Monday, December 17, 2007

Genocide, Continued

Funny isn't it how we forget the rest of the world is moving along without our attention? I have posted on Darfur several times and it is not going away. Of course, President Bashir has often promised, and never performed on the promise, to stop the Janjaweed which were originally drummed up by his office to put down the uprising of 'insurgent' forces. The 'insurgent' forces were the black residents of the Darfur region, the Janjaweed the brown, Muslim, residents, whose resources are being affected by long ongoing drought.

WHEN THE United Nations Security Council approved an expanded peacekeeping force for the Darfur region of Sudan last summer, some Western politicians may have concluded -- prematurely -- that one of the world's worst humanitarian crises was at last going to be relieved. If so, that's exactly what Omar Hassan al-Bashir was hoping for. Mr. Bashir, Sudan's Arab dictator, has made an art form out of confounding Western attempts to end his genocidal repression of Darfur's African population. His pattern is to resist international pressure until it reaches a peak. He then appears to give in, waits until Western attention wanders and returns to intransigence.

Last June, after President Bush announced new U.S. sanctions, European leaders talked of imposing a no-fly zone and even China pressed for a concession, Mr. Bashir agreed to replace 7,000 African Union peacekeepers with a 26,000-member force that the African Union and the United Nations would jointly organize. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon proclaimed a success, the Security Council ratified the deal at the end of July and Mr. Ban began raising troops. Now, with the deployment due in two weeks and the world's attention elsewhere, Mr. Bashir has dug in his heels. He is refusing to approve non-African troops for the force, including Nepalese, Thai and Nordic soldiers who would be crucial to its effectiveness.

A U.N. peacekeeping official warned the Security Council on Thursday that the deployment had been endangered by Mr. Bashir's stance and that a sign-off on the troops was urgently needed. Yet the assembled ambassadors didn't react much. That's probably because Sudan's obstructionism is not the United Nations' only crippling problem: Mr. Ban has been unable to find countries willing to supply two dozen helicopters needed to give the peacekeepers mobility in a territory the size of France.
(snip)
The Bush administration, which called the campaign in Darfur genocide more than three years ago, has done more than most other governments. It provides airlift for peacekeepers and is paying for the construction of their camps. U.S. helicopters might be counterproductive in Darfur even if Mr. Bashir would accept them. But the Bush administration needs to step up its efforts to see that the U.N. force is deployed in January. That means helping Mr. Ban get his aircraft and simultaneously renewing the pressure on Mr. Bashir. The cynical strongman is counting on a failure of will by NATO and the Security Council; it will take an effort by President Bush to disappoint him.


The stance this administration has been verbal, not factual.

It will take action to make the genocide stop. As far as has been shown to date, the occupied White House is not interested in actually stopping that genocide, but only in giving itself credit for good intentions.

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2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well be fair - even by your own quote: "The Bush administration, which called the campaign in Darfur genocide more than three years ago, has done more than most other governments. It provides airlift for peacekeepers and is paying for the construction of their camps."

Give credit if some of it is due!

5:10 AM  
Blogger Ruth said...

The reason I included the quote you cited was to be Fair. What the admin. is not doing is putting any pressure on Bashir to let peacekeepers do any peacekeeping, and it won't push because he's giving dribs and drabs of info about Osama bin Laden, who lived in Sudan for many years. But of course, we're no longer really interested in that war, are we?

11:27 AM  

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