THE “INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY” AND THE

THE “INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY” AND THE AXIS OF AUTOCRATS: Hobnobbing with Council on Foreign Relations heavyweights all day, there was much rending of hair and gnashing of teeth about how the “international community” — code for Europe, Japan, and the United Nations bureaucracy — feels about the United States. Can the rifts created by Iraq be ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

THE "INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY" AND THE AXIS OF AUTOCRATS: Hobnobbing with Council on Foreign Relations heavyweights all day, there was much rending of hair and gnashing of teeth about how the "international community" -- code for Europe, Japan, and the United Nations bureaucracy -- feels about the United States. Can the rifts created by Iraq be healed? Let me propose a step in the right direction -- focusing on countries hell-bent on extinguishing freedom. For example, today the European Union announced economic sanctions against Cuba in response to the Castro regime's recent crackdown. That's a good start, but it's not enough. What I'd really like to see is concerted action against any authoritarian government that thinks it can exploit divisions within the West to crack down on their own populations. For example, Western governments must demand and/or coerce Robert Mugabe's government in Zimbabwe to release opposition leader Morgan Tsvangerai, who has been arrested on treason charges following five days of demonstrations against the government. Thabo Mbeki, I'm looking in your direction. Even more pressing is the case of Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who -- along with 17 other opposition leaders -- has been held incommunicado since late May. To date, the Burmese military junta has ignored calls for her release. ASEAN leaders, quit making excuses for the regime. [UPDATE: for more on the ASEAN problem, go to this Boomshock post.] The developed world needs to remember that when it comes to advancing the cause of democracy, they share a common purpose.

THE “INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY” AND THE AXIS OF AUTOCRATS: Hobnobbing with Council on Foreign Relations heavyweights all day, there was much rending of hair and gnashing of teeth about how the “international community” — code for Europe, Japan, and the United Nations bureaucracy — feels about the United States. Can the rifts created by Iraq be healed? Let me propose a step in the right direction — focusing on countries hell-bent on extinguishing freedom. For example, today the European Union announced economic sanctions against Cuba in response to the Castro regime’s recent crackdown. That’s a good start, but it’s not enough. What I’d really like to see is concerted action against any authoritarian government that thinks it can exploit divisions within the West to crack down on their own populations. For example, Western governments must demand and/or coerce Robert Mugabe’s government in Zimbabwe to release opposition leader Morgan Tsvangerai, who has been arrested on treason charges following five days of demonstrations against the government. Thabo Mbeki, I’m looking in your direction. Even more pressing is the case of Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who — along with 17 other opposition leaders — has been held incommunicado since late May. To date, the Burmese military junta has ignored calls for her release. ASEAN leaders, quit making excuses for the regime. [UPDATE: for more on the ASEAN problem, go to this Boomshock post.] The developed world needs to remember that when it comes to advancing the cause of democracy, they share a common purpose.

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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