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Iraq elections: the saga continues but the forecast largely stands

A number of important developments have occurred since my last post on the Iraq elections on 2 May. They are unlikely to fundamentally alter my prediction of a Shia-dominated State of Law (SoL)-National Iraqi Alliance (NIA)-some splinter groups or more likely a Kurdistani List government, but they have cast doubt on the outlook for Nouri al-Maliki’s continued premiership. Keep reading.

Original Print: http://www.examiner.com/x-44036-Foreign-Policy-Examiner~y2010m5d16-Iraq-elections-the-saga-continues-but-the-forecast-largely-stands

Iraq elections: game over, almost

Electoral meddling by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki & Co has cast near terminal doubt on lingering hopes that Iraq’s March elections would usher in democracy, pluralism and minority rights.

Early signs of regression came shortly before the election in January-February 2010. Keep reading.

Original Print: http://www.examiner.com/examiner/x-44036-Foreign-Policy-Examiner~y2010m5d2-Iraq-elections-game-over-almost

Fighting with AQI

The Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) on Thursday published a revealing, first-hand account of an ostensible Sunni insurgent’s experience fighting with al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) against US forces.

Abu Najim, nom de guerre, details his personal motivations for joining and later leaving the ranks of AQI. A burning thirst for vengeance, he maintains, drove him to engage US forces over 60 times. Keep reading.

Original Print: http://www.examiner.com/x-44036-Foreign-Policy-Examiner

Dollars, Sense and Climate Change

The myriad facets of climate change denial are thrown into relief, as dollars and sense ally, Claudio Guler writes for ISN Security Watch.

By Claudio Guler for ISN Security Watch, 19 April 2010

“With all the hysteria, all the fear, all the phony science, could it be that manmade global warming is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people? I believe it is.” – US Senator James M Inhofe (Republican – Oklahoma), 28 July 2003.

Such is the rallying cry of the climate change denial movement. Since Senator Inhofe made this statement seven years ago, the drive to discredit climate change and the science that underpins it has enjoyed considerable success, even as awareness about climate change and the threat it poses to humanity has gone mainstream.

The US, widely seen as an indispensable participant in the fight against climate change, remains among the most skeptical internationally. A Gallup poll published last month found that concerns over climate change among Americans declined during the past two years.

The recent ‘Climategate’ scandal, the product of hacked e-mail correspondence from climate scientists at the University of East Anglia in the UK suggesting collusion to manipulate data, and a row over the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) use of non peer-reviewed sources to claim that the Himalayan glaciers could melt by 2035 have cast further doubt.

The deluge of criticism culminated in the US with the publishing of In Denial by Steven F Hayward in the conservative Weekly Standard, a piece accompanied by an illustration of Al Gore standing somewhere near the North Pole, nude, shivering and clutching his groin to shield it from the biting cold while being ridiculed by polar bears.

What then keeps the climate change denial movement, a campaign shunned by all but a handful of scientists, alive and kicking? Examination suggests a confluence of factors.

Economics

Money talks. At the individual level, curbing emissions will result in higher energy costs, generating resistance at the polls. The businesses that provide energy to consumers equally do not want to see their profit margins squeezed and regard the status quo – and their position in it – as advantageous.

A lackluster economy, moreover, has likely shifted some of the political urgency elsewhere.

Corporate sector pushback comes in the form of congressional lobbying and public relations campaigns. James Hoggan from DesmogBlog, a website launched in 2006 to track and expose the interests and personalities behind climate change denial, explained to ISN Security Watch, “The oil, gas and coal industries are clearly the leaders in the climate denial campaign, although the big fossil fuel players have also made common cause with other energy intensive industries and even with industries like tobacco, which are also motivated to promote mistrust of science and government.

“Major energy industries like Exxon Mobil [Greenpeace critique] and Koch Industries [Greenpeace critique] (the largest privately owned fossil fuel company in America) have been revealed as big spenders in the campaign to deny climate science. And industry associations like the American Chambers of Commerce are also heavily implicated. But increasingly, industries have started hiding behind ‘non-profit’ think tanks, which can campaign aggressively – and expensively – while concealing the source of their funding.”

