Article contents
The Virtues of Bright Lines: Self-Determination, Secession, and External Intervention
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Abstract
The United Nations Charter-based international order sought to reconcile the self-determination of peoples with the inviolability of state boundaries by presuming sovereign states to be manifestations of the self-determination of the entirety of their territorial populations. This presumption, albeit nationally rebuttable, traditionally prevailed even where states could only by a feat of ideological imagination be characterized as “possessed of a government representing the whole people belonging to the territory without distinction.” But the international reaction to fragmentation in the former Yugoslavia—regarding both the initial “dissolution” and the subsequent struggle over Kosovo—called into question the rigid doctrines of the past and opened the door to secessionist claims theretofore dismissible as beyond the pale. Although no vindication of Russian intervention in Ukraine can properly be drawn from the Yugoslav cases, the Ukrainian crises help to surface the hidden dangers of an emerging jurisprudence that would allow previously inadmissible considerations—whether ethnic, historical, constitutional, or “democratic”—to compromise the territorial inviolability norm.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- German Law Journal , Volume 16 , Issue 3: Special Issue - The Crisis in Ukraine , July 2015 , pp. 384 - 415
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2015 by German Law Journal GbR
References
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29 The preceding section was adapted from the written version of panel remarks delivered at the October 2014 annual meeting of the American Branch of the International Law Association. Roth, Brad R., The Neglected Virtues of Bright Lines: International Law in the 2014-15 Ukraine Crises, 21 ILSA J. Int'l & Comp. L. 317 (2015).Google Scholar
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** The Serbian people … demanded respect and protection of their legitimate national and civil rights. When Croatia decided to secede from Yugoslavia and form its own independent State, the Serbs inhabiting their ethnical territories in this republic decided to break away from Croatia and remain within Yugoslavia. … Faced with the serious danger of a more widespread conflict, the Presidency of the SFRY instructed the Yugoslav People's Army to prevent such conflicts by standing as a neutral force between the parties in conflict. However, the Croatian authorities, instead of accepting such a mission of the YPA [JNA], openly attacked not only the Serbian people which it branded as a band of outlaws, but also … the Yugoslav People's Army which it termed an army of occupation. This is how war was thrust upon Yugoslavia. In such a situation it was essential to protect the Serbian people from extermination.Google Scholar
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54 On October 14, 1991 Bosnia's Parliament declared the Republic's sovereignty, with the support of parties associated with the Bosniak plurality (an estimated 44% of Bosnia's population) and the Croat minority (17%), albeit without the participation of the parties associated with the Serb minority (31%). In its January 11, 1992 Opinion (No. 4), the Commission concluded that “the will of the peoples of Bosnia-Hercegovina to constitute the [Republic] as a sovereign and independent State cannot be held to have been fully established. …” Badinter Commission Opinions, supra note 19, at 1503, No. 4. But then, curiously, it added: “This assessment could be reviewed if appropriate guarantees were provided by the Republic applying for recognition, possibly by means of a referendum of all the citizens of the [Republic] without distinction, carried out under international supervision.” Id. The non sequitur was entirely overlooked: the first sentence invoked “the will of the peoples” severally, whereas the second evidently eschewed peoplehood as a relevant category, indicating that the will of a simple majority of individual citizens can override a dissenting “people,” however cohesive.Google Scholar
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57 According to notions predominant in Slovenia and Croatia, the federation represented a historically contingent agreement of its several constituent territorial republics, the boundaries of which conceptually preceded rather derived from the union; in this view, each republic maintained, as an inherent right of self-determination, a latent sovereign capacity to exit the arrangement with its borders intact. Support for that position might be drawn from leading SFRY jurist Edvard Kardelj's Socialist-era understanding of self-determination in the Yugoslav context. For Kardelj, “the legitimacy of Yugoslavia [was] only derivative and tentative”—a mere epiphenomenon of the socialist project that subsequently disappeared. Zoran Oklopcic, Beyond Empty, Conservative, and Ethereal: Pluralist Self-Determination and a Peripheral Political Imaginary, 26 Leiden J. Int'l L. 509, 518-19 (2013). Yet Kardelj's conception—however popular with his fellow Slovenes—did not have the field to itself. More importantly, there was still less accord on the alternative. As Oklopcic indicates, “While all Yugoslav constitutions affirmed the various nations’ right to self-determination, including the right of secession, a fundamental ambiguity remained as to whom exactly this right belonged—to South-Slavic Yugoslav ethnoi, or the demoi of Yugoslavia's component republics.” Id. at 520. The distinction, while appearing to set an ethnic against a civic brand of nationalism, in reality merely determines which ethno-national aspirations will be satisfied or frustrated once secessionism seizes the agenda.Google Scholar
