Tag: Libya

Elections are the means, legitimacy the end

Again from Tripoli:

Even in a country as small (6.4 million people) as Libya, an election is a complicated affair.  More than 2.8 million people are registered to vote.  Four thousand candidates are running for 200 seats an assembly that will write the new constitution.  Voting by Libyans living abroad started today in six countries.

This would be a difficult election to administer even with another year to prepare and an established voting tradition.  People displaced within Libya will vote where they are living, but using ballots from the communities that they left.  This means ballots from all over Libya have to be available in principle in every polling place, which greatly complicates logistics, ballot security and counting but ensures that the displaced have an opportunity to be represented in their home communities.  Assisted voting will be necessary: there are no symbols on the ballot (parties are too recent a phenomenon to have established symbols) and 20% of the electorate is illiterate.  Assistance is appropriate, unless it extends to picking the box checked.

What can a small team of 30 or so international observers hope to contribute to such a far-flung and complicated process?  They can, most directly, hope to get some idea of whether the process meets the standards set in Libya’s own legislation and in international agreements to which Libya is a signatory, as well as whether the process is conducted according to what are today considered best practices.  These standards go well beyond election day voting, counting and aggregation of results.  They include the right of effective remedies after the fact when there are complaints as well as rights of freedom of assembly, expression and movement for the weeks of the campaign.  They also include the process by which the courts blocked stalwarts of the Qaddafi regime (several hundred of them) from becoming candidates, using 21 different criteria.

In a post-war country like Libya security is particularly important.  The militias claiming to provide security in parts of Libya, and clashing occasionally with each other, are both a virtue and a problem every day.  But on election day they could play an important role, either by helping to ensure a safe and secure environment and letting people vote their minds or by aligning with particular candidates or parties to try to affect the outcome.  Ideally, they should have been dissolved one way or the other before this first post-revolution election.  In practice, that is a lengthy effort, which has begun with cooptation of some of their leaders as ministers of interior and defense (as well as absorption of their cadres into the public administration) and will have to continue in the future.

Foreigners like me are not likely to be able to detect subtler efforts to influence the voting by militias and political parties, and in any event we can cover only a few of the many polling places, none of which are in the most insecure areas.  But there are also local observers–both “party agents” and civil society representatives–who are far more likely to detect abuses.  Hopefully the presence of internationals flying the banners of EU, the Arab League and The Carter Center will give courage to these local observers.  The international presence should also encourage local election boards to try to execute their responsibilities in accordance with the elaborate procedures hurriedly put into effect.  The High National Election Commission has issued more than 100 directives.

Why do we, and the Libyans, go to all this trouble?  The answer is deceptively simple:  legitimacy.  Muammar Qaddafi took power in a coup and within the first decade destroyed whatever popular support he initially enjoyed.  Thereafter he ruled the country by fear.  He never held an election.  The National Transitional Council that took over in Benghazi after the February 15, 2011 revolt and now holds governing authority throughout most of the country feels acutely its own lack of democratic legitimacy, in addition to the shortage of state capacity needed to govern the country.  So it has proceeded, with only a few weeks delay to allow more registrations, to hold these elections, which will produce a democratically validated “constituent assembly” (to choose the committee that will write the new constitution) and government Libya has ever had.

This is only the beginning of a lengthy transition.  Apart from the oil and gas sector, which was somewhat well-managed even under Qaddafi since it was his cash cow, Libya lacks effective state institutions.  It also lacks a constitution that tells which institutions should do what.  The distribution of power between the central government and the regions will be the principal issue.  Some here would like to return to a more “federalist” structure like the one Libya had under the monarchy, where the regions would have ample powers and possibly control over natural resources.  Others see that as threatening the unity of the Libyan state and would prefer decentralization–something like the relationship our states have with counties and municipalities, with responsibility for many services delegated to the more local level.

This is one of the classic problems of distributing power in a way that enables all segments of society to feel they have adequate control over their governance and related resources.  The International Crisis Group, which is a lot closer to the situation where problems are occurring than I am, believes that militias in the East concerned about their ability to influence the outcome pose a serious threat to the July 7 elections.  Iraqis are still hashing out problems of regional power distribution, nine years after the fall of Saddam Hussein.  The Libyans will not find these problems easy to solve, but solve them they will if these elections run reasonably well and produce results that the country as a whole feels are legitimate.

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Libyan bellwether

From Tripoli:

It is hard not to share Libyans’ affection for their revolution.  They are thrilled with themselves.  Qaddafi seemed forever, especially after the United States normalized relations with Libya in 2004.  But somehow in a relatively few months last year they found the courage and the means to evict him from power and establish what they hope will be a free society and a democratic state.

The odds are long.  Libya has no democratic tradition.  Elections were not held at all during Qaddafi’s 42 years in power.  The violence of the Libyan revolution, supported by NATO air power, has left thousands of armed youths and dozens of militias scattered throughout the country.  This week a mob claiming to object to the geographic distribution of parliamentary seats  attacked the elections commission office in Benghazi.  Their looting of the computers and other equipment suggests other motives, as did the green shirts some of the youths wore (green was Qaddafi’s favored color).  There are also threats of an election boycott in the south, where clashes have occurred recently.  Disorder lurks not far below the apparently peaceful and relatively orderly surface.

It is not however hard to find a hopeful Libyan. Things were so bad under Qaddafi that improvement will not be difficult.  Libyans believe themselves moderate people who will not reward the Muslim Brotherhood or the more radical Salifists the way Egypt did, a woman with hair covered by a hijab says to me.  It has taken time for Libyans to begin to understand that the election on July 7 is important.  Some thought they had fulfilled their civic obligation when they registered to vote.  No one knows how many will turn out or how they will vote, but there is ample choice and a real possibility of new faces emerging.

Women in Libya will run both as individuals for 120 seats in the assembly as well as on party lists for the remaining 80.  The party lists are required to alternate male and female names.  An Italian businessman who has been coming to Libya for decades was surprised they were even being allowed to vote.  There is palpable distrust in political parties, which have emerged only in the past year.  Individual reputation and standing is expected to count for a lot.

I enjoyed dinner this evening with activists from Egypt and Morocco.  The contrast with Libya could not be stronger.  Egypt has elected a Muslim Brotherhood president who will now engage in a complicated tug of war with the country’s still powerful Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, which has dissolved the elected parliament.  The Moroccan king has nominally begun a reform process with a new constitution and elections that returned an Islamist-led government, but things there remain as always:  absolute monarchy rules.

Libya, a country many in the region view as backward, has a grand opportunity with the elections this week.  If they go well, it will mark an important step forward in a democratic direction for the Arab awakening, which has lost a lot of its shine in recent months due to profound confusion in Egypt, extreme violence in Syria and a half-baked outcome in Yemen.  If the elections in Libya go poorly, with violence or boycott undermining their legitimacy, it will be a giant step backwards.  Libya is not the largest or most important country in the Arab world, but right now it is a bellwether that counts.

 

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Libya and Egypt are not in the same place

It will strike some as strange to write about Libya on the day Egypt’s new president takes the oath of office, but the contrast is instructive.

Oil- and gas- rich Libya had a violent revolution that swept away Muammar Qaddafi’s one-man dictatorship and has proceeded more or less on schedule with a transition roadmap laid out almost a year ago.  Virtually 100 per cent Muslim and predominantly Arab, Libya has big problems with armed militias and many local conflicts but little in the way of organized national resistance.

Egypt, a far larger, poorer and more diverse country with limited natural resources, underwent a largely peaceful revolution (violence came mainly from the regime) that forced out President Mubarak but failed to sweep away a highly institutionalized military autocracy.  Egypt’s political roadmap has changed many times in the past year and a half, so much so that Marc Lynch has satirized the process as #calvinball.  Experts can’t agree whether Egypt has even yet begun a democratic transition.  With lots of help from the Supreme Constitutional Court, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) has been very much in charge, though it now faces a serious challenger in President Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood.

None of this means that Libya will necessarily come out all right or that Egypt won’t.  But the odds are in that direction.  A lot depends on Libya’s election July 7, which I’ll be observing as a Carter Center monitor.  Voting for real for the first time in more than 40 years, Libyans will be choosing an assembly (called the National Public Conference in English) with two main tasks:  to select a committee to write the country’s new constitution and to name a government that will replace the National Transitional Council, the oft-maligned, self-appointed body that has steered Libya’s revolution for the past year and a half.  Scheduled for drafting within 120 days (recently extended from 60), the constitution will then be approved (or disapproved) in a referendum, followed by new elections.  This is a sensible sequence, even if the schedule remains tight.  There is some discussion of whether the draft constitution should be sent to the assembly before the referendum.

By contrast, Egyptians have already elected a president, whose powers are uncertain because the military has continued to issue obiter dicta.  While many of us assume these will be decisive, a great deal depends on how the tug-of-war between democratically elected president and judicially empowered military officers comes out.  Nor is it clear how the constitution will now be written.  The SCAF claims to have arrogated to itself legislative authority, dissolving a parliament elected only a few months ago in more or less democratic polls but declared illegitimate by a court mouthing what the military wanted said.  It is completely unclear when a new parliament will be elected, or even when the next presidential election will be held.

Libya’s big challenge is to stay on track.  The militias are the greatest threat to doing that, so it is important that the new assembly and government make more progress than the NTC has on dissolving them.  If they become entrenched, or aligned with political forces, a revolution that seemed to be headed in the right direction could be pulled seriously off course.

