Tag: United Nations
Adagio
There is slow movement, adagio not andante, on two fronts, Syria and the Iran nuclear issue:
- Syrian opposition leader Moaz al Khatib’s proposal for conditional talks with the regime has elicited some interest on the part of Syria, Iran and Russia.
- The P5+1 (that’s the US, UK, France, Russia and China + Germany) have agreed to meet with Iran to discuss nuclear issues February 25 in Kazakhstan. The US and Iran are indicating willingness to meet bilaterally as well.
There is no breakthrough here. These are small steps forward at the glacial pace that often characterizes diplomatic moves. But given how frozen things seemed on both fronts even a few days ago, this is progress.
On Syria, Khatib’s proposal was a personal one, made initially on his Facebook page without approval of his Coalition. It reflects in part the view of the National Coordination Committee, which is an inside Syria opposition group that has long wanted to start a dialogue with the regime. The expatriate opposition was not pleased with the proposition. My guess is that the Americans are okay with it, even though they continue to insist that Bashar al Asad step aside.
Dialogue could lead to a split in the regime between hawks who want to continue the crackdown and doves who see promise in talking with the opposition. Of course it could also lead to a similar split in the opposition, with hardline Islamists opting to continue the fighting and relative moderates interested in talking. The key issue is whether Bashar is prepared to leave power. If not, dialogue with the regime is likely to become a snare and a delusion, wrecking the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces that Khatib leads.
On Iran’s nuclear program, the outline of a deal is increasingly clear:
- limits on uranium enrichment (e.g., an end to Iranian enrichment above 20%, shipment out of the country of stockpile uranium enriched beyond 5%, and likely also something restricting plutonium production, which has not been much of a public issue so far);
- a serious, verifiable and irreversible commitment not to develop nuclear weapons (including “coming clean” on past nuclear weapons-related activities);
- an end to American and multilateral economic and financial sanctions.
It is the sequencing of the many steps that need to be taken to get to this result that has caused so much difficulty. The Americans and Europeans want the nuclear commitments implemented up front. The Iranians want sanctions relief first. Lack of trust makes compromise difficult, but it would not seem completely out of reach, provided Iran is prepared to make a serious and verifiable commitment not to develop nuclear weapons.
What we’ve got here are two instances of coercive diplomacy, where outside powers are bringing pressure to bear in order to end one regime and to curtail fundamentally the options available to another one. The odds of success are not high, since the regimes involved have a good deal at stake (and are allied with each other). Bashar al Asad would have to come to the conclusion that his life is worth more than his position. Tehran would have to come to the conclusion that regime survival is more likely if it accepts limits on its nuclear program than if it rejects them.
On the other side, the key ingredient is credibility.
The Americans and Europeans need to convince Bashar that they are fully committed to end his rule. To do so, they need to back more fully and visibly Khatib’s Coalition, making it a serious governing alternative to the Syrian regime. This is more important now than arms supplies, which seem to be reaching the rebellion in substantial if not overwhelming quantities.
Washington and Brussels also need to convince Tehran that they will tighten sanctions further if there is no nuclear deal. And Washington needs to make the threat of military force more credible than it appeared at former Senator Hagel’s confirmation hearing last week.
Even if talks with the Syrian regime and with the Iranians begin soon, at this pace we still have a long way to go before we can be certain of acceptable outcomes on either front. But slow movement is better than none.
Some good news
There is good news this morning: French forces in Mali have taken the northern town of Kidal, donors have pledged over $450 million for Mali and $1.2 billion for Syria. These are not small things, but they are not the end of the story either.
In Mali, there is now the question of Azawad, the largely desert area northwest of Kidal where Tuareg live. They have been seeking independence–it was their rebellion that touched off the Islamist insurgency that in turn precipitated the French intervention. The Islamists have not fought the French advance. Instead they have retreated northward. The question now is whether the Tuareg will help the French do them in, or at least expel them from Mali. France is already calling for the Mali government to talk with the Tuareg, hoping of course to keep them on side even if independence is out of the question.
A second important issue is deployment of African troops under UN command to Mali. The UN Security Council has already approved a mission, but organizing it, financing it and deploying it will be a big challenge. The French will presumably take the lead in trying to make this happen, as they would like out before anyone discovers that their troops might be an easy target. The Mali government and Tuareg insurgents are likely to want to keep the French in, each hoping that they will gain advantage in a negotiation over the north that is not likely to go smoothly.