58 Serb nationalists would likely express the point in a one-word rejoinder: “Jasenovac,” the concentration camp in the World War II-era Independent State of Croatia (NDH)—an entity that encompassed roughly the combined territories of present-day Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina—in which an extraordinary number of Serbs perished (along with Jews, Roma, and others). See Site, Jasenovac Memorial, List of Individual Victims of Jasenovac Concentration Camp, http://www.jusp-jasenovac.hr/Default.aspx?sid=6711.Google Scholar
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62 Non-Self-Governing Territories are, by definition, non-integral to the sovereign states that govern them. See, e.g., G.A. Res. 1541 (XV), supra note 4.Google Scholar
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66 See Release, Press, Security Council, U.N. Press Release SC/6659 (Mar. 26, 1999) (reflecting that Russia, China, and Namibia support draft Security Council resolution, defeated 3-12-0, characterizing NATO's “unilateral use of force” as “a flagrant violation of the United Nations Charter” and demanding “an immediate cessation”).Google Scholar
67 S.C. Res. 1244 (June 10, 1999) (demonstrating a vote of 14-0-1, with China abstaining).Google Scholar
68 See id. The Resolution speaks of “the people of Kosovo” enjoying “substantial autonomy within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Id. at para. 10. It also speaks of “[p]romoting the establishment, pending a final settlement, of substantial autonomy and self-government in Kosovo, taking full account of annex 2 and of the Rambouillet accords.” Id. at para. 11(a). The annex, in turn, discusses a “political process towards the establishment of an interim political framework agreement providing for substantial self-government for Kosovo, taking full account of the Rambouillet accords and the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.” U.N. Doc. S/1999/648, Annex 2, para. 8 (June 7, 1999). The Rambouillet document itself provides that “national communities” therein recognized “shall not use their additional rights to endanger … the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.” Rambouillet Accords, supra note 65, at Framework, Art. 1(2).Google Scholar
69 In 2007, the U.N. Secretary-General's Special Envoy, former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari, authored a Comprehensive Proposal for Kosovo Status Settlement, expressing the unsatisfactoriness of preserving the status quo indefinitely. Comprehensive Proposal for Kosovo Status Settlement (Mar. 26, 2007), http://www.unosek.org/docref/Comprehensive_proposal-english.pdf; see generally Jean d'Aspremont, Regulating Statehood; The Kosovo Status Settlement, 20 Leiden J. Int'l L. 649 (2007).Google Scholar
70 G.A. Res. 63/3 (Oct. 8, 2008).Google Scholar
71 Cf., Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Advisory Opinion, 2004 I.C.J. Rep. 36 (July 9).Google Scholar
72 The resolution was passed on 8 October 2008. The dates of recognitions of Kosovo can be found, inter alia, on the webpage of the Kosovo's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, http://www.mfa-ks.net/?page=2,33 (last visited June 18, 2015).Google Scholar
73 As the Court noted, the “illegality attached to the declarations of independence [of Southern Rhodesia, Northern Cyprus, and Republika Srpska] stemmed not from the unilateral character of these declarations as such, but from the fact that they were, or would have been, connected with the unlawful use of force or other egregious violations of norms of general international law, in particular those of a peremptory character (jus cogens).” Kosovo Advisory Opinion, supra note 8, para. 81.Google Scholar
74 In the Court's words, “[T]he scope of the principle of territorial integrity is confined to the sphere of relations between States.” Kosovo Advisory Opinion, supra note 8, para. 80.Google Scholar
75 See, e.g., Reference re Secession of Quebec, [1998] S.C.R. 217, 290, para. 144 (Can.), http://scc-csc.lexum.com/scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/1643/index.do (“It may be that a unilateral secession by Quebec would eventually be accorded legal status by Canada and other states, and thus give rise to legal consequences; but this does not support the more radical contention that subsequent recognition of a state of affairs brought about by a unilateral declaration of independence could be taken to mean that secession was achieved under colour of a legal right.”).Google Scholar