Koch Industries is co-owned by the $14 billion (each) brothers Charles and David Koch. David Koch quipped to Portofolio.com in October 2008, “My joke is that we’re the biggest company you’ve never heard of.”

The public space

The role of think tanks, as Hoggan maintains, is to provide a veneer of academic legitimacy to the campaign as well as to ensure maximum influence in the media to perpetuate doubt about the science of climate change. Poison the public discourse, establish a skeptical normative environment, kill legislation.

Some of the think tanks and lobbying groups in the vanguard include: the American Petroleum Institute (API), the Western Fuels Association (WFA), the CATO Institute, the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), the George C Marshall Institute, the Heritage Foundation, and the now-defunct Natural Resources Stewardship Project (NRSP) in Canada and The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition (TASSC) headed by famed lobbyist and FOX News contributor Steve Milloy.

The individual

The lack of a congenial atmosphere for discussion, moreover, helps taint already strained individual attitudes, argues Kari Norgaard, assistant professor of sociology and environmental studies at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington, US.

In a background paper to the 2010 World Bank Development Report entitled Cognitive and Behavioral Challenges in Responding to Climate Change, researched in Norway, Norgaard concludes that the presence of negative emotions in conjunction with global warming (fear, guilt and helplessness), and the process of emotion management and cultural norms leads to the construction of a social reality in which climate change is held at arms length.

In other words, the complexity of climate change and the menace it implies overwhelms individuals and creates a cognitive dissonance. Rather than trying to internalize the concerns and marshal them for action, people cast them aside altogether.

Hoggan further complements Norgaard’s findings with the notion of burgeoning mistrust at the individual level: “Public opinion polls are increasingly revealing unprecedented levels of mistrust in the public mind. People don’t trust government. They don’t trust industry. Some polls show that they don’t even trust one another. And the denial industry has taken full advantage of this mistrust, even promoting it by questioning the motives, integrity and competence of some of the world’s greatest scientific bodies.”

Asked about the divergence in US and European responses to climate change by ISN Security Watch, Norgaard reckoned, “In Europe, where a limited emissions control regime with the EU Emissions Trading System is in place, concern for the environment is more institutionalized than in the states, generating more momentum. But again, even there, comprehensive steps are wanting.”

The climate change denial movement has tentacles the world over, but it is most influential and caustic in the US. Without America’s leadership, other countries, including China and India, have little incentive to act. Obama’s presidential directives, although welcome, only go so far.

For a bipartisan solution, legislators in Washington should look to the CLEAR Act currently being discussed in the US Senate.

Otherwise, it will be up to geoengineering to resolve the matter. That is an exceedingly risky fix.

Original Print: http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affairs/Security-Watch/Detail/?lng=en&id=115105

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What to read on Iraq

Iraq’s 2006-2007 civil war fundamentally altered the balance of power in the Middle East country. In brief, the Shia majority, formerly subjugated by Saddam Hussein and the Sunni minority, won the war and rose to the helm.

The US surge – unlike what Washington and the received wisdom maintain – did not stop the bloodletting. Rather, the culmination of the sectarian cleansing of Baghdad is what primarily brought the violence to an end. Keep reading.

Original Post: http://www.examiner.com/x-44036-Foreign-Policy-Examiner~y2010m4d18-What-to-read-on-Iraq

Sudan votes: update

Western monitoring missions to Sudan announced Saturday that the country’s recent executive and legislative elections failed to meet international standards, but marked an important step in the northeast African state’s democratic transformation.

The Carter Center delegation, headed by former US president Jimmy Carter, and the EU Election Observation Mission, led by Member of the European Parliament Veronique de Keyser, both said that a mix of alleged electoral improprieties, a lack of transparency, logistical issues and party boycotts marred the vote.

Implications: Keep reading.

Original Print: http://www.examiner.com/x-44036-Foreign-Policy-Examiner~y2010m4d18-Sudan-votes-update

Sudan votes

Sudan Sunday kicked off three days of national elections as called for by the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended the two-decade long north-south civil war – albeit almost a year late. Note: The National Election Commission (NEC) on Monday extended the vote by an extra two days.

