Brazil and the responsibility while protecting initiative: norms and the timing of diplomatic support.
Kenkel, Kai Michael ; Stefan, Cristina G.
This article examines Brazil's responsibility while protecting
(RwP) initiative as an example of norm sponsorship available to
nonpermanent members of the Security Council. After setting the stage
with Brazil's historical engagement with intervention issues, it
discusses the reasons behind the Brazilian initiative. It examines
RwP's key proposals and the reactions they generated. RwP's
normative implications are discussed, together with an examination of
the main reasons why Brazil's sponsorship of the initiative waned
following its exit from the Council. Brazil's withdrawal from
sponsoring RwP highlights the need for ongoing support for initiatives
that seek to revive the international community's intervention
practices by tackling the basic tenets of discord over R2P's
implementation. Keywords: responsibility while protecting, Brazil,
international norms, Responsibility to Protect, intervention, emerging
powers.
**********
BRAZIL'S RESPONSIBILITY WHILE PROTECTING (RWP) INITIATIVE HAS
BECOME A key contribution to the international debate on the
Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and intervention in general, as well as
a guiding element for Brazil's and other emerging powers'
engagement with intervention, collective security, global governance,
and normative aspects of recent changes in the balance of global
influence. Its contribution lies in reconciling supportive and
dissenting views on R2P, including those from both the Global North and
South, in the wake of the divisive 2011 intervention in Libya. In this
sense, it is an example of the shaping of a norm, done by an emerging
power availing itself of the platform offered by nonpermanent membership
in the UN Security Council.
RwP's potential as a bridge-building exercise was realized
only after initially strong criticism. Due to a combination of
diplomatic and domestic reasons--including, significantly, the end of
the country's term on the Security Council--by the time its
potential had been recognized, RwP had seen the support of its original
sponsor withdrawn. The Brazilian initiative provides insights into a
number of pertinent issues regarding the current intervention debate and
beyond. These include the role of normative debates--especially in the
Council--as a locus of emerging powers' challenge to the global
order, and these states' potential as norm entrepreneurs, as well
as the importance of continued active sponsorship to the success of
conceptual initiatives in global diplomacy.
The RwP note, (1) launched in November 2011, represents the
culmination, to date, of Brazil's engagement with questions of
intervention and of normative aspects of its quest for greater global
influence. Given the specific time frame during which Brazil promoted
RwP, it also exemplifies the potential for normative influence that is
open to elected members of the Security Council. Internationally, it
marks the first systematic, conceptually grounded attempt by a
developing-world voice to bridge the increasing gap between mounting
acceptance of R2P's principles and growing discontent over the
manner of its implementation. This discontent is symbolized for many by
the NATO-led 2011 intervention in Libya, Operation Unified Protector,
and the vote on Security Council Resolution 1973. (2)
In this article, we analyze Brazil's role in shaping a
specific normative initiative in recent UN debates, using the RwP case.
We set the stage with a brief recapitulation, available in more detailed
form elsewhere in the authors' respective work, of Brazil's
prior normative commitments and experiences in the area of intervention.
To an extent, these can also be seen as indicative of emerging
powers' engagement with the question. Subsequently, we discuss the
proximate and remote triggers for Brazil's assumption of an
entrepreneurial role in providing a key conceptual input to the R2P
conversation in 2011. We then analyze state reactions to RwP, in the
North and the South, before outlining its specific provisions and how
these have effectively structured subsequent debates on R2P. A final
section brings the previous findings to bear in characterizing
Brazil's role as a "norm shaper." (3) Here, we explain
how the withdrawal of its support can be portrayed as premature given
the subsequent normative advancement and refinement, or lack thereof to
date, of the RwP concept beyond its role as a touchstone structuring
diplomatic debate.
The Context of RwP's Emergence: Brazil's Engagement with
Intervention
Since the advent of renewed debate over humanitarian intervention
in the post-Cold War era, intervention has been a thorny issue for
Brazilian diplomacy. Changes in Western states' understanding of
the relationship between sovereignty and human rights in the wake of the
UN peacekeeping failures of the 1990s opened an increasing gap between
the tenets underpinning established powers' policy and those held
by many developing powers who continued to view the inviolability of
borders as an important existential guarantee.
Over the course of the past decade, Brazil has incrementally moved
from a regional to a global economic and diplomatic horizon,
encountering tensions between the norms prevalent at each of these
levels. This applies prominently to intervention issues, including R2P
and UN peace operations such as the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti
(MINUSTAH), for which Brazil supplies the force commander and largest
contingent. Both issues have played a pivotal role as normative
linchpins for the country's growing pains; (4) Brazilian
diplomats' navigation of these tensions can be mapped neatly using
their reactions to the operationalization of R2P at the UN. (5)
Despite frequent election to the Security Council, prior to the
submission of the RwP concept note, Brazil did not consistently play a
prominent role in peace operations or in UN debates on intervention. The
country's representatives often either abstained or shared the
nonaligned preference for nonintervention. The emphasis, as pointedly
put by Ramesh Thakur, was on "justice among, rather than within,
nations." (6)
Accordingly, the advent of R2P was greeted with significant
skepticism. Brazil's resistance to the concept as initially
formulated by the International Commission on Intervention and State
Sovereignty (ICISS) hinged, among other points, on three main concerns:
the acceptability and efficacy of the use of military force; the
criteria of right authority (the representativeness, and thus the
legitimacy of the Security Council, was cast into doubt); and a fear,
based on a deep historically rooted mistrust, of misuse of R2P by
Western powers to cloak aggressive interventionism. (7)
Together with other developing powers such as India, (8) Brazil was
not receptive to the inclusion of R2P in the 2005 World Summit Outcome
Document. Nevertheless, a critical mass of support for the principle
resulted in the inclusion of the four crimes of genocide, war crimes,
ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity in paragraphs 138 and 139
of the Outcome Document. This shifted the cost-benefit balance for
Brazil's engagement with the concept. (9) The increasing
institutionalization of R2P at the UN created a dilemma for Brazilian
policymakers, as did growing rhetorical support. The latter is
exemplified, for instance, by positions such as that of the special
advisers for genocide prevention (2004) and R2P itself (2007) and the
insertion of R2P in Security Council resolutions, including those
mandating UN peace operations. It is noteworthy that R2P's new
weight within the UN placed two foundational principles of the
country's foreign conduct at odds: on the one hand, the firm
support for multilateralism and global governance, and therefore the
UN's normative acquis (now ultimately including R2P); and, on the
other hand, Brazil's historical attachment to a more conservative,
statist interpretation of sovereignty that did not link the right to
nonintervention to human rights concerns.
