The Responsibility Dilemma The Role of the R2P in the U.S. Foreign Policy since the Rwanda Genocide

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12797/AdAmericam.18.2017.18.04

Keywords:

mass atrocities crimes, post-Cold War politics, humanitarian crisis, US foreign policy, responsibility to protect

Abstract

This paper explores the role of the doctrine of the responsibility to protect (R2P) in shaping U.S. foreign policy in the post-Cold War period. Based on the in-depth study of declassified documents, public speeches, and other documents, this paper examines three case studies (Rwanda genocide, Iraq war, Libya conflict) as representative examples of the U.S.involvement in humanitarian crises abroad. The analysis reveals a consistently evolving narrative of a country fatalistically balancing the dilemma of responsibility. On the one side, having assumed the role of a global leader and norm-carrier, the United States is expected to act accordingly, and intervene in foreign humanitarian crises, safeguarding nations facing grave and continuous violations of human rights. On the other hand, every administration has been faced with the possibility of a backlash from either the public opinion, which does not prioritize humanitarian causes abroad, or the international community, which is not indifferent to violations of the principle of state sovereignty. As a result, the humanitarian narrative, albeit important, has been mainly applied as a secondary resource, and has not been the primary reason for interventions, as demonstrated with a number of inconsistencies in formulating foreign policies and employing the R2P rhetoric.

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Author Biography

Natalia Koper, University College London, United Kingdom

Graduated from University College London with a Master of Science in International Relations of the Americas and from the University of Warsaw with a Bachelor degree in International Relations and Applied Linguistics; awarded the UCL International Relations of the Americas Prize for Best Dissertation on an International Relations Topic; she specializes in human rights and identity politics in the Americas, in particular the safeguard of indigenous cultural rights; based in Toronto, Canada, she is currently preparing for a Juris Doctor program in North America.

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Published

2018-01-30

How to Cite

Koper, N. “The Responsibility Dilemma The Role of the R2P in the U.S. Foreign Policy since the Rwanda Genocide”. Ad Americam, vol. 18, Jan. 2018, pp. 51-64, doi:10.12797/AdAmericam.18.2017.18.04.

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