1
VIEW ON ASIA
briefing series
THE QUESTION OF 'FAILED STATES'
Author: Minh Nguyen*
Date: March 2005
During the 2004 Federal election campaign, the Australian Government flagged for the third time
in as many years the idea of a 'preemptive' – or more accurately, 'preventative' – military attack
against an anticipated threat to Australia's security. On previous occasions, the public had been
largely hostile to the idea of a unilateral invasion of Iraq. But now the US- led invasion is tragic
history, its consequences have left many Australians questioning some of the primary assumptions
in the anxious rush to war, particularly the notion of 'rogue states' and the potential threat these
states pose to Australia's security interests.
In the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq, the concept of 'failed states' is becoming fashionable
among government and private security analysts in Australia. Failed states are said to be the new
challenge for the new century and, whereas threats to world peace once came from strong
tyrannical ('rogue') states, the post-cold war challenges no w originate mainly in failed states.
Since mid-2003, the concept has supplemented, if not supplanted, rogue states, while the spectre
of an 'arc of instability' has replaced the 'axis of evil'.
Even though no one in Government can precisely name an exa mple of a failed state in the region,
this did not stop the Australian Prime Minister from enlisting this elusive concept in his attempt to
sound tough on terrorism. Even conservative and security thinktanks have jumped on the
conceptual bandwagon in labelling a number of Pacific states from Papua New Guinea to Nauru as
'failing' in their call for economic restructuring and rationalisation in those countries.
Although widely referred to, the concept of failed states is not only indistinct; it is highly
controversial because of the political and security implications of labelling a state as having
'failed'. A state that has been declared as having failed becomes a candidate for intervention in its
internal affairs by another state or international organisation, or worse still, marked for a
preventative military invasion.
This research paper attempts to explain the origins of the concept of failing or failed states and to
assess the popular claim that these states pose a security threat for Australia and Western interests.
Australia and the Notion of State Failure
Uniya
JESUIT SOCIAL JUSTICE CENTRE
2
Origins of the concept
While talk of preventative military action may be in vogue, the idea is hardly novel. The US
Government considered such a policy "morally corrosive" during the height of the Cold War but
despite its unpopular origin, the idea of prevention resurfaced as a mainstream government policy
following September 11, 2001. The document that entrenched the idea in US foreign policy, the
National Security Strategy of September 2002,
1
from its very first pages drew a connection
between the idea of prevention and the apparent dangers posed by failed states. "America is now
threatened less by conquering states than [it is] by failing ones", the paper says.
Government officials and security think-tanks in Australia soon followed the US lead. In
Australia, the concept of failed states was introduced to popular acclaim with the release of the
government- funded Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) 2003 policy report, Our Failing
Neighbour: Australia and the future of Solomon Islands,
2
which argued the case for intervening in
the troubled Solomon Islands, during the Government's deliberations over the issue.
Although scholars have been debating the concept of state failure for over a decade, as an actual
phenomenon, what is now known as 'failed states', has been part of the political reality for as long
as the international system of states has existed.
3
Historically, the notion of state failure was a
colonial preoccupation. At the zenith of European expansion, the failure of Pacific indigenous
efforts at self- government had frequently provided the opportunity and justification for great
power interventions. Powerful states often intervened in weaker states to quell social disorder that
threatened their security and trade interests.
4
"At other times," Robert H. Dorff, a US Army
scholar noted, "the weak state provided an opportunity for territorial expansion by the great
power."
5
It is often forgotten that the Solomon Islands has been at the receiving end of intervention by a
more powerful state not once but twice. In 1893, at Australia's urging, British forces landed on the
Solomon Islands "to curtail what we would now call transnational crime, especially blackbirding,
and to ensure that no other imperial power established a presence there."
6
Over a century ago, the
Solomon Islands thus provided one example of a great power intervention in what today might be
considered a failing state.
Contemporary interest in state failure re-emerged as a humanitarian concern in the early 1990s
shortly after the collapse of the Soviet alliance. The present post-Cold War period is another
historical phase characterised by rapid change in the international system. Pressure for change
followed decades of relative stability and conceptual certainty under the bipolar system in which
superpowers competition for third world patronage ensured that international relations and state
borders remained relatively rigid.