Between the World Summit and the issuance of RwP, Brazil's
representatives increasingly undertook to bridge this gap; in doing so,
they chose to contribute explicitly in normative and conceptual terms.
At its peak, this meant harnessing the emergent principle to
Brazil's quest for increased global representation and its policy
strengths in conflict resolution without force, such as peacebuilding
and poverty reduction, (10) giving the country increased
entrepreneurship as a norm "shaper," rather than mere
"taker." (11)
This trajectory of increased participation in UN debates on
intervention--spurred by the personal interest of then foreign minister
Antonio Patriota, who subsequently became the country's permanent
representative to the UN in August 2013--created the impetus that
resulted in RwP, in the wake of the Libyan intervention. Brazil's
acceptance of R2P, albeit reluctant, is indicative of the overall
advance of the debate to a new stage in the diplomatic and analytical
ambits. Indeed, the discussion has largely overcome fundamental
normative hurdles and moved into debates on operationalization. (12)
Direct Motivations for the RwP Concept Note
Against this backdrop, the more immediate impetus for the RwP
concept note lies in at least three interrelated factors. All three are
firmly located in Brazil's quest for greater diplomatic profile as
an emerging power. First, this pursuit has peace operations as one of
its central vehicles, as manifested in MINUSTAH, which represents a
rupture with previous practice. Second, Brazil chooses to mount its
challenge to established powers explicitly in normative terms, as in the
case of development aid, nuclear policy, and peacebuilding. Finally, the
discontent over Western management of the Libyan crisis provided the
immediate catalyst for the RwP initiative, which inscribed interventions
as a larger locus of normative contestation between established powers
and larger states in the Global South. Similarly, RwP is a watershed in
the R2P conversation, marking the moment at which growing consensus over
the content of the principle came to be accompanied by growing divisions
between groups of states over how R2P was to be interpreted and
implemented. In particular, the details of the negotiation process for
Security Council Resolution 1973, and its implementation by the NATO-led
coalition, crystallized the debate into a contestation over
implementation of R2P between major NATO powers and the BRICS grouping
of emerging powers (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa).
It is noteworthy that all BRICS states, together with another
aspirant to permanent membership--Germany--were members of the Security
Council during the votes on Resolutions 1970 and 1973. It is likely that
the demonstration effect of such a constellation provided added stimulus
for Brazil to take on a role as a shaper of a specific key international
norm such as R2P. Further, Brazil presided over the Council when
Resolution 1970--the first to invoke R2P with all BRICS on the
Council--passed unanimously. Following the Arab League's statement
of support for a no-fly zone in Libya, Brazil was supportive of invoking
R2P and referring to military means in a Security Council resolution.
(13) Resolution 1973 passed on 17 March 2011 and marked the first time
that the Security Council had used Chapter VII to approve the use of
force under the R2P banner against a sitting regime.
Although Resolution 1973 refers explicitly to the Libyan
government's responsibility to protect its citizens in its fourth
preambulatory paragraph, several authors have questioned the centrality
of R2P to Security Council members' deliberations with regard to
Libya at the time. (14) Indeed, the mention of R2P itself results from a
larger trajectory within the debate over intervention--and clashing
interpretations between the three Western permanent members of the
Council (P3) and the BRICS--that came to a head over the Libyan issue.
(15)
Resolution 1973 was adopted with ten positive votes, none against,
and five abstentions--those of four of the five BRICS on the Security
Council, and Germany; South Africa supported the resolution. Several of
the abstaining states opted for this route because they did not want to
stop some type of action from being taken given the steadily worsening
security situation in Benghazi, but also did not wish to see "all
necessary measures" increase to include overt pursuit of regime
change--the overthrow of Muammar Qaddafi. (16) Brazilian representatives
later pointed out that the country's abstention "should in no
way be interpreted as condoning the behavior of the Libyan authorities
or as disregard for the need to protect civilians and respect their
rights." (17) Nevertheless, as Brazil customarily does not vote
against Security Council resolutions, particularly when no permanent
member does so, abstention is de facto its strongest practicable form of
disapproval of a tabled resolution.
Emerging powers' ensuing mistrust was profound, and based
squarely on events on the ground and in New York; several members were
left with the impression of having been misled about sponsors'
intentions once Qaddafi's overthrow became an overt goal of NATO
action. (18) A perception on the BRICS's part of
"overreach" by major Western powers (19) emerged, triggered by
insistence on regime change and buttressed by the rejection by the
coalition of repeated cease-fire offers.
Accordingly, RwP must be analyzed as resulting from "fear that
R2P might be instrumental in legitimising military interventions carried
out for the pursuit of vested political, economic or strategic
interests, other than those strictly related to humanitarian
concerns." (20) A crucial factor in understanding the reaction of
emerging powers from the Global South was the "trust deficit"
that crystallized around the Libyan case and had also been "spawned
by past cases of foreign occupation," (21) rooted in
"discomfort with the use of force and skepticism about the
interests of Western states." (22) This was underscored by the
acknowledgment of Gareth Evans, Ramesh Thakur, and Robert Pape that they
were in the end "not so sure, however, that the NATO-led operation
in Libya remained a textbook R2P case for its duration." (23)
The RwP note primarily focused on remedying Brazil's foremost
concerns raised by the three elements highlighted above, with all three
centered around R2P's "third pillar," tantamount to the
use of force. Brazilian diplomacy voiced concerns specifically about the
utility of the use of force as a means of conflict resolution; (24)
Brazil was concerned that undue robustness in the international response
might "change the home-grown nature of the rebellion narrative and
thus endanger the chances of a stable resolution of the conflict in the
longer term," (25) Brazil had already criticized Pillar Ill's
implementation in Libya. Brazil's permanent representative, Maria
Luiza Viotti, argued in a July 2011 UN General Assembly debate that
"caution and moderation are the best advisers" when
implementing the third pillar of R2P and that "we must exercise
responsibility as we protect," (26) a phrase taken up by President
Dilma Rousseff during the Assembly's General Debate on 21 September
2011. (27)
Beyond immediate concerns over the effectiveness of military force,
debate over the Libyan case became a showcase for larger tensions
between established and emerging powers. The challenge to Western
normative dominance crystallized into divergences over R2P's
implementation, (28) with emerging powers preferring to use state
sovereignty to attenuate the unequal distribution of power in the
international system. (29) It is in this sense that RwP should be
perceived as an exercise in asking for clarification of R2P
implementation beyond its immediate link to the Libyan intervention, and
as an example of norm entrepreneurship linked to broader issues of
global governance. The latter was made possible by Brazil's status
as an elected member of the Security Council at the time.
