FORUM: “Promoting neutrality as an instrument of preventive diplomacy.” International Day of Neutrality 2023. Neutralism or a "neutralist policy" is a foreign policy position wherein a state intends to remain neutral in future wars. A sovereign state that reserves the right to become a belligerent if attacked by a party to the war is in a condition of armed neutrality. Neutrality has for decades dovetailed with “international activism” and the articulation of international law and collective action. The policy of neutrality contributes to strengthening global peace and security and plays an important role in forging peaceful, friendly and mutually beneficial relations between the countries of the world. Follow the conversation with the hashtags: #PreventiveDiplomacy, #NeutralityDay, #12December, #NeutralistPolicy, #Neutralism.
EVENTS: On December 12th, the United Nations General Assembly, the United Nations Security Council, and the United Nations Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs will observe the at International Day of Neutrality 2023 at UNHQ to discuss the principles of Neutrality.
That’s because although wars usually devour some neutrals, they always breed new ones: The Napoleonic wars created Switzerland’s permanent neutrality, and the Belgian revolution against the Dutch brought about Brussels’s version of the same. The First World War destroyed the latter but, in turn, inspired Danish neutrality and Norwegian neutrality . The 2nd World War have ruined those (and many more) but rebirth the neutrality of Irish, Spanish, Portuguese, and Turkish. The Cold War did away with the last three, but gave rise to the neutrality of Austria, Finland, and Yugoslavia—and the entire nonaligned movement, too. The current war over Ukraine is no exception; it has given rise to neutral policies in roughly two-thirds of the world. Nonaligned behavior of third states is a fact of international life and will remain one.As a political concept, there is no universally accepted definition of what neutrality actually means. It is most commonly understood as not taking sides in international conflicts—but this shallow definition is also the root of the misperception that neutrals are politically apathetic, which they are not.Neutrality had been defined under international law before World War I, but only as the relationship of third parties to belligerents during hot shooting wars. This understanding is often quite useless for political analysis because it leaves out peacetime neutrality and creates a binary world in which a state is either a belligerent or a neutral, with nothing in-between. This rarely aligns with reality, as visible in Switzerland’s support of EU sanctions against Russia while refraining from sending weapons to Ukraine.
A second assumption is that neutrality equals weakness and pacifism. However, a functioning neutrality policy is usually a sign of strength, as it was for the United States during its 150 years of neutrality. Neutrals have to be strong enough—militarily and ideologically—to withstand the criticism and threat from all sides of a conflict to maintain their independent positions, as the pressure on India to take sides in the Russia-Ukraine conflict shows. Last year, Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar had to explain to a European audience that India rejects the West’s binary framing: “I don’t think it’s necessary for me to join this axis or not, and if I’m not joining this I must be with the other one. I don’t accept it.”
First, its status must be credible and predictable. This means neutrals must communicate their policy stances unequivocally and be able to put up a minimum defense on their own if attacked, which is what Switzerland did during WWII when it threatened to blow up its infrastructure and fight vehemently should Germany invade. This does not mean that neutral countries need to be armed to the teeth, because neutral credibility also implies not posing a threat to either side. If one side comes to perceive a neutral as a threat—either because it is armed too much, too little, or collaborates extensively with the enemy—it’s often game over, and the neutral may become a target of economic or military attack, as happened to Laos and Cambodia in the Vietnam War.
Second, a neutral state must be useful. It can do so by assuming the function of a buffer state, offering good office services (representing belligerents diplomatically on their enemy’s soil), acting as a diplomatic intermediary for negotiations, providing a platform for international trade, offering its banking and currency to all sides, or even by tacitly accepting spying on its territory to function as an intelligence hub. Switzerland, for example, explicitly acknowledged in 1815 that its neutrality would serve peace and stability in Europe by buffering the Austrians and the French—and later served all the above functions during the World Wars.
But what about Ukraine, critics say. It had a neutrality clause in its constitution, and it was attacked! Credibility is the issue here. Not only did the NATO alliance promise eventual Ukraine membership during the Bucharest summit of 2008, but the Maidan revolution swept out the elected government of Viktor Yanukovych, bringing in pro-NATO forces. With Ukraine’s buffer state status gone, or at least questionable, Russia went on the attack in 2014.
On the other side of Russia, Mongolia stands as a counterexample, successfully buffering Russia and China with no threat against its sovereignty from either side. For Ukraine, permanent neutrality had been an option before the Russian invasion began and even until late March 2022. (It was a part of the Istanbul negotiations, which fell apart in April). Now permanent division of the country will be more likely.
During the 20th century, neutrals have worn many geopolitical hats, and they proved especially valuable during the Cold War, as the belt of neutrals from Finland and Sweden down to Switzerland, Austria, and Yugoslavia put physical space between NATO and Warsaw Pact members. What’s more, the neutral and nonaligned states helped bring about the few cross-iron curtain political breakthroughs: During negotiations for the nuclear nonproliferation treaty and the Conferences on Security and Cooperation in Europe , they often functioned as the oil that greased the wheels of world diplomacy.
Now that Finland and Sweden have relinquished their roles as buffers, Russia has already signaled it will treat them as potential threats, making them front-line states in case of a NATO-Russian war. Former Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky understood this dynamic and hence tried very hard to settle as many international organizations in Vienna as possible—even during the hottest peak of the Cold War—because they would prove Austria’s usefulness and serve as a pragmatic guarantee against a nuclear attack.
Successful neutrality is anything but fence-sitting. Engaged neutrality means taking an active role for one’s own interests and the interests of all conflict parties—being omnipartial, rather than impartial. It means getting involved whenever possible and staying out only when necessary. Engaged neutral states are obliged to raise their voices when it comes to massive human rights violations, genocide, or war.
Today, the question of whether nonalignment is long gone or having a resurgence is moot. When it comes to neutrality, there are really only two questions that matter:
First, which neutrals will leave the stage, and which ones will be born?
Second, will the neutrals play a constructive role in the new global conflict, or will they be relegated to the margins?
For better or worse, if history is of any guidance, neutrality is here to stay. We might as well think about how to use it productively.
As Finland joins NATO, a few European holdouts cling to nonalignment. ANALYSIS| FRANZ-STEFAN GADY
South Africa’s Nonsensical Nonalignment
ANC has forgotten that the outside world’s principled rejection of neutrality sustained the struggle against apartheid. ARGUMENT| EUSEBIUS MCKAISER
Why Latin America Will Stay Nonaligned?
As Argentina’s president prepares to meet with the U.S. president, the bloc’s consensus on Russia’s war in Ukraine will be put to the test. ANALYSIS | JACOB SUGARMAN
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