With the end of the Cold War and the acceleration of globalisation, a wave of state formation and
disintegration pushed the issue of failing states to the forefront of the international political and
human rights agenda. International relations scholars invariably employed different terminology
and definitions to describe one of the apparent 'negative' symptoms associated with international
1
National Security Strategy of the United States of America, September 2002, www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss.html.
2
Elsina Wainright, Our Failing Neighbour: Australia and the Future of Solomon Islands, Australian Strategic Policy
Institute, June 2003.
3
See Jon Fraenkel, "Political Instability, 'Failed States' and Regional Intervention in the Pacific", paper presented at
conference Redefining the Pacific: Regionalism – Past, Present and Future, Dunedin, New Zealand, 25-28 June 2004,
www.otago.ac.nz.
4
Robert H. Dorff, "Addressing the Challenges of State Failure", paper presented at Failed States Conference,
Florence, Italy, 7-10 April 2000, www.ippu.purdue.edu.
5
Ibid.
6
Wainright, op. cit., p.19.
3
system's reshuffle: the 'failed' or 'collapsed' state, which is primarily the fate of those states that are
thought to be 'weak', 'fragile' or 'decaying'.
Gerald Helman and Steven Ratner were among the first commentators to use the term 'failed
states' in a 1993 Foreign Affairs article.
7
They were concerned about "a disturbing new
phenomenon" whereby a state was becoming "utterly incapable of sustaining itself as a member of
the internationa l community." They were concerned that a failed state would "[imperil] their own
citizens and [threaten] their neighbours through refugee flows, political instability and random
warfare".
Box 1: Defining state failure – the theory
What is a state?
There are subtle differences in the usage of the terms 'state', 'nation' and 'country' even though they
are often used interchangeably. Some commentators would distinguish between territorial
'country' and 'nation', the latter usually refers to a tightly knit group of people with a shared
identity, culture or religion. A 'state', on the other hand, is often defined by its place and nature in
the international system.
In international law, a given 'state' is often said to exist when a political entity is recognised by
other states as the highest political authority in a given territory and is treated as an 'equal' among
the international 'community' of states. Statehood does not require diplomatic recognition by other
states, but rather a recognition that it exists. Another popular definition in international customary
law says that statehood exists only when a given political entity possesses a permanent population,
a defined territory, a government, and the capacity to enter into relations with the other states.
This definition suggests that statehood is independent of recognition by other states.
However, the 'state' can also be defined in terms of its internal political characteristics, particularly
its domestic authority and legitimacy. This means that even if a given political entity is
recognised as a state under international law, it cannot be considered a state unless certain
domestic political conditions are met. Political philosophies differ in their interpretation of these
conditions.
A narrow interpretation, first proposed by Niccolò Machiavelli, emphasises the use of force, and
force alone, as the basic constituent element of the state. As elaborated by the German sociologist
Max Weber, the state is "a human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the
legitimate use of physical force within a given territory", even when "the right to use physical
force is ascribed to other institutions or to individuals only to the extent to which the state permits
it
"
.
8
"If no social institutio ns existed which knew the use of violence," he said, "the concept of
'state' would be eliminated".
A broader understanding of the state, often referred to as the 'social contract' theory, emphasises
the relationship between the state and its citizens. As early as the 17th century, English political
philosopher Thomas Hobbes argued that individuals living in a state without a government –
without law and "a coercive Power to tye [sic] their hands from rapine, and revenge" – are in a
war of all against all in which life is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short". His proposal was
for individuals to make a social contract with an absolute sovereign government – the state – by
surrendering some of their freedom in exchange for guaranteed peace and security.
7
Gerald B. Helman and Steven R. Ratner, "Saving Failed States", Foreign Policy, no.89, Winter 1993.
8
Max Weber, "Politics as a Vocation", speech at Munich University, 1918.
4
The social contract view of the state implies not only submission of all members of society under
its authority, but also extends to the rights and responsibilities between a state and its citizens. For
the state, this includes the provision of security for its citizens (which implies an ability to
maintain a monopoly of the use of force) but it might also include the delivery of public goods and
other forms of collective consumption and, more recently, the respect of human rights.