Indeed, the RwP concept, launched on 9 November 2011, marks
Brazil's first serious effort at concerted norm entrepreneurship on
a major issue within the UN system. Assessing the completion of this
normative exercise on behalf of Brazil depends on how we define
Brazil's initial aims. The note was conceived as a complement to,
rather than a substitute for, R2P regarding its implementation.
Accordingly, if its role is interpreted as initiating a more inclusive
debate on the latter, with the involvement of Southern states, focused
on R2P's implementation within a context of normative consensus
concerning its principles, it has been a noteworthy example of a
valuable bridge-building proposal, tantamount to norm
"shaping." (30) However, if RwP is assessed as a classic
example of original norm sponsorship, the same cannot be said. In this
article, we approach RwP as the first of these two options. Furthermore,
we suggest that as such, RwP is an example of an opportunity open to
nonpermanent members of the Security Council. As is often the case in
such instances, RwP's performance can ironically be assessed in
terms of the criticism that it has generated.
Initial State Reactions: The Bridge-building Function
RwP initially met with skepticism from both Western and Southern
states. The former saw it as an attempt by a nonparticipant state to
limit the autonomy of NATO's implementation of Security Council
mandates, and an unnecessary restriction on the Council practice, while
some in the Global South, especially the other BRICS states, considered
that it had gone too far in taking up R2P's conceptual acquis on
the acceptability of military measures. Nonetheless, RwP played a
crucial part both in moving R2P forward normatively and in stimulating
buy-in from developing states, thus resuscitating the concept's
broader legitimacy in the wake of the Libyan intervention.
RwP is much less an exercise designed to produce conceptual
originality than one geared toward building political consensus
conducive to the participation of skeptical Southern states. It is when
viewed in this way that the RwP note reveals its true potential as a
normative initiative: it is much less an effort to innovate with
reference to R2P content than it is a promising attempt to engage
simultaneously in what Amitav Acharya has termed "norm
localization" and "subsidiarity," by means of creating a
bridging notion that would make troubling aspects of the R2P norm
palatable to skeptical states in the Global South. (31) This
characterization of RwP responds to claims largely by Northern states
that RwP's true intent was to slow the advance of R2P. One key
element of such critiques was the fact that the note did not cite the
ICISS report (32) and, indeed, took up some of its provisions as if they
were innovations. (33) Australia, for example, highlighted RwP's
similarity to the precautionary principles on military intervention in
the ICISS report of 2001. (34) Arguments that this reduces the
note's conceptual value added in terms of the ongoing R2P debate
miss the point; namely, that the intention was not to innovate
conceptually, but to attain broader diplomatic acceptability.
Nevertheless, in light of its past diplomatic positions on, and
limited historical profile as a contributor to, humanitarian
interventions, Brazil clearly had to overcome the healthy skepticism of
some states, particularly leading NATO members, in convincing others
that its proposal was more than a recipe for these states to "bind
themselves to inaction." (35) Thorsten Benner points out that in
light of Brazil's perceived reluctance to publicly distance itself
from the Bashar al-Assad regime during 2011 and 2012, this trust was
regained, and RwP was subsequently viewed more charitably following
Brazil's eventual public chastisement of the Syrian government.
(36)
Eduarda Hamann points out the difficulty in a state with limited
participation seeking to establish limits for those with extensive
means: "The current contradictory position could have problematic
consequences. Brazilian argument seems to be directed at those who
engage in military intervention and not at Brazil itself--a classic
'do as I say, not as I do' situation." (37) States,
especially from the Global North, were critical of Brazil's
intentions as well. In the February 2012 informal discussion, Germany,
for instance, argued that RwP might be too limiting of R2P, in addition
to focusing on expressing concerns rather than on proposing a
"precisely defined concept." (38)
Yet as Thakur has suggested, (39) Brazil's position was
clearly more constructive than that of the other BRICS states,
particularly Russia and China. While these two permanent members of the
Security Council are notorious for having vetoed four draft resolutions
to date on Syria, they have also allowed twenty-six R2P-based Security
Council resolutions to pass since Resolution 1973 on Libya. (40) Both
Russia and China also recognized the Brazilian contribution. Russia, for
instance, noted the "timeliness of the Brazilian idea, on the
Responsibility while Protecting." (41) Brazil's position is
consistent with the role of a normative entrepreneur as taken on by an
emerging power with limited military projection capacity of its own.
(42)
Specific Contributions: Structuring the R2P Conversation
Three main axes arise around which the note has structured the
ensuing conversation. These underscore Brazil's faith in the power
of stricter guidelines (43) to resolve R2P's crisis of legitimacy
after Libya: the sequencing of R2P's pillars; increased
restrictions on the use of force; and more proactive monitoring by the
Security Council of mandate compliance by ongoing missions. These
specific considerations as well as broader political issues--and,
crucially, several related to international law--provided the bulk of
public reaction to the responsibility while protecting concept note and
served to provide waypoints for the R2P conversation over the subsequent
years. Much like the global conversation about R2P itself, a good deal
of the debate over the RwP note was guided by ideological and political
differences between established and emerging powers derived from their
relative position and historical experiences. However, a more concrete
and, ultimately, most productive discussion grew out of engagement with
the note's specific proposals.
While, as noted, RwP does not cite the ICISS report directly,
having instead UN practice as its focus, the concept note nevertheless
takes up elements established by ICISS and its just war criteria such as
the need to exhaust all diplomatic means. (44) Its focus is on the
utility of force and the potential for misuse of R2P by Western powers.
The document's first real element of innovation--and one of its
most controversial components--comes in its sixth paragraph where it
first calls for the strict political and chronological sequencing of
R2P's three pillars, and then establishes a conceptual distinction
between collective responsibility and collective security. (45)
Sequencing was roundly rejected by Northern states as well as by
some from the developing world, in addition to numerous nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) closely involved in the promotion of R2P. According
to the initial RwP formulation, the three pillars of R2P "must
follow a strict line of political subordination and chronological
sequencing." (46) This was one of the most criticized elements of
the original RwP proposal; and rightfully so, as it clearly went against
the UN Charter and the main tenets of R2P. As UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon emphasizes in his annual reports on R2P to date, the three
pillars of R2P bear equal importance and should be flexibly invoked on a
case-by-case basis, acknowledging that "all three must be ready to
be utilized at any point, as there is no set sequence for moving from
one to another." (47)
In an attempt to clarify and adjust some of the elements presented
in the concept paper, Brazil later redefined the sequencing of the three
pillars of R2P as "logical" rather than chronological, thus
silencing the main initial critique against it. Indeed, Ambassador
Viotti suggested that sequencing "should be logical, based on
political prudence [instead of] ... the establishment of arbitrary
check-lists." (48)
Another key RwP proposal relates to imposing even stricter limits
on the use of force, a source of explicit criticism of the sequencing
proposal. While there is agreement among analysts that force should not
be the first option in a crisis situation where other options should be
thoroughly considered, there is also recognition of the fact that force
cannot literally be the last option. A more stringent critique of the
Brazilian proposal on the use of force, firmly rooted in Western
conceptions, is that "stronger limits on the use of force limit the
effectiveness of operations to protect civilians, and therewith
ultimately their legitimacy itself." (49) RwP's "do no
harm" principles strike at the core of Brazilian, South American,
and Southern preferences for the nonuse of force, returning to NATO
states' questioning of the true intent of RwP and their objections
that RwP could justify a formula for inaction and ineffectiveness. (50)
The third key proposal that generated strong reaction, both from
academics and Security Council member states, triggered in turn by the
way in which the NATO-led mandate in Libya was implemented, relates to
demands for closer and more proactive oversight of deployed operations
by the Council. RwP suggested the need for the Council to establish a
monitoring and review mechanism to enable all Council member states to
be properly informed about the implementation of use-of-force mandates.
(51)
While describing themselves as open, in principle, to exploring
various ways to keep Security Council members more informed, key states
also expressed concerns that "the Security Council should not be
micromanaging military operations." (52) Analysts generally accept
the fundamental necessity for increased mechanisms for accountability
and monitoring by the Council and recognize the constructive potential
in the Brazilian paper's call for enhancement of existing forms.
However, there is certainly room for further development and more
specificity on the composition of such a new monitoring and review body,
and on potentially enhancing existing mechanisms. (53)
A further criticism of RwP is that it unduly conflates the jus ad
bellum-based legal acquis of R2P with operational limits related to the
legally distinct jus in bello. According to Inger Osterdahl,
particularly the aspects in RwP's increased limitations on the use
of force shadow jus in bello provisions in that they are explicitly
intended to reduce the negative effects of the use of force once
conflict has broken out. (54) For Osterdahl, however, in the case of
multilateral interventions, the provisions for limiting force in the
manner foreseen in the RwP note are thin. As a result, according to
Osterdahl, there is in fact no binding requirement in the UN Charter
stipulating that measures not involving the use of force be resorted to
first; (55) rather, their primacy is a matter of political decision,
much as are the limits placed on Chapter VII operations' use of
force in Security Council practice.
Brazil's Withdrawal from Sponsoring RwP
The interest generated by RwP--with initial skepticism giving way
to acceptance of its potential for broadening R2P's acceptance and
thus deepening its legitimacy--translated later into encouragement, and
certain expectations for further development. However, Brazilian
diplomacy decided not to pursue the proposal further. In August 2012,
Brazilian foreign minister Patriota declared that there was no intention
to develop the proposal for further clarification to the international
community. (56)
It appears that Brazilian diplomats themselves were surprised by
the level of attention that RwP received. (57) Several factors account
for the decline in interest in developing a diplomatic campaign to
gather support for RwP. According to one Brazilian diplomat, the main
cause was the fact that Brazil was no longer a member of the Security
Council and, therefore, no longer in a position to have its voice heard
as loudly or to influence how matters related to international peace and
security are shaped normatively. (58) Indeed, this captures one of the
most important findings that Brazil's initiative suggests; namely,
that nonpermanent members of the Council can, and do, exercise normative
influence during their term on the Council, albeit as norm shapers
rather than originators. RwP was launched while Brazil was on the
Council and was "dropped" after its term on the Council was
concluded. It is in this context that emerging powers such as Brazil can
get sufficient clout to count as "norm shapers," (59) as
opposed to the more traditional norm setters such as the Permanent Five
(P5).
As noted earlier, RwP was made possible in large part due to
Patriota's personal interest in issues of sovereignty and
intervention. Patriota personally took the lead in drafting the RwP note
and in handling its presentation and furthering at the UN; (60) his
individual entrepreneurship in this sense was key. RwP's prominence
was tied to Patriota's person: the concept benefited significantly
from his position as foreign minister and diminished significantly once
he unexpectedly left the helm of the Foreign Ministry for domestic
reasons in August 2013.
Patriota's exit as foreign minister, and his successor's
less pronounced interest in security issues, together with President
Rousseff's notorious disinterest in foreign policy and focus on the
upcoming elections, appeared to have doomed RwP. Indeed, commentators of
Brazilian politics have focused on Rousseff's belief that foreign
policy could be a risk factor, which meant that controversial global
initiatives such as RwP should be avoided. (61)
Top Brazilian decisionmakers reasoned that RwP was not worth the
further investment of political capital, and perceived it as a case of
remote and uncertain political payoffs but with real political costs--a
"loss-making enterprise." (62) Brazilian diplomats did not
expect the level of resistance with which the proposal was initially
met, particularly coming from fellow Southern states. Perhaps due to
certain isolation from public debate in the domestic context, the
country's representatives were unaccustomed to the level of
criticism that RwP initially drew.
Brazil's hasty withdrawal from RwP was severely criticized by
commentators and civil society alike. Many expected Brazil to elaborate
on the initial RwP concept paper of November 2011 and to promote it
further. Civil society groups were critical of Brazil's withdrawal,
arguing that Brazil set certain expectations by "putting proposals
like RwP out there," but then showed no willingness to follow it
through. (63) Some commentators argued that the Brazilian lack of
endurance necessary to push the concept forward was "as deplorable
as much of the short-sighted Western criticisms of the initiative."
(64) And yet, in spite of Brazil pulling the plug, 2012 was the year
that RwP was on everyone's lips at the UN when considering any
R2P-related topics. (65)
Through the insertion of RwP in the R2P debate, the debate itself
became symbolic of emerging powers' resistance to normative
dominance of established powers in the face of a changing global
distribution of power. This captures the essence of why the debate over
RwP expands beyond its immediate link to the Libyan case and establishes
it firmly as a case of emerging power norm entrepreneurship linked to
broader issues of global governance. (66)
This also explains the wide range of interpretations of
BRICS's conduct in the Libyan crisis and of motivations behind the
RwP, of which we noted just a few. While some, particularly in the
Global South, have optimistically interpreted the RwP as an honest and
constructive attempt to contribute normatively to a global governance
problem, (67) others have more pessimistically inscribed the Libyan vote
and RwP itself in a pattern of overt resistance to the Western political
dominance. (68) However, RwP's goal, as Brazil initially envisaged
it and as Brazilian diplomats presented it, was to clarify the
contentious aspects related to implementing Pillar III of R2P. Also, RwP
was intended to express Brazil's discontent with NATO's
perceived overstepping of its mandate and to allow Brazil to avail
itself of this moment to play an active role in the intervention debate.
The former was recognized by key states, some members of the Security
Council. The United States, for example, during the informal dialogue on
RwP organized by Brazil in February 2012, recognized that
"Brazil's contribution to this debate can help us refine and
advance our shared commitment to R2P." (69)
While its ultimate outcome remains unforeseeable, clearly the R2P
debate has become not only a crucial element of some emerging
powers' challenge to the established distribution of power, but a
key locus for increased targeted consultation and cooperation in
mounting that challenge. (70) In addition, intervention debates have
become an important avenue for emerging powers to give normative content
to their challenge to the established global order, in a constructive
manner, thus allowing them to move beyond what Thakur once described as
obstructionist stance. (71) As Thakur points out, this position has
begun to bear fruit, putting an end to Western states' monopoly on
the capacity to set universal global standards. (72) In this sense,
"[e]merging powers are abandoning the position of ringside
observers to the development of the responsibility to protect to assume
roles as project designers--if not yet members of the implementation
team." (73) To date, Brazil's RwP initiative is the most
emphatic example of this movement.
At the global level, this was made possible by the normative
platform provided by Brazil's term on the Security Council. At the
domestic level, RwP's issuance came at a time that marked the first
sustained period in which Brazil had sought to assert itself as a player
at a truly global level. Combined, these international and domestic
contexts contributed to its shaping of R2P and, thus, global perceptions
on intervention. Indeed, RwP was intended to express Brazil's
discontent with NATO's perceived overstepping of its mandate in
Libya and to allow Brazil to play an active role in the intervention
debate.
Under President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Foreign Minister
Celso Amorim (who later became defence minister) the country had begun
consistently to operate with a global horizon and to become particularly
active on issues of intervention, inter alia taking on a leadership role
in MINUSTAH. The Lula-Amorim era was also marked by a notable opening of
the foreign policy making process in Brazil, in terms of both inputs
from civil society and closer ideological alignment of some foreign
policy tenets with the political preferences of the ruling party.
However, Brazil's top leadership has clearly made a
cost-benefit calculation that the initiative was no longer worth
additional investment of Brazilian political capital. The political
costs consisted of taking fire from many sides for the initiative, and
Brazil was not prepared for the criticism and pushback it faced after it
launched the RwP concept.
Regrettably, while prevention--a perennial tenet of Brazilian
contributions to intervention debates--plays a key role in the proposal,
the note's authors also did not include in it the crucial
comparative advantage Brazil holds in participating in such operations:
a pronounced ability to harness economic development and socioeconomic
policies, such as poverty reduction to tackle root impediments to
development such as inequality and marginalization. (74) As a result,
the once promising breakthrough contribution has languished and RwP has
been left floating astray, without a sponsor, in the past couple of
years. Brazil did not produce a second concept paper, to clarify the
first one, as was initially expected, and as of late 2015 appears to
have dropped the initiative altogether. Other priorities took
precedence, domestically and internationally. Brazil's withdrawal
from sponsoring RwP leaves an unhealthy void in structuring how to
address the basic tenets of discord surrounding the implementation of
R2P's Pillar III.
By rather unique circumstances where a norm's patron itself
decides to stop promoting it during its heyday, RwP found itself as a
norm without a sponsor. Nevertheless, RwP played a crucial part in both
stimulating the inclusion of developing states into the intervention
debate and moving R2P forward, normatively. The note provided the
framework for incipient avenues for future negotiations around the basic
tenets of discord over R2P's implementation.
Based on the specific proposals briefly discussed in this article,
RwP was Brazil's attempt to align R2P with its traditional foreign
policy objectives, centered on strengthening the authority of the
Security Council and prioritizing an international order in which all
states are equal. This was a clear effort to localize the R2P norm
through framing R2P's Pillar III in a way that closely resembles
local beliefs. As a direct reflection of Brazil's local priorities,
RwP seeks to emphasize prevention, to limit the use of force, to build
criteria for the application of coercive interventions, and to enforce
Brazil's commitment to working solely through the Council as the
ultimate authority when force is used, in line with proportionality and
last resort criteria.
Conclusion
The Responsibility While Protecting initiative provides an
opportunity to observe several salient aspects of states'
participation in global governance. RwP allows for insights into how
emerging powers can couch their challenge of the current distribution of
power in conceptual terms, contributing to shaping norms--rather than
simply taking them--while unable fully yet to make them independently
from a subaltern position. Alongside insights into the member
states' debates on intervention at the UN--and a new major
player's motivations--RwP opens the door to deeper analysis of the
norm diffusion process itself, outlining the complex interplay between
the weight of a concept's normative content and the political
position of the actor who acts as its primary proponent.