In Syria, the gigantic pledges at yesterday’s donors’ conference in Kuwait are at least a sign that the world is appalled at what is happening, but humanitarian assistance is really not an adequate response to Bashar al Asad’s homicidal behavior. The head of the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, Moaz al Khatib, is offering to meet the Syrian regime in various Middle Eastern capitals. That is an offer unlikely to be taken up. UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi is thought to be close to giving up on the search for a political solution, as Kofi Annan did before him.
What is needed in Syria is the kind of decisive move that France took in Mali. The trouble is no one has come up with what that might be. Boots on the ground aren’t going to happen. A no-fly zone might be a big help to the rebels, but President Obama is showing no appetite for it, fearing the Russians would retaliate by denying him support for the Northern Distribution Network for Afghanistan and the P5+1 nuclear talks with Iran. The Israelis yesterday reportedly attacked a convoy in Syria most likely thought to consist of missiles headed for delivery to Hizbollah in Lebanon. That kind of pinprick from that source is not going to make a difference.
Unequivocal support for a new government in Syria, appointed by the National Coalition, is about the best proposition out there these days. It will guarantee nothing, but at least it would signal determination to make the inevitable happen: the fall of Bashar al Asad.
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:
- 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):
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.
Next steps in Syria
Many observers regard appointment of an interim government by the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces as a key next step in trying to supplant Bashar al Assad, who shows no signs of stepping aside. I would not ordinarily count appointment of a committee to consider the matter and report back in ten days as progress, but all things in diplomacy are relative. Maybe it is. The National Coalition reports after its most recent General Assembly meeting:
The General Assembly of [the] coalition agreed to form a committee to communicate with political and revolutionary forces inside Syria, and with international organizations and governments to assure support for the interim government. The chair of this committee is Mr. Ahmed Maaz Al-Khateeb, president of the National Coalition Syrian, and includes Mr. George Sabra, Mr. Mustafa Sabbagh, Professor Bourhan Galion, Dr. Ahmed Syed Yusuf and Mr. Ahmed Al-Jerba. The Committee was asked to complete its mission in 10 days and send a report to the General Assembly. A decision to form the interim government will be made then.
Obviously appointment of the interim government is not proving easy. It can’t be, since it will determine an initial distribution of power that may be hard to overturn. The luminaries named to the committee are key leaders of various opposition efforts, past and present. They are also notably all male.
But the idea of consulting before acting is not a bad one. One of the supposed advantages of the National Coalition over the previous umbrella opposition organization, the Syrian National Council, is its connections to the revolutionary forces inside Syria. If an interim government fails to acquire legitimacy there, including with the Free Syrian Army factions, it won’t be worth much.
Where progress is even less evident is in Washington. There are lots of ideas being put forward for more vigorous action on Syria. Here’s my informal tally sheet:
- Use the Patriot missile batteries in Turkey to enforce a no-fly zone inside Syria along the border.
- Send U.S. military and intelligence equipment and/or training to the opposition.
- Outreach to Alawites and other minorities, to compensate for Sunni domination of the Coalition.
- Intensified engagement with the Russians to convince them to abandon Assad.
- Increase assistance to local liberated communities, especially those willing to help find and neutralize chemical weapons.
- Deploy air and other military assets prepared to strike or seize chemical weapons depots.
But if President Obama is seriously considering any of these, he did not give a hint of it in his Inauguration speech. Nor did I detect any sign of it meeting last week with Syria-focused people in the U.S. government.
The Russians though have begun to evacuate some of their citizens. This is a preliminary signal. A more definitive one would be closing of the Embassy in Damascus. Tehran is also sounding alarmed, and Bashar’s mother is thought to have left Damascus.
The regime still shows no sign of crumbling, only cracking. The opposition reports today the defection of 450 soldiers, but high-level defections (especially of key Alawite officers) are few and far between. A stalemate seems to be emerging. A “mutually hurting stalemate” is precisely the precondition for a negotiated outcome. A good negotiated outcome would be one in which Bashar al Asad steps aside and the regime gives up power, not one in which it is given another lease on murdering Syrians. UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi is presumably hard at work trying to get to yes on that.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testifies today in both the Senate and the House on the Benghazi attack in September that killed the American ambassador to Libya and three of his colleagues. She has reason to be relieved that Syria is not the focus, since the Administration has so far failed in its indirect efforts to collapse the Asad regime. Maybe tomorrow’s Senate confirmation hearing for Senator John Kerry will provide an opportunity for questioning about that. Or is the American political class going to skip altogether opportunities to examine whether we could, and should, be doing more to stop a slaughter that has now taken more than 65,000 lives?
PS: The Benghazi incident evoked this rather trenchant response from the Secretary this morning:
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Not a foreign policy Inaugural, but…
President Obama said little about foreign affairs in his Inauguration speech, but what he said bears more attention than it is getting. After a tribute America’s armed forces (and mention that we are ending a decade of war), he went on to say:
But we are also heirs to those who won the peace and not just the war, who turned sworn enemies into the surest of friends, and we must carry those lessons into this time as well.
We will defend our people and uphold our values through strength of arms and rule of law. We will show the courage to try and resolve our differences with other nations peacefully — not because we are naïve about the dangers we face, but because engagement can more durably lift suspicion and fear. America will remain the anchor of strong alliances in every corner of the globe; and we will renew those institutions that extend our capacity to manage crisis abroad, for no one has a greater stake in a peaceful world than its most powerful nation. We will support democracy from Asia to Africa; from the Americas to the Middle East, because our interests and our conscience compel us to act on behalf of those who long for freedom. And we must be a source of hope to the poor, the sick, the marginalized, the victims of prejudice — not out of mere charity, but because peace in our time requires the constant advance of those principles that our common creed describes: tolerance and opportunity; human dignity and justice.
This is extraordinarily general, or maybe tantalizingly vague. I think I know what it means for Iran: continuation of negotiations, at least for a while. But what does it mean for the brave Syrians who are fighting what is proving to be a frighteningly violent regime? It certainly aligns America with support for the Arab awakenings in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and Libya, but what does it mean for Bahrain? Or Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf states? Or, even more importantly, for China, where “those who long for freedom” are increasingly speaking out?
What we know from Obama’s first term is that he balances ideals and reality in each case based on specific circumstances. He is lawyerly in approach, treating each contingency on its merits rather than laying out a more generally applicable “Obama” doctrine (other than support for democracy and concern for the disadvantaged). This is very different from his predecessor, who set out general principles and tried to apply them to specific cases without much regard for the particular circumstances, with disastrous results.
My guess is that circumstances will force the President to say and do a great deal more about Iran, Syria, China and other situations in short order. His reference to American alliances and “those institutions that extend our capacity to manage crisis abroad”–that’s presumably the UN, OSCE, OAS and the rest of the alphabet soup of international organizations, including non-governmental ones–is a clear indication that he will be looking for help from others when he decides to act internationally.
What he did not say–but none of us should forget–is that America’s financial situation and its internal politics will constrain what it can do internationally for at least the next four years. We are broke, as the Republicans like to say. But we’ll have to wait at least for the State of the Union message if not longer to see what the Inaugural message means for resources to support both our military and civilian efforts abroad.
The Iran nuclear cliff
It isn’t often that Washington reaches a consensus on Iran, but that seems to be what is happening. Patrick Clawson urges a generous offer to Iran, to test definitively whether a deal stopping it short of nuclear weapons can be reached. Suzanne Maloney sees 2013 as the make or break year:
Dennis Ross, Trita Parsi, and Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett had long ago come to the conclusion a big package was needed to woo Tehran from its nuclear ambitions, from widely varying premises.
2013 is the make or break year for the same reason we faced a “fiscal cliff” crisis at the end of the last Congress: Washington has set itself up for a big decision. Either we get a deal that prevents Iran from getting nuclear weapons, or the Administration (with ample Congressional support) has committed the United States to go to war. Suzanne is surely correct that the American people are not “there” yet, but I see that as a good thing: it gives the Administration maximum negotiating leeway. Maximum but not infinite: Congress (Democrats and Republicans) will have to lift sanctions if a deal is reached. It won’t happen unless the majority is satisfied that the deal blocks Iran from becoming a nuclear weapons state.
International Atomic Energy Agency officials are in Tehran today trying to gain access to an Iranian site thought to have been used in the past for nuclear weapons research. The Americans regard Iran coming clean on those activities as vital to any deal that lets Iran off the sanctions hook. It is unlikely we’ll have a quick answer to the many questions about Iran’s past activities, but the talks today are important to opening the door.
At the same time, the P5+1 (5 permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany) are haggling with Tehran over a date to continue the political-level nuclear talks, which are supposed to convene this month. The main issue seems to be whether sanctions relief will be on the agenda. The Americans in particular have wanted to reserve all but the smallest sanctions relief (parts for aircraft) for later on, after seeing real progress on nuclear questions. The Iranians want sanctions relief up front.
The emerging consensus in Washington in favor of a big package to test Iran’s intentions and reach a definitive conclusion could end years of uncertainty and haggling. But it also raises the very real possibility of going over the Iran nuclear cliff to war.