Definitions that were conveniently put in place to circumvent aggressions of world powers. If definition of human rights doesn't even include right to live and not to be maimed then what is the point of that definition in first place? Right to live and not be tortured mentally and physically is a basic right of every human being and you are saying that is not covered under human rights? We all know how these wars start with planted evidence. Iraq war is the prime example of how fake intelligence reports were used a pretext to an invasion of a country. Syrian war was started under pretext of Syria using chemical weapons. Libyan war was started for God know what reason bcz they still havnt yet figured out why they invaded libya. Afghanistan was turned upside down just to hunt down few criminals who used to be best buds with US in the past. Do you want to bet that same is not the case with all invasions under pretext of a imperialist agenda? Blanket blame is what should be attributed as these decisions were/are being made by people who were elected by people of US. If west is ready to blame entire countries, cultures and religions then what is the issue that we cant call out their human rights violations under pretext of peace and stability.
Bro,
It is important to distinguish this theme on following grounds:
1. Human Rights in the Country context
2. Human Rights in the Global context
Human Rights evaluation becomes really complicated with geopolitical considerations in the mix. One reason is that a war can be fought on legitimate grounds (there are examples in recent history, let alone in earlier history).
The aforementioned distinction is apparent even in the Holy Quran (Surah Al-Baqarah; Surah An-Nisa).
The art of distinction make it possible to evaluate state of affairs from different angles and on different levels; much apparent aspects of oppression cannot be used to cast shadow over lesser visible aspects of oppression in this manner.
As for the conflicts you mentioned:
American intervention in Afghanistan had UN-mandate:
https://www.un.org/press/en/2001/sc7248.doc.htm
Al-Qaeda Network was deeply entrenched in the region prior to American intervention. It was not possible to counter this movement by merely arresting Osama Bin Laden (Afghan Taliban were not handing him over anyways even though Musharraf administration attempted to convince them to). Al-Qaeda Network had to be dismantled given the scale of its atrocities around the world - no
ifs and
buts. Pakistan will be much better without these **um roaming our streets in the long-term.
American interventions in Iraq (2003 - 2011) and Libya (2011) respectively?
Imperialism for sure (NATO acted on its own accord in each case). On the flip side, both countries tasted ruin due to bad leadership (some individuals are greedy and selfish to the extent that they are not willing to step down from position(s) of power in the face of virtually any situation - millions be damned).
USA is not responsible for Syrian Civil War; Assad regime is. However, thanks in part to understanding reached between Obama administration (USA) and Putin administration (Russia) in 2013, Assad regime is unlikely to be held accountable for its war crimes.
I do agree all five of them get away with it but US is the biggest beneficiary of veto power when it come to dropping down inquires in war crimes. I am talking about documented facts where US threatened bodies like ICC
https://theconversation.com/us-puni...ng-potential-war-crimes-in-afghanistan-143886
Meanwhile using them persecute other countries.
Some examples:
Insiders say UN sought to downplay criticism of Myanmar and was hamstrung by China, Russia opposition to firm response.
www.aljazeera.com
The two nations veto UN resolution to maintain two border crossing points from Turkey to deliver aid to northwest Syria.
www.aljazeera.com
Russia and China vetoed a last-ditch attempt by Western members of the U.N. Security Council to extend approval - which expires on Friday - for humanitarian aid to be delivered across two border crossings into Syria from Turkey for the next six months.
www.reuters.com
Nine council members voted in favor, while South Africa joined Russia and China in voting no, and three abstained. To pass, a resolution needs nine votes in support and no vetoes by the five permanent members, which include Russia and China. Both countries back the the authoritarian regime of...
www.bloomberg.com
WE live in
interests-driven world - Human Rights take a back seat in these matters unfortunately. Human Rights in the Global context to be precise.