Month: January 2013

Israel’s unexpected election results

Aya Fasih reports on two discussions last week of the Israeli elections:

Israeli elections have always had wider implications for the Middle East.  But last week’s elections were fought mainly in terms of domestic issues.  The outcome was unexpected:  Prime Minister Netanyahu did less well than anticipated and the center did better than expected.

The Brookings Institution and George Washington University’s Elliot School held separate events on the outcome, their implications for Israeli politics and for relations with the United States.  The Brookings event focused on what the upcoming coalition might look like and what this will mean for future U.S.-Israeli relations.  The George Washington University event focused on the changes in Israeli society that brought about the election results.

The Brookings Event:

With Daniel Byman, Senior Fellow and Research Director at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy, as the moderator, the panel, comprised of Natan Sachs and Martin Indyk, focused on these questions:

  1.  What are the possible scenarios/coalitions that may arise from the election outcome?
  2.  What are the implications for U.S.-Israeli relations.?
  3.  Do the results disprove the widespread perception that Israel is moving to the right?

Natan Sachs, a Fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy of Brookings, noted the 19 seats that Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid—a new, centrist political party focusing on improving education, providing low-cost housing, and supporting small businesses—won.  The parties comprising the “center” of Israeli politics did much better than expected.  Lapid will be a necessary but not sufficient partner in the new governing coalition.

Two coalition scenarios are possible:

1) LikudYisrael Beytenu (Netanyahu and Liebermann’s parties, which ran candidates on the same party list), Yesh Atid, and the ultra-orthodox, or

2) Likud-Yisrael Beytenu, Yesh Atid, and the right-wing “The Jewish Home.”

The first option is reminiscent of 10 years ago in 2003, when a Likud Prime Minister (Sharon), a centrist party headed by Lapid’s father had 15 seats, and the modern-orthodox (presented today by Bennett’s Jewish Home) formed a coalition.  This formula can be stable provided the government focuses on domestic issues (the “civilian agenda”), where Bennett and Lapid can agree, and avoids contentious issues such as the peace process and settlements (the Palestinian issues).

Israeli voters are disinterested in the Palestinian issue, which has been quiescent.  Those parties that paid attention to it in the campaign lost out.   Only a major event like a Third Intifada or developments on the Iranian front will reverse this.  Israelis have lost hope for a satisfactory negotiated settlement.  Domestic issues, not the Palestinians, determined the result of elections.

Martin Indyk, former US ambassador to Israel, assistant to President Clinton, and founding director and Senior Fellow at Brooking’s Saban Center for Middle East Policy, agreed with Sachs that any coalition must include elements other than Likud-Yisrael Beytenu and Lapid’s Yesh Atid but thought it might be “more restricted.”  Indyk focused primarily on U.S.-Israeli relations.  Netanyahu has mishandled his relationship with the U.S.  The election results are good news for the American government, but “until Israel runs into a brick wall on the Palestinian issue…the Israeli government won’t take seriously the idea of an…American initiative.”  U.S. influence is waning, and President Obama seems to prefer it that way.

The Elliot School Event:

The Elliot School event, which gathered three Israeli political scientists and one sociologist, was focused on discussing the implications of the election results within Israel. The panelists tried to elucidate the changes and trends in Israeli society that brought about unexpected election results.

Ilan Peleg, Professor of Government and Law at Lafayette College, doubts that there will be much change from the past.  Any new coalition government under Netanyahu’s premiership will be a status quo government. The center did well, but it faces difficulties:

  1.  the four centrist parties are unable to unite, leaving the impression that they are based on leaders rather than ideology,
  2. their message tends to be “uni-dimensional” and focused on single issues,
  3. their broader agendas are not clear.

Divisions on the right helped the center do better than anticipated, not the center’s own strength.

Yoram Peri, Chair of Israel Studies at the University of Maryland, said that these elections were expected to reveal a shift in Israeli society to the right.  It did not happen.  Important changes occurred within the right, with Netanyahu weakened.  Young voters are disillusioned with the old faces and uninterested in the Palestinian issue, unless and until there is a Third Intifada.  For older Israelis, the Palestinian issue remains important.  The Arab Spring will make Netanyahu willing to compromise.

Gershon Shafir, Professor of Sociology at the University of California San Diego, also noted that the remarkable strengthening of the center in these elections is the result of the younger voters.  They have been suffering from economic problems and took to the streets of Tel Aviv two years ago.  They are particularly dissatisfied with the benefits the ultra-orthodox get—mainly exemption from military service.

Jonathan Rynhold, Visiting Professor of Israeli Studies at the George Washington University, said  it is not Israeli society that is moving to the right, but rather the Israeli elite. “Israel moved to the right security wise and not ideologically.” Rynhold said that the stagnation of the peace process is what allowed other issues, such as education and the cost of living, to rise as the main issues of this election.

All agreed that the success of the center in these elections cannot be entirely attributed to the strength of the center.  Peleg attributed the center’s success to the weakness of the right, Peri and Rynhold attributed it to a generation gap and the lack pressure on the Israeli-Palestinian issue, while Shafir attributed it economic problems and animosity towards the ultra-orthodox.  All four stressed that the Palestinian issue should once again rise to the top of the agenda for the Israeli public and politicians, despite its absence from this election campaign.

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Egypt off course, again

Unrest in Egypt on the January 25 second anniversary of the revolution that overthrew Hosni Mubarak was easy to predict.  Many who supported the revolution are disappointed with the results, the economy is in a tailspin and President Morsi is proving himself more autocrat than democrat.  But what happened Saturday is nuts.

Friday the protests were pretty much as expected:  large and marred by clashes with the security forces.  Saturday was far worse, especially in Port Said.  A judge (sitting in Cairo) sentenced 21 of its al Masri football fans to death for an incident last  February in which 74 people died in a clash with fans of Cairo’s al Ahli.  The rioting Saturday in Port Said took at least two dozen more lives.  Unrest is continuing this morning.  The soccer clubs and their fans are protagonists in both the Egyptian revolution and tensions between the periphery and Cairo.

Egypt’s secularist/liberal National Salvation Front is now threatening to boycott elections unless five demands are met:

  1. A neutral investigation of the violence.
  2. Immediate amendment of the constitution.
  3. Formation of a new “national salvation” government.
  4. An end to President Morsi’s attacks on the judiciary.
  5. Clear legal status for the Muslim Brotherhood.

These may all be perfectly reasonable things to ask for, but to link participation in the elections to their immediate fulfillment is not.  The April parliamentary elections, to quote myself, are

the secularist liberals’ last, best chance of gaining political traction for the next four years. If they fail, as seems likely, Egypt will experiment with a constitution that leaves a lot of room for Islamist maneuvering in a society that is more interested in economic results than theocratic correctness.

With failure likely, it is understandable that the opposition might prefer to sit out the elections, but it would be unwise.  Even a relatively small minority position in parliament will provide a channel through which to counter Morsi’s worst instincts.  Trying to do so exclusively through street demonstrations won’t work for long.  Egyptians are tired of disorder and want a return to stability.  Morsi will have little problem repressing an extra-parliamentary opposition if he aligns himself with the “party of the couch” (aka the silent majority) in imposing law and order.  Most Egyptians don’t want, and can’t afford, continuing disorder.

The National Defense Council is calling for a “national dialogue” and considering a curfew.  Morsi has more than once tried to convene national dialogues (in place of any meaningful change of direction), which the opposition generally boycotts.  This time there is a suggestion that neutral figures will do the convening.  Are there any left?  Egypt is now thoroughly polarized along many different axes:  religious/secular, Muslim Brotherhood/Salafists, center/periphery, revolution/old regime remnants, young/old, rich/poor, Muslim/non-Muslim, urban/rural.  Not to mention al Ahli/al Masri.

