"Perils of ignoring festering conflicts
Published: January 2 2009 18:57 | Last updated: January 2 2009 18:57
From Kashmir, through Palestine to Somalia, the last weeks of last year were prodigal in reminders of how dangerous it is to ignore( AMEN ) the festering disputes of the Middle East, South Asia and the Horn of Africa. Yes, they stew for a bit. But then they tend to boil over.
Gaza, to be sure, was already a cauldron. But it got that way in no small part because of flawed western policies: first, through allowing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to stew; and then attempting to isolate Hamas( I'D LIKE TO SEE THIS DONE, BUT IT WON'T WORK ) – which was democratically elected three years ago – and doing nothing to lift the Israeli siege that has turned Gaza into a prison for its 1.5m inhabitants.( I AGREE )
November’s brazen and bloody jihadi raid on Mumbai may have been carried out by a Kashmiri group, or it may be part of subcontinent-wide reprisals against the new civilian government of Pakistan’s attempted rapprochement with India and retreat from alliances of convenience with jihadis in Afghanistan and Kashmir. Either way, it illustrates how unresolved conflict can detonate a region.( TRUE )
Somalia is of a different order. It imploded into a long night of anarchy and warlordism nearly two decades ago. After the messy failure of US intervention in 1993, it was left to rot( SAD BUT TRUE ) – until the Union of Islamic Courts began to provide a rough semblance of Islamist order. That panicked the Bush administration into backing Ethiopia’s devastating invasion two years ago. It was a bit like taking a hammer to a ball of mercury: the Islamists were routed but regrouped under radical leadership, and are taking over swaths of Somalia (and maybe its new business, piracy) as Ethiopia withdraws.( TRUE )
None of these conflicts is at all easy, but rarely are they responsive to brute military force. The record suggests force breeds extremism and, in extremis, failed states.( I AGREE )
Israel’s regular attempts to enhance its security and break the regional logjam by force well illustrate this. The occupation of Palestinian territory after the 1967 six-day war has locked it in a deadly embrace with its Palestinian neighbours that only the creation of an independent Palestinian state can break. Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon led to the emergence of Israel’s deadliest enemy, Hizbollah – as Ehud Barak, the current defence minister, has acknowledged though apparently not learnt from. Its misfired 2006 war on Hizbollah ended by undermining a rare, democratically elected, pro-western government in Beirut, making Lebanon barely governable, just as the current pounding of Gaza has discredited Mahmoud Abbas, the moderate Palestinian president.( I AGREE )
Ripples through these regions easily build into waves. The US-allied leaders of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan, initially happy to see Israel hit Hizbollah or Hamas, quickly change their tune as soon as their peoples rally to the militants. Their legitimacy and survival is at stake.( TRUE )
Happily( MORE LIKE PRAISE GOD ), the superficial muscularity of the Bush-Cheney era – the idea that you can bomb people into moderation and alignment with western interests – is about to end.
Barack Obama has the opportunity to approach afresh these unresolved conflicts before they disappear into a lethal stew of rejectionism and radicalism. He looks to be preparing to appoint several special envoys, including for the Middle East and Kashmir. Good. That concentrated focus is needed: to identify and act on tractable grievances before they become the property of jihadis and extremists."
Maybe he could add the Congo, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Columbia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, and Georgia to his list, just for starters.
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