On My Mind: Dangerous impasses (JERUSALEM POST OP-ED) By KENNETH BANDLER 05/29/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=271754
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Impasses can engender complacency. That is precisely the danger
underlying the current international positioning regarding Syria and
Iran. President Bashar Assad’s dubious assent to a cease-fire and
Iran’s talks with world powers over its nuclear program are the
latest tactic of these two allies to resist mounting economic and
diplomatic pressures.
Both regimes have gained some reprieve. Further action on Syria
awaits the outcome of the UN observer mission. What more to do with
Iran is on hold ahead of a third round of talks with the five
permanent UN Security Council members and Germany, known as the P5 +
1 group.
Yet, while world powers ponder what to do with these two recalcitrant
regimes, neither Damascus or Tehran is changing its behavior or
goals. In Syria, the costs in human suffering are rising far above
the UN estimate of 9,000 dead. The quest for Iranian nuclear weapons
capability advances as more centrifuges are installed to expand
uranium enrichment.
Assad’s ostensible acceptance of Kofi Annan’s cease-fire plan did not
come from the merciless Syrian dictator. It was announced by the
former UN secretary general’s spokesman. Yet, the plan’s doom was
foretold when Assad’s forces continued to pummel Syrian cities during
Annan’s visit to Damascus in March.
Now, with more than 250 UN monitors in Syria, Assad has demonstrated
again that he has no interest in ending his 15-month-old brutally
violent crackdown. The weekend massacre of more than 100, a third of
them children, in Houla, was a particularly bloody outrage. It also
was a reminder that Assad forces began assaulting the Syrian people
by arresting and torturing schoolchildren in March 2011.
As long as Assad continues to ignore the cease-fire he allegedly
accepted, the Annan plan will remain fanciful. And the observers’
mission, born out of the failure of the UN Security Council, due to
Russia’s and China’s opposition, to adopt meaningful action, will
continue to be ineffectual. The UN should reconsider, admit failure,
remove the international monitors and regroup with stronger action.
Most disappointing for the Syrian opposition, international pressure
on Assad has been steadily weakening. Nowadays, there is barely a
mention of Assad’s need to step down, which was the call to action
issued by the US and the European Union in the summer and fall of
2011.
The UN presence helps to legitimize Assad who continues living in an
illusory world where he promotes a view that foreign terrorists, not
Syrians, are against his regime. He expounded that view recently in a
Russia TV interview. And, he now blames the Houla massacre on
insurgents.
SYRIAN ACCEPTANCE of the Annan cease-fire came just a day before the
representatives of Iran and the P5 plus one gathered in Istanbul, for
the first time in more than a year. Whether or not that was a
coincidence, Iranian-Syrian relations have tightened, with Tehran
providing support to the Assad regime.
Iran’s record of deceit is similar to Syria. Tehran has ignored four
UN Security Council resolutions, International Atomic Energy Agency
reports, and ever-tightening economic and financial sanctions imposed
by the US, EU and many other countries.
Meeting in Istanbul on April 13, and again last week in Baghdad, the
P5 + 1 group spent a lot of time talking with Iran but no agreements
were reached other than to convene again in a few weeks in Moscow. On
the positive side, the US, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany
rejected Iran’s requests to weaken sanctions without concrete,
verifiable actions that Iran will abandon its quest for nuclear
weapons capability.
Skepticism is warranted regarding any assumed sincerity by the Syrian
or Iranian regimes in resolving their respective crises in good
faith. But they do have an advantage over an international community
that is not fully united, or may not have the staying power, in
dealing with them.
The sad reality is these dual impasses, with their inherent dangers,
can continue as world powers are distracted by other, seemingly more
pressing matters. With US elections in less than five months, and the
electorate concerned about the economy, debate and discussions about
crises in lands far away will recede. Similarly, new governments
emerging from elections in Europe will be tempted to focus on the
deepening economic recession, rather than entertain new initiatives
to deal with Iran and Syria.
The status quo in Iran and Syria, however, is unacceptable and poses
security threats beyond their respective borders. The international
community, led by the US, will need to make clear that patience is
not limitless. Firm deadlines to end Assad’s crackdown in Syria and
to stop Iran’s nuclear weapons program are needed, with credible
warnings that compelling actions will be taken if they continue to
defy the international community.
In short, complacency is not an option.
The writer is the American Jewish Committee’s director of media
relations. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 05/29/12)
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