Source: Wikipedia, "State" and "Social Contract", en.wikipedia.org, accessed 7 February 2005
What is state failure?
How one defines the state will determine how one understands state failure. Michael Ignatieff
adopted a more Machiavellian or narrow understanding of state fa ilure, which for him occurs
when "the central government loses the monopoly of the means of violence".
9
Ignatieff argued
that the ability to monopolise the use of force is the basic constituent element of a functioning
state for which all other conditions, such as the respect for human rights and delivery of social
services, will depend.
In the broad sense of state failure, William Zartman offered an arguably 'social contract'-based
definition of state failure for whom state failure is said to occur when "the basic functions of the
state are no longer performed".
10
But it is "a deeper phenomenon than mere rebellion, coup, or
riot. It refers to a situation where the structure, authority (legitimate power), law, and political
order have fallen apart", he added.
11
Whether narrowly or broadly defined, the blame for state failure are many, ranging from European
colonialism to what the colonial successor regimes or external agents did to that legacy.
12
In many
places like East Timor, colonialism left behind little that the local population could build upon. In
other places colonialism had created artificial borders and unviable social structures prone to
ethnic conflict. Burma, where a civil war has been fought for nearly half a century, is a reminder
of a complex colonial legacy of differing treatment for different ethnic groups that became an
impediment to creating a unified sense of nationhood following independence.
In other instances 'third world colonialism' has been blamed. In Indonesia (although rarely
considered a failing state) the largely Java-centric project to expand, unify and create a nation out
of diverse cultures and faiths has been progressing from the moment Indonesian independence was
declared. Indonesia, which initially covered no more than the island of Java, expanded to
subsume the former kingdom of Aceh to the east and as far as East Timor and Papua to the west.
Not surprisingly the greatest unrest has occurred and is occurring at these peripheral regions.
Besides historical factors, there are contemporary internal and external factors. Internal factors
include economic maladministration, corruption and general failure at self- governance – local
successors squandering their colonial inheritance. Certainly these are factors in many instances of
state failure but, as the late UN official Sergio Vieira de Mello noted, "it would be hard to imagine
a case of extreme poverty, underdevelopment, inequity, or armed conflict in which none of the
complex causal factors originated outside the affected country". At the core of state failure is also
a combination of "direct armed aggression, covert military intervention, encouragement of proxy
warfare, exploitative multinational trade and business practices, or reckless economic
destabilization", he argued.
13
9
Michael Ignatieff, "Intervention and State Failure", Dissent, Winter 2002, p.118.
10
William Zartman, "Introduction: Posing the Problem of State Collapse", in William Zartman (ed) Collapsed States:
The Disintegration and Restoration of Legitimate Authority, Colorado and Lynne Rienner Publishers, London, 1995.
11
Ibid.
12
Ignatieff, op. cit., p.118.
13
Sergio Vieira de Mello, "The Pillars of Human Security" Global Agenda, 2003.
5
A security threat?
It is no coincidence that the proliferation of international terrorism, transnational criminal
activities and Western interests in failing states are all occurring at the same time in history. There
are obvious examples where state failure had intermeshed with the covert world, for example, in
Somalia and past and present Afghanistan. This said there is always a tendency to generalise the
dangers of state failure to the extent that any state considered failing or failed is potentially a
'basket case' of international criminal activities and terrorism.
According to former US president Jimmy Carter, failed
states "can become havens for terrorist ideologues seeking
refuge and support. Failed states are the breeding grounds
for drug trafficking, money laundering, the spread of
infectious diseases, uncontrolled environmental degradation,
mass refugee flows and illegal immigration."
14
No matter
how fashionable it is to demonise failed states, such an
alarming assessment paints a misleading picture of the
phenomenon and can lead to an unhealthy policy obsession
with state failure and militarism.
International terrorism
A popular concern is the idea of 'saving' failed states in order
to fight international terrorism. Since the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001, and the revelation that the terrorist
network Al-Qaeda operated training camps in Afghanistan,
conventional wisdom has linked international terrorism with
failing or failed states. The fear among Western policy
makers is that state failure is fomenting security threats that
could have ramifications not just locally but across globe.
"[W]e have come to understand better", the Australian Government said in a ASEAN Regional
Forum report, "the impact weak and failing states can have on global security. Afghanistan
illustrated the role such states can play in providing shelter for terrorist networks."
