Wars of national liberation
Wars of national liberation or national liberation revolutions are conflicts fought by nations to gain independence. The term is used in conjunction with wars against foreign powers (or at least those perceived as foreign) to establish separate sovereign states for the rebelling nationality. From a different point of view, such wars are called insurgencies, rebellions, or wars of independence.[1] Guerrilla warfare or asymmetric warfare is often utilized by groups labeled as national liberation movements, often with support from other states.
The term "wars of national liberation" is most commonly used for those fought during the decolonization movement. Since these were primarily in the third world against Western powers and their economic influence and a major aspect of the Cold War, the phrase itself has often been viewed as biased or pejorative.[2] Some of these wars were either vocally or materially supported by the Soviet Union, which stated itself to be an anti-imperialist power, supporting the replacement of western-backed governments with local communist or other non pro-western parties.[1][3] However, this did not always guarantee Soviet influence in those countries. In addition to and increasingly in competition to the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China presented themselves as models of independent nationalist development outside of Western influence, particularly as such posturing and other longterm hostility meant they were regarded as a threat to Western power and regarded themselves as such, using their resources to politically, economically and militarily assist movements such as in Vietnam. In January 1961 Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev pledged support for "wars of national liberation" throughout the world.[4]
Legal issues
International law generally holds that a people with a legal right to self-determination are entitled to wage wars of national liberation.[5][6] While Western states tend to view these wars as civil wars, Third World and communist states tend to view them as international wars.[5] This difference in classification leads to varying perceptions of which laws of war apply in such situations.[5] However, there is general agreement among all states today in principle that the use of force to frustrate a people's legal right to self-determination is unlawful.[5]
Strategies and tactics
Wars of national liberation are usually fought using guerrilla warfare. The main purpose of these tactics is to increase the cost of the anti-guerrilla forces past the point where such forces are willing to bear. Wars of national liberation generally depend on widespread public support, with ordinary civilians providing crucial support. Finally, wars of national liberation are often embedded in a larger context of great power politics and are often proxy wars.
These strategies explain why they are quite successful against foreign regimes and quite unsuccessful against indigenous regimes. Foreign regimes usually have a threshold beyond which they would prefer to go home rather than to fight the war. By contrast, an indigenous regime has no place to which they can retreat, and will fight much harder because of the lack of alternatives. Moreover, foreign regimes usually have fewer active supporters in the theater, and those that exist can often be easily identified, making it possible for guerrilla armies to identify their targets. By contrast, indigenous regimes often have much more popular support, and their supporters are often not easily recognized as such, making it much harder to conduct operations against them without also causing harm to neutral parties.
Decolonization period
The Haitian Revolution 1791-1804 was successful against the French colonial empire.
The first separatist rebellion within the former British Empire not to end in defeat since the American Revolutionary War was the Irish War of Independence of 1919-1922 which led in 1922 to the renewed independence of most of Ireland (26 counties out of 32). However the rebellion also led to the Irish Civil War (1922-1923).
The Indonesian War of Independence (1945-1949) followed with the Liberation of Irian Jaya (1960-1962), the First Indochina War (1946–54), Vietnam War (1959–75), and the Algerian War (1954–62) were all considered national liberation wars by the rebelling sides of the conflicts. The African National Congress (ANC)'s struggle against the apartheid regime is also another example. Most of these rebellions were in part supported by the Soviet Union, which was an anti-imperialist power. Since the 1917 October Revolution and the subsequent Russian Civil War, the revolutionary objectives of communism were shared by many anticolonialist leaders, thus explaining the objective alliance between anticolonialist forces and Marxism. The concept of "imperialism" itself had been which had theorized in Lenin's 1916 book, Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism. For example, Ho Chi Minh — who founded the Viet-Minh in 1941 and declared the independence of Vietnam on September 2, 1945, following the 1945 August Revolution — was a founding member of the French Communist Party (PCF) in 1921. In January 1961, over three years before the Gulf of Tonkin incident which would mark the United States' increased involvement in the Vietnam War, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev would pledge support for "wars of national liberation" throughout the world.[7] In the same decade, Cuba, led by Fidel Castro, would support national liberation movements in Angola and Mozambique. The Portuguese colonial wars finally led to the recognition of Angola, Mozambique and Guinea-Bissau as independent states in 1975, following the April Carnation Revolution.
