Originally posted by karajorma
Seeing as how I'm still waiting for your explaination of why the Chechnyans are freedom fighters when they take a school hostage but the KLA are terrorists then, yeah, I question your objectivity when it comes to your own nation of birth.
And while you may not be pro ethnic cleansing you seem to have no problem with allowing the country that was responsible for it to make a land grab as a result. As Aldo states that's a dangerous precedent.
I doubt I ever called the Beslan hostage-takers freedom fighters. It doesn't sound like something I would say. But if you dig up the quote, then I apologize for it.
First of all, it's highly subjective as I'm sure you know. But freedom fighter refers to ends, terrorist refers to the means used tos ecure those ends. You can be a freedom fighter without using terrorist methods (though that's unlikely), and you can be a terrorist without fighting for freedom (9/11 for example.)
If I am indeed inconsistent in calling the KLA terrorist and their cause illegitmate while at the same time advocating independence for Chechnya (which, by the way, exists on a completly different level, given that several hundred thousand innocents have been killed, as opposed to less than 5000 civilians on
both sides in Kosovo) than I could be forgiven, since you (presumably) support both the independence of Kosovo, due to majority will (a majority by the way that was obtained by the same type of ethnic cleansing prevalent during the early 90s, though in this case it happened while the territory was firmly under NATO control) and yet oppose the same thing in Bosnia. If I am inconsistent, then so are the major world powers, the only difference being that they have armies, diplomats and courts to carry out their will.
What I am arguing for (or rather against) at the moment is the right of foreign powers to exercise control over the territory of a sovereign nation(s) by force of arms. By engaging in a civil war, a country (or any component of it) does not magically give up it's sovereignty. If that were the case, there are AFAIK around 30 such conflicts currrently on-going aroud the world, and in each case you would presumably support the subordination of the local, elected government to rule by an unelected, unaccountable foreign group, for an unspecified length of time, with blanket powers over every aspect of the state.
Originally posted by karajorma
And do you believe it was right for any of them to have profitted from that?
But who will serve out the justice, and on a global scale no less? Are they elected? Who gave them authority to do so? How much authority exactly do they have? I don;t believe that it is right for the group with the most guns to come up with a definition of justice that suit them and impose it on those who are powerless to refuse. Shall we start extraditing
all individuals gulty of war crimes? I would be fine with that, as long as a single standard is applied to all, or else the court has no legitimacy. If you want to punish those who start wars, I can certainly agree with that, but until I see Blair, Bush, Clinton, Putin and others in the dock, I will consider the Hague a kangaroo court.
Don't get me wrong, I look forward to a truly global court, because you can't expect a nation to persecute it's own leaders, but if they apply the standard of justice selectively, then I really can't support that.
Though again, I really don't see how implementing economic reforms, education reforms and other such things, much less determining the very direction in which the country should steer has anything to do with war crimes or war criminals, even if you accept the legitimacy of Ashdown's mission in Bosnia.