15
Apart from
sheltering terrorists, it has also been claimed that failed or failing states can become terrorist
'breeding' grounds as "young people with ineffectual government, few jobs, little or no education
… find strength and security within terrorist organizations."
16
Despite the view that a direct link exists between state failure and international terrorism, recent
evidence suggests that such a link cannot be assumed. Using evidence from a study by Ulrich
Schneckener,
17
German researcher Daniel Lambach argues that effective terrorist networks have
requirements that are not always well served in failed states – communications technology and
human and financial resources for recruitment, training, planning and logistics purposes, for
example. The September 11 attack is a reminder of an act of terrorism that, although conceived
and planned in Afghanistan and other 'failing states', relied on many developed states for its
14
Jimmy Carter, "The Human Right to Peace", Global Agenda, 2004, www.globalagendamagazine.com.
15
Commonwealth of Australia, "Annual Security Outlook 2004," ASEAN Regional Forum, 2004, www.dfat.gov.au.
16
"Preventing State Failure to Combat Terrorism," Background Guide, Stanford Model United Nations Conference,
2004.
17
Daniel Lambach, Failed States and Perceptions of Threat in Europe and Australia, Paper for the Conference", paper
presented at the New Security Agendas: European and Australian Perspectives conference, London, 1-3 July 2004,
www.staff.uni-marburg.de/~lambach.
Child solider in Rwanda 1998
Photo: Mark Raper SJ, Jesuit Refugee Service
6
operation, including recruitment in Germany and Spain and the "extensive use of banks in the
United States."
18
Richard Devetak has argued that a hospitable environment for terrorist groups is more likely to be
"poorly governed, corrupt or sympathetic states like Afghanistan under the Taliban, Yemen and
Kenya, but also Pakistan and Indonesia among others."
19
Illegal migration
In the last few decades, the world has witnessed increasing flows of cross-border migration, with a
substantial number of illegal immigrants being assisted by people smugglers.
20
People smugglers
supply sophisticated false documents and use clandestine, often dangerous methods of
transporting people while exploiting the desperation of those willing or forced to migrate. Ever
since the large wave of Afghani and Iraqi refugees and migrants arrived on Australia’s shores in
the late 1990s, it has often been assumed that most illegal migrants originate from failing or failed
states – people desperately searching for a better life in the West, or people enlisting the service of
people smugglers operating in failed states. However, as with international terrorism, the
evidence for this is only partial.
Studies into this area suggest that international migration occurs greatest in countries that are
emerging from extreme poverty, that are building infrastructure and accumulating savings.
Research by Ronald Skeldon prepared for the International Organisation for Migration
21
has found
that "the principal reasons for the illegal migration are not to be found in absolute poverty but in
the increased knowledge of opportunities available elsewhere – the very product of development",
which is hardly a description of a failing or failed state.
China is an example of a poor but fast developing country. China is also the source of the largest
group of unauthorised entrants (both economic migrants and refugees) to Australia until the year
2000.
22
The US State Department has pointed out that Chinese illegal migrants tend to come from
developed areas that have the infrastructures needed to provide required communication and
transportation to the West.
23
They must also have access to significant funds (usually through
loans), as fees for people smugglers or 'snakeheads' can be quite significant.
In contrast, most citizens in failed states will have less exposure to the 'lures' of the West, and will
be more concerned with escaping immediate violence or scraping together a living than occupying
their time thinking about a better life in the West. They may also be "too ignorant of other
opportunities, and too far removed from transportation and communications networks [to] initiate,
facilitate and sustain international migration", according to former Australian Federal Police
adviser, John McFarlane.
24
18
9-11 Commission, 9-11 Commission Report, 2004, www.9-11commission.gov.
19
Richard Devetak, "Globalisation’s Shadow: Political Violence in a Global Era," Around the Globe, 1(2), August
2004.
20
Alexander Downer, "Australian Aid - Investing in Growth, Stability and Prosperity", Eleventh Statement to
Parliament on Australia's Development Cooperation Program, September 2002, www.ausaid.gov.au.
