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Bush decrees new sanctions against Sudan
By Bill Van Auken
30 May 2007
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President Bush Tuesday announced that his administration is
imposing a fresh set of economic sanctions on Sudan, claiming
the measures are designed to pressure the government in Khartoum
to halt the bloodshed in the countrys western-most province
of Darfur.
The sanctions target 30 Sudanese government-owned companies
along with a company that Washington accuses of trafficking arms
to Sudan, barring them from any financial relations with the US
and making it a crime for American corporations or individuals
to do business with them.
Three individualstwo senior Sudanese officials and a
rebel leaderare subjected to similar economic sanctions
under the presidential edict.
Bush also vowed to seek a new United Nations Security Council
resolution imposing a tighter arms embargo on Sudan and creating
conditions for further military intervention.
Four years of fighting in the Darfur region between armed separatist
rebels, government forces and the Janjaweed, an ethnic Arab pro-government
militia, have divided indigenous Arab and non-Arab tribes and
left an estimated quarter of a million people deadmost of
them from disease and hungerwhile displacing some 2 million
others.
While Washington has consistently sought to place the entire
onus for the continuation of the conflict on the government in
Khartoum, there is ample evidence that the separatist rebels have
little incentive to reach a settlement, believing that a continuation
of the violence could increase pressure for Western intervention
and further their aims of regional autonomy and power-sharing.
In his speech Tuesday, Bush justified the new set of sanctions
by accusing Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of blocking
the deployment of a United Nations peace-keeping force.
The Sudanese government has resisted the deployment of UN troops,
fearing it could turn the country into a de facto Western protectorate.
Instead, it has called for an expanded African Union force, with
UN backing.
Once again, Bush labeled the humanitarian crisis in Darfur
genocide. This assessment that has been rejected by
both the United Nations and a number of aid organizations active
in the region, which acknowledge that Darfur constitutes one of
the worlds greatest humanitarian disasters, but dispute
the inference that violent repression carried out by the government
in Khartoum constitutes an attempt to exterminate an entire people.
The use of this term has an unmistakable purpose. Under the
UN charter, the determination of genocide in a given country requires
armed intervention. Washingtons accusations of genocide
have gone hand-in-hand with an attempt to portray the conflict
as a racial struggle pitting Arabs against black
African tribes, a gross simplification and distortion of
the conflict aimed at inflaming public sentiments.
The genocide label is also utilized for domestic
political purposes. Floated first by then-Secretary of State Colin
Powell in the run-up to the 2004 election, the accusation was
popular both with the Christian right and Zionist organizations,
which have adopted the cause of Darfur for their own reasons.
The Bush administration had until recently dropped the use
of the word genocide, but has resurrected it in the last several
months.
For too long, the people of Darfur have suffered at the
hands of a government that is complicit in the bombing, murder,
and rape of innocent civilians, Bush declared in his White
House speech Tuesday. My administration has called these
actions by their rightful name: genocide. The world has a responsibility
to help put an end to it.
If one were to remove the word Darfur and substitute
Iraq, the entire passage would stand as a fitting
indictment of the Bush administration itself. The number of Iraqis
who have lost their lives as a result of four years of US war
and occupation is at least three times as great as number who
have died in Darfur, and a far greater percentage of these deaths
is directly attributable to military action. Twice as many Iraqis
have been driven from their homes, either internally displaced
or forced into exile, and every essential social institution and
aspect of basic infrastructure has been decimated.
Washington is not pursuing a policy of genocide in Iraq; its
aim is not to wipe out the Iraqi people or exterminate its Sunni
population. Rather, it is to suppress all opposition to its semi-colonial
control of the country and its strategic oil wealth, a goal that
has unleashed violence and death on a near genocidal scale.
Nor is the government of al-Bashir out to exterminate the non-Arab
people of Darfur, but rather has sought to suppress a challenge
to its centralized control, an aim that has also entailed widespread
death and suffering.
