March 2, 2015

America's real exceptionalism: Ignoring the international law it helped create

After World War II, the US used its triumph to help create the United Nations, push for the adoption of its Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and ratify the Geneva Conventions for humanitarian treatment in war. If you throw in other American-backed initiatives like the World Health Organization, the World Trade Organization, and the World Bank, you pretty much have the entire infrastructure of what we now casually call "the international community."


Not only did the US play a crucial role in writing the new rules for that community, but it almost immediately began breaking them. After all, despite the rise of the other superpower, the Soviet Union, Washington was by then the world sovereign and so could decide which should be the exceptions to its own rules, particularly to the foundational principle for all this global governance: sovereignty. As it struggled to dominate the hundred new nations that started appearing right after the war, each one invested with an inviolable sovereignty, Washington needed a new means of projecting power beyond conventional diplomacy or military force. As a result, CIA covert operations became its way of intervening within a new world order where you couldn't or at least shouldn't intervene openly.

All of the exceptions that really matter spring from America's decision to join what former spy John Le Carré called that "squalid procession of vain fools, traitors... sadists, and drunkards," and embrace espionage in a big way after World War II......

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Not at all what happened. Truman let the Westphalian UN stuff and Nuremberg happen, but it was already too late because FDR had a personal relationship with Uncle Joe that Truman didn't inherit or understand. Truman nuked Japan to keep Russia from getting there first. Not exactly covert. The US absorbed the Axis and kicked the Soviets out of the Allies and voted against Joe being a NATO member. The US replaced Germany and Japan as the global leader of the Axis, which had previously been shared. So here we are parked in front of WWIII and it's all out in the open and obvious. The Heartland is now at arm's length and Russia/China/India/Iran are linked by defense pacts to Russia, the nuclear clock at 3 minutes to midnight.

Anonymous said...

Not to diminish the role of intelligence, clearly the elimination of privacy is a cornerstone of fascism. The role of intelligence in overthrowing governments like Ukraine recently, was not going to work in big places like the Soviet Union, Southeast Asia, China or the current Middle East. It did, however, work well in the US, which has been a primary target certainly since Joe McCarthy.