The contentious Libyan intervention provided a window of
opportunity for Brazil to make use of a fortuitous constellation of
positional and normative factors to launch a notable normative
initiative. We have outlined those factors here: the growing tensions
between the normative background of R2P at the global level and
Brazil's own prior commitments; its desire to use peace operations
and interventions as a vehicle toward a greater international profile,
especially doing so with a normative emphasis; the unique normative
influence it was able to convey as an elected member of the Security
Council; and the emergence within the Brazilian foreign policy
establishment of a context of dynamism and a leadership personality with
specific interest and know-how on the R2P issue.
Never designed as an innovation, the RwP concept note, after
initial opposition, began to fulfill its function after a certain lag
time. As we illustrated, it served to structure debate on R2P for
several years after its launch, and it recently has enjoyed something of
a resurgence as a potential means to breaking the international
community's bloody deadlock over Syria. It is in this context of
initiating a more inclusive debate on the R2P, centered around reaching
normative consensus on its key tenets regarding the use of force, that
we describe it as a noteworthy example of a valuable bridge-building
proposal. However, Brazilian diplomats believed that it would suffice to
launch the concept and allow it to stand on its own, without systematic
and regular further investment of diplomatic capital.
Nonetheless, this approach has proven to be problematic. The fate
of the RwP demonstrates that the shelf life, and normative impact, of
conceptually based diplomatic initiatives bear a direct relationship to
the stature of their originating states and to the relative investment
they bring forth. For as long as the RwP enjoyed the full support of the
Brazilian foreign policy establishment, it also enjoyed, in relative
terms, considerable success by being taken up in a report of the
Secretary-General, serving as a conceptual basis for further development
of R2P's normative content, and effectively laying out the
structure of the political conversation on R2P. In the absence of
further support from its primary patron, its impact has been relegated
to the last of these three factors.
Brazil's recent withdrawal from sponsoring RwP emphasizes the
urgent need for renewed support for such initiatives that tackle the
basic tenets of discord over R2P's implementation. Active support
is certainly needed for a norm's progress. With renewed Brazilian
support--perhaps in concert with like-minded emerging and established
powers such as India, Germany, and South Africa--the concept retains
significant potential to contribute positively to a key aspect of global
governance today.
Notes
Kai Michael Kenkel is on the permanent faculty at the Institute for
International Relations at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de
Janeiro and an associated researcher at the German Institute for Global
Affairs. He acknowledges generous support provided by the Brazilian
National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) and
the Rio de Janeiro State Research Support Foundation (FAPERJ). Cristina
G. Stefan (formerly Badescu) is lecturer in International Relations at
the University of Leeds and previously taught at Western University and
the University of Toronto. She published the monograph Humanitarian
Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect: Security and Human
Rights (2011) and articles in journals including Security Dialogue,
Canadian Journal of Political Science, Canadian Foreign Policy Journal,
and International Studies Perspectives.
(1.) Permanent Mission of the Federative Republic of Brazil to the
United Nations, "Responsibility While Protecting: Elements for the
Development and Promotion of a Concept," UN Doc.
A/66/551-S/2011/701 (9 November 2011), http://www
.globalr2p.org/media/files/concept-paper-_rwp.pdf, accessed 9 November
2015.
(2.) UN Security Council, Res. S/RES/1973, The Situation in Libya
(17 March 2011), http://daccess-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N11/268/39/PDF/N1126839 .pdf?OpenElement, accessed 9 March 2014.
(3.) The "norm shaper" approach is explained in more
detail in Cristina Stefan's forthcoming article "'Norm
Shapers by Circumstance': A Closer Look at the 'Responsibility
While Protecting' and Non-Western Normative Initiatives,"
based on a paper presented at the International Studies Association
annual convention in New Orleans, February 2015.
(4.) Kai Michael Kenkel, "South America's Emerging Power:
Brazil as Peacekeeper," International Peacekeeping 17, no. 5
(2010): 644-661; "Out of South America to the Globe: Brazil's
Growing Stake in Peace Operations," in Kai Michael Kenkel, ed.,
South America and Peace Operations: Coming of Age (London: Routledge,
2013), pp. 85-110.
(5.) See Kai Michael Kenkel, "Brazil and R2P: Does Taking
Responsibility Mean Using Force?" Global Responsibility to Protect
4, no. 1 (2012): 3-29.
(6.) Ramesh Thakur, The Responsibility to Protect: Norms, Laws and
the Use of Force in International Politics (New York: Routledge, 2011),
p. 144.
(7.) See the contributions to Conflict, Security and Development
14, no. 4 (2014); Rama Mani and Thomas G. Weiss, eds., Responsibility to
Protect: Cultural Perspectives in the Global South (London: Routledge,
2011); Gareth Evans, The Responsibility to Protect--Ending Mass Atrocity
Crimes Once and For All (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press,
2009), p. 53.
(8.) Alex J. Bellamy, Global Politics and the Responsibility to
Protect: From Words to Deeds (London: Routledge, 2011), pp. 43ff.
(9.) UN General Assembly, "World Summit Outcome," UN Doc.
A/RES/60/1 (24 October 2005).
(10.) See Kai Michael Kenkel, "Brazil's Peacebuilding in
Africa and Haiti," Journal of International Peacekeeping 17, no.
3-4 (2013): 272-292.
(11.) See Jeffrey Checkel, "Norms, Institutions and National
Identity in Contemporary Europe," Working Paper No. 98/16
(Copenhagen: Advanced Research on the Europeanization of the
Nation-State, University of Oslo, 1998); Stefan A. Schirm, "Leaders
in Need of Followers: Emerging Powers in Global Governance,"
European Journal of International Relations 16, no. 2 (2010): 197-221.
(12.) See Phil Orchard, "Review Article: The Evolution of the
Responsibility to Protect: At a Crossroads?" International Affairs
88, no. 2 (2012): 377-386, especially 378.
(13.) Diplomats at the Permanent Mission of Brazil to the UN,
interviewed by the second author, New York, 20 June 2014.
