Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Latest Middle East Peace Talks

The latest attempt to resolve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict has been launched with remarkably little fanfare. 

Chief negotiators for the government of Israel and the Palestinian Authority met in Washington last Monday and Tuesday (July 29 and 30) and agreed to begin formal talks about the substantive issues within two weeks.  They set a nine month time limit and will alternate between Ramallah and Jerusalem as sites of the talks. 

The U.S. government, led by Secretary of State John Kerry, has been actively negotiating with the Israelis and Palestinians for the past several months to set the stage for renewed talks. 

Compared to the 2010 effort, the U.S. role in creating the conditions for talks to begin has been quite different this time around,.  And the biggest difference has been lack of public involvement by President Obama.  In 2010 the President was a prominent player in the process, appointing George Mitchell as his special envoy, calling on both sides to come to the table and getting into a very public spat with Prime Minister Netanyahu and the Israeli government over a potential freeze on settlement activities in the West Bank.  The talks did not ever get started.

This time there was no public announcement of a new push in the Middle East, no high level meetings in Washington with the Israeli and Palestinian leadership, and no visible attempt to get both sides to agree to try to agree on the preliminaries.  Instead there have been a series of events that have been seemingly unrelated to each other and unrelated to potential talks.  For example, the Arab League revised their official peace plan to include the possibility of adjustments to the 1967 borders of Israel ... which gives the Palestinian Authority a tacit blessing to agree to some territorial adjustments.  The Palestinian Authority shifted its rhetorical position and stopped mentioning a freeze on settlements as a precondition to negotiations.  Israel stopped mentioning the necessity of recognition of Israel as a Jewish state.

The first public indication that serious steps were being taken was the Israeli decision to release 104 Palestinians who had been convicted of a variety of terrorist offenses, many of whom had been incarcerated in Israel for 20 years or more.  That decision came amidst a flood of rumors about impending talks and was seen as a major good will gesture by the Israelis.  No one has agreed to any other concessions, but somehow people seem to have gotten the idea that Israel will ease up on settlement construction and the Palestinians will drop efforts to get enhanced United Nations recognition this Fall.  (For a quick refresher on what enhanced UN recognition might mean as well as a review of the political situation in the Middle East two years ago, check out an earlier blog entry Palestinians at the UN ... does it matter?

The first step in any negotiation is agreeing to talk about talks and the first success was getting the sides to agree to talk about the issues.  While this is a major step forward, no one needs Yogi Berra’s reminder that it ain’t over until it’s over.  Polls indicate that a majority of Israelis and a larger majority of Palestinians expect the talks to come to nothing.  Even Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister has said the talks will be useless.  Many pessimists are already deciding whether to say “I told you so” with a regretful or gloating tone. 

One might even ask, what’s the point?  Why go through all the hassle and expense of having negotiations if they are guaranteed to fail?  The next step after talks fail is always the blame game, with each participant assuring the world that they were the very essence of reason and sweet charity and it was the other side that was completely unreasonable and intransigent.  Why waste nine months in meaningless charades?

A contrarian point of view (and being optimistic about peace in the Middle East is about as contrarian as you can get) would argue that if you compare the internal political dynamics of both Israel and the Palestinians with the situation three years ago there are some notable differences that make successful talks more likely.

ISRAEL

Binyamin Netanyahu won reelection as Prime Minister last January but the coalition of parties included in his government lost a total of 11 seats in the Israeli parliament.  Netanyahu’s Likud party did not have the necessary Knesset majority so he put together a new coalition government, one that included a centrist and even a small liberal party and excluded the most hard line right wing parties that had played a large role in his old coalition.  The center of gravity in the Israeli government has shifted toward the center of the political spectrum and is far more supportive of the possibility that hard choices and real pain could lead to progress toward peace.  (The decision to release the Palestinian prisoners, many of whom have been convected of murdering Israeli citizens in terror attacks, is immensely unpopular in Israel and would have been unthinkable in the past.)

One example of the difference the change in the composition of the ruling coalition has made is that Tzipi Livni, Israel’s Justice Minister and a well known moderate politician is the chief negotiator in the talks.   A second example of the impact of the change in is the fact that it is the deputy foreign minister who is dismissing the talks; in 2010 it was the then Foreign Minister, leader of one of the most hard line right wing parties in the cabinet, who publicly scoffed at negotiations. 

A second significant difference between 2013 and 2010 is in the West Bank and Gaza.  Two things have made the occupation of much of the West Bank more difficult for Israel.  One is the growing international movement against Israeli settlers, including organized boycotts of Israeli products produced in the West Bank.  The other is the increased number of so-called “price tag” actions by Israeli settlers against Palestinian villagers.  These have ranged from desecration of mosques to destruction of olive orchards and open confrontations between Israeli soldiers and ideologically motivated settlers.  The situation in Gaza, which we’ll discuss below,  has changed dramatically in the past two years, in ways that make it easier for Israel to consider negotiations.

THE PALESTINIANS

There has been a sea change in the relationship between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas.  Two years ago, in the aftermath of Israel’s assault on the Gaza Strip, (for a reminder of what that was all about, see On The Recent Violence in the Middle East ) Hamas was riding high and the Palestinian Authority looked near collapse.  The emergence of a Muslim Brotherhood dominated government in Egypt seemed to boost Hamas stock even further.  But the civil war in Syria dramatically weakened the Assam regime’s ability to act as a Hamas ally, the coup* in Egypt that removed President Morsi and the Brotherhood from power, and growing discontent with Hamas’ failure to provide a minimal standard of living and jobs in the Gaza Strip, have all seriously undermined Hamas support.  (Even Hamas’ glorious image as the valiant leaders of armed resistance against Israel has been tarnished since it has cracked down on anyone who has been tempted to launch rockets over the border in Israel.  “Real” resistance fighters see Hamas as having struck an implicit bargain with Israel to give up armed attacks for economic benefits.)  Significant economic growth in the West Bank and a more efficient and less corrupt administration, have made the Palestinian Authority more popular and stronger in the West Bank and make it look better in contrast to Hamas’ performance in the Gaza Strip.

 All of this gives the Palestinian Authority more political wiggle room and a better chance of selling an agreement to the citizens of the West Bank and the larger Arab world.