Egypt’s big challenge is to find where the right tracks that lead to serious democracy lie.  It is hard to believe that either the military or Morsi acting alone will find them.  But the interaction between the two, guided in part by the Egyptian courts, may have a better chance.  I suspect the Americans are also playing a role in pushing the military to turn over real authority to the civilians, but Morsi’s advocacy yesterday of freedom for a terrorist convicted in a U.S. court may make them hesitate.  Admittedly, Morsi is navigating in difficult waters.  He’d better learn quickly where the shoals lie.

Libya is freer of external constraints, but in some sense just as fraught with its own internal difficulties, on a far smaller scale than Egypt.  What can a single American election observer hope to contribute in such a situation?  Not much.  Local observers who know the terrain and the people, never mind the language and culture, are likely to have a far bigger impact.  But having a few of us around in Carter Center shirts may provide some top cover for Libyan political parties and nongovernmental organizations to be bold in insisting  on good procedures in preparation for the polling, on election day and in the subsequent counting.  Most newly democratic regimes would like a seal of approval, not a Bronx cheer, from the foreigners.

This is also an opportunity for me to sniff the atmosphere in Libya nine months after my last visit, when I returned more hopeful than I had been previously that Libya was on the right track.  Circumstances in post-war and revolutionary places change rapidly.  The security environment is nowhere near as permissive as it was last September, when I ran along the quay in Tripoli.  I am most interested in talking with ordinary Libyans:  what do they think about what they’ve wrought?  Are they longing for a return to a strongman, as many Iraqis seem to be doing, or are they determined to forge ahead in the democratic direction?  Do they have confidence in the electoral process?  Will they view the results as legitimate, even if the results aren’t what they prefer?    What are their priorities, and how do they think their needs can best be met?

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This week’s peace picks

Lots of good events in DC this week, several of them big all-day events.  I’ll be away part of the week in Vienna–that’s my excuse for not going to everything.  Write-ups for peacefare.net are, as always, welcome. 

1.  Unleashing the Nuclear Watchdog:  Strengthening and Reform of the IAEA, Stimson, noon June 25

Event Details

On June 13, 2012, The Centre for International Governance Innovation released its long-awaited report, “Unleashing the Nuclear Watchdog: Strengthening and Reform of the IAEA.”

The report will be presented at an event on June 25 in Washington, DC, co-hosted by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute North America (SIPRI North America). CIGI Senior Fellow Trevor Findlay, author of the report, will present the report’s findings. He will be introduced by Dr. Chantal de Jonge Oudraat, executive director, SIPRI North America.

The  release of “Unleashing the Nuclear Watchdog: Strengthening and Reform of the IAEA” marks the culmination of a two-year research project that examined all aspects of the Agency’s mandate and operations ― from major programs on safeguards, safety, security and the peaceful uses of nuclear energy to governance, management and finance. The report makes multiple recommendations, both strategic and programmatic, for strengthening and reform of the Agency.   The project was a joint undertaking of CIGI’s global security program and the Canadian Centre for Treaty Compliance (CCTC) at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs (NPSIA) at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada.

Professor Findlay holds a joint fellowship with the International Security Program and the Project on Managing the Atom at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. He also holds the William and Jeanie Barton Chair in International Affairs at NPSIA and is director of the CCTC.

When & Where

SIPRI North America, Stimson Center
1111 19th Street NW
Twelfth Floor
Washington, DC 20036

Monday, June 25, 2012 at 12:00 PM (ET)
2.  Revolution Under Siege: Is There Hope for Egypt’s Democratic Transition?
Summary: Mohamed Elmenshawy, director of the Languages and Regional Studies Program at the Middle East Institute; Nancy Okail, director of Freedom House’s Egypt Programs; Anwar El-Sadat (participating via Skype), president of the Reform and Development Party in Egypt; and Ruth Wedgwood (moderator), director of the SAIS International Law and Organizations Program, will discuss this topic. Lunch will be served. For more information and to RSVP, contact fhevents@freedomhouse.org.

3.  Iran and the West: Oil, Sanctions, and Future Scenarios, SAIS room 500 BOB, 9-12:45 June 26

Room 500
1717 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington, DC

 

9:00 – 9:15 Light Breakfast
9:15 – 9:30 Welcoming RemarksAmbassador Andras Simonyi (Managing Director, SAIS CTR)
9:30 – 11:00 PANEL I    Energy and Politics: Myths and Reality of a Complex InteractionSpeakers:

Claudia Castiglioni (Calouste Gulbenkian Fellow, SAIS CTR)

Sara Vakhoshouri (President of SVB Energy International and former Advisor to Director of the National Iranian Oil Company International)

Guy Caruso (Senior adviser in the Energy and National Security Program at CSIS, former administrator of the Energy Information Administration)

Moderator:

Robert J. Lieber (Department of Government and School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University)

