A new approach: the need to focus on failing
states.
by Mair, Stefan
In the post-9/11 security paradigm, failed states are considered
one of the main threats to international and regional security. However,
there remains much debate over what exactly constitutes a failed state.
The first point of contention lies in the problem of identifying the
indispensable functions of a state. The second lies in the controversy
over the degree of failure in key functions that makes a state a failed
state. Most would generally agree that a state must be able to exert a
monopoly on the use of force within its borders, provide a legitimate
political and legal order, and offer essential services in health,
education, and physical infrastructure. The consensus ends here,
however, with academics and policymakers disagreeing on the more
detailed requirements of the definition. How deep and comprehensive must
the monopoly on the use of force be? What constitutes the legitimacy of
a political order? Which social services are essential? What factors
account for the failure of a state?
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In a 2007 study on international state building, Ulrich Schneckener
draws a clear distinction between failed states and failing states.
Failing states like Colombia, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Georgia, and Nigeria
are unable to completely control their territories, but they still
deliver public services to the majority of the population and have some
degree of political legitimacy. In failed states, however, none of the
functions mentioned above is effectively performed. The most prominent
example of a failed state is Somalia. Although I acknowledge that the
breakdown of regional security might have serious repercussions on
international security, I argue that ultimately, it is the failing
state, not the failed state, that encourages international terrorism and
organized crime. The failed state, in contrast, poses more threats to
regional security than to international security.
International Security
As crucial as these differentiations between failed states and
failing states are for a proper understanding of state failure,
decision-makers who are concerned with failed states as security risks
to Western societies rarely refer to them. Although their overall
perception of failed states has only slightly been influenced by the
academic debate on failed states, there have been two exceptions. They
have taken into consideration the concrete examples of failed states,
such as Somalia, Afghanistan, Liberia, and the Democratic Republic of
Congo, and the total incapability of these states to control their
territories.
According to conventional wisdom, these failed states enable
international terrorists and organized crime to seek haven and run their
training camps and operational bases within their territories. This
assumption, however, hardly passes the reality check. Despite the
widespread rumors about al Qaeda cells in Somalia, the links between
Somali factions and warlords and the terrorist network are rather loose.
So far, Somalis have not played a prominent role in international
terrorist attacks outside the African region.
The case of Afghanistan also illustrates the threat posed by
failing states. Here it must be stated that at the time al Qaeda was
most successfully running its training camps in Afghanistan, the country
was closer to the model of an effective state than it was in the prior
two decades. As illegitimate as the rule of the Taliban was in the view
of the Western world, the regime controlled greater pieces of the Afghan
territory (where it allowed al Qaeda to operate in exchange for
financial and military support), provided a more reliable political and
legal order, and offered better social services than the preceding
regimes.
The same assumption holds true for organized crime, which cannot
flourish in a stateless environment. Organized crime needs a legal order
to subvert in order to make real profit as well as a certain minimum of
financial, economic, and physical infrastructure in order to flourish.
For this reason, it is not the failed state, but the failing state,
which has the greatest attraction for international terrorism and
organized crime.
The failing state's inability to exert a monopoly on the use
of force over its whole territory offers the necessary retreat for
terrorists and organized crime to regroup, recover, and prepare their
actions. Furthermore, its relative effectiveness in providing a core
physical infrastructure in the form of airports, ports, and
telecommunication creates the conditions favorable for carrying out
these actions. It is not surprising, then, that it is the failing state
of Pakistan that probably harbors the majority of al Qaeda training
cells, and that it is failing states such as Colombia, Guatemala, and
Nigeria that produce the majority of international organized crime.
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The potential global health risks emerging from failed states pose
similar threats to human security. The inability of failed states to
maintain a minimum of health services provides an excellent breeding
ground for highly contagious epidemics, as demonstrated by the outbreak
of SARS in 2003. But while the breakdown of physical infrastructure in
failed states should prevent the spreading of disease beyond a local
focus of infection, the lack of capacity of failing states to fight
epidemics early and effectively makes it almost impossible to confine
outbreaks of diseases to local spots. Therefore, truly failed states do
not merit as much attention as they have received in the current
literature, as they do not pose as large of a threat to international
security as do failing states.
Regional Security
Regional security offers a different picture, as failed states have
been the starting points of regional conflicts again and again. The
inability of a state to control its territory and exert a monopoly on
the use of force opens the space for a great variety of private actors
of violence. Classical rebel movements, criminal and youth gangs, and
ethnic, tribal or clan militias, vigilantes, traditional hunters, and
warlords all fill the vacuum that the state creates. Despite differing
in their motives and strategies, these violent groups share a common
will to acquire weapons and to use them to meet their ends. The purchase
of weapons, in turn, demands the mobilization of financial resources.
Private actors of violence in failed states and those close to
failure have several potential sources of income. They can directly
exploit the trade of precious raw materials (diamonds, gold, coltan, and
timber), trade illegal goods such as drugs, engage in human trafficking,
smuggle legal commodities across the border, and raise protection money
through a system of alternative taxation.
The use of violence is the essential compelling factor in this
system. The efforts of private actors of violence to acquire the
financial means to buy weapons and to use these weapons to acquire more
money becomes a vicious circle. Ultimately, both those who started as
armed groups pursuing political objectives and those who considered
themselves merely self-protection units lose sight of their original
objectives and intentions. The result is the creation of a rather
complex and highly profitable war economy in which the profits are
spread in a very unequal way.
Since successful economies have the tendency to expand, failed
states become a problem for neighboring countries, especially when these
countries are failing on their own. Private actors of violence are most
tempted to extend their authority across borders when they find
attractive raw materials there. In addition, rebel movements within
neighboring countries are able to maintain operational bases in the
territories of a failed state controlled by a friendly partner.
This in turn provides governments of more or less functioning
states with sufficient reasons for intervening directly in the
neighboring failed state. Deposits of precious resources in the target
areas of their intervention might be an additional incentive for such
military adventures. The exploitation of these resources might even
raise enough money to finance the intervention and the establishment of
a military occupation. As a result, a comprehensive conflict theater
forms in the region.
The Deterioration of Security in Africa
In West Africa, Charles Taylor not only used the resources he
acquired in Liberia's war economy to overcome most of his Liberian
opponents but also to elect himself as Liberia's president. Early
in his career as a warlord, Taylor directed a quasi-rebel movement in
neighboring Sierra Leone that concentrated its military efforts on the
diamonds fields there. Indeed, it appeared as if Taylor would be able to
extend his territorial control via proxies to Guinea. Taylor also
established criminal links to the Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso. When the
North-South conflict in the Ivory Coast escalated to a civil war, Taylor
seized the chance to send some of his forces in the disguise of Ivorian
rebels across the border to take a slice of the neighboring country and
contribute to its destabilization.
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