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Darfur: Bush and Blair plan no-fly zone and consider air strikes
against Sudan
By Ann Talbot
20 December 2006
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The Bush administration is considering imposing a no-fly zone
over the Darfur region in western Sudan. It would be backed up
by the threat of air strikes, a naval blockade and an extension
of the existing sanctions regime.
UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has endorsed the plan. Blair announced
his support for tougher action on his return from
a trip to Washington. A UK official was reported in the Financial
Times as saying, The Americans mean business.
The plan seems to be to work with France, which has 1,200 troops
in Chad and units of its air force in the Central African Republic.
French mirage jets have already carried out air sorties over the
last two weeks in the Central African Republic and Chad. A spokesman
from the French Ministry of Defence warned of the danger of Somalisation
of the region. He told the Independent, We want to
ensure that the Darfur crisis does not take on a further dimension.
The region is crucial if we want to put a peace force in Darfur.
According to local reports, thousands of civilians were forced
to flee from the town of Birao in the Central African Republic
as a result of a French air strike. If France were to join with
the US and UK in imposing a no-fly zone it would mean a joint
attack on one of the poorest countries in the world by three major
powers.
At present, diplomacy is continuing. Andrew Natsios, the US
special envoy to Sudan, reported some progress after a four-day
trip to Khartoum during which he met with President Omar al-Bashir.
He had a two-hour meeting with Bashir, who has refused to see
him on previous visits. According to Natsios the Khartoum regime
is now prepared to accept the presence of United Nations technical
staff, including military advisors, in Sudan.
This concession to US pressure follows Natsioss public
threat that the US would resort to what he called Plan B.
Natsios declined to say what this plan entailed, but the report
in the Financial Times makes it clear that the US and UK
are considering military action. Khartoums concession falls
short of accepting the 13,000 UN troops that the US is demanding
should be allowed into Sudan.
The possible move to military action against Sudan follows
a period in which the US ruling elite have been deeply divided
over the best course of action. The divisions have been no less
marked between the US and Europe.
If Bush now seems to be leaning towards military action it
is despite warnings from the US military, which is sceptical about
its ability to intervene effectively in Sudan.
With an area of 1 million square miles, Sudan is the largest
country in Africa. It borders on Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic, Chad,
Libya and Egypt. The potential for war in Sudan to involve other
African countries is immense. Its Red Sea coastline and Arab and
Muslim culture in the north give it links to the Middle East.
The possibility of the conflict expanding on a more than regional
scale is immense. China, for example, is the largest foreign investor
in Sudan. The Chinese National Petroleum Company (CNPC) has invested
£8 billion in the Sudan oil industry. According to the Washington
Post, China owns 40 percent of the Greater Nile Petroleum
Operating Co., which dominates Sudans oilfields. Almost
half of CNPCs overseas oil and 7 percent of all Chinese
oil imports are thought to come from Sudan. Chinese workers are
engaged in infrastructural projects, such as the 900-mile pipeline
that connects the Heglig oilfield in Kordofan with Port Sudan
on the Red Sea. According to the Daily Telegraph, 10,000
Chinese nationals worked on this project. A US or British hit
on a Chinese merchant ship or Chinese owned plant such as the
pipeline could have global implications.
Nor is it certain than any agreement between the US, UK and
France would withstand intervention in this strategically important
country. Western Sudan was the scene of the Fashoda incident,
which almost brought Britain and France to war before World War
I.
Bushs threat to attack Sudan flows directly from the
US debacle in Iraq. The worse the situation in Iraq has become
for the US and its allies, the more confident has the Khartoum
regime felt to assert its own interests in the Horn of Africa
and beyond. The result is that the Horn of Africa is at the epicentre
of a growing regional conflict that is now spreading into Central
Africa. It is a conflict that the New York Times has described
as the next Congo. The epithet is not inappropriate given the
regions mix of mineral wealth and complex rivalries. But
it was possible for imperialist rivalries over Congo to be contained
in both the post-World War II period and in the late nineteenth
century. That is far less certain today.
The Sudanese government has stepped up its murderous campaign
against the civilian population of Darfur and is spreading the
war into Chad and the Central African Republic. This escalation
follows the signing of a Darfur peace deal in May.
The Darfur agreement is only one of the many Western-backed
deals that has been disrupted by Khartoums action. Conflict
has again broken out in southern Sudan where a peace deal brought
an end to the civil war only last year. The need to maintain a
deal that offered the prospect of US and European access to the
oilfield of the south was one of the reasons that the Bush administration
has previously resisted calls to take action over Darfur.