21
Ronald Skeldon, "Myths and Realities of Chinese Irregular Migration," IOM Migration Research Series, no.1,
International Organization for Migration, Geneva, 2000.
22
Ibid.
23
US Department of State, "Why Do They Leave Their Homes?" US Department of State website, www.state.gov.
24
John McFarlane, "People Smuggling: a Serious Issue in an Unstable Region," Platypus Magazine – Journal of the
Australian Federal Police, October 1999, www.afp.gov.au. Citing research by Jack Goldstone, "A Tsunami on the
Horizon? The Potential for International Migration from the People’s Republic of China" in Paul Smith (ed.), Human
Smuggling: Chinese Migrant Trafficking and the Challenge to America’s Immigration Tradition , The Center for
Strategic and International Studies, Washington, 1997.
7
War and civil strife can increase cross-border migration as people attempt to escape danger and
violence, particularly given that refugee movements are now "central to the objectives and tactics
of war", a major UNHCR report says.
25
Cross border migration can also be indirectly promoted
by political uncertainty as territorial borders become porous with the increasing loss of central
control.
26
Although the evidence suggests that failed states can
potentially create internal displacement and refugee
outflows, there is little evidence of a direct link between state
failure and illegal migration except that some refugees might
be desperate enough to seek the services of criminal gangs.
Yet since the 2001 Tampa crisis and September 11,
connecting dots between failed states and illegal migration
and people smuggling has also become popular.
Money laundering
Drug, terrorist and criminal money laundering have also been
linked with state failure. Australian commentaries on this
topic have often focused on the Pacific islands as an example
of failing states providing opportunities for money
laundering, tax evasion and fraud. "When you have a failed
state, it's a state that can be exploited by people such as
money launderers …" Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
said shortly before the deployment of troops to the Solomon
Islands in 2003. According to the Federal Police
Commissioner Mike Keelty, "The activity is fostered by island countries with few resources to sell
other than their financial names."
27
Yet despite the textbook example of the Pacific island Nauru – which until recently was a regional
financial centre for money laundering and identity fraud – there is little else to suggest a
connection between state failure and money laundering. Using a number of political and
economic indicators, one of the most comprehensive empirical studies on international money
laundering was unable to establish a nexus with state failure.
28
Only 18 states were classified as
'failed' or 'failing' out of the 90 alleged money laundering states surveyed, according to the study.
The explanation for this is hardly surprising, "money launderers or their clients attach high
importance to keeping their money safe and like to exp loit legal protections to do so, which is no
easy task in politically or economically failing or failed states."
29
Narcotics
Mick Keelty and others have pointed out that an estimated 80% of heroin trafficked illegally into
Australia is sourced from the Golden Triangle region, most of it from Burma.
30
The link between
state failure and the cultivation and processing of narcotics seems more evident than that with
international terrorism, illegal migration or money laundering, particularly in the example of the
25
UN High Commissioner for Refugees, The State of the World's Refugees: 50 Years of Humanitarian Action,
UNHCR, 2000, www.unhcr.ch.
26
McFarlane, op. cit.
27
Mick Keelty, "Transnational Crime, Police Peace Operations and Asia-Pacific Security," Meeting of Australia
CSCAP, University House, 8 February 2001, www.afp.gov.au.
28
Peter Reuter and Edwin M. Truman, Chasing Dirty Money: The Fight Against Money Laundering, Institute for
International Economics, 2004.
29
Ibid.
30
Adam Graycar et al, "Global and Regional Approaches to Fighting Transnational Crime," International Policing
Conference, Adelaide, 6 March 2001, www.aic.gov.au.
Refugees in Albania 1999
Photo: M Almeida, Jesuit Refugee Service
8
three major drug producing countries, Afghanistan, Burma and Colombia. All these states are
attempting to deal with significant insurgency groups and all have significant drug production and
trafficking records.
31
Providing the land and climate are suitable, failed and failing states create an ideal political
environment for the cultivation, production and transportation of illicit drugs. "[A]narchy and
lawlessness is good for business", Antonio Maria Costa, the Executive Director of UN Office on
Drugs and Crime, said of the drug trade.
32
The drug trade provides easy cash for both desperate
farmers trying to live off their war-ravaged land and local warlords and gangs eager to enlarge
their military capability. This could be seen in today's Afghanistan, "with lawlessness rising, the
farmers are finding it more and more attractive to sow poppy all over the country."
