[Mb-civic] Arab League futility - Boston Globe Editorial
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Mar 30 03:53:06 PST 2006
Arab League futility
March 30, 2006 | Editorial | The Boston Globe
THIS WEEK'S ARAB LEAGUE summit in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum,
appeared to validate the group's reputation for idle chatter and obtuse
decisions.
If the site of the summit was not callous enough -- the host government
is the perpetrator of an ongoing genocide in Darfur -- the participants
made things worse by rejecting a proposal to supplement 7,000
ineffectual African Union monitors in Darfur with a substantial United
Nations peacekeeping force. In so doing, the league's 22 members were
accepting the cynical line of Sudan's genocidal ruler, Omar al-Bashir,
who characterized the plan for a UN peacekeeping force in Darfur as a
violation of Sudan's sovereignty.
This gesture of solidarity with the forces behind mass murder,
systematic rape, and the ethnic cleansing of non-Arab African tribal
groups in Darfur cast a pall on everything else that was said, or left
unsaid, by the dignitaries -- mostly autocrats -- in attendance in Khartoum.
The summit's pledge of solidarity with the Palestinians, in conjunction
with a repetition of the 2002 Arab League offer of peace with Israel in
return for a withdrawal from all Arab lands, belongs under the rubric of
idle chatter. The vapidity of the members' stance was evident in their
refusal to increase last year's commitment to contribute $55 million per
month to the Palestinian Authority. The Palestinians are asking for $170
million.
But the most dramatic -- and pathetic -- failing of the summit was its
effort to address the twin specters of sectarian warfare and Iranian
influence in Iraq. In a barely veiled lament at the prospect of
US-Iranian talks about Iraq's future, the Arab League's secretary
general, Amr Moussa, said: ''Any solution for the Iraqi problem cannot
be reached without Arabs and Arab participation. Any result of
consultations without Arab participation will be considered insufficient
and will not lead to a solution."
This was a coded way of expressing deep Arab fears that the United
States and Iran are preparing to subtract Iraq from the Arab world,
allowing it to be absorbed into a swelling sphere of Iranian influence.
At the summit's closing session, Iraq's foreign minister told the other
Arab states that they shared the blame for what is happening today in
Iraq because of their indifference to decades of Saddam Hussein's
''authoritarian rule and wars." And he rightly said they had an
obligation now to help Iraq in ''isolating terrorism and drying up the
sources that finance its activities."
It is in the interest of the Arab states to heed this plea, because the
jihadists now wreaking havoc in Iraq will likely be coming after them next.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2006/03/30/arab_league_futility/
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