Phil sent
this to me, thought you might find it interesting. Just a
reminder we are meeting Tuesday 9 PM room 308 and before the meeting
there is a Darfur benefit at LeftBank 2424 18
th Street NW from 6:30-8:30
Negotiating With Genocide
MOST ARGUMENTS
about the Darfur genocide boil down to a question of urgency. The Post
and other critics have called for immediate pressure on the sponsors of
genocide in Sudan's government and a quicker deployment of outside
troops to defend civilians. Meanwhile the Bush administration has
worked toward these goals, but slowly.
Rather than changing
Sudan's behavior by, say, imposing a no-fly zone, the administration
has sought a durable political solution to the tension between Sudan's
government and its regions. Instead of pressing for a quick NATO
deployment, the administration has ceded the job of protecting
civilians to the slow-moving African Union. To be charitable, the
administration's argument is not only that the direct application of
U.S. or Western power would be costly and risky. It's that, in the long
term, there won't be peace in Darfur without a political solution and
that Africa will remain miserable unless it builds up the African Union
to address its problems. Recent news has revealed some strength and
much weakness in this approach.
The positive news is that the
search for a political solution is inching ahead. Last year the
administration pressed successfully for a north-south peace deal, under
which southerners would be invited into Sudan's central government and
given a share of the nation's oil wealth. To secure this deal, the Bush
team had to forgo aggressive options such as a no-fly zone; when
criticized for this choice of priorities, the administration argued
that the north-south settlement would help Darfur because the
power-sharing model could be extended to the territory, ending the root
cause of its violence. Slowly, the administration is pursuing this
vision. Despite the destabilizing death of John Garang, the southern
leader, southerners have taken up positions in the central government.
The next step is to include them in the government team that is
negotiating with Darfur's rebels. If that can be achieved, it would
boost peace prospects in Darfur.
The problem is that, in the
meantime, horrific suffering continues. The slow response to the
genocide last year cost the lives of probably tens of thousands of
civilians. This year the case for urgency has sometimes dimmed:
Government-backed death squads have been less active, and a huge
humanitarian effort has forestalled large-scale starvation. But a
recent series of attacks has shown how quickly violence can flare up
again. In the last days of September, a Janjaweed death squad crossed
into neighboring Chad
and killed 36 civilians, and another
squad supported by government helicopters attacked a camp for displaced
civilians in Darfur, killing 34. These and other attacks drove
thousands from their homes and brought relief efforts to a standstill.
The United Nations' disaster chief, Jan Egeland, warned that, unless
security improved, the Western humanitarian effort "could all end
tomorrow." Yesterday, the first killings of African Union peacekeepers
in Darfur underscored his point.
The problem the Bush
administration now confronts is the same one it's faced since the
beginning of the genocide. It has chosen to work with Sudan's
government in seeking a durable political solution, but there's no
telling how long that quest will take or whether it will succeed at
all. The administration's main interlocutor in the government, Vice
President Ali Uthman Muhammad Taha, sometimes appears able to lead
Sudan in a moderate direction, as he did in agreeing to the north-south
peace deal. But sometimes Mr. Taha appears to have been sidelined, as
when his government harasses western relief workers in Darfur and
resumes massacres of civilians. On other occasions Mr. Taha seems
deluded. A Sudanese paper recently reported him as saying that Darfur's
trouble "was closely linked to the American election fever."
With interlocutors such as these, the administration should not base
its entire Darfur strategy on the potentially endless search for a
political solution. Nor should it pretend that a small African Union
force can keep the peace in a region the size of France. The
administration's long-term desire for a negotiated peace and for
African self-reliance in peacekeeping is laudable. But it needs a more
muscular short-term strategy. What about punishing the government for
its recent massacres by destroying the participating helicopters? What
about supplementing African Union troops with NATO ones? To be sure,
NATO resources are stretched thin by Iraq and Afghanistan, and Western
leaders are tempted to regard Sudan as marginal to their interests. But
NATO was born -- indeed, the idea of "the West" was born -- out of the
ashes of Hitler's genocide. If it refuses to fight the modern echoes of
that barbarism, what does the West stand for?
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Sara Weisman
"Never again" – please join me in helping stop the genocide in Darfur
Visit http://www.ushmm.org/conscience/ to learn more.
2020 F Street NW
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