Disarmament DocumentationBack to Disarmament Documentation 'Iraq and beyond', Senator Richard Lugar on the 'Greater Middle East', March 29'A new partnership for the Greater Middle East: Combatting Terrorism, Building Peace', Speech, March 29, 2004. Since the end of World War II, we have recognized that our
national security rests on four strong pillars: our own democratic
values and the example of freedom that we hold out to the world;
our military strength; our alliances with other countries and our
ability to work cooperatively with the rest of the international
community; and an enlightened use of both hard and soft power,
including diplomacy, aid, and trade, that promotes friendship while
protecting us from enemies.
Similarly, the Trust would go beyond the primary development paradigm of growth, infrastructure and health. It would help realize what the Arab Human Development Report called “a restructuring of the region from within.â€? Ultimately, the Trust would seek to promote changes to many of the structures that have been identified by the Arab scholars in the Development Reports as roadblocks to modernization in the Greater Middle East. This involves reform of economic systems; lessened state control of economies; diversification away from over-reliance on oil and toward more value-added industries; reform of labor markets to promote productivity and greater opportunities for advancement; revamping of weak education systems; a sea-change in the role of women in education, the economy, and society; much greater emphasis on research, science, technology and engineering; and political reform to give citizens more space to think and to have a voice. As the latest Development Report notes, political instability and struggles for power “in the absence of….democracy…impede the growth of knowledge on Arab soil.â€? The Trust would recognize that many of the policies and practices that have hobbled the Greater Middle East have been endorsed by the governments of the countries in question. It will be a challenge to convince them to join the Trust as partners in a process that will require them to make such fundamental changes. That’s why the Trust will seek to engage all elements of societies. The Arab Human Development Report calls on “the state, civil society, cultural and mass media institutions, enlightened intellectuals and the public at large to plant those values that encourage action and innovation in the political, social and economic sphere.â€? This challenge to business-as-usual helps explain why the administration’s own ideas for a Greater Middle East initiative have so far met with resistance from many Arab governments. Some Europeans have also criticized the initiative for, in effect, choosing reform over stability. I urge the President and his team to stay the course and not be cowed by this initial reaction. Many comments about the administration’s plan have a familiar ring. Arab autocrats have denounced it as an imposition of western values by outsiders. They’ve also criticized it as being a mission impossible until western outsiders impose a settlement on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Such obstructionism simply makes the case more clearly for real reform. I understand the desire of regional governments for “ownershipâ€? of this process, which is why I have emphasized the two-way nature of the Trust’s functions. But granting ownership does not mean the G-8, through the Trust, should simply write blank checks to Greater Middle East governments to pursue their own self-interested visions of reform. That would deny the need for fundamental change. We must be prepared to use our considerable leverage with allies inside and outside the region to promote truly democratic reforms and political freedom, not simply maintain the status quo, or our initiatives will lack credibility. At the same time, by remaining engaged in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, we will strengthen the rationale for our broader initiative in the region. The Security Dimension The social and political changes we are seeking will be even more difficult in an atmosphere of violence. The industrialized democracies, working with the countries of the Greater Middle East, must try to maintain a stable environment for long-term progress. I have proposed that NATO, with its integrated military command, interoperability of equipment and forces, and a proven ability to make decisions and take action, assume a larger role in the Greater Middle East and make the region a new priority. I have made a number of specific proposals. In particular, NATO should beef up its presence in Afghanistan, where it is leading the International Security Assistance Force, and assume a formal role in Iraq. No reasonable country of the Greater Middle East, just as no Western or Asian country, can wish for failure in the rehabilitation of Iraq. NATO’s involvement, by further internationalizing the reconstruction effort, will make success more likely. More broadly, NATO should launch a major effort to promote strong military-to-military relations with Greater Middle East countries, a program I have called “Cooperation for Peace.â€? As in NATO’s hugely successful Partnership for Peace program in Central and Eastern Europe, NATO could help with training for peacekeeping, counter-terrorism and border security, as well as with defense reform and civilian control of the military. This Cooperation for Peace program would complement efforts by the Twenty-First Century Trust to modernize Greater Middle Eastern societies and integrate them into the international community. The Political Dimension Achieving the kind of regional transformation we seek will require many steps over a long period of time. The first step, before deciding WHAT change is necessary, must be for the leaders and the people of the Greater Middle East to agree, through vigorous and open debate among themselves and across the region, that change IS necessary. This reform in attitude cannot be imposed from outside, it must be generated from within the region, across national boundaries. And it must be seen in the context of people taking charge of their own futures. We already see examples under way. For instance, the Alexandria Library in Egypt hosted a conference on ‘Critical Reforms in the Arab World: From Rhetoric to Reality’ this month to bring together members of the civil society in the Arab region including intellectuals, businessmen and academics. They declared they “are fully convinced that reform is a necessary and urgent matter.