HomeArticleInternational Law Is A Meaningless Concept When It Only Applies To US Enemies

International Law Is A Meaningless Concept When It Only Applies To US Enemies

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Australian whistleblower David McBride just made the following statement on Twitter:

“I’ve been asked if I think the invasion of Ukraine is illegal.

My answer is: If we don’t hold our own leaders to account, we can’t hold other leaders to account.

If the law is not applied consistently, it is not the law.

It is simply an excuse we use to target our enemies.

We will pay a heavy price for our hubris of 2003 in the future.

We didn’t just fail to punish Bush and Blair: we rewarded them. We re-elected them. We knighted them.

If you want to see Putin in his true light imagine him landing a jet and then saying ‘Mission Accomplished’.”

As far as I can tell this point is logically unassailable. International law is a meaningless concept when it only applies to people the US power alliance doesn’t like. This point is driven home by the life of McBride himself, whose own government responded to his publicizing suppressed information about war crimes committed by Australian forces in Afghanistan by charging him as a criminal.

Neither George W Bush nor Tony Blair are in prison cells at The Hague where international law says they ought to be. Bush is still painting away from the comfort of his home, issuing proclamations comparing Putin to Hitler and platforming arguments for more interventionism in Ukraine. Blair is still merily warmongering his charred little heart out, saying NATO should not rule out directly attacking Russian forces in what amounts to a call for a thermonuclear world war.

They are free as birds, singing their same old demonic songs from the rooftops.

When you point out this obvious plot hole in discussions about the legality of Vladimir Putin’s invasion you’ll often get accused of “whataboutism”, which is a noise that empire loyalists like to make when you have just highlighted damning evidence that their government’s behaviors entirely invalidate their position on an issue. This is not a “whataboutism”; it’s a direct accusation that is completely devastating to the argument being made, because there really is no counter-argument.

The Iraq invasion bypassed the laws and protocols for military action laid out in the founding charter of the United Nations. The current US military occupation of Syria violates international law. International law only exists to the extent to which the nations of the world are willing and able to enforce it, and because of the US empire’s military power — and more importantly because of its narrative control power — this means international law is only ever enforced with the approval of that empire.

This is why the people indicted and detained by the International Criminal Court (ICC) are always from weaker nations — overwhelmingly African — while the USA can get away with actually sanctioning ICC personnel if they so much as talk about investigating American war crimes and suffer no consequences for it whatsoever. It is also why Noam Chomsky famously said that if the Nuremberg laws had continued to be applied with fairness and consistency, then every post-WWII U.S. president would have been hanged.

This is also why former US National Security Advisor John Bolton once said that the US war machine is “dealing in the anarchic environment internationally where different rules apply,” which “does require actions that in a normal business environment in the United States we would find unprofessional.”

Bolton would certainly know. In his bloodthirsty push to manufacture consent for the Iraq invasion he spearheaded the removal of the director-general of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), a crucial institution for the enforcement of international law, using measures which included threatening the director-general’s children. The OPCW is now subject to the dictates of the US government, as evidenced by the organisation’s coverup of a 2018 false flag incident in Syria which resulted in airstrikes by the US, UK and France during Bolton’s tenure as a senior Trump advisor.

The US continually works to subvert international law enforcement institutions to advance its own interests. When the US was seeking UN authorization for the Gulf War in 1991, Yemen dared to vote against it, after which a member of the US delegation told Yemen’s ambassador, “That’s the most expensive vote you ever cast.” Yemen lost not just 70 million dollars in US foreign aid but also a valuable labor contract with Saudi Arabia, and a million Yemeni immigrants were sent home by America’s Gulf state allies.

Simple observation of who is subject to international law enforcement and who is not makes it clear that the very concept of international law is now functionally nothing more than a narrative construct that’s used to bludgeon and undermine governments who disobey the US-centralized empire. That’s why in the lead-up to this confrontation with Russia we saw a push among empire managers to swap out the term “international law” with “rules-based international order”, which can mean anything and is entirely up to the interpretation of the world’s dominant power structure.

It is entirely possible that we may see Putin ousted and brought before a war crimes tribunal one day, but that won’t make it valid. You can argue with logical consistency that Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is wrong and will have disastrous consequences far beyond the bloodshed it has already inflicted, but what you can’t do with any logical consistency whatsoever is claim that it is illegal. Because there is no authentically enforced framework for such a concept to apply.

As US law professor Dale Carpenter has said, “If citizens cannot trust that laws will be enforced in an evenhanded and honest fashion, they cannot be said to live under the rule of law. Instead, they live under the rule of men corrupted by the law.” This is all the more true of laws which would exist between nations.

You don’t get to make international law meaningless and then claim that an invasion is “illegal”. That’s not a legitimate thing to do. As long as we are living in a Wild West environment created by a murderous globe-spanning empire which benefits from it, claims about the legality of foreign invasions are just empty sounds.

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Latest comments

  • International law cannot exist if there is a bullying keeping a pig eye in the international court.
    International law cannot exist if about every couple decades there is a new normal.
    in the past international law could not exist in a time where the colonialism policies urged the necessity to reintroduce mass slavery from Africa into the new. world.
    In the past international law. could not exist when the introduction of a specialized labor class and wages slowly replace not without protests and rivers of blood the existence of slaves.
    International law and democracy cannot coexist in a world. where. secret agencies, secret societies and corporations have a special forum called by the name of corruption surrounded by special privileges to dodge the system.
    International law cannot coexist in a world of lies.
    Perhaps the last thing to be emancipated after civil rights, universal healthcare and freedom is to learn how to live and to coexist with the truth.

