberal international order’ encompasses our ideas about the purpose and utility of military force in international affairs, about the structure of political order and authority, about the role and rights of the strong in relation to the weak, and about the possibility and appeal of self-government in both individual and collective terms. This is what merits casting this discussion in terms of international political theory.
To explain, say, the disastrous intervention in Iraq purely as a reverberation of deep, enigmatic structural forces such as a global balance of power being recalibrated or shifts in trade deficits, currency reserves, purchases of US Treasury bonds or the changing pattern of Western states’ fossil fuel consumption would not fully capture the awesomely irrational and criminal scale of what happened to that country. Nor would such explanations tell us much about the legacy of political structures and new forms of authority that we will inherit from this era of permanent war. The protracted torment of Iraq reaching back to 1991 seems to me very clearly one of the greatest criminal acts of our times. Yet it is never discussed alongside Rwanda or Srebrenica, both of which are repeatedly (and self-servingly) identified as the worst moments of our era and conveniently seen as sins of omission – morality tales in which the failure of the West to intervene was seen as the most important, overarching aspect of those atrocities. To me, it seemed increasingly clear that military operations which were supposed to have inaugurated either a new supranational global order or alternatively an expansionist American empire built around a ‘civilising mission’ for democracy and human rights embodied instead a ‘de-civilising mission’ that led to regression and de-modernisation with the shattering of unitary nation-states that had emerged from the era of Third World revolutions, alongside the dialling back of the markers of secular progress, whether measured in terms of public infrastructure, centralised nationhood, women’s rights, secular authority, ethnic and religious pluralism, and so on.
Yet, apparently, sins of commission did not exist. Many scholars, intellectuals and academics have insisted that the 2003 invasion of Iraq had no relationship to the broader pattern of liberal interventions since 1992, while in the next breath insisting that yet another military intervention in yet another Arab state, Libya, was entirely justified and welcome in the very next year after the US formally ended its post-occupation campaign in Iraq. I lost count of how many conferences, panels and academic roundtables I sat through to be reassured not only that, even while the forces of Islamic State were ensconcing themselves on the shores of Tripoli, the NATO bombing campaign had been blessed not only by following the deepest principles of ‘just war’ theory as enunciated by St Augustine and Thomas Aquinas, but also that the campaign conveniently conformed to the latter-day scriptures of human rights and the writ of UN Security Council resolutions. Exasperated by the blithe self-assurance of those arguing for yet more war, I realised that the recurrent amnesia and casuistry of debates around intervention had to be accounted for and not merely refuted. What was it about these ideas that made it so easy to split apart the most basic questions of cause and effect, to treat every humanitarian crisis as if it were sui generis, and to act as if intervention itself had no history? This is the question that I have tried to answer in this book, and it is one that led me to consider contradictions within liberal internationalism itself – contradictions that have given rise, I argue, to a cosmopolitan dystopia.
Books about ideas arguably accrue debts more than other kinds of book. The inspiration for the critique in this book came from engaging with and (I hope) extending the work of several thinkers, namely Jef Huysmans, Anne Orford, Jean Cohen and Samuel Moyn. It was their work that provided the key insights for understanding interventionism in terms of political exceptionalism and anti-utopianism, as well as changing forms of state and sovereign authority, and for contextualising these issues in debates about international order. This enabled me to knot together practical concerns about international security with a theoretical interest in underlying principles of international order. Following in their footsteps I hope to use and expand upon their insights taken from constitutionalist reasoning and international political theory, as I hope to demonstrate over the course of the book that these insights are uniquely well suited to explaining and contextualising certain political outcomes that would otherwise seem aberrational.
Many of the ideas in this book also grow out of earlier work and debates associated with the (now defunct) Sovereignty And Its Discontents working group (SAID) of the British International Studies Association, which I helped to convene and oversee alongside Christopher J. Bickerton and Alex Gourevitch. Whatever insights I can claim in this book also bear their imprint, for which I am very grateful, although needless to say I bear sole responsibility for the arguments in this book, including for any errors of fact and judgement. There were so many roundtables, seminars, workshops, panels and conferences associated with the SAID project, and since, that it seems to churlish to select specific individuals who were particularly influential with respect to the arguments in this book. Nonetheless, I feel obliged to extend a special thanks (in no particular order) to James Heartfield, Michael Savage, David Chandler, R. B. J. Walker, Tara McCormack, Chris Brown, Lee Jones, Ian Zuckerman, Shahar Hameiri, Aidan Hehir, Mervyn Frost, Jonathan Joseph, Peter Ramsay and Jennifer Welsh – all of whom supported the SAID project and/or variously contributed to helping shape the arguments in this book. I also extend my thanks to an anonymous reviewer working on behalf of Manchester University Press. If any of them read the finished product, I hope they find it stimulating and useful even if they do not agree with it. Once again, the fault for any errors is mine alone. A special word of thanks to the charming Marie-Claire Antoine, who initially suggested I write this book, far too many years ago, and was happy to discuss it over a steak and red wine in downtown New York. Another special thanks to Tony Mason, Robert Byron and Jonathan de Peyer, my editors at Manchester University Press, who inherited the project and have shown heroic patience with the book ever since. Last but not least, my grandmother Nada Milić (née Prokić) had a refrain to the effect that if someone asked her for her view about the state of the world, she would happily give them a piece of her mind. When I was little, I promised to give her the opportunity to do so. Hopefully this book goes some way, in a sorely belated and ultimately inadequate manner, to do just that. The book is dedicated to her memory.