If dialogue fails, as it has repeatedly in the past, Morsi will no doubt try to use the security forces to impose order.   That may succeed, but the outcome is far less likely to be democratic.

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A state in search of itself

Laurentina Cizza, the second of my Middle East Institute interns this semester, makes her peacefare.net debut with this piece on Libya:

The environment of near-anarchy in Libya is expected to get worse before it gets better. That was the general conclusion of Thursday evening’s Middle East Policy Forum at George Washington University, “Libya: a state in search of itself,” moderated by Ambassador Edward “Skip” Gnehm.

The Library of Congress’ Chief of the African and Middle Eastern Division, Mary Jane Deeb opened with a theoretical overview of the current situation in Libya. She focused on one question in particular: How do we categorize Libya today? A mere political ouster? A civil war? A proper revolution? She argued for the last: Libya is currently undergoing phase two of Huntington’s conception of the western revolution. With the fall of the Jamahiriya and the emergence of new political actors, Libya has done away with the old political institutions and produced new political actors who promise to build a new order.

She categorized Libya’s current political actors in three, not necessarily mutually exclusive, groups:  (largely urban) youth, tribes, and Islamists. She expressed optimism for Libya’s long-term prospects. Young Libyans span across the political spectrum, but they represent the most educated generation in Libyan history (under Qadhafi, Libya boasted some of the highest literacy rates in North Africa). Libya’s current chaos represents a side effect of the new political actors’ struggle for equilibrium.  But Deeb also forecasted that the instability would continue. After all, the establishment of any self-respecting political order takes time. Bottom line:  from an academic standpoint, Libya is exactly where political scientists expect it to be.

Karim Mezran, a Senior Fellow at Atlantic Council’s Rafiq Hariri Center for the Middle East, opened his commentary with this disclaimer: “Being both Italian and Libyan prevents me from being optimistic.” Having set the tone, he focused on two questions: How was the revolution possible and what are the revolution’s chances today?

Regarding the first question, he distinguished between an official and an unofficial narrative of the revolution. The sardonic unofficial narrative postulates that Western powers hold more of the credit for the success of the Libyan revolution than the Libyan people, and not only for NATO’s role. An intensive four-day Al Jazeera campaign did more to prompt Sarkozy’s condemnation of Qadhafi as a war criminal than a 40-year record of human rights violations. Western powers’ withdrawal of support for Qadhafi did more damage than a protracted struggle between the regime and rag-tag rebels ever could. Case in point: Syria. He also took care to acknowledge that Libya’s revolution was also a civil war. Qadhafi had his supporters, who are now a marginalized portion of the population that is all but twiddling its thumbs as the new government struggles to its feet.

Regarding the prospects of the Libyan revolution, time is of the essence. The government’s inability to ensure security is breeding a climate amenable to militias, terrorist networks and criminal organizations. Mezran described the eastern part of the country, the site of Ambassador Stevens’ death, as “near-anarchy.” The current delay in the constitutional process is countering the progress made by the smooth General National Council elections. As instability continues, political tensions boil and the risk of the constitutional process exploding into violence increases.  He offered two solutions:

1) That Libya recognize the importance of Western support, particularly in training of security forces and dealing with the militias;

2) An international agreement or treaty providing security for the southern border, which is porous to terrorist and criminal networks.

While a theory-oriented Deeb focused on the promising long-term, a realist-oriented Mezran focused on the painful short-term. Libya has to get through the latter before it enjoys the former.

 

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An exclusive club, not the movies

Danijela Milinkovic at Belgrade daily Vecernje Novosti asked me some questions.  I responded a week ago.  I gather they published the interview yesterday.  Here is the interview in English:

Q:  Wanting to achieve its strategic goal – joining the EU – Serbia faces numerous demands on Kosovo, which, it seems, getting bigger and bigger as we progress in integration. Is our path towards the EU charged masochism and do you believe that giving up on Kosovo for Serbs will be the ticket for entry into the European track?

