Book contents
10 - Outlaw states: 1999
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2009
Summary
The terrors of lawlessness must be responded to … if need be, by the terrors of the law.
the moment of victory of a political force is the very moment of its splitting: the triumphant liberal-democratic “new world order” is more and more marked by a frontier separating its inside from its outside.
Introduction: the shift to anti-pluralism
On 23 April 1999, in Washington DC, Nato celebrated its fiftieth anniversary. The organisation had been created in 1949 with the purpose of defending western Europe from the threat of Soviet invasion. At a dinner held that evening, the leaders of Nato states gave speeches outlining their agenda for the future of the institution. It was clear from these speeches that both the ambit of Nato's activities and the range of its self-images had expanded quite considerably since 1949. For some, Nato had, like the Concert of Europe, come to embody a particular set of values. British Prime Minister gTony Blair, reflecting the comments made by European leaders at Chaumont and Langres 185 years before, trumpeted: ‘The shared values of democracy, the rule of law, and human rights make Nato more than a military alliance. They are the practical embodiment of trans-Atlantic unity.’ Others in Washington emphasised the idea of Europe as a zone of peace. Vaclav Havel characterised Europe as an expanding, universalising sphere whose enlargement ‘signifies the real and definitive end of the imposed division of Europe and the world’.
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- Great Powers and Outlaw StatesUnequal Sovereigns in the International Legal Order, pp. 278 - 316Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004