Ongoing wars defined as national liberation conflicts
The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) is a national liberation movement, meaning that it holds official recognition of its legal status as such. Other national liberation movements in the OAU at that time included the African National Congress (ANC) and Pan Africanist Congress of Azania (PAC). It is the only non-African national liberation movement to hold observer status in the OAU, and was one of the first national liberation movements granted permanent observer status by the United Nations General Assembly pursuant to a 1974 resolution.[8][9] The PLO also participates in UN Security Council debates; since 1988, it has represented the Palestinian people at the UN under the name "Palestine".[10]
The following current conflicts have sometimes also been characterized as wars or struggles of national liberation (such a designation is often subject to controversy):
- Some Iraqi insurgent groups, and certain political groups believe that the Iraq War was a war of national liberation against the US-led coalition.
- Many Kurds believe the Kurdish–Turkish conflict to be a war of national liberation of Kurdish people in Turkey.
- The Polisario Front has sought the independence of Western Sahara since 1975 and considered its guerilla war against Morocco as national liberation war (like many foreign observers, countries and the African Union), while Morocco considered it a secessionist movement. Polisario had been recognized by many countries, the African Union and the United Nations as the legitimate representative of the Sahrawi people. The hostilities are frozen since the 1991 cease-fire following the settlement plan agreement.
- As a result of the politics of the former Yugoslavia, the government of Kosovo declared (on 2 July 1990) an independent "Republic of Kosovo" from the Republic of Serbia's Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija. After the dissolution of socialist Yugoslavia, a referendum was held for independence in 1992 that passed and began a conflict between the Albanian separatists led by the Kosovo Liberation Army and the Yugoslav military and paramilitary armed forces. This lasted until 1999 when a peace was brokered and the province came under UN administration under the terms of UNSCR 1244. International negotiations between Pristina and Belgrade are in progress on the future status of Kosovo.
Conflicts
Conflicts which have been described as national liberation struggles:
- The Swedish War of Liberation (1521–23)
- The Eighty Years' War
- The Khmelnytsky Uprising
- The American Revolutionary War
- The Irish Rebellion of 1798
- The Irish Rebellion of 1803
- The Kashmir insurgency against Indian forces.
- The Peninsular War against Napoleon's occupation of Spain and Portugal during the Napoleonic Wars
- The Haitian Revolution
- The German Wars of Liberation against Napoleon's occupation of German lands during the Napoleonic Wars
- The Spanish American wars of independence
- The Greek War of Independence (1821)
- The Serbian Revolution
- The Serbian–Turkish Wars (1876–1878)
- The People's Liberation War (Yugoslavia)
- Explicit wars of decolonization:
- The Philippine Revolution
- The August Revolution, Vietminh against Japanese invasion of Vietnam
- The First Indochina War, Vietminh against French occupation of Vietnam
- The Indonesian National Revolution
- The Tamil resistance to Sri Lankan colonization in Tamil-speaking territories and discrimination against the Tamil people.
- The Zionist armed insurrection in British-ruled Mandate Palestine, involving the Lehi and Irgun, and later the Haganah. Also the Israeli Independence War against Arab states.
- The Madagascar revolt against the French in 1947
- The 1947–1949 Palestine war in 1947–1949.
- The Algerian War against France (1954–1962).
- In Angola (People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA), National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA)), Mozambique (FRELIMO), Guinea-Bissau (PAIGC, FLING), and Cape Verde (PAIGC) against Portugal
- In Cameroon, by the UPC against France
- In South Yemen by various nationalist organizations against Britain
- The Mau Mau revolt in British-ruled Kenya
- The Rhodesian Bush War in white-ruled Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), led by ZANU and ZAPU
- In Western Sahara, by the Moroccan Army of Liberation against Spain & France, and by the Polisario Front against Morocco & Mauritania occupation.