There is, of course, a noteworthy difference in these two tragic
processes. George Bush heads the militarily and economically most
powerful nation on the face of the planet, while al-Bashir is
the president of one of its most impoverisheda nation that
bears the scars of protracted colonial domination and which was
an arena throughout the latter part of the twentieth century for
bloody wars fomented by US imperialism in an attempt to block
Soviet influence in the region.
The present improbable attempt by George W. Bush to masquerade
as a champion of human rights is driven by similar geo-strategic
interests. Sudan is a significant producer of oil, with reserves
estimated as high as 1.2 billion barrels. Moreover, as the country
with the largest land mass in Africa, it straddles the strategic
Red Sea, the Maghreb, Central Africa and the Horn of Africa.
Last, and certainly not least, it has become the focal point
of a bid by China to secure its steadily rising demand for oil
by cementing close economic and political ties with the African
continent.
China has invested some $15 billion in Sudan since 1999, and
it owns a 40-percent stake in the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating
Co., which runs Sudans oil fields. Its Sudanese oil imports
have increased nearly six-fold over the past year, reaching 220,000
barrels a day, according to customs figures released by Beijing
earlier this month.
Not surprisingly, Bushs imposition of unilateral sanctions
and his demand that the UN follow suit drew sharp criticism from
Beijing, which has no intention of ceding its interests in the
region. According to the Associated Press, Liu Guijin, Chinas
special envoy to Sudan, commented, Willful sanctions and
simply applying pressure are not conducive to the solution of
the problem and will only make the issue more complicated.
Having just returned from a trip to Darfurs refugee camps,
Liu said he believed Sudanese factions and international negotiators
were working to resolve the humanitarian crisis in the region.
I didnt see a desperate scenario of people dying
of hunger, the Chinese envoy told the press. He added, The
Darfur issue and issues in eastern Sudan and southern Sudan are
caused by poverty and underdevelopment. Only when poverty and
underdevelopment are addressed will there be peace in Sudan.
Opposition to the US sanctions was echoed by Russia and South
Africa. Russias ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, questioned
the timing of Washingtons measures, commenting to Reuters
that the UN had been working with Sudan and there have been
some positive developments.
South Africas UN ambassador, Dumisani Kumalo, also expressed
skepticism about the US sanctions. Right now the surprising
thing was that we were thinking the government of Sudan was now
beginning to take the right actions and agree to what we were
going to do, he said. Its not clear which way
we are going.
Washington has no interest in the stabilization of Sudan or
a resolution of its humanitarian crisis. Its policy there, as
in Iraq, has since well before the Darfur crisis been one of regime
change, with its supposed humanitarian concerns serving merely
as a useful cover. As Chinaperceived by Washington as its
principal rising global rivalhas expanded its influence
in the country, this desire for regime change has only strengthened.
There is also undoubtedly within this new-found campaign over
Darfur an attempt to shift public attention from the catastrophe
that US imperialism has created in Iraq.
The Bush administration enjoys the strongest support for this
diversion from within his ostensible opposition, the Democratic
Party, whose leading politicians have sought to cast a US intervention
there as some kind of moral crusade. Last month, Senator Joseph
Biden, the Delaware Democrat who heads the Foreign Relations Committee
and is a candidate for the partys 2008 presidential nomination,
called for direct US military intervention.
I would use American force now, he said at a hearing
of his committee. I think its not only time not to
take force off the table. I think its time to put force
on the table and use it.
Similarly, in February, New York Democratic Senator Hillary
Clinton, the partys putative front-runner in the presidential
race, called for US action to stop the genocide in Darfur.
During testimony by Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Gen. Peter
Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, she asked the Pentagon
chiefs whether the Bush administration would send in American
warplanes to enforce a no-fly zone over Sudan.
See Also:
Iraq and Darfur: the politics
of war crimes
[9 February 2007]
Darfur: Bush and Blair
plan no-fly zone and consider air strikes against Sudan [20
December 2006]
Chad regime against
coup attempt
[1 May 2006]
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