Ocnus.Net
Facing China in the Multidimensional Mess in Darfur
By AUSTIN BAY,Houston Chronicle 11/5/08
May 12, 2008 - 3:53:35 PM
The sensationalist media love the fracas, since harassing
Olympic torchbearers creates great video.
"Publicity politics" leveraging shame and moral
outrage and calling for action can produce responsive change in those rare
places where freedom is constitutionally or institutionally enshrined - in
other words, in democratic nations that practice open, responsive politics.
China is a curious, evolving dictatorship. As a permanent
member of the U.N. Security Council and a major importer of Sudanese oil, China
can put diplomatic pressure on Sudan's Islamist government in Khartoum.
The protests have embarrassed Beijing just enough to
rhetorically nudge Sudan - though in terms of getting on-the-ground results
like stopping the genocide, the nudges have had little effect.
When it comes to fighting Sudan's multifront war of which
Darfur is currently the most genocidal theater, no nation exerts a decisive
influence on Khartoum's Islamists.
Why? Because Khartoum is waging a dictatorship's war on its
own people, a war for the survival of Sudan's corrupt regime on the regime's
preferred terms.
Despite Chinese criticism, the government-backed Muslim
"janjaweed militias" continue to attack black African farmers and
Sudanese aircraft continue to bomb rebel positions (sometimes) and the farmers'
villages (frequently).
China did back the Security Council's creation of UNAMID,
the U.N.-African Union "hybrid" peacekeeping and peace enforcement
mission in Darfur that finally set up its headquarters in December 2007.
UNAMID's deployment, however, has become a sad joke. It will
take a year before the mission is fully manned. UNAMID is short of helicopters.
Transport helicopters give UNAMID the ability to quickly move observers and
light infantry forces to threatened areas.
Several nations (including Britain and Ethiopia) have
promised to help provide helicopters, but until the force has them the Sudanese
government will wage war on the non-Arab tribes with little interference.
Motivated people who really want to have an effect on the
ground in Darfur should call for reform of the entire United Nations. Huge job?
Yes. One that challenges the "politically correct" and
"transnational" (usually anti-American) elites who always demand
"international action" and look to the United Nations as a great
"force for good"?
Yes again. But reform needs to happen if effective
peacekeeping is to occur.
The U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) has a
rhetorical grasp of the problem. The DPKO Web site will tell you that
peacekeeping "defies simple definition" and that many peacekeeping
missions are "multidimensional."
The Darfur conflict is definitely multidimensional. Sudan is
clearly involved, as are various Sudanese rebel factions. Darfur tribes have
kin living on the Chad side of the Chad-Sudan border, so Chad is involved.
Sudan accuses Chad's government of supporting Darfur rebel groups, and it does.
Sudan supports anti-Chad government rebels.
The United Nations has confronted similar situations in the
past. Somalia and Bosnia ought to provide valuable and critically important
lessons, which should organizationally and operationally inform and guide new
missions.
They do, though only in the most glancing sense. Every major
U.N. peacekeeping operation remains a "shake and bake" exercise with
personnel contingents assembled piecemeal, equipment a collective hodge-podge,
supply a sometimes thing and airlift often supplied by the U.S. Air Force,
since no one else can do it.
Recall that the Clinton administration got frustrated with
United Nations fiddling in the Balkans and fought the 1999 Kosovo War using
NATO as its "peace enforcement" instrument.
Perhaps the United Nations is just not institutionally
capable of conducting "anti-genocide peacekeeping" in Darfur. Do the
Hollywood stars and Olympic protesters favor a U.S.-British-French invasion of
western Sudan?
As it is, the Khartoum government paints UNAMID as an
"imperialist invasion."
Khartoum's dictatorship is the fundamental problem. The
celebrities and protesters ought to call for regime change, though wouldn't
that sound uncomfortably like the Bush administration toppling Saddam Hussein's
genocidal regime in Iraq?
Source: Ocnus.net 2008