- In Namibia, by the South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) and SWANU against apartheid South Africa
- The Dhofar Rebellion in Muscat and Oman
- The Brunei Revolt
- The Bangladesh Liberation War against West Pakistan
- The Vietnam War, with the Vietcong in South Vietnam against the military forces of South Vietnam and the United States.
- In Afghanistan, against the occupying Soviet Army.
- In Ireland, the Irish War of Independence and The Troubles in Northern Ireland; also, the Provisional IRA insurgency against the United Kingdom, aimed at creating a socialist republic within a united Ireland, from 1969 until 1998.
- In Cambodia, against the occupying Vietnamese Army and People's Republic of Kampuchea.
- In Nicaragua, by Augusto Sandino's forces against the occupying U.S. Marines.
- In Chad, by FROLINAT against the Tombalbaye dictatorship
- In South Africa, against apartheid by Umkhonto we Sizwe and Poqo.
- In China, the Second Sino-Japanese War against Imperial Japanese subjugation of China.
- the Eritrean War of Independence against Ethiopia
- In Bougainville, by the Bougainville Revolutionary Army against Papua New Guinea
- The Turkish War of Independence
- The Ogaden War of 1977 against Ethiopia
- The successful Maccabean Revolt against the colonial Greek Seleucid Empire
See also
- List of historical autonomist and secessionist movements
- List of active autonomist and secessionist movements
- List of national liberation movements recognized by intergovernmental organizations
- List of unrecognized countries
- African independence movements
- List of decolonized nations
- War of Independence
- Independence
- 14 Points especially V & XII
- Colonialism & chronology of colonialism
- Insurgency and counter-insurgency
- Hukbalahap
- Portuguese Restoration War
- Clausewitz's On War
- First Nagorno-Karabakh War
- Western Sahara War
- American War of Independence
- Liberation War of Bangladesh
References
- Rubinstein, Alvin Z. (1990). Moscow's Third World Strategy. Princeton University Press. p. 80. ISBN 0-691-07790-8.
- McNamara, Robert S. (1965-08-30). "Buildup of U.S. Forces in VietNam, Statement by Secretary of Defense, Robert S. McNamara, Before the Subcommittee on Department of Defense Appropriations of the Senate Committee on Appropriations on August 4, 1965". Department of State Bulletin: 369. Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- Ballard, Chet; Gubbay, Jon; Middleton, Chris (1997). The Student's Companion to Sociology. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 36. ISBN 0-7567-7867-0.
- Little, Wendell E. (1980). "Wars of National Liberation—Insurgency". Air University Review (September–October). Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- Malanczuk, 1997, p. 336.
- Higgins, Noelle (April 2004). "The Application of International Humanitarian Law to Wars of National Liberation" (PDF). Journal of Humanitarian Assistance. Retrieved 2010-07-15.
- Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin (2005). "24 "The Cold War Comes to Africa". The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World (hardcover). Basic Books. pp. 432–433. ISBN 9780465003112.
- Shultz, 1988, p. 100.
- Wilson, 1990, p. 119.
- Boczek, 2005, p86.
Bibliography
- Boleslaw Adam Boczek (2005). International law: a dictionary. Scarecrow Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-8108-5078-1.
- Malanczuk, Peter Autor (1997). Akehurst's Modern Introduction to International Law. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-11120-1.
- Mitchell, Thomas G. (2000). Native vs. settler: ethnic conflict in Israel/Palestine, Northern Ireland, and South Africa (Illustrated ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-31357-8.
- Richard H. Shultz (1988). The Soviet Union and revolutionary warfare: principles, practices, and regional comparisons. Hoover Press. ISBN 978-0-8179-8711-4.
- Wilson, Heather A. (1990). International law and the use of force by national liberation movements (Illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-825662-5.
External links
- Edre U. Olalia, Vice President of International Association of People’s Lawyers (IAPL) THE STATUS IN INTERNATIONAL LAW OF NATIONAL LIBERATION MOVEMENTS AND THEIR USE OF ARMED FORCE
- Edre U. Olalia, Vice President of International Association of People’s Lawyers - The status in International Law of National Liberation Movements
- A reversal of International Law