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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Interdisciplinary studies > Globalization
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Powerless by Design - The Age of the International Community (Paperback)
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Powerless by Design - The Age of the International Community (Paperback)
Series: Public Planet Books
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In "Powerless by Design" Michel Feher addresses Western officials'
responses to post-Cold War conflicts and analyzes the reactions of
the Left to their governments' positions. Sometime in the early
1990s, Feher argues, U.S. and European leaders began portraying
themselves as the representatives of a new international community.
In that capacity, they developed a doctrine that was not only at
odds with the rhetoric of the Cold War but also a far cry from the
"new world order" announced at the outset of the decade. Whereas
their predecessors had invested every regional conflict with an
ideological stake, explains Feher, the representatives of this
international community claimed that the crises they confronted did
not call for partisan involvement.
Exemplary of this new approach were Western responses to ethnic
cleansing in the former Yugoslavia and genocide in Rwanda. In order
to avoid costly interventions, U.S. and European leaders traced
these crimes to ancient tribal enmities and professed that the role
of the international community should be limited to a humanitarian,
impartial, and conciliatory engagement with all the warring
parties. They thus managed to appear righteous but powerless, at
least until NATO's intervention in Kosovo. Faced with this
doctrine, both the liberal and radical wings of the Western Left
found themselves in an uneasy position. Liberals, while lured by
their leaders' humanitarianism were nonetheless disturbed by the
dismal results of the policies carried out in the name of the
international community. Conversely, anti-imperialist militants
were quick to mock the hypocrisy of their governments' helpless
indignation, yet certainly not prepared to demand that Western
powers resort to force.
Are we still in this "age of the international community"? Feher
shows that with NATO's intervention in Kosovo, both liberal and
radical activists suddenly found their mark: the former welcomed
the newfound resolve of their governments, while the latter
condemned it as the return of the imperialist "new world order."
For Western leaders, however, the war against Serbia proved an
accident rather than a turning point. Indeed, less than a year
later, their indifference to the destruction of Chechnya by Russian
troops suggested that the discursive strategy exposed in "Powerless
by Design" might remain with us for quite some time.
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