33
Box 2 – Background to the Solomon Islands intervention
The vast majority of Solomon islanders are ethnic Melanesians, but there has been intense and
bitter rivalry between the Isatabus on Guadalcanal and migrant Malaitans from other islands. In
the late 1990s, tension between the Isatabus and the Malaitans escalated on the main island of
Guadalcanal. Armed Isatabus militants, many who were unemployed youths, drove out of the
rural areas people from the neighbouring islands, accusing them of taking land and jobs.
Thousands of Malaitan families were forced to abandon their homes and villages and flee to
Honiara. The Malaitan Eagle Force (MEF) was formed in retaliation.
Large quantities of weapons were transferred from the police (the majority of whom are
Malaitans) to the MEF. In June 2000 the MEF seized control of the capital, forced Prime Minister
Ulufa'ulu to resign and parliament to fo rm a new government with Sogavare as the interim Prime
Minister. A new Parliament was elected in December 2001 and Sir Allan Kemakeza appointed
Prime Minister.
The armed conflict between Malaitan and Isatabus militants led to a serious deterioration in
security. Violence and crime increased. The political institutions were weak, political leaders felt
obligations to the conflicting parties, and some parliamentarians took sides. The police were
implicated in the violence and exploitation while the judiciary was hampered by threats against
judges and prosecutors. The ineffectiveness of the justice system contributed to a climate of
impunity.
Efforts occurred to resolve the conflict and in November 2000 many committed themselves to the
terms of the Townsville Peace Agreement, an agreement brokered by Australia involving a formal
ceasefire between the Malaitan and Isatabus populations. It was significant at the time and
delayed further Australian assistance. However by 2002, despite the efforts of an international
observer team that arrived following the Townsville Peace Agreement, the security situation had
worsened.
With the breakdown of law and order, the formal sector of the economy was on the brink of
collapse. The Government was insolvent and most commercial export activities ceased to operate.
Hospitals and schools ceased to function while public servants were not paid and many did not
turn up to work. Roads fell into disrepair especially during the wet season.
31
Mick Keelty, op. cit.
32
Original emphasis. Antonio Maria Costa, "Drugs: Cash Flow for Organized Crime - The Economic Addiction to
Illegal Drugs," address to the Diplomatic Academy, Warsaw, Poland, 1 February 2005.
33
Arif Jamal, "Opium Production Resumes In Afghanistan," Eurasianet, 12 March 2002, www.eurasianet.org.
9
On 10 June 2003, the ASPI released Our Failing Neighbour, a report which served as an
important catalyst to mobilise support for the intervention in Canberra and amongst the Australian
public. Our Failing Neighbour argued that the process of state failure in the Solomon Islands was
"far advanced." The prospects of a "failing state on our doorstep engages Australia’s interests at
many levels, from short-term economic, consular and humanitarian concerns to our most enduring
strategic imperatives", the report says.
In July 2003, a multinational force arrived at the formal invitation of the Solomon Islands
Government and under conditions that were "acceptable to Australia".
34
Their task was to assist
the Government in restoring law and order and in rebuilding the country's institutions. The
Regional Assistance Mission for Solomon Islands (RAMSI) known as "Helpum Fren" (helping a
friend) had a number of broad functions.
It included a military arm to win and keep the peace. 1,700 troops arrived from nine countries in
the region. Guadalcanal rebel leader Harold Ke'ke and other militants surrendered within weeks
of their arrival. Under an amnesty, over 3,700 weapons including about 700 high-powered
military-style weapons were removed from circulation. Now that the initial function of restoring
law and order has been a success, RAMSI is turning its attention to the more difficult and
controversial task of restoring the prison and judicial systems, and building economic and
institutional capacity.
RAMSI has been enjoying enormous popular support so far, but as the operation approaches its
second year anniversary, there are some signs of growing tensions on the Islands about its ongoing
role. Among the government ministers, the former Finance and Treasury Minister Francis Zama
has been the most critical of RAMSI, accusing the operation of interfering in the country's
sovereignty.
