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Syria and the Neutrality Trap: The Dilemmas of Delivering Humanitarian Aid through Violent Regimes

Autor Carsten Wieland
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 iun 2021
The Syrian war has been an example of the abuse and insufficient delivery of humanitarian assistance. According to international practice, humanitarian aid should be channelled through a state government that bears a particular responsibility for its population. Yet in Syria, the bulk of relief went through Damascus while the regime caused the vast majority of civilian deaths. Should the UN have severed its cooperation with the government and neglected its humanitarian duty to help all people in need? Decision-makers face these tough policy dilemmas, and often the "neutrality trap" snaps shut.This book discusses the political and moral considerations of how to respond to a brutal and complex crisis while adhering to international law and practice. The author, a scholar and senior diplomat involved in the UN peace talks in Geneva, draws from first-hand diplomatic, practitioner and UN sources. He sheds light on the UN's credibility crisis and the wider implications for the development of international humanitarian and human rights law. This includes covering the key questions asked by Western diplomats, NGOs and international organizations, such as: Why did the UN not confront the Syrian government more boldly? Was it not only legally correct but also morally justifiable to deliver humanitarian aid to regime areas where rockets were launched and warplanes started? Why was it so difficult to render cross-border aid possible where it was badly needed? The meticulous account of current international practice is both insightful and disturbing. It tackles the painful lessons learnt and provides recommendations for future challenges where politics fails and humanitarians fill the moral void.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780755641390
ISBN-10: 0755641396
Pagini: 200
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Clearly explains the complicated juridical, humanitarian and political dimensions of delivering humanitarian aid during wars

Notă biografică

Carsten Wieland is a German diplomat, senior UN consultant, Middle East and conflict expert with high-ranking mediation experience. He has served with three UN Special Envoys for Syria as Senior Expert for Intra-Syrian Talks and political advisor. He has also worked on political responses to the Syrian conflict for the German Foreign Office and as Director of the German Information Center for the Arab World in Cairo. A journalist by training, he reported from the United States, the Middle East and Latin America as a foreign correspondent. He was a Government Fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP), Geneva, and a fellow at the Public Policy Institute at Georgetown University, Washington DC, USA. His publications include Syria: A Decade of Lost Chances (2012), Syria - Ballots or Bullets (2006) and Syria at Bay: Secularism, Islamism, and "Pax Americana" (2006).

Cuprins

ForewordAbbreviations1. Introduction to a Tough Dilemma2. Expectations and Disillusions Beyond Syria3. Containing the Human Beast: Fundamentals of International Humanitarian and Human Rights LawThe Government's Particular ResponsibilityState-centred International PracticeNeutrality and ImpartialityCountries' Controversial Consent4. A Moving Target: Dynamics of International Humanitarian and Human Rights LawLaw or WarAn Octopus with Dwindling ForceContested Notions of State Sovereignty5. The Terrorism Tool: De-humanizing the OtherThe Sin of Rage at Ground ZeroThe Myth of the Unlawful CombatantPoisonous RhetoricA Self-fulfilling Prophecy 6. De-Neutralizing Aid: All Roads Lead to Damascus The Government's Grip on Humanitarian Work Syrian Arab Red Crescent's Plight in a Totalitarian System Western Diplomats' DilemmaCross-Border Controversies in the Security Council7. In the Pillory: The UN's Syria DilemmaComplicity with Evil Contracting Dangerous BedfellowsBetween All Fronts8. Credibility CrisisThe UN ReactsDonors React9. Diversifying Aid: Roads to Circumvent Damascus"Humanitarian Plus"A Double-edged SwordThe Reconstruction Gamble10. Irreconcilable Positions: Roads to NowhereFig Leaf for Political FailureDouble Deficiency Russia's Soft Power FailureContempt for Multilateralism11. Arguments for Change: How to Avoid the Neutrality TrapConclusion BibliographyIndex

Recenzii

Hats off to Wieland for giving us food for thought at this critical crossroad in the evolution of humanitarian aid. I hope it leads the UN, donors, and humanitarian organizations to reflect seriously about how they can change their approach to delivering humanitarian aid during an armed conflict before we repeat the deadly mistakes of Syria.
Wieland deserves ample praise for his decision to write a book that catalogs in exhausting detail the failings of an institution he admires so much. One hopes that his former colleagues understand the book as an effort to strengthen United Nations, not embarrass it.
A masterpiece, this book is a riveting call for action to prevent governments that massacre their own citizens from directing who shall, and who shall not, receive donor-funded life-saving emergency help.
A highly interesting and original study based on many years of practical and intensive experience of Carsten Wieland, who served as a diplomat and an academic, dealing with the Middle East, Syria in particular, also in the intra-Syrian negotiations under the auspices of the UN Special Envoy for Syria. This book clearly explains the complicated juridical, humanitarian and political dimensions of the various dilemmas of delivering humanitarian aid during wars. Wieland provides an authoritative guide on how to better deal with delicate humanitarian issues, like those in Syria. It should be highly recommended reading for politicians, humanitarian negotiators, people active in the field of humanitarian aid and other decision makers.
This in an extraordinary book on humanitarian law and practice in the Syria conflict. By a scholar-practitioner with many years of experience studying Syria and acting as advisor to the UN mediator on the country, it is a model of how theoretical concerns and practical experience in policy making can cross fertilize each other.
The most convincingly argued call yet to take international humanitarian aid out of the control of unaccountable governments that use sovereignty as a pretext - the ultimate exposure of sovereignty as fake neutrality.