(14.) See, for example, Justin Morris, "Libya and Syria: R2P
and the Spectre of the Swinging Pendulum f International Affairs 89, no.
5 (2013): 1272.
(15.) See Aidan Hehir, "The Permanence of Inconsistency:
Libya, the Security Council, and the Responsibility to Protect,"
International Security 38, no. 1 (Summer 2013): 137-159, at 146.
(16.) Diplomats involved in the process, personal communication
with the first author, 10 April 2015; Paul D. Williams and Alex J.
Bellamy, "Principles, Politics, and Prudence: Libya, the
Responsibility to Protect, and the Use of Military Force," Global
Governance 18, no. 3 (2012): 281.
(17.) See http://responsibilitytoprotect.org/Security%20Council%20meeting%20on %20the%20situation%20in%20Lybia%2017%20March%202011.pdf,
accessed 22 April 2015.
(18.) Carlos Chagas Vianna Braga, "Peacekeeping, R2P, RwP and
the Question of the Use of Force," in Eduarda Hamann and Robert
Muggah, eds., Implementing the Responsibility to Protect: New Directions
for International Peace and Security? (Brasilia: Instituto Igarape,
2013), p. 32.
(19.) See Gareth Evans's discussion regarding the BRICS's
reaction in "The Consequences of Non-intervention in Syria: Does
the Responsibility to Protect Have a Future?" in Robert W. Murray
and Alasdair McKay, eds., Into the Eleventh Hour: R2P, Syria and
Humanitarianism in Crisis (Bristol: E-International Relations, 2014),
pp. 19-20.
(20.) Alcides Costa Vaz, "Brazilian Perspectives on the
Changing Global Order and Security Challenges," in Michael Emerson
and Renato Flores, eds., Enhancing the Brazil-EU Strategic Partnership:
From the Bilateral and Regional to the Global (Brussels: Centre for
European Policy Studies; Rio de Janeiro: Fundacao Gctulio Vargas, 2013),
p. 196.
(21.) Patrick Quinton-Brown, "The Responsibility While
Protecting: Linchpin or Trojan Horse?" in Eduarda Hamann and Robert
Muggah, eds., Implementing the Responsibility to Protect: New Directions
for International Peace and Security? (Brasilia: Institute Igarape,
2013), p. 65.
(22.) Naomi Kikoler, "Emerging Powers and Mass Atrocity
Prevention--Brazil," paper prepared for the Nexus Fund,
http://ceas-serbia.org/root/images/Emerging_Powers_and_Mass_Atrocity_Prevention- Brazil.pdf, accessed 15 March 2014.
(23.) Gareth Evans, Ramesh Thakur, and Robert A. Pape,
"Correspondence: Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility
to Protect," International Security 37, no. 4 (2013): 206.
(24.) Williams and Bellamy, "Principles, Politics, and
Prudence," p. 281.
(25.) Paul D. Williams, "The Road to Humanitarian War in
Libya," Global Responsibility to Protect 3, No. 2 (2011): 258,
quoted in Paula Wojcikiewicz Almeida, "From Non-indifference to
Responsibility While Protecting: Brazil's Diplomacy and the Search
for Global Norms," Global Powers and Africa Programme Occasional
Paper 138. Johannesburg: South African Institute for International
Affairs, April 2013 (1), footnote 50, p. 11. See also Morris,
"Libya and Syria," p. 1272.
(26.) Brazil, "Statement During Informal Interactive Dialogue:
The Role of Regional and Sub-regional Arrangements in Implementing the
Responsibility to Protect," 12 July 2011,
www.globalr2p.org/media/files/brazil-stmt.pdf, accessed 10 February
2015.
(27.) Brazil, "Statement at the Opening of the General Debate
of the 66th Session of the United Nations General Assembly," 21
September 2011, http://gadebate.un
.org/sites/default/files/gastatements/66/BR_en_0.pdf, accessed 10
February 2015.
(28.) See El Hassan bin Talal and Rolf Schwarz, "The
Responsibility to Protect and the Arab World: An Emerging International
Norm?" Contemporary Security Policy 34, no. 1 (2013): 7-10.
(29.) See Julian Culp and Johannes Plagemann, "Hooray for
Global Justice? Emerging Democracies in a Multipolar World,"
Working Paper No. 242 (Hamburg: German Institute for Global Affairs,
2013), pp. 7-13.
(30.) See, for example, Pu Xiaoyu, "Socialization as a Two-way
Process: Emerging Powers and the Diffusion of International Norms,"
Chinese Journal of International Politics 5, no. 4 (2012): 341-367, at
356-359.
(31.) See Amitav Acharya, "Norm Subsidiarity and Regional
Orders: Sovereignty, Regionalism, and Rule-making in the Third
World," International Studies Quarterly 55, no. 1 (2011): 95-123;
Jochen Prantl and Ryoko Nakano, "Global Norm Diffusion in East
Asia: How China and Japan Implement the Responsibility to Protect,"
International Relations 25, no. 2 (2011): 204-223.
(32.) International Commission on Intervention and State
Sovereignty, Responsibility to Protect: Report of the International
Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (Ottawa: International
Development Research Centre, 2001).
(33.) Brazil, "Responsibility While Protecting," par. 3.
(34.) Australia, '"Responsibility While Protecting,'
Statement by Mr. Gary Quinlan, Ambassador and Permanent Representative
of Australia to the UN," 21 February 2012,
http://australia-unsc.gov.au/2012/02/responsibility-while-protecting/,
accessed 30 March 2015.
(35.) United States, "Remarks by the United States at an
Informal Discussion on 'Responsibility While
Protecting,"' 21 February 2012, http://usun.state.gov/briefing
/statements/184487.htm, accessed 16 March 2015.
(36.) Thorsten Benner, "Brazil as a Norm Entrepreneur: The
'Responsibility While Protecting' Initiative," Working
Paper (Berlin: Global Public Policy Institute, March 2013), pp. 7-8.
(37.) Eduarda Passarelli Hamann, "Brazil and R2P: A Rising
Global Player Struggles to Harmonise Discourse ande Practice," in
Malte Brosig, ed., The Responsibility to Protect: From Evasive to
Reluctant Action (Johannessburg: Hanns Seidel Foundation,
Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, Institute for Security Studies, and South
African Institute of International Affairs, 2012), p. 82.