Mr Zama argued the Solomon Islands did not know the full magnitude of the RAMSI package,
elements of which are dictated from Canberra. While acknowledging the positive improvements
in law and order, he thought that the operation was an "overkill" and a possible "liability" for the
country. He has also accused Australia of running a parallel government in his former department
and of interfering with the state's judicial independence.
35
A day after making his concerns known
in Parliament, Mr Zama was sacked from his ministerial position.
With an election looming in the Solomon Islands, the Australian Government will be keen to
duplicate the public relations successes of the Iraqi and Afghani elections in showcasing the
experiment in intervention as a triumph. However, despite measures to discipline dissent on the
Solomon Islands, the debate over RAMSI's role will surely continue as the long-term implication
of the package becomes apparent to the local population.
Source: adapted and updated from Peter Hosking SJ, View on the Solomon Islands, Uniya View on the Pacific Series,
2004, www.uniya.org/research
How the concept is applied in practice
The concept of 'failed states' for Australia was not shaped by the September 11 attacks, unlike the
US and the UK, but by the Solomon Islands intervention in 2003. Before that, and despite the war
against Afghanistan, the Government said little about failing or failed states let alo ne the idea of
intervening in a failed state to fight terrorism.
36
As late as January 2003, Mr Downer was
34
Prime Minister John Howard, quoted in "Solomons MPs Say Yes to Intervention Force", Sydney Morning Herald,
11 July 2003.
35
Robert L. Iroga, "Independency of judiciary questioned," Solomon Star, www.solomonstarnews.com.
36
See Lambert, op. cit.
10
dismissing the idea of intervening in the Solomon Islands as a "folly in the extreme". "It would
not work," he said, "no matter how it was dressed up ".
37
In case the point was missed, a major
Government policy paper added a few weeks later, "Australia is not a neo-colonial power. The
[Pacific] island countries are independent sovereign states".
38
Six months later, it seems Mr Downer discovered a way to 'dress up' Australia's new-found
foreign policy assertiveness. With the release of the ASPI report on the Solomon Islands, the
concept of failed states apparently gave the Government the rhetoric it needed. As Tony Wright
of The Bulletin explained, "It was not so much that the Solomon Islanders should have assistance
foisted upon them – it was a matter of Australian security. A failed state such as the Solomons
could become a danger to Australia".
39
By September 2003, Mr Downer was at the UN General Assembly saying that, "It is no longer
open to us to ignore the failed states … Old shibboleths – such as the excessive homage to
sovereignty even at the expense of the preservation of humanity and human values – should not
constrain us." This argument was reinforced in the aftermath of Prime Minister Howard's
comment during the Australian Federal election period about the possibility of Australia launching
a preemptive attack on foreign soil in the region against terrorists. Mr Downer quickly qualified
the Prime Minister's comments so that it referred only to situations of failed or failing states rather
than (presumably 'successful') states like "Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines".
40
"Imagine a situation", Mr Downer told ABC Radio, "it's not likely to be Indonesia or a country
which has a strong counter-terrorism capability, but a failed state in the South Pacific, as the
Solomons once was and is not now, and a situation where a terrorist was about to attack and the
country involved eit her didn't want to or in their case couldn't do anything to stop it, we would
have to go and do it ourselves".
41
The Government has not accused any other state of failing. It has , however, referred to the
Solomon Islands, Afghanistan and Iraq as former fa iled states. It is no coincidence all three states
have been subjected to intervention with Australia's involvement in recent years, invited or
otherwise.
Conclusion
The Government's approach to the idea of state failure suggests that policy precedes concept and
not vice versa. It seems the Government is only willing to use the label, state failure, against a
particular state, when it intends to intervene or has already intervened in that state.
42
The use of
the concept is therefore highly nuanced: a state is considered 'failing' only when Australia or
another powerful (usually Anglo-Western) nation declares it to be so, and only according to set
policy objectives. Similarly, the term 'failed state' has been applied after the fact to describe the
former situation of a state in which intervention has already occurred.
It also appears from the evidence that Western leaders and commentators may have overstated or
at best offered a misleading impression of the threats posed by failing or failed states. The re does
not appear to be a strong correlation between state failure and some of the worst forms of
transnational criminal activity like terrorism and money laundering. Where there is a link, state
failure by itself does not necessarily account for the activity. Other factors, such as corruption or
poor governance – which exists in both strong and weak states – are also important considerations.
