Recent crises in Syria, South Sudan, Burma, and Iraq underscore that the prevention and cessation of mass atrocities is a core national security interest—one shared by all governments. The United States cannot halt and avert atrocities on its own—there must be collaboration by multiple international actors.
In its latest report, “Allies Against Atrocities: The Imperative for Transatlantic Cooperation to Prevent and Stop Mass Killings,” the Simon-Skjodt Center outlines the critical role the transatlantic region—like-minded governments in North America and Europe—can play in shaping and leading multilateral atrocity prevention efforts.
Written by Lee Feinstein, Dean of the Indiana University School of Global and International Studies and former US Ambassador to Poland, and Tod Lindberg, Research Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, the report argues that successful atrocity prevention “requires coordinated and sustained efforts by local, regional, and international actors.” Through detailed interviews with senior European and Northern American policymakers, NGO officials and members of the think-tank and academic communities, Feinstein and Lindberg examined the capabilities and gaps of key international actors in preventing and responding to mass killings.
In the report, they provide a number of recommendations to strengthen cooperation:
Recommendations for the US Government
Build legitimacy for atrocity prevention
Work first with like-minded and capable partners
Be prepared to act to halt atrocities if necessary
Support and assist UN peacekeeping
Maintain the interagency process for assessing and working to reduce atrocity risks
Take the lead on internationalizing atrocity prevention
Join atrocity prevention with other strategic considerations in the rationale for fighting and defeating ISIS and stabilizing a post-Assad Syria
Recommendations for the US and Broader Transatlantic Community
Devise & implement coordinated Transatlantic atrocity prevention efforts
Reassess participation in peacekeeping
Limit the use of the veto at the UN Security Council
Broaden the concept of civilian protection
Improve international contact and coordination
Improve field-level coordination
Impose coordinated financial sanctions on perpetrators and enablers of atrocities
Reassess international law and norms on intervention to halt atrocities
Parliamentarians must do more
Emphasize prevention in treaty law
At a time of unprecedented humanitarian displacement and political transitions in the US and many European states, there is an urgent need to implement their findings.
The Simon-Skjodt Center launched this report in March at the Hoover Institution. Watch the discussion: