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31 August 2012 By Osman Mirghani If we were to judge Lakhdar
Brahimi's mission based on the controversy that
surrounded his appointment and his recent statements,
then we must already consider it a failure. The
veteran Algerian diplomat found himself in the eye of
a storm once leaks were published revealing that he
was the chosen successor to Kofi Annan as the joint
UN-Arab League envoy. Annan decided to resign after he
found that he was plowing the sea, and that his
mission with regards to the Syrian crisis had not
achieved any progress, and did not have any chance of
success in light of the international division, the
regional strife, and the internal escalation of
violence. Many advised Brahimi not to accept the job
and warned him that it was too late for peace efforts,
and that there was no longer any room for compromise
between a regime that persists with violence and
murder and an opposition that has become more
militarized and more determined for al-Assad to leave.
However, Brahimi accepted the mission, either because
he is used to difficult assignments, or because he
could not adapt to life outside the theater of
international politics, or because certain parties
sought to persuade him to take over the mantle because
the international community does not want to seem like
it has abandoned diplomatic efforts completely in
favor of a military solution, which seems no less
complicated than a political one. Only a few days after the announcement of his
appointment, quiet criticisms of Brahimi transformed
into an avalanche of attacks in the wake of the
remarks attributed to him, whereby he reportedly said
that it was premature to talk of whether or not
President Bashar al-Assad must step down. The Syrian
opposition interpreted these words as hint to the
possibility of al-Assad surviving under a political
settlement, and considered this to be a blatant
disregard for the blood of the Syrian people and
called for an apology from the new envoy. The
opposition stressed that it was too late to talk about
a political solution whereby al-Assad would still be
present in the transitional phase, and that the
minimum that is required is for the President and his
entourage to leave, if the entire regime does not. This uproar shows the difficulty of Brahimi's task
and the slim chances for diplomatic success in light
of the military escalation and the tension between
different parties involved in the crisis, both
internally and abroad. Certainly Brahimi's statements
were interpreted in a distorted manner, in light of
the highly tensioned atmosphere in Syria where there
is no room for a careful reading of statements coated
in diplomatic language with multiple interpretations
and facets. If we return to read these statements, we
find that Brahimi, when asked whether he would demand
al-Assad to resign, actually said: "It's much too
early for me to say. I don't know enough about what is
happening". There is a clear difference in meaning
between these words and the interpretations that
claimed he was alluding to the survival of al-Assad in
power. Nevertheless, Brahimi was forced to issue new
statements in order to clarify his first remarks, and
in order to explain that he did not say it is too
early to talk about al-Assad's departure, but rather
that: "What I said is that it's early for me to say
anything related to the content of this issue. That's
what I said…Regarding whether Assad has to step down
or not, I didn't say that it's too early for him to
step down". Brahimi has much experience when it comes to thorny
issues, and is known for his patience and perseverance
in his maneuvers between conflicting parties, but he
will find the Syrian crisis to be a much harder test
than any of the previous crises he has mediated or
acted in. The furor over his recent statements is only
a small sample of what he will face in the days to
come. Yet this reality is not lost on the discerning
Brahimi, and he has acknowledged that divisions within
the Security Council thwarted Kofi Annan's previous
efforts, and that his first task is to overcome these
divisions, saying: "The problem is not what I can do
differently, it is how others are going to behave
differently". This may be part of the diagnosis of the
problem, but it certainly does not offer a solution to
the dilemma of overcoming these divisions, nor does
Brahimi put forward a vision of how he can make
"others" behave differently. The divisions within the
Security Council are at their peak, especially between
Russia and China on the one hand, and the US, France
and Britain on the other. These differences make it
seem like the world has returned to the Cold War. The
Russians and Chinese believe that the West is imposing
its own solutions and models, passing these through
Security Council resolutions, and that this could set
a precedent for other areas and conflicts, including
those within the Russian and Chinese domain. This was
expressed by the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov, who said that the outcome [of the Syrian
crisis] will impact how future conflicts will be
resolved; "either following the UN Charter, or
democracy by bombs", as he put it. Yet the real
problem is that everyone is using the UN Charter for
their own purposes and objectives, and the demands of
the people are becoming less significant in the face
of states' calculations and their interests, and
modern history offers us many examples of this. As for
the talk about "democracy by bombs", this avoids the
plain truth, namely that the revolutions begin
peacefully and only become militarized after
tyrannical regimes resort to bloody repression, and
external interests and calculations interfere with
internal movements. The Syrian crisis offers an example of this and
more; it is not only intertwined with conflicting
international calculations, it also overlaps with
regional conflicts and internal complexities and
sensitivities, and the regime is prepared to use
extreme levels of violence to cling onto power. This
is the atmosphere that thwarted Annan's mission and
this is what Brahimi faces in the days ahead, whilst
the suffering of the Syrian people continues to
escalate. But the difficult question is should the new
envoy pull out? Despite all the reservations, Brahimi's withdrawal
would mean leaving the arena free of any sound other
than the noise of gunfire and the groans of the
victims and the bereaved. It is true that the regime
is gradually eroding, and that the opposition is
gaining more strategic locations and power, but the
military option may not materialize any time soon,
especially considering the internal complexities and
the external entanglements, which means more suffering
for the Syrians and more problems for the country in
the future. Thus the window should not be closed on
the peaceful solution, however impossible it may seem,
even to give al-Assad one last chance to leave safely
and spare Syria more bloodshed. |