*I am well aware that no one in the U.S. government uses this word because it would mean the administration would be legally obliged to cut off all funding for Egypt, which would leave no leverage over the Egyptian miliary.  Sometimes something can look like a duck, walk like a duck, and quack like a duck, but not necessarily be a duck.

And the ROLE OF THE UNITED STATES is different.  President Obama was the highly visible driving force and face of the 2010 initiative.  He tried to push the Israelis into meeting the Palestinian demand for a moratorium on West Bank settlement activity and got a very public slap in the face when Israel announced a major increase in settlement activity while Vice President Biden was visiting Tel Aviv.  Obama and Netanyahu have had a frosty personal relationship from the beginning and Netanyahu’s open preference for Mitt Romney in the 2012 election has been a further complication. 

This time Obama is very much in the background.  Secretary of State John Kerry is getting the credit for the serious politicking that had gotten the talks started and former Ambassador Indyk will probably be the American official most closely involved with the talks as they develop.  There has been far less media coverage and White House positioning which reduces the temptation of either side to play to public opinion here or in the Middle East.  All other things being equal, it is easier to explore possibilities and  make concessions outside the glare of the limelight.

The logic of the situation and the current political dynamics justify a modest optimism.  But the shadow of past failure and the cautionary tale of the frog and the scorpion should give even the most robust optimist pause.

THE FROG AND THE SCORPION

A scorpion was crawling across the Sinai desert under a brutal noonday sun when he came to the Suez Canal.  He spotted a frog sunning itself on the bank.  Since he wanted to cross the canal, and couldn’t swim, he asked the frog to give him a ride on his back.  The frog initially refused, on the quite prudent grounds that the scorpion would sting him.  The scorpion argued persuasively that it would be unreasonable for him to sting the frog in the middle of the canal because they would both die.  So he got on the frog’s back and they started across.  In the middle of the canal the scorpion felt the urge to sting and it grew and grew until he could no longer resist and he sank his deadly venom deep into the frog who began to sink beneath the water.  “Why, why did you do it?” cried the frog with his dying breath.  And with his last gasps, the drowning scorpion replied, “This is the Middle East.”

Thursday, May 9, 2013

A Critical Choice on Syria

The moment when President Obama has to make an unpalatable decision on escalating involvement in Syria  is inching closer.  The pressure to intervene more actively mounts daily.

Last year the President defined the use of chemical weapons by the regime as a red line, whose crossing would provoke a strong American response.  There is mounting evidence that sarin gas has been used at least once on a small scale in Syria.  The President insists that the evidence is not conclusive; his critics, both here and abroad, accuse him of dithering. 

There have been rumors and accusations of the use of chemical weapons in Syria at several points in the past year.  Both the opposition and the Assad regime have accused the other of using poison gas. The allegations have increased in the past few weeks and focused on events in a village last March.

Almost all the primary sources of information on what is happening in Syria are second hand and filtered through sources with inherent unreliability.  For example, the primary “go to” source of information on events inside Syria for media in the U.S. and Europe is the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a small London based group of anti-Assad activists that claims to have some 200 informants inside the country and tracks civilian casualties (more precisely, people killed and wounded by government forces; government soldiers or supporters killed by opposition forces are not always included.)  It is highly unlikely that the CIA, British MI6, or Israeli Mossad have a network of spies on the ground; it is highly likely that they are getting at least some of their raw data from SOHR or other anti-Assad exiles.  The other major source of information is interviews with refugees who have fled Syria for camps in Turkey or Jordan.  (It was those interviews that led to the assertion by a UN human rights investigator that there was evidence opposition forces had used gas.)  The UN mission authorized some months ago is prepared to go to Syria, if and when the government guarantees free and unfettered access.  All the reports and claims of gas use agree that the incidents, if they happened, were sporadic and small scale.  That makes it even more difficult to verify or refute the claims.

I think it is fair to say that the weight you give to the uncertainties in determining what happened is inversely related to how eager you are to have the U.S. get more heavily involved. 

Some observers, including members of the U.S. senate like John McCain, have long advocated more robust support for the Syrian opposition.  The charges that the regime used sarin gas in March are further evidence of the brutality and inhumanity of a desperate dictator whose forces have already killed tens of thousands of innocent civilians. There is a strong belief that the United States could and should provide direct military support to hasten the end of the Assad era and influence the regime that will emerge after victory.  Failure to act undermines our ability to influence events in the Middle East.  After the President’s statement that use of gas would be a red line the regime could not cross without grave consequences, failure to act now undermines the credibility of any U.S. pledge.  

For those who are hesitant to see the United States move beyond the current policy of supplying non-lethal supplies and advice to the opposition, there is skepticism that military assistance can be narrowly targeted to the “good guys” among the opposition and/or doubts that we really can influence the outcome, either in terms of hastening the end of Assad or making sure his replacement is friendly to Western interests. Iraq and Afghanistan are stark warnings to look long and hard before you leap.  Another line of argument against increased involvement focuses on the broader international context and warns about adding unnecessary complications to our already difficult relations with Russia and China or seeming to validate the Iranian fears that we’re out to get them.

The problem for President Obama and others who are reluctant to expand U.S. involvement is that there is a simple and compelling story about chemical weapons in Syria.  The President said using chemical weapons would provoke a strong response from the U.S.  The British, French and Israeli intelligence services all say the regime used gas and no one in the U.S. intelligence community says we are sure they didn’t.  The counter story stressing the carefully hedged qualifiers and definite maybes is lame and makes the President look both weak and indifferent to the massive suffering of millions of Syrians over the past two years.

What is the menu of choices facing the United States?

The focus here is not fine tuned tactics but overall strategy.  A minimalist strategy would seek to redress the military balance between factions in the anti-regime coalition.  A maximalist strategy would try to position the United States to control, or at least strongly influence, the post-Assad regime.  We have been supplying non-lethal equipment to some elements of the Free Syrian Army (a loose coalition of disparate armed groups who, sometimes with difficulty, cooperate in the fight against the regime.)  Supplying more non-lethal materiel is not really an option; we’ve gone about as far as we can go down that path.  All the options available for increasing U.S. involvement include some level of actual weapons.  No one is suggesting that uniformed American soldiers be deployed anywhere near Syria. 

Broad options include:

Even the balance between factions.

  For most of the past two years a growing volume of weapons has been shipped into Syria from Qatar and Saudi Arabia.  There are a number of very wealthy people in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf who finance a wide range of Sunni Islamists throughout the world, from conservative Whahabbi imams for mosques throughout the Middle East, North Africa and Western Europe to armed fighters.  The arms suppliers and smuggling routes that supported the Sunni insurgency in Iraq ran from the Gulf through Syria; shifting the delivery point from Iraq’s Anbar province to groups within Syria was simple.  The Syrian groups fighting Assad who are not inspired by political Islam, home grown or linked to expatiates in Britain, France or the United States have receiver far less support.  The United States and European countries have supplied non-lethal aid, such things as medical supplies or communications equipment and some covert advice on strategy and tactics. 

So the first, minimal, option would be to try to supply enough weaponry to insure that the elements who would resist the imposition of a narrow and repressive regime have the firepower to counter those who would.

Change the balance between the regime and its opponents. 

The Syrian military, despite significant loss of bases, defections of officers and men, and using up large amounts of weapons and ammunition, remains a formidable fighting force.  The regime is able to muster large numbers of tanks, artillery, short and medium range missiles, and other heavy weapons.  It is unchallenged in the skies, freely operating helicopter gunships and jet fighter bombers.  Rebel advances have been fiercely contested and rebel gains have come at a heavy cost in human life, both military and civilian.  While the balance has shifted from clear regime superiority to something closer to a stalemate, Assad and his supporters seem able to hold on to Damascus for a very long time, especially since they have been resupplied by Russia several times in the past two years.

Ensure the rapid victory of the opposition.

 One idea that is being floated in Washington is to neutralize the Syrian air force by declaring a no-fly zone over rebel held areas.   While Israel has demonstrated that you can fly over Lebanon and launch cruise missiles and smart bombs at targets in Syria, enforcing a no-fly zone means flying regular patrols over Syrian territory and that would necessarily mean a major bombing campaign to take out the Syrian air defense system.  An additional step might well be the use of CIA agents and military Special Operations personnel to provide training and close support to the opposition forces on the ground. 

And the maximal strategy would be to insure enough American support, including weapons, a no-fly zone, advisers and other assistance to guarantee the United States a major role in the creation of the post-Assad regime in Syria.

Each of these broad options comes with major questions and risks.

For the minimal strategy of supporting “good” elements with enough weapons to counter the “bad”ones:

How “good” do the good guys have to be?  Is being independent of influences from Islamist sources in Saudi Arabia or the Gulf enough?  Do we have to look for (probably nonexistent) nascent democrats, or altruistic leaders who seek neither power nor wealth for themselves?  How much corruption and brutality is tolerable?  Do you draw the line all the way down at “He may be a nasty rat bastard but he’s our nasty rat bastard?” Or do you insist on a moderately high standard at the risk of not finding enough people eligible to receive weapons?

How do you insure that the weapons you supply to the “good guys” don’t end up in the hands of the people you’re trying to counter, either in the short term or the long run?

For the more robust strategy of supplying weapons and other support to defeat the Syrian military and bring a quick end to the Assad regime:

If this option means a no-fly zone, how do you insure that the campaign to neutralize
Syrian air defenses doesn’t mean weeks of intense air warfare with high risk of killing civilians on the ground and U.S. casualties in the air?

At what point does U.S. involvement become significant enough to trigger reactions by other countries?  Iran is an active supporter of the Assad regime ... at what point does Iran perceive U.S. involvement in Syria as a threat to its interests?  Russia has long standing military, commercial and political ties with Syria.  At what point does the Putin government in Moscow perceive U.S. involvement as destroying a Russian ally? 

How do you insure that the “victory” doesn’t mean the triumph of radical Islamists?

Escalating to a maximalist strategy of not only toppling the Assad regime but also playing a major role in shaping the next regime through supplying even more weapons to the opposition and major financial and political support to our favored elements in the coalition, raises the same questions as the other two options, plus:

Doesn’t this amount to a major, very long term commitment to financial and political supporter to a new regime with a significant probability that those parts of the opposition that we do not like or support will change their definition of “the enemy” from the Assad regime to what they label an American puppet regime?  Do we really want to become responsible for Syria?

At no point in this discussion is “don’t get involved” listed as an option.  It is not just that the United States has been involved in Syria since the violent conflict began, trying to find a peaceful solution and avoid tens of thousands of deaths.  We have a important interests in the Middle East,   from tangible ones like oil to intangible ones like stability and development.  In an interconnected world, what happens in Syria directly or indirectly affects all its neighbors and through them, most of the rest of the world.  The cars we drive, the clothes we wear, the food on our tables are all inextricably linked to the global economy and society.  Given the size of our economy, the array of diplomatic and military resources we have available, and the values America embodies when we are at our best, what we do inevitably matters.  Deciding to avoid involvement in a situation affects the outcome as much as deciding to become involved. 


Sunday, February 10, 2013

Population Growth, Climate Change and Small Animals

I was at a lecture on climate change by a distinguished atmospheric scientist the other night.  Her talk focused on the wealth of data supporting a strong relationship between growing amounts of CO2 in the atmosphere and increased average temperatures around the globe.  She talked about some possible approaches to limiting CO2 emissions, arguing against a “silver bullet” -- a single strategy that would solve everything, but suggesting there were “silver shotgun pellets” of multiple behavioral and technological changes each of which could make a difference.

At the end of the question and answer period, a gentleman commented that he could remember 50 years ago when there was much talk about a population explosion and ensuing global famines and other catastrophes.  The implication seemed to be that we got all hot and bothered back then but the worst didn’t happen so maybe climate change isn’t that serious an issue. 

The comment reminded me that I wrote my dissertation on the politics of population policies focusing on the big battles over family planning at the UN that culminated just about 50 years ago.  And I began to see some interesting parallels between the dynamics of dealing with population growth and the dynamics of facing up to climate change.

Only barely relevant but interesting, I hope, side note.  The UN debates were couched in careful euphemisms.  The question was always “family planning” modified by reference to cultural values, as if “birth control” or “contraception” were just too shocking.  With the one exception noted below, everyone carefully avoided anything that even the most prudish moralist could regard as “unfit for pious ears.”

Something’s Happening Here ...

Like the concern about climate change, the attention to population dynamics began in an academic discipline and was initially discussed at international meeting of professional demographers.  But as data accumulated from around the world a remarkable pattern began to emerge and the discussions in various international conferences began to move from “here is what the data shows” to “HEY! SOMETHING REALLY IMPORTANT IS HAPPENING AND WE BETTER DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!!"  In the case of population it was the Demographic Bureau of the Economic and Social Council that evolved into the UN Population Commission and pushed the issue into the General Assembly.  In the case of the climate it was a series of meeting of atmospheric scientists who pushed the item onto the agenda of the 1992 Rio conference on the environment and created the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 

Like climate change, population growth had its skeptics.  Unlike climate change, where the skepticism is about whether it is really happening and/or the role of humans, the population skeptics argued that it wasn’t really a problem.  (It was kind of hard to argue against the data on growing population and impossible to argue that human behavior wasn’t a major factor.)

What It Is Ain’t Exactly Clear ...

Climate change skepticism comes in three flavors:

Full blown denial: the climate is not changing.  Either data is cooked by self-serving scientists so they can get more grants or by an international conspiracy to impose world government;

Deja Vu all over again
: climate is changing but that is merely natural alteration that has been going on for millennia and soon enough we’ll be back in a cooling trend (the cynic adds “and we’ll be all hot [sic] and bothered about an impending ice age!”);

It Isn’t Us: climate may well be changing but the causal mechanism is NOT increased emissions of CO2 or methane, etc. because of human activity.  Therefore there’s no need to do anything.

In contrast, population growth denial did not focus on disputing the data on rapidly growing numbers of people in much of the world, with the exception of the Irish delegate to the UN General Assembly in 1965 who condemned the whole discussion of population growth as merely “...a conspiracy of the international contraceptive manufacturers...” Instead the argument centered around whether there were real problems posed by rates of growth.

Two population growth denial positions were common.

Up With People
: one point of view, strongly associated with the position of the Roman Catholic Church, saw growing population as a positive good, a manifestation of God’s command in Genesis to be fruitful and multiply.  The real problem was that efforts would be made to promote contraception.

Grow Baby, Grow: yes, this position said, population is growing and there is a problem -- a potential lack of food.  But the solution is not curtailing people but expanding production.  This view was most often voiced by the Soviet Union and its allies, who usually added the notion that it was capitalist/imperialist stifling of Third World workers and farmers that caused the problem . 

International Solutions to International Problems

In the early 1960s the United Nations tried to develop a comprehensive global strategy for dealing with population growth.  In essence, what proponents wanted was a sweeping statement that uncontrolled population growth was a global threat to world peace and stability and therefore every government had to develop national strategies for family planning (which everyone knew had to include access to contraception.)  The effort failed in the face of a passionate minority of states. 

Side note that may interest me more than anyone else: whether a country voted for or against the proposal was not related to its demographics, either size of population rate of growth, or density.  It was not a Cold War issue pitting the Communist East against the capitalist West, nor a clash between the more developed North and the less developed South.  States with a large proportion of Catholics in their population, regardless of demographics, ideology or level of development, were against the proposed grand strategy.

The emergence of climate change as an issue also had a strong international dimension.   Beginning with the global conference on the environment in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, the UN fostered a global strategy for dealing with climate change, initially expressed in the Framework Contention on Climate Change which came into effect in 1994.  The Framework was broad and bland enough that almost everyone signed on.  But when negotiations were in held in Kyoto in 1997 to try to put some meat on the Framework’s bare bones and to go beyond “somebody probably ought to do something” to draft a Protocol to the Framework treaty that would lay out who should do what, the international consensus collapsed.  Several subsequent meetings have made no progress.  Many observers think that between the international politics of deciding which countries have to change and who should bear the short term economic consequences of reducing emissions and some doubts about the utility of the strategies embodied in the Kyoto approach, the search for a comprehensive global strategy has reached a dead end.  It is not as simple as a conflict between the advanced capitalist economies of the Global North and the developing economies of the Global South.  But when the discussions have gotten serious, it has tended to degenerate into one side saying “you got rich by spitting tons of CO2 into the atmosphere for 150 years and now you want to stifle our growth” and the other side saying “if you make the same mistakes we did we’re all screwed and, besides, you’re refusing to do anything so you can have a competitive advantage and sell even more stuff to our consumers.”

Out With The Hedgehogs, In With The Foxes
[a hedgehog knows one big thing; the fox knows many little things]

Even if the global approach of the 1960s had been politically feasible, it would not have halted the unprecedented growth in the world’s population.  There are several variables that determine the size of a country’s population at some time in the future.  Two of the most important are the number of women of child bearing age and the number of children each of those women can be expected to have.  Given the growth that had already occurred, there were more women of child bearing age than the world had ever seen and their younger sisters who would soon begin bearing children were an even larger cohort.  So even as the number of children each woman was expected to have declined, as it did, the overall population continued to grow.  But that rate of growth was slowed by a number of steps taken by governments, non-governmental groups, and individual women and men.  Our situation today and in the decades to come would have been far worse if these groups and individuals had not taken action.

The changes in population dynamics did not happen automatically.  The hedgehogs who pushed for a unified global solution started the process but it was a host of foxes who worked on a variety of ideas who made the myriad of small changes that cumulated in big differences. 

International efforts did have an impact.  The United Nations General Assembly may have failed to pass a comprehensive population treaty that would have impelled action by governments, but that was not the end of UN involvement.  The General Assembly did create a United Nations Population Fund which supports not only continuing research but programs within 150 countries that help local governments address women’s reproductive health, maternal and child health care, family planning, and a range of related issues.  The Fund and its staff of experts cannot force a government to do something but it gives it some positive incentives to do the right thing.  The second major result of the General Assembly’s 1965 showdown over population was the movement of international discussion of population issues away from the political arena to a series of international conferences in the next three decades in Bucharest, Mexico City and Cairo.  Unlike the General Assembly where governments are the sole players, these conferences provide a forum and networking opportunity for citizen activists and non-governmental organizations.  This is a huge benefit for people from countries whose governments are reluctant to take action or are recalcitrant opponents of doing anything.  The agendas for these conferences show a steady evolution in thinking about population dynamics and the development of strategies for change.  (This abbreviated and simplified account can’t capture all the hard work and sustained effort by literally hundreds of thousands people around the world, nor catalog their successes and frustrations.  It also ignores continuing battles over birth control, sterilization and abortion.)

Technological breakthroughs such as the development of new strains of rice and improvements in irrigation systems for small farmers in the Global South that launched the Green Revolution in food production in the 1970s did not just happen but came from focused research and development projects and years of work by individuals and organizations to diffuse the innovations to arms and villages around the world.

Individual changes, from greater education for young girls to changes in social mores and attitudes toward women and birth control, have been an important dimension in changes in birth rates and population growth. 

An optimist might expect the same pattern for climate change.  Given the amount of greenhouse gases already circulating in the atmosphere and the chemistry of gases like CO2 and the reality of the lives and aspirations of the some 6 billion people who live in the less developed Global South, there seems to be no realistic hope for suddenly reducing emissions to the point where we are not adding anything to the dynamics of global warming.  But the optimist can see technological changes, personal choices, and national policies that lead to significant reductions in emissions and creative adaptations that let us cope with the most disastrous consequences of climate change.

The optimist is willing to make a leap of faith and believe that the efforts of the hundreds of thousands of people around the world, from the scientists of the IPCC and universities to the economic and political forces shaping government policies to the  activists pushing for bigger and faster changes, to the individuals making small changes in life style, will cumulate into real progress.  The optimist will realize that, fortunately, she or he doesn’t have to counter the negative effects of climate change all by him or herself but can look for opportunities to be a helpful fox whatever means are available, be it political activism, financial support for the work of others, or life style changes.  The optimist may look at the story of five decades of work on population issues and decide that the tortoise is a better mascot: slow and steady beats flash and dash.


Thursday, January 24, 2013

Timbuktu is Closer Than You Think

For many of us, Timbuktu is a symbol of exotic remoteness, a synonym for “the ends of the earth.”  If you say “Tuareg,’ some Americans will think of the VW Touareg SUV while others might conjure up fierce desert nomads swathed in distinctive deep purple robes.   And “Mali” is likely to be misheard and evoke images of aunt, niece or sister Molly or Molly Pitcher of song and legend. 

“What,” almost all of us are likely to say, “does any of this have to do with air strikes by French jets, 2,000 French soldiers in armored vehicles already fighting on the ground and more being flown in on U.S. aircraft?” 

Much of the answer has to do with powerful political dynamics within the country of Mali and part with the impact of external events on the main actors in the Malian political drama.

All Politics is Local

The real estate agent’s “location, location, location” mantra is a good place to start to understand Mali.  Northern Mali is deep in the Sahara desert, home to a sparse population of fiercely independent nomads.  Southern Mali is almost entirely in the Sahel, the transition zone between the desert and more fertile and temperate land to the south.  The Sahel is flat, rolling terrain with just enough rainfall to support sparse grass and scrubby brush.  Several centuries ago the Sahel was wetter and greener and from the 10th to 17th centuries supported a series of large kingdoms.  Timbuktu was developed as a major staging area for caravans carrying salt, slaves, ivory and gold from southern Africa to North Africa and on to Europe in enormous camel caravans.  It also served as a center of Islamic leaning and culture, from which missionaries spread Islam throughout West Africa.

Around the world, nomads like the Tuareg of the Sahara and the more settled small farmers and herders of the Sahel tend to live in an uneasy equilibrium.  They depend on trade with each other for goods they cannot produce themselves but they fear and distrust each other.  As the Sahel becomes drier and the Sahara desert creeps south, pasture land grows more scarce and conflicts between nomads and settled people are exacerbated. 

This is a central dimension in the current conflict. 

Like so many African countries, Mali’s borders were drawn for the administrative convenience of colonial powers at the end of the 19th Century.  What is now Mali was part of the larger entity of French Sudan which became independent in 1960 as the Mali Federation.  Within two months Senegal withdrew from the federation, leaving Mali landlocked and, aside from some gold deposits and a small area of fertile land along the Niger river, bereft of natural resources.  Over time tourism, especially from France, has become a significant factor in the economy.  At least it was until violence erupted in the north and tourists were taken hostage.

In the more settled areas of the Sahel making the distinction that this village is in Mali, that one is in Senegal, Niger, or Burkina Faso makes some sense, especially some 50 years after Mali gained independence from France.  But for nomads in the Sahara, borders are merely marks in the sand that the wind blows away.

Leaders of the several Tuareg clans resisted French attempts to control their movement and interfere with their profitable trading and smuggling.  As the French withdrew from their African colonies, Tuareg leaders called for the creation of an autonomous Tuareg homeland.  Instead Tuaregs were included in the Saharan desert portions of the new nations of Mali, Mauritania, Chad and Senegal. Around 15% of the population of Mali is classified as Tuareg or a related group.

The tension between political, economic and social development in Mali and Tuareg aspirations for autonomy has waxed and waned over time, but some level of political conflict has always been present.  The conflict escalated to significant violence in early 2012.

Some Politics are More Local Than Others


The conflict in Mali became a violent threat to the survival of the country last year because the long standing balance of political and military power was upset by three major developments:

1) Over the past two decades the ancient trans Sahara trade routes have been revived as one of the major avenues for smuggling drugs shipped from South America to the coast of West Africa and then overland to North Africa and Europe.  The Sahara trade routes are also a major artery for the movement of economic migrants from sub-Saharan Africa to North Africa and on into Europe.  Tuareg clans have made some money as caravan guides but even more by charging smugglers protection fees ... so their operations will not be attacked by Tuaregs.

2) A significant number of young Tuareg men were recruited into elite units of the Libyan army.  When rebels toppled Qadhafi, Libya became a dangerous place for non-Libyans who had fought the rebel militias and the Tuaregs left with their weapons.  Not only were there now hundreds of young Tuaregs with military training but they had brought large numbers of sophisticated infantry weapons with them.

3) Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and other militant groups grew rapidly from relatively obscure remnants of the brutal civil war between the Algerian military and Islamist militants.  Fueled by money from drug smuggling and hostage ransoms, the turmoil in Libya and the weakness of Libya’s Saharan neighbors, the region has become a magnet for disaffected youth from neighboring countries and combat veterans from Iraq, Afghanistan, and Somalia. 

