‘Hostis humani generis’ is a 17th century legalism
that means ‘enemy of all mankind’. It was at that time applied to the pirates,
particularly those who had set up shop in the Caribbean where they had safe
ports to go to such as Port Royal and even their own ‘pirate republic’ in
Nassau at one stage.
The indiscriminately brutish behaviour of many pirates had
made them thoroughly unpopular with all and sundry, and there was no shortage
of people who were after their blood. But tensions among the European powers –
the Spanish, English, French and Dutch – stood in the way of effective
cooperation towards combating the common threat.
Pirates were actually seen as quite
useful when they attacked ships of rivals, particularly the Spanish, and deals
were struck between local governors and so-called privateers who were offered
safe havens in return for promises to not attack ships of the protecting nation
and a cut of booty seized. It was only in the early 18th century
that the attitude ‘enough is enough’ prevailed and the pirates were finally
dealt with decisively by the European naval powers.
There are striking
parallels between the pirates of old and ISIS – the largely indiscriminate and
often bestial behaviour that has made them almost universally despised, the safe
havens and nominal statehood, the local deals surrounding the sale of ISIS’s
oil and other plundered assets, and above all, the complex geopolitics that stand
in the way of decisive action being taken against them by opponents who, should
they set aside their differences for just a few short weeks, could annihilate
them with little effort. There is indeed a ‘coalition of the willing’ acting
against them, but the coalition is far from a united one. For one thing, it is sharply
divided over the extension of the campaign into Syria. Iraq is a
straightforward matter of the government of a sovereign state requesting
assistance in dealing with an insurgency, which is entirely permissible under
the UN Charter (although the Iraqis do not want the US’s Arab allies to strike targets on Iraqi territory). The Syrian
government did not, however, request any such support, and indeed did not
consent to it – the Syrian UN delegate was merely passed a letter from John
Kerry by the Iraqi delegate prior to the commencement of the attacks to the
effect that they would be happening. There is a common view in Washington and
Whitehall that the al-Assad regime is ‘illegitimate’, and need therefore not be
consulted about violations of Syria’s territorial sovereignty – a position
rather at odds with the UN dealing with the Damascus regime as the government
of the Syrian Arab Republic with respect to the disposal of its chemical arsenal.
Russia and Iran have, unsurprisingly, denounced the attacks on Syrian soil as
illegal under international law. Thus far, the European powers have restricted
their operations to Iraq, although the French have mooted the possibility of
including Syrian targets after the murder of one of their nationals by ISIS
affiliates in Algeria. Despite David Cameron’s dismissive view of the regime in
Damascus, the British parliament would have to authorise strikes in Syria in
the course of a second vote (unless he invokes his prerogative powers, which he
could have done to begin with but chose not to).
Another
issue is the scope of military involvement. As senior members of the British
and American top brass have pointed out more than once, air strikes alone can
not and will not settle ISIS’s hash, and ‘boots on the ground’ will be needed.
However, both the US and UK leaderships appear to be adamant in their assertion
that it won’t be their troops that do
the dirty work. All eyes are on the Kurdish peshmerga,
the deal being, I suspect, that the West won’t kick up too much of a fuss when
the Kurds declare independence probably next year. But Soviet-era weaponry is
no match for the 21st-century arsenal ISIS possesses courtesy of the
Iraqi army and some shadowy suppliers. Several European nations have promised
to supply the Kurds with the hardware they need, but Turkey has been howling in
protest as they fear those weapons will be turned on them by Kurdish
separatists afterwards, and most of the promises remain to be acted on.
The West is
also talking about arming the ‘moderate’ Syrian opposition. Getting the gear to
the intended recipients would be quite a feat in itself given that this nebulous
entity is the meat in the sandwich between the al-Assad regime and various
extremist groups all gunning for them. They may as well airdrop those military
supplies straight into ISIS’s lap as that’s where they’ll almost certainly end
up anyway.
To win this
war, Mosul and Raqqa need to be recaptured. The Iranians could probably take
Mosul with a single crack regiment. Cameron has been trying to snuggle up to
his counterpart in Teheran, but the bloodymindedness of the British and
especially the Americans with respect to the regime in Damascus has thrown a
spanner into those works. And of course there’s no way active cooperation with
Damascus would be given a moment’s thought, even though it is just about
impossible to see how Raqqa could be retaken without the Syrian army getting
into the act.
We have
been warned that this war is going to take not months but years. And yet it
could be over in weeks, even without any Western ‘boots on the ground’ if
Teheran and Damascus were brought on board and the Kurds were properly
equipped. (Direct Turkish involvement would be useful too – as I write, the
Turks are considering active military involvement, but no doubt there will be
strings attached relating to the Kurds, and it is likely that the Turks would
not be prepared to extend their military presence beyond a security zone
adjacent to their border.) Allowing this war to drag on and on – which is the
way it’s starting to look unless there is a radical change in Western policy–
can only have the most regrettable consequences. With every engagement, ISIS
becomes more experienced and effective as an army. Every instance of
‘collateral damage’ – and there has been some already – adds grist to their
propaganda mill that is sure to feed into the disquiet that many Arabs feel
concerning the West’s true intentions.