  • Whataboutism is a term invented by hypocrites to attempt to protect other hypocrites from the consequences of their…. er .. hypocrisy. It’s use is a diagnostic sign of neuronal insufficiency and bad faith and it was expressly developed to smoke and mirror confrontation with fact..
    Good for you to call it out.

  • The thinkers of the early days after Cromwell’s dictatorship came to understand that restraint of government was not about being nicely-nice. War and tyranny are parasites that shell out their host from the inside. The Iraq and Afghanistan wars hurt America too. The hoo-yah boys don’t get it. The Shitzkreig is hurting the Russian nation. International law is intended to prevent national suicide. Be a patriot and not a bully! Peace now!!

  • John Helmer does an excellent job of understanding what decision-tree led Russia to invade Ukraine to fight NATO expansion. http://johnhelmer.net/what-joseph-stalin-said-to-himself-when-russias-survival-was-at-stake/

  • https://drjohnsblog.substack.com/p/petro-yuan?s=w

    The author of this article downplays the significance of Saudi oil being sold in Chinese Yuan/renminbi.

    Importantly, this non-dollar sales arrangement eliminates the foundation of the petro-dollar, which Nixon/Kissinger negotiated with Saudi Arabia after the US default from the Bretton Woods gold standard, after American gold was depleted to the point that it could not honor international demands for gold.

    In the past the American military has wrought death and destruction upon nations which have dared to sell oil for other currencies, countries such as Iraq and Libya. Iran has weathered American opprobrium for a long time now, and though under duress, has not capitulated.

    Iran is selling a lot of oil to the Chinese, but we don’t know the $US value of it.

    Saudi Arabia has poor relations with Iran, but can observe which way the wind is now blowing, and has good relations with Russia and China, the new guarantors of military and economic security in the changing “world order”.

    It is likely that the US will attack Saudi Arabia in some way for this, and China, in some way, but the options are much narrower now. All of the options for attacking Saudi Arabia and China will also degrade US military and-or financial power. The way the “American” decisions have been made recently makes me think that there is a cabal in power which is intentionally working against actual American national interests. It is possibly just hubris and very bad judgement, but it is rapidly degrading American status as a global power,while simultaneously setting up a particularly bad economic status for deeply indebted Americans after the fall of empire. How will America export enough to repay these vast debts when the dollar is no longer accepted at-face-value, but needs to be backed by valuable material exports like oil, wheat, soybeans and cotton? What will Americans eat, burn and wear?

    ​ “​War and oil is also the focus, along with the US dollar and sanctions, on the back of the headline that Saudi Arabia is in talks with China to sell oil for CNY. Obviously, this is a much larger deal than the $2.6 billion purported India-Russia oil deal floated Monday, and in line with present pace of escalation in this metacrisis. This time we are talking $56 billion in oil and related petro-chemical exports, and $27 billion in Saudi imports…”

    https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/rabobank-petroyuan-news-suggests-china-preparing-us-sanctions​

  • I agree that different standards seem to apply for different countries. But how do you in practice navigate in a world where “International Law is not applicable”?
    You need to take a stand about the Russian troops bombing the shit out of the Ukrainians. No matter what has happened in the past cannot justify what’s going on – 2 wrongs don’t make a right.

    • Actually, when it comes to war, two wrongs do make a right in the eyes of the victor.

  • When was the last time when a country preparing to invade another country suddenly got cold feet because they thought ‘hang on, we better not do this because it’s against the law’. I don’t think the thought of getting in trouble has any influence on these decisions. And when has international law ever influenced what the US does? Clearly, it’s a meaningless concept.

    • There is only one law between countries. Might makes right.

  • In Orwell’s fictional account,the general public is incapable of distinguishing the government’s official versions of history from reality due to direct censorship and manipulation of language Orwell linked the continuous war between world powers to the manipulation of reality;”When war is continuous there is no such thing as military necessity the most palpable facts can be denied or disregarded almost any perversion of thought can be safely practiced they can twist reality into whatever shape they choose.The Caesars and Pharaohs could not be so.

  • We need Julian Assange for Australian PM with the great Caitlin Johnstone as Depty PM.
    The two would bring some real light to the darkness that is the corrupt world of Australian politics.

    Thanks once again Caitlin. Keep up the good fight. You are a hero to many and one of the few real journalists we have left.

  • Inane question:

    When was it ever otherwise in a unipolar new world order powered with the backing of the U.S. MICC?

    “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.”

    ― Frederick Douglass

  • YES. And you would think all those free thinking people living in democracies could hold their own politicians accountable, instead of chasing fantasies of evil tyrants in far away lands implanted into their minds … by their own politicians.
    Thank you Caitlin, now if we could somehow make what you said BINDING. Or at least as they say in memes, let it sink in.

  • Terrific as always CJ. I don’t know if you’ve seen the ErrolMorris doc “FogOfWar”, or read JohnPerkins “ConfessionsOfAnEconomicHitman”, but this afternoon I blended the two into an explanation of how international development loans via IMF & WorldBank [McNamara’s gig after quantifying everything the US did/had in VietNam, including the humans] may have been used to control foreign countries, expand NATO, manipulate the UN and drive a neoliberal/neoconservative world order at everyone’s expense, including we Americans who would rather not notice what our government does today, summon up an outdated textbook company narrative simplified for adolescents, dismiss every criticism as unpatriotic and then sleep during the sermon on Sunday morning before an afternoon riding crack before the ass-grabbing game on TV or grip-blasting through target misses at the range.

    Subjects distracted from the responsibilities of citizenship are often the loudest cheerleaders for illusion.

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