â€? And contrary to the popular notion that democracy is somehow an alien concept, they said they embraced “without ambiguity, genuine democracy.â€? We need much more of this. Many in the region say that they cannot support an agenda for change unless the United States addresses the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Arab Human Development Report calls the conflict “a contributing factor to the region’s democratic deficit, providing both a cause and an excuse for distorting the development agenda.â€? The search for stability in the Greater Middle East must proceed hand in hand with the resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But the nations of the Greater Middle East must be brought into the process of resolving the conflict. They cannot continue to expect the U.S. to address these issues on their behalf, and then complain that the U.S. is not doing it right. Therefore, I propose that as part of this drive to bring the Greater Middle East countries into the modern world, we bring them fully into the process of resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This would close what has in the past often been a gap in strategies for the larger region. As a first step, we should expand the “Quartetâ€? which is currently directing the peace processâ€"the U.S., Russia, the European Union and the United Nationsâ€"into the “Sextetâ€? by adding Egypt and Saudi Arabia. This would give the Palestinians more confidence in any proposal that comes forth, and give all countries in the region a greater stake in both the specifics of new peace proposals and in the efforts to follow through on their implementation. Closer Arab support would also give the Palestinians the option to make compromises that they might not otherwise make on their own. Secondly, we must recognize that Prime Minister Sharon’s unilateral disengagement has created an opportunity that we should seize to generate new attitudes and approaches to ending the violence. His decision to evacuate unilaterally almost all settlements in Gaza and a number in the West Bank, once unthinkable by any Israeli leader, is being accepted by most within Israel. Many in Israel are recognizing the demographic reality that if Israel maintains control of the West Bank to the beginning of the next decade, Jews could be a minority in the state of Israel. Such recognition now reinforces Israel’s acceptance of the principle of a separate Palestinian state. The Israeli withdrawal, as a practical matter, along with Israel’s construction of a security fence, will reduce the opportunities for Palestinians to attack Israelis, and the need for Israeli military checkpoints and other intrusions into Palestinian daily life, which do so much to inflame anger. The withdrawal, because it is new and was put forward unilaterally, could energize the peace effort and provide a useful “detourâ€? in the Road Map without abandoning it. However, it is important that we, along with the Quartet--or the Sextet--work actively with the Israeli government to ensure that disengagement is done in a way that enhances Israeli security, returns a significant number of Arab neighborhoods to Palestinian Authority jurisdiction and does not fragment Palestinian territory. It should also be coordinated with the Palestinians and others. There is concern that the Palestinian Authority is so weak and fragmented that upon an Israeli departure, a radical group such as Hamas could emerge as the de facto rulers. That’s why the administration is promoting the active involvement of Egypt and Jordan in any security arrangement in Gaza. But we can and must go further. With the effective collapse of the Palestinian Authority, Israel has no reliable negotiating partner, as events of the past week have underscored. We should consider asking moderate Arab countries to assume significant responsibility for rehabilitating or restructuring the Palestinian Authority so that discussions can be restarted. Some experts have proposed turning over control of the Palestinian territories to an international trusteeship. This trusteeship would provide enhanced security for both Palestinians and Israelis, it could restructure the Palestinian security services, and lead a reform of the Palestinians’ failed institutions. It would turn back sovereignty at the appropriate time. Why shouldn’t this trusteeship be managed by Arab nations? This would give them a role in what they themselves claim is at the core of many of their own problems. Arab nations’ establishment of a trusteeship; Israeli unilateral disengagement: these might sound like drastic measures. But taken together, they could revive momentum toward a solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Conclusion The G-8 has already taken on one new role in 21st Century security, the Global Partnership Against the Spread of Materials and Weapons of Mass Destruction and has pledged an additional $10 billion over 10 years for Nunn-Lugar programs in the former Soviet Union. The Greater Middle East Twenty First Century Trust should be a new form of social compact between donors and recipients. By working together with a wide range of other nations, Americans can demonstrate that we are strong and creative advocates of a peaceful world for all, and that the future lies in being a partner with the United States, not a counterweight to it In my view, the G-8 Summit in Sea Island at the beginning of June represents an opportunity to focus the world on modernization needs in the Greater Middle East. This challenge should be addressed by the G-8, and it should include the participation, contribution, and vision of those in the Greater Middle East. By the same token, the NATO summit in Istanbul at the end of June would be the right venue for framing a transatlantic security structure that extends throughout the Middle East. As His Royal Highness Prince El Hassan bin Talal noted last October in Amman, “Peace is real and durable only when the root causes of conflict have been eliminated.â€? He went on to highlight the importance of eradicating poverty to limit violence. We can achieve greater security through careful mitigation of well-defined threats. We can extend our idealism to create broad opportunities for millions of people to enjoy more promising lives for themselves and their children. Let us answer the call of those in the Middle East and work with them. Source: Senator Lugar's website at, http://lugar.senate.gov. © 2003 The Acronym Institute. |