By Daniel Allott on 3.24.06 @ 12:06AM
The Bush Administration gets its geopolitical and humanitarian priorities in order.
The Bush Administration's recent willingness to address ethnic
cleansing in Sudan more actively suggests that, in the face of
genocide, strategic and humanitarian interests never clash.
It was only a few weeks ago that those of us who have been
closely following the genocide in Darfur were lamenting the tense
and evasive nature of the Bush Administration's policy there.
Despite having done more than any other government to respond to
this human rights disaster -- including providing the bulk of
humanitarian aid, continuously pressing for tough UN action against
the government and unabashedly using the word "genocide" to
describe conditions there -- the administration's reaction had at
times been fragmented and equivocal.
Since Sudan is considered a key ally in the war on terror
(Khartoum's agents have reportedly penetrated terrorist networks
not otherwise accessible to the U.S.), the administration often
handled the Sudanese government with kid gloves. Last April the
White House worked behind the scenes to ensure the demise of the
Darfur Accountability Act in Congress, which would have stepped up
pressure on the regime to cease the killing. The administration
even allowed the CIA to fly Sudan's intelligence chief, Salah
Abdallah Gosh, an architect of the Darfur atrocity, to Washington
for consultation.
The mixed signals sent by the United States -- sometimes
condemning and at others times seemingly commending the regime --
gave the impression that the Bush Administration was not serious
about securing peace in a region suffering the effects of the
government-sponsored slaughter of 400,000 people, in addition to
the rape, disfigurement and dislocation of another 2.5 million
people.
Recent weeks, however, have brought a remarkable shift in
America's course of action toward the place United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan recently labeled "little short of hell
on earth." First came the president's nod to Darfur in his State of
the Union address, when he said, "We show compassion abroad because
Americans believe in the God-given dignity and worth of...a refugee
fleeing genocide..." Next came Bush's pledge that the United States
would play a pivotal role in helping swap an under-manned,
under-funded, and out-gunned African Union force of 7,000 for up to
20,000 well-trained and properly mandated United Nations soldiers.
(A move the UN Security Council approved at the prodding of U.S.
Ambassador John Bolton.)
Most recently, Bush sent an emergency supplemental funding
proposal to Congress, including a request for $514 million for
peacekeeping and humanitarian programs in Darfur.
SO, TO WHAT CAN WE ATTRIBUTE the Bush Administration's newfound
commitment to Darfur? Here are two possible explanations.
First, by all accounts the situation in Darfur is spiraling out
of control. After over a year of savagery, conditions seemed to
improve last summer when Khartoum promised to rein in its death
squads. But the promises proved hollow and the onset of the dry
season last fall revived the government militia's thirst for
spreading terror throughout the region. Jan Pronk, the UN
representative in Sudan, recently reported, "At least once a month
groups of 500 to 1000 militia on camel and horseback attack
villages, killing dozens of people."
In addition, more than one million Darfurians continue to
languish in internally displaced persons camps, while several
hundred thousand have sought safety across the border in Chad,
where the militias have started launching cross-border raids on
villages on an almost daily basis.
International aid agencies have reported that entire sections of
the population are cut-off from relief, and aid workers have faced
increased threats, harassment and beatings. Last month, twenty-one
World Food Program convoys were attacked, four times as many as
last summer. The increased violence has caused many humanitarian
organizations to scale back operations due to security concerns.
The UN predicts that if the situation continues to deteriorate at
its current rate, the death toll could rise to 100,000 a month.
What has become clear is that far from improving, the conditions in
Darfur are actually deteriorating.
A second and more compelling explanation for the
administration's interest in Darfur has less to do with what's
changing on the ground and more to do with what hasn't changed
about the philosophical groundwork of Mr. Bush's foreign
policy.
Foundational to this administration's foreign policy vision is
the protection and promotion of the dignity and natural rights of
all men. Indeed, Bush identified human rights violations as a chief
reason for intervention in Iraq, and he regularly refers to "ending
tyranny in our world" as his ultimate foreign policy objective.
Accordingly, failure to act in Darfur manifestly undermines the
moral credibility of every foreign mission the United States
undertakes. Conversely, intervention in Darfur, certainly the most
egregious humanitarian crisis in the world today, becomes proof
positive that Mr. Bush is sincere when he talks about his
dedication to the cause of human dignity and compassionate conduct
abroad.
SO, WHILE SOME SUGGEST AMERICAN engagement in Iraq precludes
intervention in Darfur, more astute observers recognize Iraq as
reinforcing the imperative for U.S. involvement there.
Of course, America's work is just starting, and there is much
more that can be done.
A welcome start would be for the administration to insist that
the UN enforce an arms embargo against Sudan and punish scofflaws
(such as China and Russia) that continue to supply Khartoum with
the money and weapons that fuel terror. The U.S. should demand the
release of an unpublished UN study listing those countries that
ship weapons to the Sudanese government. Mr. Bush should publicly
denounce the Arab League's decision to hold its annual summit in
Khartoum, scheduled for the end of March. To allow the summit to
take place would not only encourage the Sudanese government to
continue the genocide against its people but would be an economic
reward for a country guilty of the worst human rights abuses.
Most important, President Bush should continue to call on NATO
members to provide equipment, training, transport and soldiers to
the peacekeeping in Darfur until enough UN troops are available for
deployment, which will take at least six months and as long as a
year.
The conventional wisdom used to be that the White House's
reluctance to engage Darfur more actively derived from a foreign
policy calculus that placed strategic military interests over
humanitarian ones. But, Mr. Bush's quiet metamorphosis on Sudan
demonstrates that in the face of genocide the best strategy is also
the most compassionate.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Law, Military, Iraq, Russia, United Nations, NATO, Africa