International failure in responding to genocide in Darfur should be
occasion for the deepest shame. Inaction has already cost hundreds of
thousands of lives and caused untold human suffering--but the
catastrophe is far from over. The example of Darfur should prompt
considerable reflection on whether the world community feels any
"responsibility to protect" civilians endangered because of
inaction, or indeed deliberate actions, on the part of their own
governments and regimes. Have we reached the point in confronting
atrocity crimes at which we put civilian lives ahead of expedient claims
of national sovereignty? An answer in the abstract was provided by all
UN member states in September 2005. At that time, countries declared
themselves "prepared to take collective action, in a timely and
decisive manner, through the Security Council" when national
authorities fail to "protect their populations from genocide, war
crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity."
We know--from a staggering number of human rights reports and
assessments, and myriad accounts from journalists and humanitarians in
the region--the relevance of this clause to events in Darfur. For almost
five years, Khartoum has committed all the crimes enumerated here in an
attempt to destroy the perceived non-Arab or African civilian base of
support for Darfur's rebel groups. Current humanitarian conditions
reveal that a grim genocide by attrition is the regime's means of
sustaining this strategy, which includes continuing harassment and
obstruction of aid efforts.
As this brutal counter-insurgency effort is set to enter its sixth
year, hope for protection resides entirely in the success of an
unwieldy, unprecedented, and inauspiciously begun UN-African Union
"hybrid" peace support operation, authorized by UN Security
Council Resolution 1769 in July 2007. In October 2007, the force had
begun deploying without adequate resources, or even land for housing its
personnel, and was burdened by a crippling dependence upon African Union
personnel--this at the insistence of the Khartoum regime, which is
determined to control the mission as much as possible. Consequently,
there is likely to be little significant near-term improvement in the
acute security crisis that threatens millions of Darfuri civilians and
the vast humanitarian operations on which they depend.
At the same time, the National Islamic Front (NIF), which dominates
the merely notional "Government of National Unity" in Sudan,
appears bent on precipitating renewed north-south conflict. The NIF has
no only reneged on key terms of the January 2005 peace agreement that
ended more than 20 years of unfathomably destructive north-south civil
war, but has engaged in a series of provocative actions directed against
both the southern Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) and its
military forces. In October the SPLM responded by suspending its
participation in the national government. The prospects for renewed war
are greater than at any time since January 2005, and the consequences of
such a war would be catastrophic. Whatever Darfur cease-fire might be in
place, or whatever peace process may be inching forward, would readily
collapse under the weight of nation-wide civil war.
Darfur's staggering figures make the questioner international
response all the more exigent: hundreds of thousands already dead; 2.5
million displaced, most losing anything; and 4.2 million human beings
dependent on the world's largest and most endangered humanitarian
operation.
Answers are at once numerous and complex--and bluntly obvious.
There has simply never been any stomach to confront, in effective and
concerted fashion, the ruthless tyranny of the NIF. The regime came to
power by military coup in 1989, deposing the elected government of Sadiq
el-Mahdi and deliberately aborting Sudan's most promising chance
for peace since independence. Yet there have never been coordinated
economic sanctions targeting the NIF leadership. There have never even
been effective diplomatic sanctions, although the UN nominally imposed
them in 1995 following the NIF's role in the conspiracy to
assassinate Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Addis Ababa. On the
contrary, commercial and capital investment in the Khartoum-dominated
economy has been massive, coming from Europe, Canada, and Asian
countries, primarily China.
Moreover, Khartoum has never faced a serious threat of
non-consensual military action to halt genocide, even in Darfur, where
the realities of large-scale, ethnically-targeted human destruction have
been consistently and unambiguously reported since 2003. This lack of
resolve is clear from a series of feckless UN Security Council
resolutions stretching-back to July 2004, when the Council impotently
"demanded" that Khartoum disarm the savage Janjaweed militias
that were responsible for so much of the village destruction and,
consequently, the vast numbers of people killed or displaced.
Remote, arid, and landlocked--far from any navigable body of water
and without significant infrastructure--Darfur offers unlimited
opportunities for Khartoum to compromise the effectiveness of any
deploying force. And dismayingly, despite the "hybrid" nature
of the operation, African Union Commissioner Alpha Oumar Konare
capitulated early on to Khartoum's demand that forces be
essentially, virtually exclusively, African in character. Since the AU
simply does not have the requisite number of trained troops and civilian
police available (the latter are particularly important), there will be
critical shortfalls in men, training, equipment, logistics, and
administrative capacity.
The failure of Security Council Resolution 1706 (August 2006),
which authorized robust UN and civilian forces, marked a turning point.
Effectively and expeditiously deployed, the force authorized might have
saved tens of thousands of lives and prevented the ongoing slide into
increasingly chaotic violence, which is the primary legacy of the
ill-conceived and disastrously consummated Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA)
of May 2006 in Abuja, Nigeria.
Resolution 1706 was the real moment of decision for accepting a
"responsibility to protect" in the face of Khartoum's
defiant claims of "national sovereignty"--and the
international community blinked. Inevitably, this encouraged Khartoum to
cleave all the more insistently to the DPA, in which no international
guarantors are stipulated as part of security provisions. Further peace
talks can accomplish little if the international community is not
willing to press Khartoum for meaningful compliance with previous
commitments.
What can be done to respond to the crisis, particularly in light of
growing fatigue among aid organizations, international actors, and even
advocacy groups?
Khartoum has been impressively patient in playing a very poor hand.
It little expected that its genocidal response to the rebellion that
emerged fully in February 2003 would garner so much international
advocacy attention--given Darfur's previous obscurity--and was
caught temporarily off-guard. But the regime was vastly encouraged by
the willingness of Western governments to trade Darfur in the interests
of securing a north-south peace agreement, even as the refusal to speak
honestly about Darfur occurred at the height of genocidal violence.
Having seen this expediency, Khartoum relies on Darfur not
remaining a serious irritant in various bilateral and multilateral
relations. This will certainly be true if some fig leaf of a protection
force deploys and desultory peace talks proceed indefinitely.
Khartoum will be persuaded that the international community is
serious only if deployment of the force recently authorized by
Resolution 1769 is clearly under UN command, and if it is made plain
that obstructionism by the regime will be met with harsh sanctions. It
must be understood that military force will be used against any armed
elements that impede deployment or operations of the authorized force.
Selection of the components of the deploying force must rest squarely
with the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO); Jean-Marie
Guehenno, head of UN DPKO, should insist that the African Union have
only an advisory role in the selection of troops and civilian police.
Critically, the militarily capable Western nations that have been
scandalously laggard in providing key transport, logistical, and
tactical air resources must be urgently forthcoming. Civilian police and
military observers should be deployed on a highly expedited basis to the
most insecure and volatile areas, with adequate military protection.
On the political front, China must be convinced to cease protecting
its client state from real diplomatic pressure. Here advocacy efforts
focusing on Beijing's hosting of the 2008 Summer Olympics have been
much more effective than those of Western governments. European nations
must be prepared to suspend diplomatic relations in the event that
Khartoum cleaves to its obstructionist ways, and they should be prepared
to impose economic sanctions as robust as those of the United States.
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