11:00 – 11:15 Coffee
11:15 – 12:45 PANEL II The Future of Iran-West Relations: A Transatlantic PerspectiveSpeakers:

Michael Makovsky (Foreign Policy Director at the Bipartisan Policy Center)

Abbas Maleki (Robert E. Wilhelm Fellow at Center for International Studies, MIT)

Moderator:

Suzanne Maloney (Senior Fellow, Saban Center for Middle East Policy at Brookings Institution)

4.  Crisis Yemen:  Going Where?  City Club, 555 13th St NW, 10-noon June 26

The National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations periodically sponsors public educational programs on Capitol Hill and around Washington, DC where an assemblage of domestic and internationally renowned specialists analyze, discuss, and debate issues of importance to the relationship between the U.S. and the Arab countries, the Middle East, and the Islamic world. These events examine how best to strengthen and expand mutual Arab-U.S. trust, confidence, and benefits while examining a range of complex issues, interests, and policies.
UPCOMING:

June 26, 2012
Crisis Yemen: Going Where?

TRANSCRIPT EVENT FLYER
TRANSCRIPT WAQ AL-WAQ

Participating specialists:

Ambassador Barbara Bodine, Lecturer and Director, Scholars in the Nation’s Service Initiative, Princeton University; and former U.S. Ambassador to Yemen
Mr. Gregory Johnsen, Ph.D. Candidate, Princeton University; author, Waq al-waq blog and The Last Refuge: Yemen, al-Qaeda, and America’s War in Arabia; and former Fulbright and American Institute for Yemeni Studies Fellow in Yemen
Dr. Charles Schmitz, Associate Professor of Geography, Towson University; President, American Institute for Yemeni Studies; and former Fulbright and American Institute for Yemen Studies Fellow in Yemen
Mr. Robert Sharp, Associate Professor, Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies, U.S. Department of Defense/National Defense University

Moderator:

Dr. John Duke Anthony, Founding President & CEO, National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations; former Fulbright Fellow in the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen; and official observer for four of Yemen’s presidential and parliamentary elections

5.  Armed Drones and Targeted Killing: International Norms, Unintended Consequences, and the Challenge of Non-Traditional Conflict, German Marshall Fund, 12:15- 2 pm June 26

 

Date / Time
Tuesday, June 26 / 12:15pm – 2:00pm Register with host
Location
German Marshall Fund 1744 R Street NW, Washington DC, 20009
Speakers Mark R. Jacobson, Sarah Holewinski, Mark V. Vlasic
Description A discussion of the dilemmas posed by the use of RPVs, or “drones to include the implications for alliances, international norms, and their use outside of traditional armed conflict. The panel will also address the unique capability this new technology presents as well as the potential for unintended consequences and “blowback.”Speakers include Sarah Holewinski, Executive Director of CIVIC (Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict) who is preparing a report on drones with the Colombia Law School Human Rights Clinic and Mark Vlasic from Georgetown University and Madison Law & Strategy Group PLLC who has served at the World Bank and the Pentagon and has authored a legal analysis of Targeted Killing in the Georgetown Journal of International Law. The event will be moderated by Dr. Mark Jacobson, Senior Transatlantic Fellow at the German Marshall Fund and former Deputy NATO Representative in Afghanistan.

6.  Third Annual Conference on Turkey:  Regional and Domestic Challenges for an Ascendant Turkey, National Press Club, 9-5 June 27

529 14th St., NW
Washington
District of Columbia
20 045
"istanbul galata" by DeviantArt user ~illegale

The Middle East Institute’s Center for Turkish Studies
in collaboration with the Institute of Turkish Studies present:

“Regional and Domestic Challenges for an Ascendant Turkey”

June 27th, 2012
9:00am-5:00pm
National Press Club
529 14th Street, NW 13th Floor
Washington, DC 20045

Conference Schedule:

8:45am – 9:00am: Registration

9:00am – 9:15am: Welcome
Ambassador Wendy J. Chamberlin, Middle East Institute
Gönül Tol, MEI’s Center for Turkish Studies
Ross Wilson, Institute of Turkish Studies

9:15am – 10:00am: Opening Keynote
Senator John McCain
United States Senate

10:00am – 10:30am: Keynote
Ömer Çelik
Deputy Chairman of the Justice and Development Party

10:30am – 10:45am: Coffee Break

10:45am – 12:15pm
Panel 1: Turkey’s Domestic Calculus: The Kurds, the Constitution, and the Presidential System Debate

Yalçın Akdoğan, Member of Parliament, Justice and Development Party
Ruşen Çakır, Turkish Daily Vatan
Michael Gunter, Tennessee Technological University
Levent Köker, Atilim University
Moderator: Michael Werz, Center for American Progress

12:15pm – 1:00pm: Lunch*

1:00pm – 1:45pm: Keynote
Ibrahim Kalın

Chief Adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

1:45pm – 3:15pm
Panel 2: Turkey, the EU, and the U.S.: Evolving Partnerships Post-Arab Spring

Brice de Schietere, Delegation of the European Union to the U.S.
Ambassador W. Robert Pearson, IREX
Ambassador Ross Wilson, Atlantic Council
Yaşar Yakış, Center for Strategic Communication, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs
Moderator: Sharon Wiener, Koç University

3:15pm – 3:30pm: Coffee Break

3:30pm – 5:00pm
Panel 3: Turkey’s Leadership Role in an Uncertain Middle East

Amr Darrag, Freedom and Justice Party, Egypt
Joost Hiltermann, International Crisis Group
Yigal Schleifer, Freelance Journalist
Robin Wright, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
Moderator: Abderrahim Foukara, al-Jazeera

*Complimentary lunch will be available on a first come first served basis

 

Register
7.  The South China Sea and Asia Pacific in Transition: Exploring Options for Managing Disputes, CSIS, 9:30 am June 27 and 28

Follow @CSIS for live updates

The CSIS Southeast Asia Program will host its second annual conference on Maritime Security in the South China Sea June 27-28, 2012.

The conference is a timely policy level discussion of the complex and important issues around the South China Sea. The program will take place a week before Secretary of State Clinton departs for the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF) and Post-Ministerial Conference (PMC) in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

Assistant Secretary of State for Asia and the Pacific Kurt Campbell will deliver the keynote speech on Wednesday, June 27 and Senator Jim Webb (D-VA), chairman of the Senate’s Asia Pacific subcommittee, will present a keynote address on Thursday, June 28.

In addition, CSIS is pleased to have recruited a world-class group of experts from Asia and the United States to initiate the dialogue around five key themes:

  • Recent developments in the South China Sea
  • South China Sea in ASEAN-U.S.-China relations
  • Assessment of the South China Sea in a changing regional landscape
  • Role of international law in resolving and managing territorial disputes
  • Policy recommendations to boost security and cooperation in the South China Sea

Continuing disputes suggest there is a great need and interest to explore security in the South China Sea. We have invited approximately 20 experts to make presentations and will invite senior officials, executives, academics, and members of the media to participate in the dialogue. The full conference agenda is available here.

Please click here to RSVP by Monday, June 25, 2012. When you RSVP you MUST include the panels you wish to attend.You must log on to register. If you do not have an account with CSIS you will need to create one. If you have any difficulties, please contact imisadmin@csis.org.

8. Libya, One Year LaterCATO, noon June 27

Noon (Luncheon to Follow)

Featuring Diederik Vandewalle, Adjunct Associate Professor of Business Administration and Associate Professor of Government, Dartmouth College; Jonathan Hutson, Director of Communications, Enough Project to End Genocide and Crimes against Humanity; Benjamin H. Friedman, Research Fellow in Defense and Homeland Security Studies, Cato Institute; moderated by Malou Innocent, Foreign Policy Analyst, Cato Institute.

The Cato Institute
1000 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20001

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If you can’t make it to the Cato Institute, watch this event live online at www.cato.org/live and join the conversation on Twitter with the hashtag #CatoEvents. Also follow @CatoEvents on Twitter to get future event updates, live streams, and videos from the Cato Institute.

Some political commentators have called the Obama administration’s intervention last year in the Libyan civil war an “undeniable success” and one of “the greatest triumphs and signature moments in Barack Obama’s presidency.” One year later, however, Libya remains in crisis. Reports suggest that operatives linked to al Qaeda are active in Libya. Militias are detaining thousands of former regime loyalists and engaging in widespread torture. Instability remains rampant and has spilled into neighboring states. Moreover, President Obama’s unilateral decision to intervene contravened congressional war powers.

What do these troubling developments mean for the future of the UN’s “responsibility to protect”? Did the death of Muammar Qaddafi vindicate the intervention? Will Qaddafi’s example make other so-called rogue states less willing to relinquish their nuclear programs? Were political commentators premature in declaring NATO’s intervention a success? Please join us as leading scholars examine this under-appreciated and almost forgotten topic.

Cato events, unless otherwise noted, are free of charge. To register for this event, please fill out the form below and click submit or email events@cato.org, fax (202) 371-0841, or call (202) 789-5229 by noon, Tuesday, June 26, 2012. Please arrive early. Seating is limited and not guaranteed. News media inquiries only (no registrations), please call (202) 789-5200.

9. Sanctions on Iran: Implications for Energy Security, Brookings, 9-12:30 June 29

Falk Auditorium

Washington, DC

Register to Attend

Next month, international economic pressure on the Islamic Republic of Iran will intensify dramatically. Although Iran has been the target of various U.S. and multilateral sanctions throughout most of the past three decades, the latest measures are the most severe in history. These actions have been credited with reviving Iran’s interest in negotiations with the world, but they have yet to persuade Tehran to abandon its nuclear ambitions, and are creating new challenges for the international coalition that has sought to constrain Iran. They also pose new uncertainties for energy markets and the international economy at a precarious period in the global recovery and the U.S. presidential campaign.

On June 29, Foreign Policy at Brookings will host a discussion assessing the wide-ranging implications of the Iran sanctions regime and consider the prospects for a diplomatic resolution to the Iranian nuclear issue.

After each panel, participants will take audience questions.

Details

June 29, 2012

9:00 AM – 12:30 PM EDT

Falk Auditorium

The Brookings Institution

1775 Massachusetts Ave., N.W.

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications
events@brookings.edu
202.797.6105

Event Agenda

  • 9:00Welcoming Remarks
  • 9:15Panel One: Strategic and Energy Implications of Iran Sanctions
  • 10:45Break
  • 11:00Panel Two: International Approaches to Iran Sanctions
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Playing chess with Mike Tyson

I might wish that were the name of William Dobson‘s book about how dictators are adjusting to contemporary pro-democracy rebellions, as the original text of this post said, but really it’s Dictatorship 2.0.  I haven’t read it but intend to do so, as there was a lively discussion of it yesterday at the Carnegie Endowment with Karim Sadjadpour chairing, Dobson presenting, Otpor‘s Srdja Popovic and Marc Lynch commenting.

It is hard to be an old style dictator today, Dobson avers.  Really only North Korea is left, as Burma has begun to adjust.  The plug can’t be pulled on communications, which means dictators need to get savvy and use more subtle forms of repression:  targeted tax inspections, contested but unfree and unfair elections (preferably with the opposition fragmented), control over television and the courts, big handouts to the populace.  Dictatorships today do not aim for ideological monopolies but rather to prevent and disrupt mobilization.

Oppositions have to adjust as well.  Srdja outlined the basics:  they need unity, planning and nonviolent discipline.  They must be indigenous.  Internationals can help, mainly through education and help with communications.  Protesters need to avoid confronting dictatorial regimes where they are strong and attack them where they are weak.  You don’t challenge Mike Tyson to box; better to play chess with him.  This means avoiding military action in Syria, for example, and focusing on the regime’s economic weakness.  The contest is between opposition enthusiasm and the fear the regime seeks to impose.  Humor and “dispersive” tactics that do not require mass assembly in the streets (work and traffic slowdowns, boycotts, graffiti, cartoons) are increasingly important in reducing fear.

Marc emphasized the sequence of events in the Arab awakening:  Ben Ali’s flight from Tunisia made people elsewhere realize what was possible, Mubarak’s overthrow in Egypt made it seem inevitable, Libya and Yemen were far more difficult, a reversal that has continued in Syria, where the regime has substantial support from Alawites and Christians afraid of what will happen to them if the revolution succeeds.   The tipping point comes when perception of a regime changes from its being merely bad to being immoral.

So who is next?  Saudi Arabia and Jordan are in peril, Marc suggested.  Bahrain is living on borrowed time.  Srdja suggested Iran, which is moving backwards towards an old style dictatorship after the defeat of its Green Movement, can only be challenged successfully if the protesters learn from their mistakes.  They need better leadership and a focus on the state’s inability to deliver services.  China, Dobson said, has been good at pre-empting large protests.  Burma may not be adjusting quickly enough to avoid an upheaval.

I didn’t hear mention of Russia, Cuba, Algeria, and lots of other places that might be candidates, but no one was trying to be comprehensive.  Wherever they may be, dictatorships will adjust to what they see happening elsewhere and try to protect their monopoly on power from those who challenge it.  Their opponents will also need to adjust.  It is thus in both war and peace.

 

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This week’s peace picks

Not a slow week, but one with a bit longer term focus than some:

1. Persian subversion: Can America withstand an Iranian oil shock? AEI 10-11:30 June 12.

In Conjunction with Securing America’s Future Energy (SAFE)
AEI, Twelfth Floor
1150 Seventeenth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036
(Two blocks from Farragut North Metro)

In recent months, Iranian saber rattling has shaken energy markets. Although sanctions targeting Iran may raise the price at the pump, inaction is also costly: allowing Tehran to pass its nuclear threshold will endanger security in the Persian Gulf and may lead to even greater oil price hikes.

Against the backdrop of the Iranian nuclear crisis, American policymakers are increasingly considering ramping up domestic oil production and alternative energy. How much can shale oil, new pipelines and offshore oil production shield the U.S. economy from instability in the Persian Gulf and Iran’s leverage over world oil prices? How do the recent bankruptcies of U.S. solar energy firms affect American alternate energy strategy? Join a panel of foreign policy, national security, energy and transportation experts for an open discussion.

If you cannot attend, we welcome you to watch the event live on this page. 

Agenda

9:45 AM
Registration

10:00 AM
Panelists:
Elliott Abrams, Council on Foreign Relations
Gen. (ret.) James T. Conway, 34th Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps
Sam Gilliland, Sabre Holdings
Daniel Yergin, IHS Cambridge Energy Research Associates

Moderator:
Michael Rubin, AEI

11:30 AM
Adjournment

2. Japan-Korea-China Economic Relations, 9-10:30 June 12

Japan-Korea-China Economic Relations
Location:
KEI Conference Room

1800 K ST NW Suite 1010

Washington 20006

Speakers:
Joshua Meltzer, Fellow Global Economy and Development, The Brookings Institution
Mireya Solis, Associate Professor American University
Derek Scissors, Senior Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation
Description:

As Korea strives to be a global leader, the country has concluded several bilateral and multilateral Free Trade Agreements since 2003 and is currently negotiating additional agreements while laying the groundwork for a Korea-Japan-China FTA and considering the resumption of negotiations with Japan. Japan’s trade strategy also continues to evolve as it develops a new growth strategy after the natural disasters of 2011. Both Korea and Japan are carefully watching the developments around TPP. In the meantime, China has become the largest trading partner of Korea and Japan and the three countries recently signed a trilateral investment agreement as a potential first step toward a trilateral trade accord.

The seminar will assess the current status of the Korean and Japanese trade policies in light of the implementation of the KORUS FTA and the continued discussion of the TPP, Korea-China FTA and Korea-Japan-China FTA.

Light refreshments will be served.
Seating is limited, RSVPs are required.
To RSVP, please email events@keia.org

3.   2012 GPI Launch: How Can Global Peace Metrics Inform Foreign Policy? CSIS, 9-10:30 June 12

Please join us for the results of the sixth annual Global Peace Index and inaugural Positive Peace Index:Tuesday, June 12, 2012
9:00 AM – 10:30 AM
B1 Conference Center, CSIS
1800 K St. NW, Washington, DC 20006

A Panel Discussion With

Amb. William Garvelink, Senior Adviser, U.S. Leadership in Development, Center for Strategic and International Studies (Moderator)

Anne-Marie Slaughter
, Bert G. Kerstetter ’66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University (Opening Remarks)

Lawrence Wilkerson, Distinguished Adjunct Professor of Government and Public Policy, William and Mary College

Josh Rogin, Staff Writer, Foreign Policy

Emily Cadei, Foreign Policy Reporter, Congressional Quarterly

Michael Shank
, U.S. Vice President, Institute for Economics and Peace (GPI Results Presentation)

In a world often described by crisis and conflict, which countries are the most peaceful? How do we measure peace and its economic value? How can peace metrics inform U.S. foreign policy?

The Global Peace Index (GPI) is the first-ever analysis to methodically rank countries on their peacefulness and identify potential determinants of peace. Comprised of a range of indicators measuring the absence of violence in society, the GPI takes into consideration both internal and external factors, and measures 99% of the world’s population.

For the first time, this year’s report includes a Positive Peace Index (PPI), highlighting the key institutional factors associated with creating peaceful and resilient societies. The PPI ranks countries by their institutional capacity to move away from violence and towards peace.

The GPI is produced by the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP), guided by an international panel of independent experts and supported by the Economist Intelligence Unit, which collates the data and calculates the rankings in conjunction with the IEP.

Please RSVP to achang@csis.org

4.  Culturally-Based Approaches to Peacebuilding in Pakistan, SAIS (Kenney) 9:30-11:30 June 12

Hosted By: Conflict Management Program
Location: Kenney Auditorium, The Nitze Building (main building)
Summary: Ali Gohar, founder and rebar (leader) of Just Peace Initiatives; Samar Minallah, documentary filmmaker and human rights activist for Ethnomedia; and Leena El-Ali (moderator), director of Muslim-Western Relations and Middle East and North Africa Programs for Search for Common Ground, will discuss this topic. For more information and to RSVP, visit http://salsa.wiredforchange.com/o/6060/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=36079.
5.  Libya on the Eve of Elections: Examining the Challenges of Political and Economic Development, Carnegie Endowment, 10-11:30 June 12

With Libya’s first nationwide democratic election quickly approaching, serious progress on political and institutional development is essential as the country proceeds with its transition. While re-establishing security remains vital in the short term, many long-term development challenges also require immediate attention, including building effective, accountable institutions at the national and local levels; developing an independent and diverse civil society; establishing and protecting a free, professional press; and reforming the military, police, and other security forces. Meanwhile, Libyans must engage in a national dialogue on how to ensure adequate representation in government for women, youth, and and various tribal and ethnic groups. By smartly leveraging domestic resources and international assistance, the Libyan people could be well-positioned to build a prosperous and free country.

