Madeleine Albright seems to think so.In this interesting article, she suggests that the results of Iraq have made the international community shy away from violating another countries sovereignty, even for humanitarian reasons- the current case in point being Burma:-
"The Burmese Government's criminally neglectful response to last month's cyclone, and the world's response to that response, illustrate three grim realities today: totalitarian governments are alive and well; their neighbours are reluctant to pressure them to change; and the notion of national sovereignty as sacred is gaining ground, helped in no small part by the disastrous results of the American invasion of Iraq.
Indeed, many of the world's necessary interventions in the decade before the invasion - in places like Haiti and the Balkans - would seem impossible in today's climate....
The concept of national sovereignty as an inviolable and overriding principle of global law is once again gaining ground. Many diplomats and foreign policy experts had hoped that the fall of the Berlin Wall would lead to the creation of an integrated world system free from spheres of influence, in which the wounds created by colonial and Cold War empires would heal.
In such a world, the international community would recognise a responsibility to override sovereignty in emergency situations - to prevent ethnic cleansing or genocide, arrest war criminals, restore democracy or provide disaster relief when national governments were either unable or unwilling to do so.
During the 1990s, certain precedents were created. The administration of George Bush snr intervened to prevent famine in Somalia and to aid Kurds in northern Iraq; the Clinton administration returned an elected leader to power in Haiti; NATO ended the war in Bosnia and stopped Slobodan Milosevic's campaign of terror in Kosovo; the British halted a civil war in Sierra Leone; and the United Nations authorised lifesaving missions in East Timor and elsewhere.
These actions were not steps towards a world government. They did reflect the view that the international system exists to advance certain core values, including development, justice and respect for human rights.
In this view, sovereignty is still a central consideration, but cases may arise in which there is a responsibility to intervene - through sanctions or, in extreme cases, by force - to save lives.
Governments in the developing world are now determined to preserve the principle of sovereignty, even if the human costs are high.
Thus, Burma's leaders have been shielded from the repercussions of their outrageous actions.
Sudan has dictated the terms of multinational operations inside Darfur.
The Government of Zimbabwe may yet steal a presidential election.
Political leaders in Pakistan have told the Bush Administration to back off, despite the growth of al-Qaeda.
African leaders (understandably, perhaps) have said no to the creation of a regional American military command.
And despite efforts to enshrine the legal doctrine of a "responsibility to protect", the concept of humanitarian intervention has lost momentum."
Madeleine Albright was the United States secretary of state from 1997 to 2001.
Since Iraq, the world is scared to help - Opinion - smh.com.au
Can we partly blame the Bush administration for our pussy footed attempts to help the Burmese typhoon victims too?![]()


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Madeleine Albright makes a valid, though debatable point. It seems to me fairly shallow to dismiss it just because you vote Republican, or defend the invasion of Iraq.