Failed state
A "failed state" is one that has a "shattered social and political structure." For example, in a September 10, 2002 article, CNN said that, Afghanistan, "after more than two decades of constant warfare," was "a nation in ruins." Towns and cities had become "reduced to rubble" and its social and political structure had become "torn apart by years of bitter conflict. ... It was this failed state, [said] Western leaders, that allowed Afghanistan to become a home to terrorists -- in turn paving the way for the events of September 11[, 2001]."
In August 2001, Pakistan was described as having "failed to achieve political stability, sustained economic growth or a clear sense of national identity."
Daniel Thürer, Dr. jur., LL.M. (Cambridge), Professor of International Law, European Law, Constitutional Law and Administrative Law at the University of Zurich, writing for the International Review of the Red Cross December 1999, says "Failing States are invariably the product of a collapse of the power structures providing political support for law and order, a process generally triggered and accompanied by anarchic forms of internal violence." He says that the "former Secretary-General of the United Nations, Boutros Boutros Ghali, described this situation in the following way:
- "'A feature of such conflicts is the collapse of state institutions, especially the police and judiciary, with resulting paralysis of governance, a breakdown of law and order, and general banditry and chaos. Not only are the functions of government suspended, but its assets are destroyed or looted and experienced officials are killed or flee the country. This is rarely the case in inter-state wars. It means that international intervention must extend beyond military and humanitarian tasks and must include the promotion of international reconciliation and the re-establishment of effective government.'"
"States in which institutions and law and order have totally or partially collapsed under the pressure and amidst the confusion of erupting violence, yet which subsist as a ghostly presence on the world map," Thürer says, "are now commonly referred to as failed States or Etats sans gouvernement."
Thürer states that, "However, neither expression is sufficiently precise. Failed is too broad a term, for, going to the opposite extreme, the aggressive, arbitrary, tyrannical or totalitarian State would equally be regarded as having failed -- at least according to the norms and standards of modern-day international law. On the other hand, "State without government" is too narrow, since, in the type of State [Thürer disccuses in his] article, it is not only the central government but all the other functions of the State which have collapsed." For this reason, Thürer says the term failed State should be understood to mean disintegrated or collapsed State."
Other Related SourceWatch Resources
- Horn of Africa
- New Iraq
- Operation Iraqi Freedom: Beginnings of a Quagmire (November-December 2003)
- Pax Americana
- Pax Americana, Africa
- Post-war Iraq
External Links
Iraq as a "failed state"
- 11 February 2003: "Kuwaiti minister calls Iraq 'failed state'", CNN.
- September 2003: "Iraq as a Failed State: A six month progress report. Executive Summary and Recommendations. Report #1: Pre-war through Septtember 2003] by Pauline H. Baker, Fund for Peace.
PAULINE H.. BAKER THE FUND FOR PEACE
Headlines
- July 2002 (Issue): "Somalia. A failed state?" by Andrew Cockburn, National Geographic: "Somalia appears to be the very definition of what we call a failed state. The last time this desert country possessed anything approaching a normal government, with tax collection, social services, and law enforcement, was under a bloody dictator named Siad Barre. After Barre was driven out by a national rebellion early in 1991, political power over most of Somalia fell into the hands of feuding warlords, who, like grand dukes from the European Middle Ages, deployed their private armies to battle for power even as hundreds of thousands of other Somalis were dying of hunger. Outside intervention, often with good intentions, has done little to help--and has usually made things worse."
- 6 October 2003: "UN Seeks to Transform Liberia from Failed State to Nation at Peace" by Abdullah Dukuly, Inter Press Service.