What will the assembly elections – originally slated for June 19th but now expected to be delayed until July – look like?  What are the major political forces emerging in the country and how are they preparing for the elections?  How will the election of a national assembly affect the role of the National Transitional Council (NTC)? What are the top priorities for the Libyan government, particularly regarding institutional reform? How can Libyans develop a robust civil society and ensure freedom of opinion, press, and assembly?  Which best practices from other state-building efforts would be most appropriate for the Libyan case?  In particular, how might various models of federalism and decentralization be useful? And what is the most constructive role for international actors to play in supporting capacity-building, among other needs?

Please join us for a discussion of these issues with:
Manal Omar
Director of Iraq, Iran, and North Africa Programs, Center for Post-Conflict Peace and Stability Operations, U.S. Institute of Peace
Stephen McInerney
Executive Director, POMED
Fadel Lamen
President, American-Libyan Council
Moderator: Sarah Margon
Associate Director, Sustainable Security and Peacebuilding Initiative, Center for American Progress

Click here to RSVP for the event.

We’ll also be live-tweeting from the event, so follow the conversation at #POMEDLib. If you’d like us to ask one of your questions, we’ll try to include a few from our virtual audience.

Please contact Anna Newby at anna.newby@pomed.org with any questions, or call (202) 828-9660, ext 23.

6.  The State of Health in Afghanistan: Implications for Economic Stability, Security and Women, USIP, 3:30-4:30 June 12

Despite the number of negative trends in Afghanistan, tremendous achievements have been gained in the health sector. Most notable is the programming on maternal health, which has contributed to a significant decline in infant and child mortality rates.  The percentage of female healthcare worker has risen dramatically in USAID-funded healthcare facilities.

How has the health sector improved the overall health of a country? What can we learn from the Ministry of Health that might be applied to other sectors? How has the sector supported economic stability and security? What are the country’s health goals as Afghanistan prepares for its security and political transitions in 2014?

Please join USIP’s Center for Gender and Peacebuilding, in collaboration with the Afghan Embassy, the Department of State and USAID, for a panel discussion on the health sector’s contribution to economic stability and security in Afghanistan leading to 2014. The minister of Public Health of Afghanistan, Honorable Dr. Soraya Dalil, will discuss the “state of health” in Afghanistan. She will be joined by U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues Melanne Verveer and Michele Schimpp, deputy director for USAID’s Afghanistan and Pakistan Task Force.

Panelists

  • The Honorable Dr. Soraya Dalil
    Minister of Public Health
  • Ambassador Melanne Verveer
    Ambassador at Large for Global Women’s Issues, U.S. Department of State
  • Michele Schimpp
    Deputy Director for Afghanistan and Pakistan Task Force,  USAID
  • William Byrd, Discussant
    Senior Expert in Residence, U.S. Institute of Peace
  • Kathleen Kuehnast, Moderator
    Director, Center for Gender and Peacebuilding, U.S. Institute of Peace

7.   The Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR)Complementarity or Cooperation between State, USAID and the NGO Community, USIP, 9-4:30 June 15

After Secretary of State Hillary Clinton introduced the QDDR as a major step in elevating development alongside diplomacy as a key pillar of American foreign policy, many non-governmental organizations (NGOs) welcomed the QDDR as the beginning of a better coordinated and more effective approach to global development. USIP and Webster University will host a day of discussion about how the QDDR complements NGO efforts in development, humanitarian relief and conflict management as well as the current challenges and opportunities that result from the QDDR.

This discussion will be built around presentations from senior United States government officials from the Department of State and U.S. Agency for International Development and from leaders in the NGO community. These will be followed by panel discussions that combine the perspectives of policymakers and NGOs on the topics of economic development, public health, education, human security, and human rights.

USIP was among the organizations that contributed ideas to the development of the QDDR, particularly in the areas of stabilization and conflict prevention. Discussion of the QDDR and its goals will enhance the effectiveness of both NGOs and the U.S. Government in global development and conflict prevention efforts, particularly in building local capacity and promoting innovation.

Conference Themes:
  • What in the QDDR is relevant to the work of NGOs and private voluntary organizations (PVOs)?
  • How will the objectives of the QDDR affect NGOs and PVOs?
  • Where is there complementarity in the following areas?
    • Conflict Prevention
    • Capacity building
    • Development of effective civil society
    • Humanitarian aid
    • Contributions of new technology

Download Conference Agenda

Speakers

  • Nancy Lindborg 
    Assistant Administrator, USAID
  • Melanie Greenberg 
    President and CEO, Alliance for Peacebuilding
  • Lindsay Coates 
    Executive Vice President, Interaction
  • Ambassador Robert Loftis 
    Former Acting Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization, the Department of State
  • David Wilson 
    Dean of Humanities, Webster University
  • Jeff Helsing 
    Dean of Curriculum, U.S. Institute of Peace
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