Titre : | Governing the Use-of-Force in International Relations: The Post 9/11 US Challenge on International Law |
Auteurs : | Aiden Warren ; Ingvild Bode |
Type de document : | Books |
Editeur : | London [United Kingdom] : Palgrave MacMillan, 2014 |
Article en page(s) : | X, 234 p. |
Collection : | New security challenges series |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-1-137-41143-3 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Index. décimale : | 341.63 |
Tags : | Intervention (International law) ; Unilateral acts (International law) ; International law--United States ; Preemptive attack (Military science) ; Self-defense (International law) ; internal security--United States ; United States--Military policy |
Résumé : | "This book examines US recourse to military force in the post-9/11 era. In particular, it evaluates the extent to which the Bush and Obama administrations viewed legitimizing the greater use-of-force as a necessary solution to thwart the security threat presented by global terrorist networks and WMD proliferation. The Bush administration's use-of-force policy centered on advocating preemptive self-defence options, which were really preventive in nature. For example, it is argued that they responded to potential long-term threats based on ambiguous evidence. Central to this cloaking of preventive options in the more legitimate language of preemptive self-defence was an expanded notion of what counts as an imminent threat. Despite the Obama administration's avowal to multilateralism and professed US adherence to global norms, it did not expressly reject his predecessor's reasoning on the preemptive/preventive use-of-force. Indeed, the Administration's counter-terrorist campaign against Al Qaeda and in particular its drone program made the use-of-force in self-defence a widespread, regular, even commonplace occurrence during Obama's tenure. Despite being positioned at different points on the political spectrum, the book therefore concludes that Bush and Obama have chosen a remarkably similar approach towards expanding the use-of-force in self-defence. "-- |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
302799 | 341.63 WAR G | Book | Royal Military Academy | Conflict Studies | Disponible |