A:  As I understand it, normalizing relations with Pristina is the EU’s current requirement in order to give Serbia a date to begin accession negotiations.  It has been understood from the first that this “normalization” includes reaching mutually satisfactory agreements with Pristina on northern Kosovo.

But Serbia will not become an EU member without going further.  It will have to establish diplomatic relations with Kosovo and exchange ambassadors, because becoming a member will require agreement of the 28 existing members.  More than one will insist on diplomatic relations between Pristina and Belgrade, even if the EU as a whole does not.  Nor is that the only thing Serbia will have to do:  it will have to meet the many other criteria for membership.  There is no single “ticket” for entry into the EU.  There are many tickets.

Accession to the EU is a long and complicated process of conforming Serbia’s laws and practices to European norms.  It will take at least a decade.  Once you get finished with one chapter, there will be another one.  There are currently 35 chapters of the acquis communitaire, which form the basis of the accession process.  There may be more by the time Serbia completes the process.

I would not regard preparation for EU accession as “masochism.”  Countries do these things because they want rule of law, security, prosperity and social well-being.  There are enormous rewards.  If you enter the process feeling nothing but pain, maybe you are in the wrong process.  You are not going to the cinema; you are joining a privileged and highly selective club that will enable all of Serbia’s citizens to enjoy far better and freer lives.

Q:  Whatever Serbia does, it seems that is not enough to change the attitude of the great powers towards our country us? Where are we wrong?

A:  While I often hear this complaint, it seems to me that both Europe and America are today respectful and friendly towards Serbia.  Once Milosevic was gone, sanctions were lifted, Serbian leaders were welcomed in Washington, Brussels and European capitals, and substantial resources were made available, mainly through the IMF and private channels. There is ample cooperation on many issues:  drugs, organized crime, nuclear technology.  There are really only two issues that give people in Washington pause about Serbia:  Kosovo and Bosnia.  On those, I would describe the pressure from Washington as firm but relatively light-handed.  The two governments disagree on Kosovo and on Milorad Dodik, but this is not affecting their basically friendly relations on many other issues.

The EU is taking a tougher attitude right now on Kosovo, largely due to German initiative. From my perspective, that is a good thing:  if the issues in the north can be resolved, Kosovo will certainly benefit but so too will Serbia.

Q:  Would you say that Serbia is today at a turning point?

A:  No.  It seems to me Serbia is still clinging to romantic notions about its ties to Russia, the Non-aligned Movement and the claim to sovereignty over Kosovo that have nothing to do with its future in the European Union.  Serbia will not be at a turning point until it makes a decision to turn.  Even then, it will have a long process of negotiation and adjustment of its laws and practices before entering the EU.  Even once fully prepared, it may have to wait for the 28 members to arrive at a convenient political moment.

Q:  Do you think that decomposition of the Balkans is over or we will see new changes of borders in the future?

A:  The changes that have occurred so far have been in the status of borders (from internal boundaries to international borders), not where the borders are drawn.  I would describe this not as “decomposition” but as dissolution of former Yugoslavia.  I see no possibility of additional changes of borders, which won’t be acceptable to either Europe or the U.S.

Q:  The European Council has decided to grant Serbia a “conditional date”, in other words, to determine the beginning of the pre-accession negotiations with the EU for March. What does Serbia need to do until then, in order to make the next step in the integrations?

A:  This is a question for the EU, not for me.  But my understanding is that the EU wants to see normalization of relations with Kosovo, including a settlement of the main issues in the north, before it starts accession negotiations.

Q:  Is Serbia going to face with the new conditions regarding Kosovo in the coming months?

A:  Yes, in coming months and years.  Kosovo will be an issue in many of the 35 chapters of the negotiations, unless there is a comprehensive solution early in the process.

Q:  How do you comment on the platform and Kosovo resolution, adopted by the Government and the Parliament? Will this document contribute to the solution of the Kosovo issue or contrary?

