Plea for a Humanitarian Intervention
Over 8,000 people have been killed in Syria over the past few months. Most of them were killed by soldiers or other members of President Bashar al-Assad's security forces. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay and an investigation commission set up by the UN Human Rights Council estimate that the Assad regime's brutal crackdown against parts of the Syrian population now constitutes a "crime against humanity".
Theoretically, this gives the international community the "responsibility to protect" the citizens of Syria from their own authorities. To date, however, all political, diplomatic and economic pressure exerted as a way of carrying out this responsibility has failed. Neither the clear condemnation of Syria by a 3/4 majority of the UN General Assembly and the Human Rights Council nor the economic sanctions imposed by the West have moved Assad to halt the violence against his own people.
Preventing the worst-case scenario

However, when it comes to preventing this worst-case scenario, there is one option that has not yet been tried, namely a humanitarian intervention using military means that is supported by all five veto-wielding powers in the Security Council.
Having examined the relevant political and international law criteria for a "humanitarian intervention" using military means, many experts have so far advised against such an undertaking in Syria. In doing so, they have quite rightly referred to questionable or failed interventions in recent history, in particular to NATO's aerial war against Serbia in 1999. The Western military alliance waged this war without the approval of the UN Security Council, breaking international law in the process.

The political and international-law related reservations regarding a humanitarian intervention in Syria are indeed serious. However, these reservations only ever relate to the political framework of the dissent between the five veto powers in the UN Security Council.
With the exception of Rwanda in 1994, this dissent was undoubtedly the political reality in all cases where intervention to prevent or end genocide or crimes against humanity has been debated since the end of the Cold War. This is why discussions about possible action that can be taken in the event of the most serious human rights violations have all too easily settled into this cosy and unimaginative reality of dissent.
Stationing UN peacekeeping forces in Syria
As far as Syria is concerned, it is vital that consensus between the five veto powers on a humanitarian intervention by military means is sought and then jointly implemented. The top priority would be the stationing of UN peacekeeping forces tasked with opening up and securing land corridors to allow the people of Syria to be supplied with the goods they need to survive and to allow refugees and the injured to be transported out of the conflict zone.
Assad might initially protest against a corresponding consensus agreement between the five veto powers, but if not only US and Russian troops, but also, if at all possible, blue berets from China, the UK and France were to be stationed in Syria, it is hard to imagine Assad's armed forces taking on these troops.

This plan entailed the stationing of a Russian-American peacekeeping force in Kosovo with the backing of the Security Council. Verschbow cabled Washington that "10,000 soldiers would be needed if the Serbian President Milosevic agrees; 30,000 if he doesn't". But his creative proposal for ending the bloodshed in Kosovo ended in the wastepaper basket. This episode alone contradicts NATO's claim that its humanitarian intervention, which took the form of an aerial bombardment of Serbia that began in March 1999 and broke international law, was the only way to end Serbian human rights violations in Kosovo.
Stop the bloodshed
From Washington to Peking, all of the governments involved in the debate about Syria say that the priority must be to stop the bloodshed. If these assertions are serious, it must be possible to reach consensus about a humanitarian intervention. However, Moscow and Peking suspect that for the West and the Sunni governments of the Arab League, this is not about the human rights of people in Syria, but about toppling Assad's regime, and that this, in turn, is a first step towards waging war against Iran and toppling the regime in Tehran.

The West could do much to allay these suspicions, thereby improving the chances of a joint course of action involving Russia and China. It could table a draft resolution in the Security Council that focuses solely on the modalities of a humanitarian intervention and could forego all condemnations, threats of sanctions and calls for Assad's resignation. The draft resolution submitted by Germany and other states during the Security Council meeting on Syria at the start of this week, did not meet these requirements and was, therefore, once again rejected by Russia and China.
If international consensus on a humanitarian intervention is not reached, the only remaining option would be to offer Assad and his clan secure exile abroad and an amnesty.
Many people – including the author of this article – are convinced that this is not an option because of the fact that working through and punishing serious human rights violations is an important prerequisite for justice and reconciliation and, consequently, for lasting peace and inner stability in a country. However, given the threat of the "worst-case scenario" for Syria and its neighbours, offering Assad exile and amnesty would be the lesser of the two evils.
Andreas Zumach
© Qantara.de 2012
Translated from the German by Aingeal Flanagan
Editor: Lewis Gropp/Qantara.de