Canterbury
December 2019
Introduction: the rise of cosmopolitan dystopia
While I was putting the finishing touches to the manuscript in early 2019, I was in touch via WhatsApp with a journalist who was in Syria, reporting from the front line in the final offensive by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) against the Baghouz enclave, the last redoubt of Islamic State (IS), near the Syrian border with Iraq. The question of what to do about Western citizens who had joined IS and were now languishing in Kurdish-run refugee camps was also very much in the news: the front cover of this book shows women and children evacuated from Baghouz arriving at a screening centre run by the SDF in the eastern Syrian province of Deir Ezzor in March 2019. All this prompted me to think back to the summer of 2014, the moment when my understanding of liberal intervention shifted decisively. This happened as I read with foreboding the news of the fall of the Iraqi city of Mosul to a new jihadi group. While the fall of Mosul signalled yet another escalation of violent conflict in a country that was already bloody and battered, it was the name of the group, ‘Islamic State’, that was in many ways more troubling. This strange and sinister name signalled an explicitly political, even geopolitical, ambition and vision on the part of jihadi insurgents – vision and ambition that had hitherto been noticeable by its absence.¹ The desire to establish a new political order that openly challenged the writ of existing nations in the region led me to the conclusion that the rise of Islamic State set the seal on a powerful and pervasive strain of ideas about international affairs – a set of ideas that could be described as political cosmopolitanism, which sought to replace the nation-state with a new, transnational order.
While there was little doubt in my mind that what we were seeing in Iraq in 2014 was the consummation of ideas that I had been discussing in seminar rooms and lecture halls since the late 1990s, I still did not expect the resonances and analogues to be quite so uncannily direct and obvious. While the slave markets, brazen cruelty and fantastical visions of militarised global expansion were all self-evidently and even ostentatiously dystopian, Islamic State was also very clearly cosmopolitan. It was cosmopolitan in the most basic and obvious sense, in that it was multi-ethnic and multinational, comprising many thousands of people from all over the world. These people had descended on two Middle Eastern backwaters, Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria, in order to join a new political entity that did not aspire to become an independent nation or country in any meaningful sense of the term. Islamic State was thus also cosmopolitan in the broader sense that it rejected the sovereign nation-state. Not only did it seek to overthrow existing nation-states, as when its fighters ejected Iraqi security forces from their bases in the north-west of the country, it rejected the very form of the sovereign nation-state as such. Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the late self-styled caliph of the Islamic State, called upon his followers to ‘trample’ the ‘idols’ of nationalism and democracy in the sermon with which the caliphate was formally established. He further enjoined all Muslims everywhere to join ‘a state where the Arab and non-Arab, the white man and black man, the easterner and westerner are all brothers’ and that would enact divine – that is, supranational – justice against its opponents.²
Islamic State also made much of its supersession of national borders, as on 30 June 2014, when its militants flamboyantly bulldozed the border posts that formally separated Syria and Iraq, thereby supposedly unifying the territories of the two countries in an integrated new political system that transcended the merely human, secular artefacts of nation-states. Followers of Islamic State renounced their national citizenship on social media and burned their passports, while its fighters saw the world as a single site of battle as they launched terror attacks in cities around the world.³ At the same time, various Islamist militias and jihadist groups across Africa and Asia, embroiled in their own local conflicts and civil strife, willingly subsumed themselves into this globalised new vision of conflict and supranational order. As a new type of polity, Islamic State claimed legitimacy neither from below (it did not claim to represent any particular nation or group seeking self-determination), nor from above, for Islamic State reached higher than any international law or supranational body when its caliph claimed directly to stand for mankind as such, drawing on nothing less than divine authority to do so.
Travelling to Iraq and Syria for ‘humanitarian purposes’ may have provided the alibi or initiation for many a Western would-be jihadi, but however pure or impure their motives, however authentic or inauthentic their compassion, it is unsurprising that the logic of humanitarian rescue was entwined with that of violent regime change.⁴ After all, while the world bewailed the human rights abuses and atrocities committed by the Syrian government, it was jihadis who were the ones actually fighting the government on the ground, and it was only jihadis who actively, persistently and unambiguously sought to overthrow the Syrian regime. As one reflective would-be jihadi put it, viewing military conquest as a charitable act and feeling entitled to intervene in other countries’ civil wars and to rebuild their societies were popular Western ideals more than they were Islamic scripture.⁵ In short, humanitarian compassion for distant strangers entwined with transcending nation-states by force if necessary and scorning nationalism through transnational organisation and supranational authority were familiar themes in world politics. What we were seeing in Iraq and Syria was only a murky mirror, one in which familiar ideals and hopes were being played out in dark and terrible form: permanent war inspired by global ideals in a borderless world.