A:  I don’t believe the platform is a step forward:  it reiterates Serbia’s claim to sovereignty over all of Kosovo while proposing separate governance of the Albanians, who would become second class citizens inside Serbia.  They won’t accept that, and no one in Europe or the United States will ask them to do so.  But let’s see what happens in the talks between Dacic and Thaci.  That is more important than what it says in the platform.

Q:  You said that this platform is “Milosevic`s dream”. Could you, please, explain that?

A:  I don’t think I need to say more:  my previous answer explains fully. Milosevic would have been delighted with sovereignty over all of Kosovo and second class citizenship for Albanians.

Q:  What is, in your opinion, the most disputing in the platform for the international community and Kosovo Albanians?

A:  For the moment, northern Kosovo is the big issue, but in the future it will be something else:  protection of monasteries and religious sites, military forces or who can go where for Christmas.  Underlying all the issues are questions of sovereignty and territorial integrity.  When you reach agreement with Pristina on those issues, the story will be over.

Q:  Serbia is required to withdraw from the institutions in northern Kosovo, and our government has consistently refused this request as inadmissible. Will the proposal for broad autonomy of the Serbian community in Kosovo be acceptable to the West and Pristina?

A:  I see no problem if Serbia will accept the autonomy provided for in the Ahtisaari plan.  That is already accepted in Pristina, Washington and Brussels, all of which will be prepared to see additional agreements reached to implement the Ahtisaari arrangements.

Q:  What do you expect to happen in the next few months in the Balkan region and can we expect new instabilities and conflicts?

A:  Troublemakers can always make trouble.  But I hope to see the leaderships in Belgrade and Pristina make a real effort to come to terms with each other, for mutual benefit. I see some indication that Prime Ministers Dacic and Thaci are headed in the direction of a comprehensive resolution of issues. That would be a good thing.

 

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Preventing violent conflict after Asad

This is a paper I prepared for USAID, which hosted a discussion last week.  The questions are theirs, the answers mine:

  1. What is the map of conflict? What is the recent history of the Syrian conflict, including the divisions and connections within Syrian society?

Geographically, the best I’ve seen recently mapping areas of (relative) control is this, from the Institute for the Study of War.  But these sharply delineated areas do not convey the complexity of the situation.  Confrontation lines are not well defined.  Large parts of the north are nominally in rebel hands, or Kurdish hands, or no-man’s land, including most or all of the border points with Turkey.  But the regime is still capable of striking, at least from the air, in these areas, and the rebels are capable of striking within regime-held areas.  There are neighborhoods within regime-controlled towns that are rebel-held, and vice versa.  The most up to date unclassified picture I’ve seen is “Cities and towns during the Syrian civil war” (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cities_and_towns_during_the_Syrian_civil_war).  They offer this picture of the situation in Aleppo on November 23, 2012 (they have more recent pictures, but I was unable to lift them into this document): Aleppo conflict

This fluid, confused, overlapping and uncertain pattern of control among at least three distinct forces (rebels, Kurds and government) will make the post-war period particularly hazardous, as regime and rebel forces jockey for position both before and after a ceasefire, if one is every agreed.

Syria is a diverse society.  Pre-war, religious and ethnic groups were more or less distributed this way.   Many areas included people belonging to other than the dominant group.  This will decline.  With more than 2 million displaced and half a million refugees in neighboring countries, towns and neighborhoods will tend to homogenize.  People will seek refuge more often than not among their own sect or ethnic group.  Individuals in mixed areas may try initially to protect them from ethnic and sectarian cleansing, but some minorities, especially in majority Sunni areas that come under Islamist rebel control, will leave.  Syria will have fewer mixed communities and neighborhoods at the end of the civil war than it had at the beginning.

2.  What are the vital grievances or interests, how do they threaten other groups, and how may that lead to future violence even after the regime changes?

The main overtly expressed grievance at this point is the persistence in power of the regime, which the unarmed opposition and the armed rebels regard as criminally oppressive, illegitimate and self-enriching.  The revolution has been fought in the name of dignity and freedom.  It has not on the whole been fought on sectarian grounds, but some of its adherents are Islamist extremists who regard the Alawites and other minorities with hostility, disdain or worse.