76 Judge Simma's separate opinion ascribes the Court's presumptive neutrality to “an old, tired view of international law, which takes the adage, famously expressed in the 'Lotus' Judgment, according to which restrictions on the independence of States cannot be presumed because of the consensual nature of the international legal order.” Kosovo Advisory Opinion, supra note 8, para. 2 (separate opinion by Simma, J.). Apart from failing to note that the supposed “Lotus principle” by its nature has no application to sub-state units, Simma's ascription misconstrues the doctrinal point: The non-judgmentalism stems not from absence of law, but from an affirmative norm regarding (for better or worse) the outcome of such struggles as “matters essentially within the domestic jurisdiction.” See Declaration, Friendly Relations, supra note 5.Google Scholar
77 See Opinion, Kosovo Advisory, supra note 8, para. 82 (showing that states have expressed “radically different views” on the doctrinal issues central to determining Kosovo's status: (1) “Whether, outside the context of non-self-governing territories and peoples subject to alien subjugation, domination, and exploitation, the international law of self-determination of peoples confers upon part of the population of an existing State a right to separate from that state”; (2) “whether international law provides for a right of ‘remedial secession’ and, if so, in what circumstances”; and (3) “whether the circumstances which some participants maintained would give rise to a right of ‘remedial secession’ were actually present in Kosovo”).Google Scholar
78 See Opinion, Kosovo Advisory, supra note 8, paras. 102–09.Google Scholar
79 Id. at para. 109. To infer any legal conclusions about Kosovar “peoplehood” on this basis would be to overread what Zoran Oklopcic properly calls “a seemingly off-the-cuff remark.” Zoran Oklopcic, Preliminary Thoughts on the Kosovo Opinion, EJIL: Talk! (July 26, 2010), http://www.ejiltalk.org/preliminary-thaughts-on-the-kosovo-opinion/#more-2505. The use of that the term “people” may refer merely to the declarants’ subjective understanding of their “capacity.” Id. Google Scholar
80 For arguments in favor, see the Statement of Federal Republic of Germany filed with the International Court of Justice in connection with the Kosovo Advisory Proceedings, at 34–37, available at http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/141/15624.pdf. See also Written Statements of Albania, Estonia, Poland, and Ireland, available at http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/index.php?p1=3&p2=4&k=21&case=141&code=kos&p3=1. But see, e.g., Written Statements of Cyprus, Spain, and the Russian Federation. For a study of these submissions, see Milanovic, Marko, Arguing the Kosovo Case, in The Law and Politics of the Kosovo Advisory Opinion (Marko Milanovic & Michael Wood eds., 2014), http://ssrn.com/abstract=2412219. As Milanovic reports: “Perhaps the most remarkable item from the first round is that one state in the pro-Serbia camp did explicitly endorse the right to remedial secession—Russia—while claiming that Kosovo did not satisfy its requirements on the facts. It was indeed the only member of the P-5 to do so.” Id. at 25.Google Scholar
81 Jeremy Lott, In Defenseof Hypocrisy 60 (2006).Google Scholar
82 See generally W. Ofuatey-Kodjoe, The Principle of Self-Determination in International Law (1977).Google Scholar
83 G.A. Res. 1514 (XV), supra note 4, at para. 2. The Security Council reaffirmed the statement in S.C. Res. 183, paragraph 4 (Dec. 11, 1963), and the language is repeated verbatim in Common Article 1 of the 1966 Human Rights Covenants. ICCPR, supra note 2, art. 1. International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Jan. 3, 1976, 993 U.N.T.S. 3, art. 1.Google Scholar
84 G.A. Res. 1514 (XV), supra note 4, at para. 5.Google Scholar
85 G.A. Res. 1541 (XV), supra note 4, Annex, Principles I, IV, V.Google Scholar
86 See id. at Principles II, VI VII, VIII, IX.Google Scholar
87 Id. (containing at some points plural references (e.g., “the territory and its peoples”) thereby implying that a single Non-Self-Governing Territory can contain more than one people, though this plurality is given no operative significance).Google Scholar
88 G.A. Res. 1514 (XV), supra note 4, at para. 6.Google Scholar
89 Friendly Relations Declaration, supra note 5 (emphasis added).Google Scholar
90 See, e.g., Antonio Cassese, Self-Determination of Peoples: A Legal Reappraisal 115-13 (1995) (discussing the preparatory work to the safeguard clause, which reveals concessions to non-liberal-democratic states).Google Scholar
91 See G.A. Res. 50/6, supra note 7; United Nations World Conference on Human Rights, Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, supra note 7.Google Scholar
92 Friendly Relations Declaration, supra note 5.Google Scholar