Such was the brutality of the attacks by an unidentified militia
in southern Sudan that some observers have suggested that they
are the work of the Lords Resistance Army (LRA) that has
been engaged in an uprising in northern Uganda for the past 20
years. The LRA recently began talks with the Ugandan government.
Long backed by Sudan, the LRA may now be active againthis
time working against the Khartoum regimes internal enemies.
Meanwhile in Somalia, the Supreme Islamic Courts Council (SICC)
has driven out the Transitional Government that was set up under
a UN-backed deal in 2004 and which established itself in Somalia
at the beginning of this year. Somalias neighbours Eritrea
and Ethiopia are being drawn into the dispute. Ethiopia and Eritrea
were at war from 1961 until 2000 with a brief interlude of peace
between 1991 and 1998 and that conflict is set to reignite over
Somalia. Ethiopias Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has declared
that his country is at war with the SICC. Eritrea has given its
support to the SICC.
The immediate cause of the spread of conflict may be a new
assertiveness on the part of the Sudanese government. But the
real causes of the instability of the region lie in the policies
of US imperialism, both past and present, and the long history
of colonial involvement going back to the nineteenth century.
Since the days of the Cold War the US has poured weapons into
the area because of its strategic significance. It has supported
various nationalist elites in ferocious internecine wars as it
tried to exclude the Soviet Union from the area. By the end of
the Cold War these national elites controlled rival armed camps
with ruined economies. They attempted to maintain their political
grip by plunging their countries into a further round of wars
and civil wars. Such are the conditions that US policy has created
in the Horn of Africa that if Sudan did not assert itself, one
of its rivals would make its own bid to become the regional hegemon.
A major humanitarian disaster is already unfolding in Darfur.
The Khartoum regime is attempting to depopulate a region the size
of France. It has unleashed a scorched earth policy in which villages
and crops are destroyed, and civilians raped and mutilated. An
estimated 1 million people have been displaced into makeshift
camps where they are dependent on aid handouts and 200,000 killed
by the government-backed Janjaweed militia.
A Save Darfur campaign has won support from celebrities such
as George Clooney, who visited Darfur with fellow actor Don Cheadle
and Olympic athletes Tegla Loroupe and Joey Cheek. But it is endorsed
by major political figures such as former US secretary of state
Madeleine Albright, who was part of the Clinton administration
when the US destroyed a pharmaceutical factory in Khartoum with
cruise missiles. Albright and other Democrats at the National
Democratic Institute for International Affairs are in fact lobbying
for a return to that same militarist policy in relation to Sudan.
Former US secretary of state for Africa Susan Rice, a board
member of the National Democratic Institute, called for air strikes
against Sudan at the beginning of October in a Washington Post
article. The United States, preferably with NATO involvement
and African political support, would strike Sudanese airfields,
aircraft and other military assets, Rice wrote. It
could blockade Port Sudan, through which Sudans oil exports
flow. Then UN troops could deployby force if necessary,
with US and NATO backing.
The model she cites is the NATO invasion of the Balkans. She
wrote: The real question is this: Will we use force to save
Africans in Darfur as we did to save Europeans in Kosovo?
The reality of the NATO bombing campaign against Serbia was that
Albanians as well as Serbs were killed, while ethnic tensions
were increased. The purpose of the Balkan intervention was not
to protect the Albanian minority, but to secure access to the
vital oil reserves of the Caspian. Camp Bondsteel, one of the
biggest US military bases to be built from scratch since the Vietnam
War, now sits in Kosovo close to vital pipelines.
Oil is also a question in Sudan and the surrounding countries.
Southern Sudan has large oil reserves. The extent of the oil reserves
in the Darfur region is still uncertain, but they may be considerable.
Rolls-Royce Marine in Norway is manufacturing $10 million worth
of oil equipment for Sudan. According to two Norwegian organisationsNorwatch
and the Norwegian Council for Africathis equipment is destined
for Darfur. Eric Hagen of Norwatch said, The equipment probably
will be used to connect new oilfields to the gigantic main oil
pipeline in Sudan.
Sudans national oil company began drilling in Darfur
last year. According to the Guardian, Friedhelm Eronat,
a wealthy British-based businessman, has bought the largest single
share of oil rights in Darfur through his company Cliveden Sudan.
He may be acting alone or on behalf of another company. US companies
are currently excluded from Sudan by US sanctions. Eronat gave
up his US citizenship and became a UK citizen shortly before the
deal was signed.
See Also:
China steps up trade and investment
in Africa
[15 November 2006]
France backs Chad regime against
coup attempt
[1 May 2006]
US pushes for larger UN intervention
in western Sudan
[10 March 2006]
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