There is widespread resentment of the Alawites for their support to the regime, the privileges some of them have acquired over four decades of the Assad regime, their loyalty to Assad during the revolution and the behavior of their militia (Shabiha) towards non-Alawites.  Few Alawites have joined the rebellion, whose adherents (like Syria itself) are mainly Sunni.  Very few of the defectors from the regime are Alawite.  There is also a periphery vs. center conflict:  people from rural and suburban areas have attacked town centers, poorer neighborhoods have given haven to rebels while wealthier neighborhoods have tended to remain more loyal to the regime.

While many Kurds dislike the regime and the Kurdish National Council has formally joined the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, Kurdish forces have sometimes clashed with rebels and will expect a federal Syria to emerge post-war, with clearly defined and locally governed Kurdish areas.  This will be a challenge even under the best of circumstances, given the distribution of Kurds and their relatively small numbers (under 10%?).

Christians, Ismailis and Druze have split, some supporting the regime and others opposing.  But some extremist Islamist fighters will view them as adversaries.  The (patently false) secularist claims of the regime have garnered it significant support among minorities, who fear Islamist extremists.  Both the minorities and secularism are in for a rough ride after the revolution.

The civil war itself will generate new grievances.  It has uprooted a large number of people (the total could easily reach 4 million), destroyed vast amounts of property and killed upwards of 60,000 Syrians.  When and if people are able to return to their homes and other property, they may find them destroyed, looted or seized by others.  Property disputes are likely to be common.  Revenge killing in the absence of a viable police force and justice system will occur.  Its scale and extent could amount to mass atrocity.

3.  Who are the key actors in the Syrian conflict? i.e., who are the likely conflict mobilizers, Peace builders, and neutral players? Who and which are the individuals or institutions that give societal grievances structure and direction to continue the current violence?

There are lots of people trying to stay out of the line of fire, but there are few playing the role of neutrals.  The warring parties are the regime and its opponents, not all of whom are advocates or perpetrators of violence.  The armed rebels are still not unified.  Many in the opposition have not wanted to see militarization of the conflict, and non-violent demonstrations have continued.

At the retail level, almost anyone aggrieved may become a conflict mobilizer, and that will mean almost everyone.  But mass mobilization for violence requires more than individuals.  Some of the main suspects for larger scale mobilization of violence belong to the former warring parties:

  • Regime forces, especially Shabiha and elite forces (Republican guard, for example), who fear revenge or have been instructed to continue resistance (remember the Saddam fedayeen!).
  • Rebel armed groups seeking to enlarge their areas of control, enforce discipline and seize property.  Jabhat al Nusra, the Al Qaeda affiliate that the United States has declared a terrorist group, and other armed Sunni Islamists will try to dominate the post-war scene.
  • Intelligence operatives of both warring parties (including non-Syrians) and others seeking to escape or cover their previous misdeeds.

Some of these potential sources of violence can also play a mitigating role, provided they get an adequate political settlement and are brought under civilian control (witness February 17 and other militias in Libya in the immediate aftermath of the revolution, for example).

 4. What does the future of Syria look like? How is the current violence setting the stage for future conflict or peace? What are the trends or triggering events that will create vulnerabilities to violence?

 The future of Syria is bleak.  Whenever the civil war ends, its economy will be a shambles, its government will be eviscerated, its military will be disgraced, its population will be impoverished, displaced and heavily armed.  Outside powers, which have fought a proxy war inside Syria for almost two years already, will jockey for position post-war, each favoring its surrogates and seeking to ensure its vital interests.

Given the uncertainty of where the confrontation lines lie, it would be a miracle if this civil war ended without chaos, internecine fighting, looting and sectarian revenge killing.  Little will be required to trigger violence.  The main question is the next one:  what can be done to stop it.