A Sense of Crisis

The conflict in Mali became a major international concern after the capture of the town of Aguelhok by insurgent fores in January 2012.  Ninety-seven Malian soldiers surrendered after they ran out of ammunition and were summarily executed, along with an unknown number of civilians.  The perceived failures of the government to support the army in its fight against the insurgents led to a coup by junior officers in March.

Mali’s neighbors in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) negotiated an end to the coup and immediate restoration of civilian rule and also promised economic and military support, which, however, has been slow in coming.  The insurgents have continued making major gains in northen Mali, capturing several towns and underlining the weakness of the Malian armed forces.  While the insurgents are a loose coalition of tractional Tuareg groups, Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and other Islamist groups, it has been the most radical elements who have taken control of captured towns and imposed a particularly harsh and rigid interpretation of Islamic law on the citizens.  There is widespread evidence of beatings and executions, as well as destruction of local religious sites and historical monuments.

In October 2012 the UN Security Council unanimously voted to direct ECOWAS and the African Union to develop a plan for intervention to support the government of Mali.  But the situation continued to deteriorate and when it seemed there was little standing between rebel forces and the capital of Bamako, Mali asked France to intervene last week.  The initial rapid response drew from French assets already on the ground in Chad and Côte d’Ivoire with additional troops being flown in on U.S. Air Force transports.

As of this writing the French seem to be making steady progress but are meeting stiffer resistance than expected. 

What’s the Point?


As fascinating as the history of Timbuktu maybe, it is still a long way from much of anywhere.  So why all the excitement?

For the government of Mali the stakes are obvious: the insurgency has already seriously destabilized the regime and a successful assault on the capital Bamako would spell the death of a relatively open, relatively democratic regime. 

For the large majority of the people of Mali, the violence and behavior of the insurgents when they have taken a town are extremely threatening.  Before the fighting began, Mali was one of the 25 poorest countries in the world.  The collapse of tourism has made things worse. 
The Muslim missionaries who moved across the Sahara from North Africa in the 10th and 11th centuries were predominantly Sufi.  The Sufi movement within Sunni Islam puts more emphasis on emotional expression, integrating music and dance into prayers, and less emphasis on formal obedience to behavioral laws.  Islam in West Africa has adopted and adapted many local customs and beliefs and is typically described as “more relaxed” in practice than, for example, Saudi Arabia.  But Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and similar groups have been inspired by the rigid, puritanical version of Islam originating in Saudi Arabia and spread by Saudi funded religious schools throughout the region.  It is overly simplistic but not completely wrong to say there is a real fear of fierce desert nomads seizing control and imposing a harsh and repressive regime which is likely to regard Sufi-influenced Malians as not “real” Muslims.

For France the fate of Mali is tied to the fate of its neighbors, all of whom are former French colonies who have maintained strong economic and military ties with France.  The attack on the Amenas oil field in Algeria by a group associated with the Islamist forces in Mali is a pointed example of how the presence of several thousand heavily armed militants can threaten important economic assets throughout the northern Sahara. 

Mali’s neighbors are not only concerned with attacks on their own territory but also about the reported tens of thousands of refugees fleeing the fighting and the brutal regimes established in captured towns.  The Italian willingness to provide some trainers and logistical support to the Mali army reflects the same concern about refugee flows from North Africa to Europe.

For the United States, the dominant perspective in the response to the Mali situation is the concern that the Sahara desert will become the newest base for al Qaeda and al Qaeda-like organizations to train terrorists. 

The End Game

The pessimistic scenario sees French forces getting bogged down in a protracted battle to liberate the towns taken by the insurgents and a corresponding failure to bolster the military and political capabilities of Mali’s neighbors.  The optimistic scenario sees the French succeeding relatively quickly in pushing the fighters back into the desert and relieving the pressure on the government of Mali, then working with an African Union/ECOWAS force to stabilize the region.  Optimists might point to the situation in Somalia where an AU force supported by the U.S. and other western powers has prevented the radical al Shabaab group from seizing control of Mogadishu and gone a long way to neutralize them throughout the countryside.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

On the Recent Violence In the Middle East

The latest round of fighting between Israelis and Palestinians seems to be winding down with incoming rockets, helicopter gunships, fighter bombers and drones being replaced by the battle to control perceptions of who is right and wrong, who has gained and lost.   The oft cited “fog of war” is being replaced by an equally opaque “mist of spin.”   

Speculation about short and long term consequences of events can be pretty risky so I hope no one drags these notes up in six months or a year.   Nonetheless, there are some things that I think can be said about what might be some implications for both the short and longer range.   

Trying to describe events inevitably involves selectivity and some implicit bias.  But let’s start with an outline anyway.

After Operation Cast Lead, the 2008 Israeli air and ground incursion into Gaza, Hamas [click  here for a quick primer on Hamas and Gaza] declared a unilateral cease fire.  A couple of weeks ago Hamas announced that it was ending it and small groups began launching rockets into southern Israel. 

The initial Israeli response was the usual sort of tit for tat air strike that targeted a senior Hamas military commander.

But this series of attacks differed in two ways from the past.  First, in addition to the short range rockets launched from Gaza of the past – not much more than big mortar shells with a range of just a few miles pointed in the general direction of some village in southern Israel – there were now longer range rockets, traveling up to 40 or 50 miles and launched in the general direction of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, threatening and personally involving the majority of the population of Israel.  The second significant difference was the increasing deployment by Israel of batteries of anti-rocket missiles, the weapons system code named Iron Dome

In the face of an increasing barrage of rockets and increasing public outcry, Israel expanded its response to include hundreds of air strikes aimed at people suspected of launching rockets, suspected storage depots for rockets and public buildings in Gaza, including the parliament building.  And Israel made very public preparations for a ground assault on Gaza, a clear threat of major escalation if nothing changed.

Three days of negotiations led by Egyptian President Morsy culminated in the announcement of a cease fire by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Egyptian foreign minister Mohamed Kamel Amr.  While it is not clear who promised what to whom, the agreement had the necessary ambiguity to permit both Israel and Hamas to declare that they had gotten exactly what they had wanted all along.  Continuing negotiations, sponsored by Egypt and the U.S. will probably lead to some real easing of the Israeli blockade in exchange for pledges by Hamas (with assurances from Egypt and the U.S.) to curb rocket launchings.