And the longer all this goes on, the more opportunity ISIS has to do
some serious al Qaida-style planning for attacks on Western targets both
outside and on Western soil. As the Australians discovered last month, the
tentacles of the organisation already extend far beyond the Middle East.
Then there is
the spectre of ‘legitimacy creep’ as the Islamic State begins to look and act
more and more like a nation-state. It is already starting to look like a ‘real’
government with formal political and administrative structures, the latter including
ministries and government departments. Although they are tight-lipped about it,
the Turks reportedly engaged in negotiations with ISIS over the Turkish
hostages at the diplomatic level. The attributes of nationhood as outlined in
the Montevideo Convention 1933 – a defined territory, a permanent population, a government, and
capacity to enter into relations with the other states – are being approached
by the Islamic State at a perceptible rate. They are unlikely to be recognised
by any other country, but the Convention stipulates that nationhood is actually
independent of recognition. The Islamic State is on its way to joining
Somaliland as a self-declared independent nation that is not officially
recognised by anyone but which has dealings with other countries as though it
were. Surely the rest of the world can not allow the Islamic State this luxury
– but with all the indecisiveness borne of mutual distrust and conflicting
interests, that is exactly what is being allowed to happen.
Once the imperial
European powers said ‘enough is enough’ with regard to the Caribbean pirates,
the game was up fairly quickly. Unfortunately, it took decades for that stage
to be reached, with untold suffering for countless victims in the meantime. I
hope we are not looking at history repeating itself, or, even worse, waiting
for Godot while a terrorist de facto state
emerges before our very eyes. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to be
proved wrong on both counts. But I suspect it will take a truly cataclysmic
incident to spur ISIS’s enemies into decisive action, such as a massive attack
on Western soil or – perhaps – the desecration of the tomb of Suleyman Shah,
the grandfather of the founder of the Ottoman Empire, located in a Turkish
enclave in Syria – and currently surrounded by ISIS fighters.
Barend
Vlaardingerbroek BSc (Auckland), BA, BEdSt (Queensland), MAppSc (Curtin), PhD
(Otago), DipCommonLaw, PGDipLaws (London) is associate professor of education
at the American University of Beirut. Feedback welcome at bv00@aub.edu.lb.
4 comments:
The scum Islam IS are at the border of Turkey Ayn el Arab as we write, and only now is Turkey prepared to take action. Turks hate Kurds, I think it is the PKK thing. When I was in Turkey the Turks who befriended me, they said you can have Turkish girl Westerner but no Kurd. You marry Kurd girl you dead here
All aronud the Police were checking identity cards. Kurd is bad there,
Meanwhile the Americans are shooting at chicken coops.
Prior to the dropping of the A bomb on Japan, the USA was confronted with the distinct possibility of losing some 1 million plus men, by following a conventional war in storming the Japanese beaches.
President Truman made the bold and correct step to drop the Atomic Bomb on two cities thus ending the conflict.
Since then no Atomic Bombs have been used in conflicts; relate this in a military sense to the 13th century when the Longbow (invented by the Welsh) was adopted by King Edward 1.
Its impact was similar, giving the English a weapon of mass destruction on a scale that brought both Knight and foot soldier to a common level; in essence destroying a Feudal class distinction.
Go forward some 30 years from now, might take that long to try to destroy ISIS, but by then they will have nuclear missiles as well; and you can bet your bottom dollar they would never hesitate to use them.
All Military advantages are a temporary situation, it behoves us all to realise that if you disregard your advantage in war your enemy will certainly not. The old adage by the Confederate General Nathan B. Forrest on winning needs repeating “Firstest with the Mostest” .
Am I advocating the use of our nuclear advantage? Your dam'd right I am. The alternative will be a disaster, not for us, but for our descendants, and it is about time our Politicians stared thinking about them and their world. The last thing we want for them is to be asking ISIS how they won!
Brian
Agree with Brian, its the great unspeakable, use the bomb!... but ask yourself this, these scum ISIS are not worth one of our sons or daughters to die in fighting them. They laugh (rightly) at us Westerners as we hesitate to do anything without first asking, is it in the rule book, will anyone else be harmed, what will everyone else think, then we give them (ISIS) weeks notice that we are coming to bomb you on such and such a date, maybe even the time, they just laugh and we bomb empty buildings. They laugh again and continue to cut throats of women, babies and old men. Yes the bomb would be decisive and final and gain respect. Its horrific but the alternative is even worse.
The Coalition of 50 weakling Countries should move into North Syria from entry Kuwait with 100,000 men and shoot anything holding a rifle and not wearing an Allied uniform.
But oh dear the coalition of 50 weakling talkfest Nations can’t even take out a few malignant ISIS soldiers around Koban. But I bet once the Kurds are eliminated the USA will be able to bomb the City to rubble. Isn’t that great and brave, Kurds expendable as always .
United Nations should tell Turkey you are either with us or against us. No comment? OK. You are no longer in the UN and you support destruction of the Kurdish titles. You are Islam and therefore enemy, prepare to have your country re-organised. We will get on to you as soon as we have finished with ISIS. The Islam terror is going to finish
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