5.  What are the opportunities for reducing conflict? What have we learned from similar conflict in the region?

In the absence of vigorous efforts to mitigate conflict, it will occur and may lead to mass atrocities, chaos and renewed civil war.  Main options (not mutually exclusive) for preventing this from happening include the following:

  • A clear, well-constructed and well-communicated end to the Assad regime, agreed by the main players, including as broad a spectrum of revolutionary and regime forces as possible, with a roadmap to a future democratic regime that will respect minority rights.
  • Implementation of the roadmap under the supervision of an international body that includes the main international powers with influence (neighbors and major powers).
  • A strong, legitimate international intervention force of both police and military to separate warring parties, establish a safe and secure environment and protect minorities.
  • Tangible outreach by the new leaders to communities that have not supported the revolution, reassuring them and providing credible guarantees of security, possibly using foreign forces (UN, Arab League or other).
  • A well-articulated plan of action for holding a clearly defined and limited number of senior regime figures accountable for abuses, as well as a broader effort to give victims an opportunity to voice grievances and seek eventual redress.
  • Reconfiguration, retraining and reform of security forces that can reestablish a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence accepted by both former regime elements and rebels.
  • Quick stabilization of the economy and infusion of vital humanitarian assistance that is distributed fairly and transparently.
  • A well-targeted reconstruction effort that local communities help plan and monitor (like the National Solidarity Program in Afghanistan).
  • Establishment of a relatively quick administrative procedure for settlement of disputes and recovery of private property, in particular real estate.
  • Funding and empowerment of grassroots people and organizations (including in particular the revolutionary local administrative councils) committed to a democratic outcome and organized across sectarian and ethnic lines.
  • Creation of safe havens for particular minorities.

This last item is distasteful to many (including me), but it has often been used and has sometimes worked, at least temporarily.  This is what the Americans did when they constructed T-walls around distinctly Sunni and Shia neighborhoods in Baghdad during 2006/7.  The French army did it in northern Kosovo in 1999.  It is what some believe Alawites will try to do by retreating to the western littoral, where they traditionally are a higher percentage of the population than in the rest of the country.  The Kurds may also attempt to create distinctly Kurdish areas, in preparation for the federalization of Syria they will seek in the post-war constitution.

There are pros and cons to each of these options, but this much is clear:  in the absence of a concerted effort to prevent violence post-Assad, Syria is likely to suffer a chaotic episode of horrific blood-letting and state collapse (possibly even fragmentation) that may make the civil war seem tame.  Those who seek to prevent this need to plan quickly, secure the necessary resources and gain broad international support for an expensive and challenging effort.

6.  What are the implications for humanitarian assistance and reconstruction efforts?

Humanitarian assistance provided to civilians inside Syria in the current confused situation, with no stable, clear lines of confrontation between opposing forces and little humanitarian access, is difficult.  The upwards of 2 million internally displaced people are a priority.  Whatever channels are used—UN and its agencies, Syrian Red Crescent, ICRC, Western and Islamic nongovernmental organizations—it will be challenging to verify that assistance is going to vulnerable people and is not diverted for political or military purposes.  Aid agencies should try to ensure that impartiality in evaluating needs and in delivering commodities.  But it would be better to flood Syria with humanitarian assistance, especially this winter, than to worry too much about who will receive it.  The $210 million provided by the U.S. in 2012 and so far in 2013 will have to increase sharply if the current level of hostilities continues, as seems likely.  U.S. humanitarian assistance so far appears to be reaching most of the areas affected by the war.

Reconstruction assistance is different.  The United States, though not a belligerent, has chosen to support the rebellion.  Providing reconstruction assistance to the Syrian government while it fights a war against its civilian population is not only inappropriate but harmful and counter-productive.  Helping some of the liberated communities, especially in the north, begin to provide basic services would however be a positive contribution.  This should be done only with a good understanding of the local situation:  through what channels is the assistance being provided?  Are they legitimate representatives of the local community?  How do we know?  How can reasonable standards of accountability and transparency be met?  Are there groups in the community not represented?  How will providing assistance affect relations between ethnic or sectarian groups?  Will it encourage conflict or otherwise do harm?  Is the overall balance of assistance equitable?  Do the recipients and potential recipients agree?  There are groups like the Civil Administration Councils that can help to answer these questions.