On one hand there is a great temptation to announce winners and losers after a violent confrontation like this, as if it were a sporting match.  (One often gets this odd image of a British announcer noting “Hamas are leading one nil after the first period.”) On the other hand there is the safe academic stance of “it’s too soon to tell.”  (As in the probably apocryphal story of the British historian who had decided that the Roman era in Britain had been a generally positive time but it was still too early to tell about the Norman Conquest.)  Perhaps we can do something in between.

Implications for the Future.

The Palestinians (click here for a brief overview of Hamas and the Gaza Strip)

Hamas has emerged from this round of violence in a much improved position. 
   
     They are widely perceived in the Middle East and elsewhere as winning a military victory against Israel. 

    They are seen as the undisputed leader of the Palestinian resistance, eclipsing the Fatah led government in Ramallah.

    In exchange for promises to end rocket attacks, they seem likely to get major concessions on ending the blockade.

    They have emerged as major negotiating partners of the U.S., Egypt, and Israel, even if everyone pretends they aren’t [it’s a stylized drama: offstage  U.S. diplomats talk to Israelis; Egyptian officials talk to Hamas.  The Americans and Egyptians talk to each other on stage then return to the wings to talk to Israelis and Hamas.  After several scenes, the Egyptian and American diplomats announce an agreement and the curtain comes down, with no one having violated the tabu against talking to “those people.”]

     The Palestinian Authority in Ramallah, dominated by Fatah and ostensibly the government of both the West Bank and Gaza Strip, has lost ground in its struggle with Hamas.  Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Abbas will try to present United Nations recognition of the Palestinians as a “non-member” state as a major victory.

Israel

    If the primary goal of the attacks on Gaza was to stop the rocket attacks once and for all, I think it is fair to say that the operation was not very successful.  There will be a period of calm during which the Hamas authorities will monitor the border more carefully and the smuggling of rockets and other weaponry will continue at a reduced pace.  But ultimately the authorities in Gaza cannot completely control the bands of fighters who operate out of the refugee camps and slums of Gaza City and Rafah.  At some point I think the rockets will resume.  However, the lull in attacks will give Israel time to expand the deployment of the Iron Dome system which will further reduce the effectiveness of the rockets.

    The violent confrontation with Hamas will play a role in the election next January but it is too early to say what that will be.  Much may depend on whether people come to see the latest military adventure as a necessary step to defend civilians or see it as a mistake flowing from a larger reliance on military solutions to the problems posed by the situation in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. 

    In the longer run, it is possible that this will mark a turning point in the Israeli-Palestinian relationship.  Many observers believe that the status quo [add link] is unsustainable.  The optimists wonder if 1973 is a precedent.  In 1973 Egypt launched a surprise attack across the Suez Canal into the Sinai Peninsula, driving Israeli forces back.  After several days of fierce fighting, Israel gained the upper hand and, regaining all the territory it had lost and refraining from totally destroying the Egyptian army only because of the intervention of the United States and Soviet Union through UN mediated peace talks.  But Anwar Sadat and other Arab leaders were able to portray the initial success as a great victory that shattered the myth of Israeli invincibility and Israeli confidence in their invulnerability to attack was shaken.  The result was Sadat’s daring proposal for peace talks, met by Menachim Begin’s equally bold acceptance, that led to the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty.  The fact that Hamas and other Palestinian voices are calling their recent battle a victory and the apparent psychological effect of the otherwise ineffective rocket attacks on Tel Aviv and Jerusalem on Israeli public opinion may make both sides amenable to serious talks about their political future.  That would be extremely unlikely to involve some dramatic breakthrough, but continuing discussions mediated by Egypt and the United Sates might be a way forward.

    I do not think this has been another mindless spasm of violence in an interminable clash of people who have always hated each other.  Nor do I think this is the turning point so often fervently sought that will lead to peace.  But it may prove to be a small but significant step in the right direction.

Egypt

Because of its 1973 peace treaty with Israel and physical proximity to the Gaza Strip, Egypt has always been a major player.  There were some worries in Israel and elsewhere that the replacement of Mubarak by Mohamed Morsy would mean a radical tilt towards groups like Hamas and hostility to Israel.  But Egyptian diplomats proved both adept and reliable partners with the U.S. in achieving a cease fire.  Egypt has maintained, if not actually improved, its position as an indispensable participant in whatever the future holds.

The United States

    The United States, like Egypt, reasserted its status as an indispensable player.  In fact I think the U.S. improved its position with both Egypt and Israel.  Relations with the new Egyptian regime have not always been smooth.  The fear that Egypt would tilt toward radical Islamists like Hamas and some worrying signs that President Morsy is more interested in building a regime based on political Islam and the Muslim Brotherhood than one that is committed to democracy and inclusion of both secular Egyptians and Coptic Christians have caused some bumps in the road in the past year.  Establishing an effective working partnership to end the violence in Gaza was a significant positive step.  Egypt needs a good working relationship with the United States for economic support and the United States needs a good working relationship with Egypt for diplomatic and strategic reasons.

    The recent events have also affected the U.S.-Israeli relationship.  After the abject failure of Obama’s effort at peace making, the primary issue between the U.S. and Israel has been Iran, with the Israeli government trying to push the U.S. into a much more aggressive stance toward Tehran and the U.S. working hard to prevent a unilateral Israeli military strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.  It is an open secret that Obama and Netanyahu do not like each other and Netanyahu rather openly rooted for a Romney victory.  (Netanyahu’s social and economic conservative views plus his personal liking for Romney led one commentator to note that Netanyahu speaks English with a Republican accent.) Republicans tried to make Obama’s difficult relationship with Netanyahu a campaign issue.  Obama’s reelection victory and the fighting in Gaza changed all that.  Netanyahu’s political opponents in Israel began to openly criticize him for alienating the President and sounding far too hawkish on Iran.  Instead of the U.S. trying to persuade Israel to exercise restraint, the Israelis now found themselves asking the U.S. for help. 

I think it is very clear that the real winners here are the ordinary people of the Gaza Strip because the blockade will be eased and their lives will be improved.  We can only hope that there will be other positive results.