The vote comes amid allegations of electoral improprieties and a boycott by Yasser Arman of the southern Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) and former prime minister Sadiq al-Mahdi of the northern opposition Umma party, effectively securing a win for President Omar al-Bashir of the National Congress Party (NCP) and an indictee of the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur. EU election observers have also pulled out the western Darfur region, citing security concerns.

Critics charge that the exercise in suffrage will do little more than legitimize the despotic rule of Bashir, increase his defiance toward international opprobrium, and possibly reinvigorate his proclivity to use excessive force against rebels in Darfur and South Sudan.

This may be the case, but election observers and foreign governments must still certify the results. Moreover, although his legitimacy may be ostensibly bolstered in northern Sudan, internationally Bashir will remain a pariah as well as a fugitive, and his credibility in Darfur and South Sudan is unlikely to improve.

Proponents of the election, on the other hand, point out that the poll sets a precedent for Sudan and Bashir, and will complicate future attempts by the autocrat, should he so feel inclined, to argue against holding a referendum for southern secession scheduled for January 2011.

Much but not all of Sudan’s oil reserves, a lifeline of the Khartoum government, are located in the south.

Iran, the bomb and a surge capacity

For almost two decades now, US policymakers, foreign policy pundits and nonproliferation experts, among others, have fretted that Iran’s efforts to master the nuclear fuel cycle are primarily aimed at developing an atomic bomb. Tehran has done little to allay their concerns.

Although a nuclear weapon may be the ultimate goal – primarily to guarantee the country’s historically precarious territorial integrity and national autonomy, but also to affect the regional nuclear balance – Iran could just as well decide to stop short of the nuclear breakout point, securing for itself a so-called surge capacity.

A surge capacity, which Japan for example enjoys, involves having all the components needed to assemble and deploy a nuclear weapon within a reasonable time frame on hand – near weapons-grade uranium or plutonium, a delivery system, trained personnel and nuclear know-how – but intentionally leaving them all apart. Such an arrangement would likely allow Iran to nominally maintain its status as a non-nuclear weapons state and Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) signatory, and to simultaneously enjoy the added diplomatic leverage afforded by its latent capability.

Moreover, by not going nuclear, the strategy could help mitigate the impetus for a much-feared regional nuclear arms race involving Saudi Arabia, Egypt and maybe Syria.

The reason this approach is of interest is because during the Shah’s rule in the 1960s and 1970s, Iran pursued exactly that, a surge capacity. Are today’s efforts the Shah’s policies redux or are they instead aimed at acquiring a full nuclear capability? The West does not and probably cannot know, but negotiators on all sides are unlikely to be discounting the possibility of the former and its potential for compromise.

Original Print: http://www.examiner.com/x-44036-Foreign-Policy-Examiner~y2010m4d8-Iran-the-Bomb-and-a-Surge-Capacity

Engineering Inequality

For the past three decades economic opportunity in the US has been all but equitable. The Great Recession could mark a turning point, but only maybe, Claudio Guler writes for ISN Security Watch.

By Claudio Guler for ISN Security Watch, 31 March 2010

Live in the States? Earn at or below the 80th income percentile and feel like your economic future is unpropitious? It probably is. Though if it is any consolation, the system is rigged to work against you.

Income and wealth inequality in the US – looking at almost any metric available – have been rising broadly since the mid-1970s, splitting society and ridiculing the much-vaunted equal opportunity to the ‘pursuit of happiness.’

The WWII and baby boomer generations experienced a rather different arrangement and in turn greater social mobility. Inequality in the US declined or held steady from the early 1930s through to the mid-1970s.

Critics of the inequality argument suggest the split is more statistical than empirical, pointing out that even the poorest today are well off by historical standards. Well yes, but is that a benchmark to which we should aspire?

Gini out of the bottle

The gini coefficient for the US in 2008 – a common measure of economic inequality within a society (the lower the number, the smaller the disparity) – hovered in the neighborhood of 47. This is the highest among developed countries and rose from a nadir of 38.6 in 1968.

Europe and Canada enjoy gini coefficients closer to 30. Latin American countries boast gini coefficients in the 50-60 range.

The average hourly wage of US workers has slumped since the 1970s, and remains lower than its peak in 1972 in 2008 dollars. The top 1 percent’s share (approximately 21 percent) of total pre-tax income has returned to levels not witnessed since the late 1920s, shortly before the onset of the Great Depression.