93 G.A. Res. 60/1, para. 139 (Sept. 16, 2005) (affirming the Security Council's authority to intervene forcibly in the internal affairs of sovereign states, in furtherance of the “responsibility to protect,” where “national authorities are manifestly failing to protect their populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity”).Google Scholar
94 For example, coups in Haiti in 1994 and Sierra Leone in 1997 drew not only international condemnation, but also continued recognition of the ousted government-in-exile, leading ultimately to a forcible restoration. In these cases, there had been a landslide victory of the ousted President in a very recent, internationally-monitored election, as well as notorious brutality and demonstrable unpopularity on the part of the forces involved in the coup. As a result, a vast diversity of international actors, cutting across the international system's plurality of interests and values, were able to perceive in common a population's manifest will to restore an ousted government. See Brad R. Roth, Governmental Illegitimacy in International Law 366–87, 405-09 (1999).Google Scholar
95 The establishment of Bangladesh as a result of India's 1971 intervention in East Pakistan is a rare instance of such fracturing. Even there, the initial U.N. General Assembly indirectly repudiated the external use of force that enabled Bangladesh's independence. G.A. Res. 2793 (XXVI) (Dec. 7, 1971) (calling “upon the Governments of India and Pakistan to take forthwith all measures for an immediate cease-fire and withdrawal of their armed forces on the territory of the other to their own side of the India-Pakistan borders”).Google Scholar
96 See Convention, Montevideo, supra note 19.Google Scholar
97 Convention on Duties and Rights of States in the Event of Civil Strife, May 21, 1929, 134 LN.T.S. 45, art. 1 (codifying an Inter-American treaty forbidding “the traffic in arms and war material, except when intended for the Government, while the belligerency of the rebels has not been recognized, in which latter case the rules of neutrality shall be applied”).Google Scholar
98 See, e.g., Malcolm Shaw, International Law 383 (5th ed. 2003); Lauterpacht, Hersch, Recognition in International Law 45–46 (1947) (“[T]he sovereignty of the mother country is a legally relevant factor so long as it not abundantly clear that the lawful government has lost all hope or abandoned all effort to reassert its dominion.”).Google Scholar
99 “Successful revolution sooner or later begets its own legality.” Stanley A. de Smith, Constitutional and Administrative Law 66–67 (3d ed. 1977).Google Scholar
100 1981 Non-Intervention Declaration, supra note 6, Annex, art. 2(f) (affirming “[t]he duty of a state to refrain from the promotion, encouragement, or support, direct or indirect, of rebellious or secessionist activities within other States, under any pretext whatsoever, or any action which seems to disrupt the unity or to undermine or subvert the political order of other States” (emphasis added)).Google Scholar
101 A complicated question arises when insurgent forces achieve such efficacy as to achieve the status of “belligerent,” thereby establishing the existence of a full-fledged “civil war.” Since a government's standing traditionally hinges on its maintenance of effective control through internal processes, the inability of a regime to maintain control by its own devices calls that standing into question, thereby arguably triggering an obligation of foreign states to observe neutrality. See, e.g., Institut de Droit International, Resolution: The Principle of Non-intervention in Civil Wars (Aug. 14, 1975), http://www.idi-iil.org/idiE/resolutionsE/1975_wies_03_en.pdf; see generally Louise Doswald-Beck, The Legal Validity of Military Intervention by Invitation of the Government, 56 British Y.B. Int'l L. 189 (1986). For a recent assessment of this issue, see Akande, Dapo & Vermeer, Zachary, The Airstrikes Against Islamic State in Iraq and the Alleged Prohibition on Military Assistance to Governments in Civil Wars, EJIL: Talk! (Feb. 2, 2015), http://www.ejiltalk.org/the-airstrikes-against-islamic-state-in-iraq-and-the-alleged-prohibition-on-military-assistance-to-governments-in-civil-wars/ (last visited June 18, 2015).Google Scholar
102 See Oklopcic, Zoran, Constitutional (Re)Vision: Sovereign Peoples, Constituent Powers and the Formation of Constitutional Orders in the Balkans, 19 Constellations: Int'l J. Critical & Democratic Theory 81, 95 (2012).Google Scholar
103 It Is telling that the Canadian Supreme Court's decision in Reference re Secession of Quebec, supra note 75, perhaps the most elaborate contemporary judicial opinion anywhere on the topic, pointedly sidestepped the question of what counts as a “people,” jumping ahead conceptually to the non-violation of self-determination, The Court thus avoided having to determine whether the relevant “people” was comprised of (a) the entire Quebec papulation, (b) the entire Quebec population minus the indigenous communities; (c) Francophone Quebecois, or (d) all Francophone Canadians, let alone (e) all Canadians. Id. at 282, para. 125.Google Scholar
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