How Can the US Accuse Any
Nation of Violating ‘Rules-Based International
Order’?
By Dave LIndorff
February 13, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- "ThisCantBeHappening"--Sometimes
the hypocrisy of the US government, especially when
it comes to foreign affairs, it just too much to let
pass.
The latest example of this is the Ukraine crisis,
where the US pretty much stands all alone (unless
you count Britain’s embattled and embarrassed Prime
Minister Boris Johnson, who parrots US policy like a
trained bird), accusing Russia not just of preparing
for an “imminent invasion’ of Ukraine, but of
violating international law and “rules-based
international order,” as Secretary of State Antony
Blinken likes to put it.
The Biden administration’s top diplomat has made
repeatedly blasted both Russia for threatening
Ukraine with an invasion by moving troops and
equipment to its border and to the border between
Ukraine and Belarus, Russia’s ally to the west, and
China for its threats to Taiwan and for a rights
crackdown in Hong Kong, a Chinese Special
Administrative Region that had been promised 30
years or “no change” but was put under new stricter
national security laws following violent student
protests and university occupations in 2019-20.
But how can the US make such accusations against
the Russians and the Chinese governments when the US
for nearly eight years, has been bombing, launching
rocket and drone attacks, and sending troops, under
both CIA and Pentagon control, against both ISIS and
Syrian government troops and aircraft — even
attacking and killing Russian mercenary troops at
one point, who, unlike the US, were in Syria at the
request of the Syrian government.
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US military actions in Syria are completely
outside of any “rules based international order.”
International rules, when it comes to warfare,
are crystal clear, enshrined in the United Nations
Charter, which is an international treaty signed and
ratified by the US government along with most other
nations of the world and incorporating all the laws
of war. The primary law, violation of which is
described as the gravest war crime of all “because
it contains with in it all other war crimes.” Called
a Crime Against Peace, it states that no nation may
attack another except if that nation faces an
“imminent threat” of attack.
There are no codicils expanding on or getting
around that proscription.
The US has committed that Crime Against Peace
countless times, in Vietnam, in Laos, in Cambodia,
in Yemen, in Iraq, in Lebanon, in Syria, in Somalia,
in Sudan, in Haiti, in the Dominican Republic, in
Nicaragua, in El Salvador, in Cuba, in Niger, in the
Congo, in Panama, in Grenada — indeed in so many
places I’m sure I’m not remembering them all.
Suffice to say that my whole life (I was born in
1949), my country has been a violator of the UN
Charter’s ban on launching illegal wars.
Rules-based order? What the F**k is Blinken
talking about? The US makes its own rules. In fact,
whenever the US launches some illegal invasion or
air attack against a country, the biggest complaint
we hear in the US is that the president has ordered
up and launched a war “without Congressional
approval”
The implication is that if Congressional approves
an illegal war or act of war, that makes it legit.
It doesn’t.
What makes it worse when the US makes such
accusations against Russia and China is that it is
accusing two countries which, as objectionable as
their actions or threats might be, at least have a
better argument for their legality than does the US.
Let’s start with China. The government in Beijing
stands accused by Blinken and the US government
under a series of presidents, with threatening
Taiwan, an island that historically was a part of
China, but became functionally independent in 1949
when the Chinese Communist Party won its revolution
on the mainland, founding the People’s Republic of
China, and the remnants of the Nationalist Party and
its army fled to Taiwan, murdering tens of thousands
of local Taiwanese and Hakka Chinese people, and
establishing a brutal dictatorship under Nationalist
leader and major domo Chiang Kai-Shek. China has
never acknowledged the independence of Taiwan, which
for 50 years prior to the end of World War II had
been a colony of Japan, a spoil of victory in the
China-Japan War won by Japan against the Ching
dynasty in 1895.
The US initially recognized Taiwan, after the
Chinese Communist revolutionary victory in 1949, as
an independent country, but Richard Nixon, in a
slick realpolitik maneuver masterminded by
his National Security Advisor and later Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger, in order to recognize China
and drive a wedge between that country and the
Soviet Union, agreed to cease recognizing Taiwan as
an independent nation, removed the US embassy from
the island, and set one up in Beijing. In other
words, at that point, from the US point of view at
least, Taiwan’s status became an internal affair of
China’s, not an international affair.
The same applies to the Chinese crackdown on
rights in Hong Kong. Since July 1997, Hong Kong
ceased to be a British colony, and reverted to being
part of China. Now it’s true there were negotiations
between the Beijing government and departing British
government. During those years of transition, Hong
Kong’s appointed colonial Governor Chris Patten,
former head of the British Conservative Party,
carefully avoided allowing Hong Kongers to obtain
long-sought universal suffrage to elect all members
of the territory’s legislative council, Legco,
before the British departure (a move which would at
least have left the Beijing facing a local
government that actually represented all the people
of Hong Kong, instead of Legco representatives
representing various business sectors like banking,
the legal profession, the retail industry, property
owners, etc).
China agreed during those negotiations to
gradually increase the number of Legco members
elected from geographic constituencies, and to leave
basic freedoms of speech, press, etc. untouched “for
30 years.” But when students rose up to protest the
arrests of Hong Kong residents and their deportation
to face trials in China, it set in motion a
confrontation between democracy advocates in Hong
Kong and authoritarians in Beijing, and ultimately
to a new Beijing-imposed national security law for
Hong Kong that has turned the city into essentially
just another bit of China. But again, while it was
certainly a draconian over-reaction to legitimate
local protests, that action by China is not a
violation of international law — just violation of
an agreement between a departing (and loathed)
colonial power, a legacy of the European Opium War
against China, and a new vastly more powerful China.
It’s a bit like the US’s brutal crackdown on
immigrants at the Mexican border or on Native
defenders of water rights in North Dakota.
Disgusting, and perhaps criminal under US law, but
hardly a violation of some kind of “rules-based
international order.”
As for Russia, even the plebiscite in Crimea,
some 97% of the population there voted that they
wanted to leave Ukraine and return to being part of
Russia, as the peninsula had been until 1954, when
new Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, as a gift to
the region he had grown up in, transferred Crimea
from the Russian Soviet to the Ukrainian Soviet,
which the US has criticized as somehow fraudulent
(Crimea is about 85% ethnic Russian). With 85% of
eligible people voting, that plebiscite provided
Russia with the justification for reclaiming
jurisdiction over Crimea. Russia’s action,
criticized by the US as “aggression,” is less of a
violation of democratic norms though than the
massive disenfranchisement of blacks and other
people of color in Republican-run “red” states of
the US — a process that is now being accelerated to
warp speed with the approach of the 2022 off-year
Congressional elections. If the Biden administration
really cared about justice and democracy it would be
laser-focused on defending voter rights, not on
shipping deadly weapons to Ukraine.
If the US government cared about following a
“rules-based international order,” the it would pull
all US military forces out of Syria, pull the US
Navy out of the Persian Gulf, stop using drones to
kill people in Yemen, Somalia, and elsewhere, stop
sending US Special Forces wherever the president
wants to send them, and rejoin the World Court and
respect its adjudication of violations of
international rules and laws.
Then we wouldn’t have to listen to all the
hypocritical crap uttered by Biden, Blinken and
their ilk.
Someday, I’m sure there will come a reckoning,
when US leaders will finally be held to account for
their long record of crimes against humanity. Until
then, we will have to endure all this epic
hypocrisy.
The views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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