(38.) See Derek McDougall, "Responsibility While Protecting:
Brazil's Proposal for Modifying Responsibility to Protect,"
Global Responsibility to Protect 6, no. 1 (2014): 64-87, at 75.
(39.) Ramesh Thakur, "R2P After Libya and Syria: Engaging
Emerging Powers," Washington Quarterly 36 (2013): 71.
(40.) See Global Centre for R2P, "UN Security Council
Resolutions Referencing R2P," 23 April 2013,
www.globalr2p.org/resources/335, accessed 30 March 2015.
(41.) Russian Federation, "Statement to the General Assembly
During Dialogue on RtoP: Timely and Decisive Response," 2012,
http://responsibilitytoprotect.org
/index.php/document-archive/government, accessed 30 March 2015.
(42.) See Oliver Stuenkel, "The BRICS and the Future of R2P:
Was Syria or Libya the Exception?" Global Responsibility to Protect
6, no. 1 (2014): footnote 79, p. 18; Benner, "Brazil as a Norm
Entrepreneur."
(43.) See Paula Wojcikiewicz Almeida, "From Non-indifference
to Responsibility While Protecting."
(44.) Brazil, "Responsibility While Protecting," par. 7.
(45.) Ibid., par. 6.
(46.) Ibid.
(47.) See, for example, the 2009 Report of the UN
Secretary-General, Implementing the Responsibility to Protect, UN Doc.
A/63/677 (12 January 2009), par. 12, p. 9.
(48.) Brazil, Statement by Ambassador Maria Luiza Viotti, 5
September 2012, http:
//responsibilitytoprotect.org/index.php/component/content/article/35-r2pcs-tpics, accessed 13 December 2014.
(49.) Maxwell Kelly, "Fighting for Their Lives: R2P, RwP and
the Utility of Force to Protect Civilians," in Eduarda Hamann and
Robert Muggah, eds., Implementing the Responsibility to Protect: New
Directions for International Peace and Security? (Brasilia: Instituto
Igarape, 2013), pp. 51, 52.
(50.) Ibid., p. 55.
(51.) Brazil, "Responsibility While Protecting," par.
11(h).
(52.) See, for instance, the Australian position during the
informal UN General Assembly dialogue on RwP, hosted by the Permanent
Mission of Brazil, footnote 37.
(53.) See, for example, Jennifer Welsh, Patrick Quinton-Brown, and
Victor MacDiarmid, "Brazil's 'Responsibility While
Protecting' Proposal: A Canadian Perspective," Canadian Centre
for the Responsibility to Protect, 12 July 2013, http://ccr2p.org
/?p=616, accessed 16 March 2014,
(54.) Inger Osterdahl, "The Responsibility to Protect and the
Responsibility While Protecting: Why Did Brazil Write a Letter to the
UN?" Nordic Journal of International Law 82, no. 4(2013): 466.
(55.) Ibid., p. 468.
(56.) Almeida, "From Non-Indifference," p. 63.
(57.) Member of civil society in close contact to Brazilian
Permanent Mission during 201182012, interviewed by the second author,
New York, 19 June 2014.
(58.) Diplomat at the Permanent Mission of Brazil to the UN,
interviewed by the second author, 20 June 2014.
(59.) For more details on the notion of "norm shapers,"
see Stefan's forthcoming "'Norm Shapers by
Circumstance': A Closer Look at the 'Responsibility while
Protecting' and Non-Western Normative Initiatives," footnote
3.
(60.) Member of civil society working closely with the Brazilian
Mission to the UN during 2011-2012, personal communication with the
second author, 19 June 2014.
(61.) See Oliver Stuenkel and Marcos Tourinho, "Regulating
Intervention: Brazil and the Responsibility to Protect," Conflict,
Security and Development 14, no. 4 (2014): 379-402, at 395.
(62.) Benner, "Brazil as a Norm Entrepreneur," pp. 8-9.
(63.) Members of civil society, personal communication with the
second author.
(64.) See, for example, Benner, "Brazil as a Norm
Entrepreneur," pp. 8-9.
(65.) Diplomat at the Permanent Mission of Brazil to the UN,
interviewed by the second author.
(66.) See Benner, "Brazil as a Norm Entrepreneur."
(67.) For the optimistic view, see Oliver Stuenkel, "The
BRICS," in Eduarda Hamann and Robert Muggah, eds., Brazil as a Norm
Entrepreneur: The Responsibility While Protecting (Brasilia: Igarape
Institute, 2013), pp. 59-62. A more critical view is taken by Steen
Fryba Christensen, "Brazil's Foreign Policy Priorities,"
Third World Quarterly 34, no. 2 (2013): 271-286; Zaki Lai'di,
"BRICS: Sovereignty, Power and Weakness," International
Politics 49, no. 5 (2012): 626-629; and Stewart Patrick,
"Irresponsible Stakeholders? The Difficulty of Integrating Rising
Powers," Foreign Affairs 89, no. 6 (2010): 44-53.
(68.) See Aidan Hehir, The Responsibility to Protect: Rhetoric,
Reality and the Future of Humanitarian Intervention (London: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2012), pp. 180-208.
(69.) United States, "Remarks by the United States at an
Informal Discussion on 'Responsibility While
Protecting,"' at footnote 37.
(70.) See, for example, Almeida, "From Non-indifference";
Stuenkel, "The BRICS."
(71.) Thakur, The Responsibility to Protect, pp. 153-159.
(72.) Ramesh Thakur, "R2P After Libya and Syria: Engaging
Emerging Powers," p. 62. Thakur specifically relates this
development, and the effects of the Libyan intervention to the need to
develop legitimacy criteria for R2P.
(73.) Luis Paulo Bogliolo, "The Responsibility to Protect and
the Responsibility While Protecting: An Analysis of Humanitarian
Intervention and the Developing World," Social Science Research
Network, 20 August 2012, p. 20, http:
//papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Delivery.cfm/SSRN ID2201588 code
1960675.pdf?abstractid=2201588&mirid=1, accessed 15 March 2014.
(74.) See Bellamy, Global Politics and the Responsibility to
Protect, pp. 93-121, on the role of development issues in the
advancement of R2P.