Anneleen van der Meer
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The chemical weapons discourse as an instrument of international order
The Second Italo-Ethiopian War
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The Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935 and the use of chemical weapons was cause for indignation at international fora, including the League of Nations, but while Italy was sanctioned for its invasion, no sanctions were imposed in response to the use of gas. Chemical weapons had been outlawed by the 1925 Geneva Protocol, which Italy and Ethiopia had both ratified. This chapter addresses the League’s inaction, and demonstrates how Ethiopian delegates instrumentalised the international discourse condemning chemical weapons in an effort to claim full statehood and protection under the Geneva Protocol, using the League of Nations’ own legal instruments and norms. In other words, the chemical weapons discourse was used as an instrument of international order. In the fluidity of interbellum international order, Italy and Ethiopia sought to create certainty about which states were full members and which were not. By using chemical weapons, Italy upheld the distinction between colonial conquest and civilised interstate warfare and the prohibition of gas in the latter, but not in the former. As a member state of the Geneva Protocol, Ethiopia was able to challenge this understanding more effectively than colonised peoples had been able to before, and to affirm its understanding of international order as rule-based, equal and universal. Ethiopia’s liminality as a semi-sovereign state unable to receive protections under the Geneva Protocol demonstrated the interwar international society’s own liminality, on the threshold between Eurocentrism and universalism.

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Instruments of international order

Internationalism and diplomacy, 1900–50

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