Monday, June 18, 2012

Non-Intervention in foreign country conflicts


In John Stuart Mill’s “ A Few Words on Non-Intervention” Mill’s speaks about an interesting topic. Mills says that whether one country is justified in assisting the people that are from another country; is based on the “yoke” that the assisted country is trying to get rid of. By yoke Mill’s states that if the country is trying to throw off a government that maintains itself by foreign support; then it is okay for another country to intervene. When the conflict is only between native rulers along with the native strength those rulers can enlist in their defense, and the people of that country; legitimate intervention is not okay. John Mill’s statement and justification for why  intervention is not allowed in situations involving conflict between a native ruling party and its people is the part of the essay that will the focal point of this discussion.
            Mill’s begins his justification for this position by stating that “ the only test possessing any real value, of a people’s having become fit for popular institutions, is that they, or a sufficient portion of them to prevail in the contest, are willing to brave labour and danger for their liberation”(Mill, Global Justice Reader, pg 482). Mill states that a people must be willing to go through tough times, experience a large amount of struggle, and be willing to put their lives on the line; in order to gain the liberty that they so desperately want. Mill’s goes on to say that if the people do not have such a unrelenting love for liberty that they are not able to take their liberty from those that are considered their domestic oppressors; then the liberty that they have been given by anyone but themselves will not be permanent in any way.
            Mills states that the people must be the ones that overthrow their domestic oppressors because if any group of people especially a group whose freedom has yet to become prescriptive does not seem to value it sufficiently enough to fight for it, and maintain it against any force which may come together within the country, even by the people who have command over the countries money, it is only a question of how long that it will take before the people will be enslaved whether it be a few years or a few months (Mills,Global Justice Reader, pg 482).  Mills in a way states that the people have to be the ones that fight for their liberty because the moment that the assisting country pulls out; the country will fall back into turmoil. The ideas that Mills present which included that people must love liberty enough to be able to fight off their domestic oppressors is a compelling and convincing argument. Originally I  was unsure whether I felt that intervention into another country’s civil war or politics would be okay or not, but Mills has made his argument sufficiently enough to convince me that in cases that involve a native government and its people; non-intervention is the best action to take.    

5 comments:

  1. I understand your take on non-intervention and how the people must be responsible for the overthrow of a despotic government. But what if there is such a brute abuse of power or indiscriminate use of violence and there is virtually no way the people could succeed?

    ReplyDelete
  2. this is a similar question to the one that i had on Stephen's post. I am interested in hearing the non-interventionist view point on how to deal with governments or groups of people that commit atrocities on their own people. This may sound foolishly optimistic but i feel that as long as the people truly want to be rid of their government they will do whatever it takes to win their freedom

    ReplyDelete
  3. I am not sure that this is always the case Roy. But it is up for debate. I would also ask why happens when a ruler is in power and committing atrocities because of what YOU do (i.e. the US and Saddam Hussein). If a state is implicated in the atrocities should it intervene to help or should it learn its lesson and just butt out?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Mill is one of my favorite political thinkers, but at first I found it hard to support the idea that unless someone wins freedom on their own, they wont be able to hold onto or use it for what it is worth. This debate is similar to one involving the question of should man intervene with nature? The context is with wildlife. If there is an endangered species, should we intervene to secure the species prosperity? According to Mill we shouldn't because even if we do, they will eventually become endangered once again. The flaw that saw them into endangerment the first time will put them right back there. According to Mill, unless they figure out how to save their own species, we should just let the species die off, even if we know of a way to help them. In my opinion, we are privileged to be in such a position, whether in the case between two nations, one with freedom and one without, or it be between two separate species, one who is mentally superior to the other. And as a result we have a passive duty to those that are less "privileged".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Of course if we are causing the endangered species to go extinct, and for the most part this is the case, then we have a greater duty to that species no?

      Mill's dictum seems to work better when the state thinking about intervening plays little or no part in the problem. However, if you believe Butler this is a very unlikely situation.

      Delete