Relatively little real reconstruction will get done during the fighting.  The main thrust now should be planning.  This should be done in close cooperation with the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, which is expected in the near future to name a government, including a ministry for reconstruction.  Ensuring a tight nexus between international assistance and the new government’s plans is vital.  Failure to do so would undermine its authority and legitimacy and make the intended transition to a democratic state far more difficult.

 

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Masterful

Secretary of State-designate John Kerry was masterful today in his Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing.  It wasn’t so much the details of what he said, but the breadth and depth.  This is a guy who really knows international affairs.

His prepared statement was notable for some high points:  the emphasis on the importance of American economic health in determining the country’s role abroad, the clarity about preventing Iran from getting nuclear weapons and the vigor of his defense of the State Department budget.  I would also note that John Kerry regards USAID, whose functions he mentioned but not its name, as an integral part of the State Department.

Then Kerry showed a lot of agility in dealing with not only the questions but also a demonstrator, expressing respect for her cries to be heard.  He defended Secretary of Defense-designate Hagel’s views on getting rid of nuclear weapons, which he said was an aspiration for a world different from the one we live in today.  He described his own changed view of Syria’s President Asad, whom he now hopes to see go soon.

He showed his clear commitment to maintaining the high priority Secretary Clinton has given to gender issues.  He was non-committal on the Keystone pipeline, deferring to the official process under way.  He was gentle with the Russians, citing their cooperation on particular issues (other than Syria).   He was supportive of American anti-corruption and human rights efforts abroad.  He showed he knows what is going on in Sudan’s Blue Nile and South Kordofan provinces.  He parried accusations about Benghazi.

Of course part of the reason for this masterful performance is the attitude of the questioners, who showed enormous respect for their long-standing colleague.  Gone was the idiot questioning of yesterday’s hearing with Secretary of State Clinton on the Benghazi murders.  There was little “gotcha.”  Certainly had the President nominated Susan Rice, who is far more combative, the tone if not the substance of the hearing would have been different.  In a week’s time the Hagel hearing may be far more contentious, even if Hagel himself comes close to matching Kerry in knowledge and equanimity.

On Syria, Kerry advocated changing Bashar al Asad’s calculations, but he was unclear about the means to achieve that.  He wants an orderly transition.  The Russians appear willing, but differ on the timing and manner of Bashar’s departure.  Kerry fears sectarian strife, implosion of the Syrian state and what they might mean for chemical weapons.

The Syrian opposition has not been ready to talk, Kerry said.  In a sentence he struck–one of his few moments of hesitation in this long hearing–he started to say that we need to increase the ability of the opposition to do something unspecified.   I’d sure like to know how that sentence was supposed to end:  increase their ability to negotiate?  increase their ability to strike the regime militarily?  There’s a big difference.  It sounded to me more like he wanted them to be more flexible on negotiations, but I’m not certain.

Kerry hit a lot of other subjects.  On Afghanistan, he put his chips on a good April 2014 presidential election, which has to provide legitimacy to Karzai’s successor.  Kerry wants “a metric” for stopping infiltration and attacks on Americans from Pakistani territory.  He noted China is “all over” Africa (and America has to get into the game).  Al Qaeda has dispersed at the urging of Osama bin Laden and is now a threat in the Arabian Peninsula and the Maghreb, where the solution is not only drone strikes but (unspecified) civilian efforts.  We don’t like what Egyptian President Morsi says about Jews, but we need him to maintain the peace treaty with Israel.  On Israel/Palestine, Kerry was cagey and refused to be drawn out, except to reiterate commitment to the two-state solution.  The solution to climate change is energy policy, which will enable job growth.  The “war on drugs” is ill-conceived.  We need to do more on the demand side.

Here is the lengthy (four hours?) video of the hearing:

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