As J. M. Keynes once noted, ‘Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back’. As the spectre of totalitarianism had faded at the end of the Cold War, many international political theorists had turned their scribblings to intellectually subduing that most intensely concentrated, brash and unrestrained form of political power – that institution that recognises peers but has no superiors, the sovereign state. While these scribblings were numerous and varied, many of them shared a similar cast, in that they sought to supersede state sovereignty in various ways. Whether through appealing to global law or vesting their hopes in supranational new regimes and institutions, a common and recurrent concern was to assimilate peoples into new supranational social, legal and political structures – those varied elements that together constituted the ‘postnational constellation’, as the title of philosopher Jürgen Habermas’s book on the matter put it.⁶ Vertically, people had to be integrated into new supranational institutions and laws that ramified from regional up to global bodies, and horizontally they had to be blended together, less segmented by national political loyalties.
While many of these changes were often assumed to be a result of the movement of capital and new types of media, globalisation was never merely a matter of spontaneous trade flows or extemporaneous new technologies, but also involved explicitly political projects of integration and reordering to better fit the emergent infrastructure of a new social order. Part of this also involved military force, in which powerful Western states were expected to act as the direct military enforcers and executors of global law, defending individuals’ human rights from the depredations of their own negligent and criminal national leaders, arresting war criminals to haul them off before international courts, promoting democracy up to and including the use of force if necessary, and acting to neutralise global security threats – security threats that paradoxically seemed to become more apocalyptically menacing the more globalised Western power became. This was the view of NATO as the ‘left hand of God’, as per the title of an exultant essay by the philosopher Slavoj Žižek in which he defended the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, the North Atlantic alliance cast as the imperfect instrument of a higher justice.⁷
If wars had previously been defined in liberal terms of antitotalitarianism and anti-communism, they had also been justified in unabashedly national terms too – defending national rights and honour, self-defence and sometimes even plain unadorned national self-interest. In the post-Cold War era, the use of force was still defined in liberal terms but also terms that were at once more cosmopolitan (justified on behalf of others) and humanitarian (protection and alleviating suffering rather than defending liberty). Thus, while in 1999 Habermas acknowledged the ‘inevitability of a transitory paternalism’⁸ in NATO’s invocation of higher right over the rights of sovereign states, he nonetheless welcomed NATO’s war against Yugoslavia as embodying ‘a leap from the classical international law of states to a cosmopolitan law of a global civil society’.⁹ Cosmopolitan political theorist Patrick Hayden saw post-Cold War developments in international security such as the doctrine of the responsibility to protect and the international human security regime as concrete steps towards ‘replacing the realist national interest-based security paradigm with a cosmopolitan, person-based paradigm’.¹⁰
A crucial constituent element of this cosmopolitan vision of politics was human rights. As Perry Anderson observed, for an entire generation of political theorists who had hitherto restricted themselves to theorising politics inside the state during the Cold War, after the Cold War ‘human rights became the global trampoline for vaulting over the barriers of national sovereignty, in the name of a better future’.¹¹ Human rights were to be used to abrade nation-states in order to insert them into new global configurations so that they would fit better alongside new actors such as non-governmental organisations, international courts and supranational bodies. Human rights provided the legal undergirding for cosmopolitan politics, the human face of globalisation. Powerful, evocative and densely layered and distributed across international treaties, conventions, national courts and supranational agencies, human rights have captured the hopes of many millions of people around the world – hopes for justice, social improvement, legal redress and political change. By the same token, human rights have also been widely criticised, not only for the hypocrisy of their defenders but also for an imperious universalism that bleaches out cultural particularism. To be sure, the language of human rights has certainly provided Western states with a supple new discourse of moral superiority to wield over up-start ex-colonies in place of white supremacy. The discourse of human rights also gave an appropriately supranational expression to old European imperial states that had grown habituated to pooling their sovereignty as their individual power waned. There is, though, one element of human rights that has hitherto been overlooked and yet is crucial to understanding both their cosmopolitan character and their dystopic results. That element is the post- or counter-utopian character of human rights. Political philosopher John Rawls, for instance, expressly framed his cosmopolitan vision in The Law of Peoples as a ‘realistic utopia’ – that is to say, a vision that was expressly modest, pragmatic and selfrestrained rather than being crusading or militant.¹² Juxtapose this with Samuel Moyn’s work, which has shown most clearly how human rights could necessarily politically succeed only as a response to thwarted utopianism.¹³ It was the failure of New Left hopes for radical transformation in Western democracies – accompanied by the frequently dismal results of Third World and anti-colonial revolutions – that formed the disenchantment that was to provide the basis for human rights as a project. At once modest and fervent, human rights offered a model of politics and activism that was restrained, diffident, circumspect and minimalistic. In place of the radical hopes for drastic improvement to be achieved