Peace Agreements and International Intervention
A peace treaty is an agreement between two hostile parties, usually countries or governments, which formally ends a war or armed conflict. Treaties are often ratified in territories deemed neutral in the previous conflict and delegates from these neutral territories act as witnesses to the signatories. In the case of large conflicts between numerous parties there may be one global treaty covering all issues or separate treaties signed between each party. In more modern times, certain intractable conflict situations, especially those involving terrorism, may first be brought to cease-fire and are then dealt with via a peace process where a number of discrete steps are taken on each side to eventually reach the mutually desired goal of peace and the signing of a treaty. Some ceasefires, such as the one following the American Revolution, may last a number of years and follow a tortuous process. "Though a wide ocean separates the United States from Europe, yet there are various considerations that warn us against an excess of confidence or security ... Politicians have ever with great reason considered the ties of blood as feeble and precarious links of political connection. These circumstances combined, admonish us not to be too sanguine in considering ourselves as entirely out of the reach of danger."
The peace treaty signed at the Appomattox Courthouse, formally ended the American Civil War. The United States went through a process of nation-building after the Civil War to reconstruct the South. This process lasted close to a century, only finally culminating in the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.
The Treaty of Versailles, formally ending the First World War, is possibly the most notorious of peace treaties, in that it is blamed by some historians for the rise of National Socialism in Germany and the eventual outbreak of the Second World War. The costly reparations Germany was forced to pay the victors of the war, the fact that Germany had to accept sole responsibility for starting the war, and the harsh restrictions on German rearmament, were all listed in the treaty and they caused massive resentment within Germany. Whether the Treaty of Versailles can be blamed for starting another war or not, shows the difficulties involved in making peace.
Peace efforts necessitate the cooperation of all parties involved in a conflict together with the international community. Cease-fire agreements facilitate this cooperation at different levels. The content of peace agreements affects the durability of peace, whether the aim is to resolve a political or a military problem or even when agreements take the form of armistices. A treaty's content usually depends heavily on the nature of the conflict being concluded. There are many possible issues which may be included in a peace treaty. Some of these are formal designation of borders, processes for resolving future disputes, access to and apportioning of natural resources, status of prisoners, status of refugees, settling of existing debts, settling of ownership claims, defining of proscribed behavior and the re-application of existing treaties.
The number of international treaties and obligations United Nations member states are involved in which they seek to limit and control behavior during wartime, has possibly made the idea of total war less tenable. This has meant that formal declarations of war are frequently not undertaken, and therefore a peace treaty does not follow the end of conflict. The Korean War is an example of a war which was suspended with a cease-fire but never closed with a treaty.
The peace process describes efforts by interested parties to affect a lasting solution to long-running conflicts, such as in Northern Ireland, and the Arab-Israeli conflict. In the Middle East, various solutions have been offered, and some tried. Jimmy Carter, Menachem Begin and Anwar Sadat worked together to create an official peace treaty between Egypt and Israel, which ended the formal state of war between the two nations as a result of the Camp David Accords in 1978. The Oslo accords were a later framework between the Palestinian Authority and the State of Israel. In 2000, when American, Palestinian and Israeli leaders met at Camp David to attempt to bring peace to the current hostilities, the social critic Noam Chomsky recalled the history of hostilities in region. He remarked: "Any discussion of what is called a 'peace process' - whether the one underway at Camp David or any other - should keep in mind the operative meaning of the phrase: by definition, the 'peace process' is whatever the U.S. government...
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