UN Human Rights Council Blames Security Council For Syrian Civil War

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UN Human Rights Claim Security Council Is Bad Cop

 

 

The United Nations human rights advocates and investigators point their finger at both commanders on the ground and the Security Council, to blame all of them for the misery in Syria. In other more direct words, Security Council, you’re the cop on the world beat, and you suck! http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/03/05/us-syria-crisis-warcrimes-idUSBREA240RP20140305

 

Analysts at http://HamiltonFinanceServices.com go further to say that the UN seems useless as the world’s policeman, and maybe the idea was doomed from its beginning.

 

Easy targets for the International Criminal Court (ICC), where so-called “rules of war” (RoW) supposedly provide the logic for prosecutions, spring up on the battlefield sooner than victory, if the UN human rights sympathizers can be believed. The commanders of troops make tactical decisions in the context of broader strategic interests, so the beginning point for identifying RoW violations might appear to the uninitiated to be the battlefield. Wrong!

 

As Rules of Engagement (ROE) spring from theater and national strategy to comply with RoW, ground commanders focused on those ROE seek to fulfill strategic orders from superiors by mechanical execution of battle plans far from the decisions about RoW.  Most ground commanders only vaguely recall hearing of RoW, and they clearly do not consider them when complying with their orders. The only perpetrators of RoW end up, historically, as the defeated decision-makers behind the front; victorious decision-makers in contrast retire to comfortable estates with shiny medals on their chests. To prosecute the order-obeying field commanders misses the point of ICC’s jurisdiction and reason for existence under the Rome Statute of 2002 (by which the ICC was formed).

 

So the UN human rights criticism of the UN Security Council for being a bad cop, for shirking responsibility to send bad field commanders and their generals to the ICC, seems premature, to put it mildly. No one has clearly won or lost the war in Syria yet.

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Nonetheless, one salient point offered in the bluster rings profoundly true. Paulo Pinheiro, a Brazilian RoW expert employed by the UN human rights bureau, charges not only field commanders and their generals with crimes but also “states which transfer weapons to ..” Syria. http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/IICISyria/Pages/PaulSergioPinheiro.aspx Does he mean the members of the Security Council, including, for example, the USA, Russia, China, France, or Great Britain? Does he mean that all the fighters in Syria will act as spoiled, violent children no matter what, so if they can find bigger, better guns, rockets, bombs, they will most certainly use them, and there is no meaningful way to stop such children except to stop giving them their preferred weapons? Does he mean that those in charge of the UN, when all is said and done, are the cause of the chaos they seek to control?

 

 

As noted, maybe the UN was doomed from its beginning.

CAR Crises Grows Despite French Troop Commitment

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France’s 1600 military members support a larger UN force of peacekeepers in the Central African Republic (CAR) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_African_Republic but according to the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon many more French troops must be sent to effectively produce peace. http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/02/11/us-central-african-un-idUSBREA1A2AK20140211

 

Already 5000 African troops work with the French, yet Christian forces intent on permanent removal of Muslims coordinate ‘ethnic cleansing’ across hundreds of miles in the land-locked republic. Over 250,000 new CAR refugees in the region since the beginning of 2014 have been added to the existing 850,000, which includes 400,000 in the immediate vicinity of Bangui, capitol of CAR. http://www.voanews.com/content/amnesty-peacekeepers-failed-to-prevent-ethnic-cleansing-in-car/1849583.html

 

Will other Euro forces join in support of CAR peacekeepers? According to a member of the European Union’s parliament, Arnaud Danjean, “Many European countries do not consider the situation in Central African Republic as a strategic and military priority.” http://www.euronews.com/2014/01/10/france-and-eu-involvement-in-central-african-republic/

 

So will the humanitarian crisis in CAR simply be left to grow? Should France reconsider its commitments to African peace? Are the current French troops to be left as the only significant European force for the foreseeable future?

 

Here at http://HamiltonFinanceServices.com we pose such questions to clarify the larger conversation about how the First World nations will respond to Third World crises. Some opinions in the debate describe the modern policy of world leaders as disengaged. http://HamiltonFinanceServices.com/?p=1503

 

If wars escalate, leaving in their wake waves of millions of refugees, can the EU and the USA afford to stand back? Are there no strategic interests related to central Africa? What other nations in the region might benefit from peace in CAR?

What do you think?