Sketch of Hamas and the Gaza Strip

Quick reminder of who Hamas is ... There are two physically separated areas where the Palestinians live: the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.  The West Bank (of the Jordan river) lies between Israel and the Kingdom of Jordan in the Jordan River valley.  It has some fertile agricultural land, a relatively well educated population, some developed cities such as Ramallah, and a small manufacturing base.  The Gaza Strip is a narrow sliver of land on the Sinai peninsula between Israel and Egypt.  Gaza City is the largest city but other significant areas include Rafah and several refugee camps.  Rafah has been a center of trade and commerce for centuries. The Gaza Strip was created by the 1948 armistice between Israel and Egypt and occupied by Israel in the Six Day war of 1967 Egypt regained control in 1973.  When the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt set formal boundaries, the border split the city of Rafah in half. 

When the PLO, led by Yasir Arafat, established the Palestinian Authority, a government with headquarters in Ramallah (West Bank), there was another Palestinian movement already rooted in the Gaza Strip.  Hamas had developed out of the Muslim Brotherhood and become the leading source of charity, health care and even education for the residents of Gaza City, especially the poor. 

Attempts by the dominant political faction in the West Bank and Palestinian Authority, Fatah, to establish the government’s control over Gaza ran into local resistance.  When Palestinians voted in legislative elections in 2006, Fatah easily won in the West Bank but Hamas surprised most observers by winning a large majority of parliamentary seats in Gaza. 

Hamas is a self-defined hard line Islamist party whose leaders have been noted for piety, Koranic knowledge, and a public refusal to acknowledge Israel but not political or administrative skills. The majority of Gazans are not Islamists, nor in favor of a socially conservative, restrictive government and more interested in economic development than an aggressive stance toward Israel, so one might ask, “What were they thinking?” 

I think you can understand Hamas victory in 2006 as a neat case of strategic voting gone badly awry.  The Fatah dominated Palestinian Authority officials and bureaucrats in Gaza were notorious for being high handedly dictatorial and seriously corrupt.  It is plausible to think that  many people in Gaza felt that they did not want a Hamas led government but they wanted to send a message to the folks in Ramallah to stop the stealing and pay attention to the needs of the people.  Since they assumed that Fatah would win the election, they felt free to vote for Hamas as a protest against the bad behavior of Fatah ... and enough people made that calculation so that they ended up electing Hamas.  A year later tension between Fatah in Ramallah and Hamas in Gaza erupted into civil war and the Palestinian Authority was kicked out of Gaza.  Technically the government in Ramallah is the government of Gaza, too, but the reality is different.

In the past 6 years Hamas has been unable to improve the economic condition of the people of Gaza, has tried to impose unpopular social restrictions and allowed private militias and various radical groups to proliferate.  Hamas’ unwillingness (or perhaps inability) to control small bands bent on violence lead to a series of short range rocket attacks on Israeli towns within a few miles of the border.  The result was the 2008-9 military operation code named “Cast Lead” that saw massive Israeli air power and a punishing ground invasion of the Gaza Strip.  After inflicting serious casualties on both armed groups and ordinary civilians and substantial damage to both government and private buildings, the Israelis withdraw under international pressure and instituted a stringent blockade on the Gaza Strip.  Hamas rule has become increasingly authoritarian and restrictive.  A key factor in the economic stagnation in Gaza and the increasing frustration of the people has been the Israeli blockade of the territory, which has made importing and exporting almost everything -- including medicine and fuel oil to power electrical generators-- nearly impossible.  In light of growing international pressure to deal with the hardships caused by the blockade, the government of Israel has begun to allow some material into Gaza.

Far more important than the trickle of goods allowed in by Israel has been the elaborate and sophisticated smuggling networks that have grown up in Gaza, featuring tunnels deep beneath the desert running from the city of Rafah in Gaza into the Sinai desert.  After the 2006 Hamas electoral victory Israel imposed a blockade of the few border crossings into Gaza and restrictions on the use of the waters off the coast of Gaza.  These restrictions were tightened even further after the 2008-9 violence.  For reasons of its own, Egypt has cooperated with the Israeli blockade and closed the crossing at Rafah.  In response, enterprising Gazans have dug a series of tunnels from their side of Rafah under the border into Egypt.  Despite periodic raids by the Israeli air force to bomb tunnels and the dangers of cave ins from haphazard construction , the tunnels have made life in Gaza bearable.  In addition to food, fuel and building materials, smugglers have done a brisk trade in weapons, especially the short range devices that can be launched by a couple of people and aimed in the general direction of Israeli settlements.  In the past few weeks the arsenals have included rockets made in Iran that have a 40 mile range and are able to reach Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. 

Israel has had a difficult enough time negotiating with Arafat and then his successor in the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas.  Hamas has repeatedly denied Israel’s right to exist and supported violence such as rocket attacks on civilians.  The U.S. and most of Western Europe have followed Israel’s lead and declared Hamas a “terrorist” organization.  While “terrorist” is as much as political term for people you really dislike as it is a term with an explicit empirical basis, the word has political and legal consequences.  A major one is that governments resolutely claim they don’t negotiate with terrorists and U.S. law prohibits American citizens and diplomats from dealing with terrorist organizations. 

Iron Dome

The Iron Dome system was developed by an Israeli defense contractor building, in part,  on engineering and software advances from the U.S. Star Wars system.

[While the technology for linking radar to detect and track intercontinental missiles and the interceptor rockets that are meant to blast off and destroy the incoming warhead in outer space has yet to work as hoped (every test so far has loosely defined “success” using the horseshoe and dancing principle: close counts) knocking down slow moving short range rockets is easier. ]

The Iron Dome equipment is a major advance over the Patriot missile system that the U.S. developed in the late 1980s and first deployed against Iraqi Scud missiles in the 1990 Gulf War.  By some accounts Iron Dome can destroy between 80 and 90% of its targets. 

This has created an interesting “good news/bad news” situation.  The good news is that most of the rockets aimed southern Israeli towns and the handful of longer range rockets fired at Jerusalem and Tel Aviv can be shot down.  The bad news is 1) that is scant comfort to the citizens of those towns when the 10-20% that make it through blow up down the street; and 2) it weakens the perception of balance and proportionality between the harm done by Gaza launched rockets and the scope and severity of the Israeli response.