Friday, January 3, 2014

Sex as a cardinal tool of foreign policy?

by Eze Eluchie

With a view to gaining respect and varying advantages in relations with other countries and advancing their values as ideals worthy of emulations (freely or by compulsion), States across the world have deployed varying tools and strategies to showcase themselves and their ethos. The foreign policy thrust of States serves to define each country to the rest of world.

The military might and combat preparedness of States are quite commonly adapted as a tool to project State interest and advance foreign policy thrusts. Nothing more underlines the seriousness of a situation, and is more convincing, as the massing of military personnel and hardware just across national borders in a state of preparedness for military action or the stationing of an Aircraft Carrier Battle Group in international waters just off the shores of a belligerent or ‘non-conforming’ State.

Good old money, in the form of international aids, loans, trade incentives, bilateral or multi-lateral assistance also comes in quite handy as a tool for advancing countries foreign policies.

Over the past few years, however, Sex, yes the good old copulation of individuals or more particularly, sexual orientation, has gradually been growing in stature as a tool by which some countries seek to foist their values on others. This trend was brought to international prominence following a direct threat by British Prime Minister, David Cameron, to deny financial assistance or aids to countries which have laws which penalize a particular form of sexual orientation, which until the last decade had constituted a crime or anti-social conduct in virtually all countries across the world. Britain, via the stance of its leader, was in effect applying Sex as a cardinal tool in its foreign policy thrusts. The European Union, the United Nations Organization and some other multi-lateral organizations soon joined the bandwagon of entities factoring domestic legislation's and policies relating to Sex as criteria for international cooperation and collaborations.

Sex has recently also been adapted by the Barack Obama-led administration in the United States as a tool of foreign policy, with its pointed inclusion of persons who are openly of a particular sexual orientation (homosexuals) in its official delegation to the Winter Olympics scheduled for Sochi, Russia in February 2014, apparently as a direct snub and provocation to host nation, Russia, which recently enacted stricter laws regulating and criminalizing non-traditional sexual practices. Prior to now, no one really bothered with the sexual orientations of whosoever was representing States at wheresoever. Calls, at surprisingly high level quarters were, astonishingly, actually made for a boycott of the Winter Olympics over sex/sexual orientation issues!

Reaction to the deployment of sex as a tool of foreign policy has been varied. From the total capitulation, via reversal of domestic statutes which criminalized the sexual orientations and preferences been advanced by the countries which tow this trend as experienced in Malawi (since the ascension to office of President Joyce Banda), to tougher sanctions for sex practices considered anti-social in some other countries such as The Gambia, Russia, Uganda, China and Nigeria.

One clearly discernible irony evident in the approach adopted by the countries which are spearheading the deployment of sex as a tool of foreign policy is the fact that, whilst aggressively promoting homosexuality, most of such countries still hold tenaciously to their domestic laws which discriminate against and criminalize some other forms of sexual preferences and orientations – such as laws against polygamy, pedophilia and bestiality, which may be acceptable nuances to other countries.

The nagging question, which no one seems to address, appears to be: Where do we really draw the line?  Will there be a time when the frequency and timing of copulation also become a tool of international policies by States? Is there likelihood further down the road of international sanctions being levied against a country and its populations on grounds of sex? Will States actually go to war to enforce a right to have sex with the person of one’s choice? Though these questions sound preposterous, they are actually natural projections from the present situation. 


Picture: Sex symbol


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