The wealth gap is equally pronounced. In 2007, the top 10 percent of Americans controlled roughly 70 percent of the total wealth of the nation and 90 percent of securities.

The result is two points of divergence in income and wealth inequality. The first is between the top 20, more likely the top 10 percent of income earners and the bottom 80 to 90 percent.

The second – dubbed the ‘middle class millionaire’ phenomenon by the US media – illustrates the gapping divide between immediate entrants into the top 1 percent and those sitting luxuriously at the top 0.1 percent of the US income distribution.

The policy argument

What factors then have driven inequality in the US since the mid-1970s?

Technological change that favors skilled workers and globalization – also known as trade and services liberalization – have dominated the public discourse.

Both have certainly made a contribution, but the latter is inherently a function of policy choices; US policymakers have exposed low and medium wage workers to greater competition from abroad than high wage workers, such as doctors.

The impact of globalization, moreover, is mitigated somewhat by the relatively closed nature of the US economy – although the absolute measure of US trade is gargantuan, relative to the economy it is small by international standards.

As far as technological change, this is a global phenomenon, and other countries in the rich world have not seen corresponding rises in inequality.

Economist John Schmitt from the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) in Washington DC argues that a third element is at play causing high and rising inequality: policies intended to promote inequality.

The argument is as follows: The dual oil shocks and economic stagflation of the 1970s generated a crisis environment that the US economic elite were able to identify and use to advance their interests, formerly looked after but not gorged. This coincided with the political rise of Ronald Reagan in the US and Margaret Thatcher in the UK, and the introduction of the neoliberal economic doctrine. Soon, the mantra was trickle-down economics.

In the seemingly boundless pursuit of efficiency, the political right with the left in tow, took on the unions – typified by the Reagan administration’s 1981 break-up of the air traffic controllers strike – retrenched the welfare state (for perspective read Gøsta Esping-Anderson), privatized many state and local government services, promoted deregulation in many sectors including financial services, and most importantly, cut taxes across the board.

President Reagan, moreover, racialized welfare state retrenchment, and in so doing drew attention to the ethnic fault-line in US economic inequality. Remember the ‘Welfare Queen’ from Chicago’s South Side?

“Each of these policies, while at least sold as efficiency enhancing, also has a separate, very clear effect of lowering the bargaining power of workers relative to their employers. That is the key feature that is in every one of these policies,” Schmitt told ISN Security Watch.

“A top candidate for what is driving inequality is compensation for the absolutely top tier of the American corporate structure. CEOs and the top management are enormously taking advantage of their insider position in these corporations, to take money first and foremost from workers, cutting benefits and wages for example, but also from shareholders,” he added.

Where in the 1960s CEOs earned 20-30 times the average worker’s pay, by the late 2000s, the ratio had crept to upwards of 300.

A historically low top marginal tax rate, 35-39 percent (it used to be 90 percent during the 1960s and has dropped precipitously since Reagan), tax loopholes (long-term capital gains for example, which often comprise a large portion of executive compensation packages, are taxed at only 15 percent), and the lack of redistributive mechanisms to diffuse efficiency gains and alleviate the displacement effects of noncompetitive industries resulting from trade liberalization have ensured generous earnings for the privileged pinnacle.

How then, did politicians convince voters in the industrial Midwest, for instance, to vote against what would appear to be their own economic interests? Suspicion falls on the political appeal of the tax cut, and the use of social issues – gay marriage and abortion in particular – to divert attention away from economic issues during campaign season.

Political economy

A just meritocracy then? For the top, yes. For the elite, certainly and spectacularly. For everybody else, hardly.

President Barack Obama may be the man to turn the tide. Health care reform, which has also made improvements in access to higher education, qualifies as a redistributive mechanism, as would yet-to-be-broached tax reform. But he is up against a nation indoctrinated by the deceptive allure of what fundamentally remains Reaganomics, and an otherworldly wealthy and influential upper class. Moreover, the economic debate in the US, focusing primarily on job creation, is only now set to kick off.

In the interim, the Great Recession is likely to have aggravated circumstances.

“It’s tough to know how it’s all going to play out. Clearly, a lot has happened here. My guess is that economic inequality, once we have all the data in, will have increased significantly over the recession. The only reason why I’d be hesitant is at least initially when the stock market crashed, the people who lost money are rich people,” Schmitt said.