37
"Neighbours cannot be Recolonised", The Australian, 8 January 2003.
38
DFAT, Advancing the National Interest, Australia's Foreign and Trade Policy White Paper, 2003, p.93.
39
Tony Wright, " High Noon in the Solomons", The Bulletin, 7 September 2003.
40
Alexander Downer, interviewed by Matt Brown, ABC Radio's AM, 21 September 2004.
41
Ibid.
42
Lambach, op. cit.
11
Despite this, the Government and some policy makers continue to make unqualified assertions
about the security threats of failed states.
The widespread fear of a failed state at Australia's 'doorstep', coupled with the Government's
readiness to exploit this concept makes the idea of state failure a potentially dangerous policy for
Australia. For a start, the danger in treating state failure as an anomaly is that it absolves the West
of any responsibility for its policies. The governments of failed states are often assumed to have
brought failure on itself by its political and economic recalcitrancy.
43
In this bla me game, even
culture and religion have not been spared – one prominent Australian historian rebuked "victims
of failed states" of the Middle East for clinging onto their "emotional idols and cherished ideas of
Islam" instead of aligning themselves sooner to "Western capitalism and democracy [which]
offers the best chance of a better life."
44
Such thinking leaves very little room for self-criticism and justifies even more intrusive forms of
Western intervention in developing states.
45
In the worst case, as Prime Minister John Howard
suggested during the 2004 election campaign, it can even lead to a US- inspired preventative
military assault. Such thinking is only a step away from advocating a US 'deputy-sheriff' role for
Australia in the region.
However, inventing more rights for Western intervention in developing states will not likely solve
long-term regional and global insecurity, particularly if the concept of state failure is based on
crude generalisations and questionable presumptions. It would be more constructive to talk less
about 'our failing neighbour' and more about our failing neighbourhood, Australia included; less
about interventions and more about conventions, both regional and international, and what
Australia should do to contribute to them. This will not happen until Australia accepts that
international terrorism and crime are not mere symptoms of state failure, but also of an unfair and
unfettered international political economy that Australia must do more to help change.
43
Adrian Hamilton, "The Idea of the Nation State is Fatally Flawed", The Independent, 19 August 2004.
44
Geoffrey Blainey, interviewed by Victor Davis Hanson, "After Iraq: The Road from Baghdad", Policy, Centre for
Independent Studies, 19(3), Spring 2003, www.cis.org.au.
45
Rita Abrahamsen, "Democratisation – Part of the Problem or the Solution to Africa's 'Failed States'?" paper
presented at the conference The Global Constitution of 'Failed States': the Consequences of a New Imperialism?
Sussex, 18-20 April 2001, www.sussex.ac.uk.
12
Web resources
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
www.dfat.gov.au
Australian Government, A Pacific Engaged: Australia's Relations with Papua New Guinea and
the Island States of the Southwest Pacific, Senate committee inquiry report, 13 August 2003
www.aph.gov.au/Senate/committee/fadt_ctte/completed_inquiries/2002-04/png/report
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
www.aspi.org.au
Global Constitution of 'Failed States', The, Conference Proceedings
www.sussex.ac.uk/Units/CGPE/events/conferences/failed_states
Lambach, Daniel, Internet Portal for the Study of Failed States, University of Cologne
www.politik.uni-koeln.de/jaeger/statestart.html
National Security Strategy of the United States of America, September 2002
www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss.html
Purdue University Failed States Conferences
www.ippu.purdue.edu/failed_states
Solomon Star
www.solomonstarnews.com
UN High Commissioner for Refugees
www.unhcr.ch
Uniya, View on the Asia/Pacific series
www.uniya.org/research
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
* Minh Nguyen is Uniya's Research Officer. View on Asia is a publication of the Uniya Jesuit Social
Justice Centre, a research centre based in Sydney’s Kings Cross, Australia. The views expressed in this
report are those of the author. Thanks to Nina Riemer, Peter Stapleton, Margaret Press RSJ and Patty
Fawkner SGS for their comments and editing. Please email comments and corrections to:
minh.nguyen@uniya.org
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