Alternate Timelines

Scenarios about 'r2p doctrine'

The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine is an international security and human rights norm established in 2005 that asserts states have a responsibility to protect their populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity. This principle allows for international intervention, including military action as a last resort, when a state fails to protect its citizens or is itself the perpetrator of atrocities. In alternate history scenarios, different implementations or rejections of R2P could significantly alter humanitarian interventions and the evolution of state sovereignty concepts.

What If The Libya Intervention Never Happened?

Exploring the alternate timeline where NATO and allied forces didn't intervene in Libya in 2011, potentially altering the trajectory of the Arab Spring, refugee crises, and geopolitical dynamics across North Africa and the Middle East.