“The catch is, something like 60 percent of Americans owned their house, and these have also fallen on average between 25-30 percent. So overall, wealth inequality has almost certainly gone up. On income inequality, it’s a no-brainer. People at the top of the income ladder have been much more successful in defending themselves against the downturn.”

Pro-corporate and pro-market (i.e., pro-competitiveness) policies are not one and the same. Power without checks and balances consolidates, eventually crowding out all but a narrow few. Dinero behaves no differently.

Original Print: http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affairs/Security-Watch/Detail/?lng=en&id=114376

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Darfur: The Genocide Question

by Claudio Guler, 18 March 2010, ISN Blog

Back in November 2008, I wrote a commentary piece on the Darfur conflict for ISN Security Watch (Sudan: China is Key) with the phrase, “the incoming Obama administration can show its resolve to combat genocide.” I can no longer say with conviction that this loaded term is an appropriate description of what transpired in the region.

I have eschewed the label in my analytical reports ever since. All the same, the debate is an important one and warrants further scrutiny. It also highlights the intersection of politics and law in international criminal justice.

What transpired in Darfur, for the most part between 2003-2006, was certainly a grave humanitarian tragedy and an abhorrent counter-insurgency campaign, but did it amount to genocide?

Former US Secretary of State Colin Powell first described the conflict in Darfur as genocide back in September 2004, sparking a flurry of activism and prompting calls for military intervention. Since then, an inadequate but better-than-nothing AU/UN peacekeeping operation has been deployed, and the International Criminal Court (ICC) referred by the UN Security Council has opened a formal investigation, indicting among others, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for war crimes and crimes against humanity. The prosecutor of the ICC, Louis Moreno Ocampo, has continued to vigorously push for charges of genocide against Bashir for targeting the Fur, Massalit and Zaghawa tribes. This has invited accusations of politicization, as critics charge that the evidence is circumstantial.

Article 6 of the Rome Statute of the ICC defines genocide as:

[A]ny of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, as such:

1. Killing members of the group;
2. Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
3. Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
4. Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
5. Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

A seminal 2005 UN Commission of Inquiry Report on the Darfur conflict found that the various tribes of Darfur, although far from constituting homogeneous religious and ethnic entities, could be viewed as ‘subjective protected groups.’

The hitch with Mr Ocampo’s efforts is that he appears bereft of evidence to demonstrate genocidal intent on the part of the central government in Khartoum.

Indeed the Commission concluded in its findings that Khartoum was guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity, but not genocide. As proof, it pointed to instances of select killings of would-be insurgents rather than entire populations, as well as the aggregation of conflict refugees in government-run camps not intended for extermination following hostilities.

Alex de Waal, a prominent Sudan expert, has denounced the prosecutor’s behavior.

Conversely, John Prendergast of the Enough Project and the Save Darfur Coalition in Washington DC continue to argue, as many others do, that the evidence for genocidal intent is conspicuous.

The Darfur conflict also has a regional dimension, suggesting a more archetypal proxy-war situation, but not excluding the possibility of genocidal behavior in individual cases, which is rarely broached in the mainstream press. Although the two have ostensibly reconciled in the past months, Khartoum was claiming not so long ago that Chadian President Idris Derby in N’Djamena – himself on French life support – funds the Darfur rebel groups. N’Djamena has accused Khartoum of similar behavior. The conflict also spills over into the northeastern Central African Republic (CAR). (Read The Tormented Triangle, a Crisis States Research Centre report on the regional aspect of the crisis.)

It is a debate. And the question of whether or not specific individuals in Darfur acted with genocidal intent is now for the judges in The Hague to ascertain. In the meantime, it is probably best for us to stick to the measured findings of the Commission report:

“The conclusion that no genocidal policy has been pursued and implemented in Darfur by the Government authorities, directly or through the militias under their control, should not be taken in any way as detracting from the gravity of the crimes perpetrated in that region. International offences such as the crimes against humanity and war crimes that have been committed in Darfur may be no less serious and heinous than genocide.”

Original Print: http://isnblog.ethz.ch/security/darfur-the-genocide-question-2

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