Chadian News
Strategic Victimhood in Sudan 
By
Alan J. Kuperman
Published: May 31, 2006
Austin, Tex.
THOUSANDS of Americans
who wear green wristbands and demand military
intervention to stop Sudan's Arab government from
perpetrating genocide against black tribes in Darfur
must be perplexed by recent developments.
Without such
intervention, Sudan's government last month agreed to a
peace accord pledging to disarm Arab janjaweed militias
and resettle displaced civilians. By contrast, Darfur's
black rebels, who are touted by the wristband crowd as
freedom fighters, rejected the deal because it did not
give them full regional control. Put simply, the rebels
were willing to let genocide continue against their own
people rather than compromise their demand for power.
International mediators
were shamefaced. They had presented the plan as take it
or leave it, to compel Khartoum's acceptance. But now
the ostensible representatives of the victims were
balking. Embarrassed American officials were forced to
ask Sudan for further concessions beyond the ultimatum
that it had already accepted.
Fortunately, Khartoum
again acquiesced. But two of Darfur's three main rebel
groups still rejected peace. Frustrated American
negotiators accentuated the positive — the strongest
rebel group did sign — and expressed hope that the
dissenters would soon join.
But that hope was
crushed last week when the rebels viciously turned on
each other. As this newspaper reported, "The rebels have
unleashed a tide of violence against the very civilians
they once joined forces to protect."
Seemingly bizarre, this
rejection of peace by factions claiming to seek it is
actually revelatory. It helps explain why violence
originally broke out in Darfur, how the Save Darfur
movement unintentionally poured fuel on the fire, and
what can be done to stanch genocidal violence in Sudan
and elsewhere.
Darfur was never the
simplistic morality tale purveyed by the news media and
humanitarian organizations. The region's blacks, painted
as long-suffering victims, actually were the oppressors
less than two decades ago — denying Arab nomads access
to grazing areas essential to their survival. Violence
was initiated not by Arab militias but by the black
rebels who in 2003 attacked police and military
installations. The most extreme Islamists are not in the
government but in a faction of the rebels sponsored by
former Deputy Prime Minister Hassan al-Turabi, after he
was expelled from the regime. Cease-fires often have
been violated first by the rebels, not the government,
which has pledged repeatedly to admit international
peacekeepers if the rebels halt their attacks.
This reality has been
obscured by Sudan's criminally irresponsible reaction to
the rebellion: arming militias to carry out a
scorched-earth counterinsurgency. These Arab forces, who
already resented the black tribes over past land
disputes and recent attacks, were only too happy to rape
and pillage any village suspected of supporting the
rebels.
In light of janjaweed
atrocities, it is natural to romanticize the other side
as freedom fighters. But Darfur's rebels do not deserve
that title. They took up arms not to stop genocide —
which erupted only after they rebelled — but to gain
tribal domination.
The strongest faction,
representing the minority Zaghawa tribe, signed the
sweetened peace deal in hopes of legitimizing its claim
to control Darfur. But that claim is vehemently opposed
by rebels representing the larger Fur tribe. Such
internecine disputes only recently hit the headlines,
but the rebels have long wasted resources fighting each
other rather than protecting their people.
Advocates of
intervention play down rebel responsibility because it
is easier to build support for stopping genocide than
for becoming entangled in yet another messy civil war.
But their persistent calls for intervention have
actually worsened the violence.
The rebels, much weaker
than the government, would logically have sued for peace
long ago. Because of the Save Darfur movement, however,
the rebels believe that the longer they provoke
genocidal retaliation, the more the West will pressure
Sudan to hand them control of the region. Sadly, this
message was reinforced when the rebels' initial
rejection of peace last month was rewarded by American
officials' extracting further concessions from Khartoum.
The key to rescuing
Darfur is to reverse these perverse incentives. Spoiler
rebels should be told that the game is over, and that
further resistance will no longer be rewarded but
punished by the loss of posts reserved for them in the
peace agreement.
Ultimately, if the
rebels refuse, military force will be required to defeat
them. But this is no job for United Nations
peacekeepers. Iraq, Afghanistan and Somalia show that
even the United States military cannot stamp out Islamic
rebels on their home turf; second-rate international
troops would stand even less chance.
Rather, we should let
Sudan's army handle any recalcitrant rebels, on
condition that it eschew war crimes. This option will be
distasteful to many, but Sudan has signed a peace
treaty, so it deserves the right to defend its
sovereignty against rebels who refuse to, so long as it
observes the treaty and the laws of war.
Indeed, to avoid
further catastrophes like Darfur, the United States
should announce a policy of never intervening to help
provocative rebels, diplomatically or militarily, so
long as opposing armies avoid excessive retaliation.
This would encourage restraint on both sides. Instead we
should redirect intervention resources to support
"people power" movements that pursue change peacefully,
as they have done successfully over the past two decades
in the Philippines, Indonesia, Serbia and elsewhere.
America, born in
revolution, has a soft spot for rebels who claim to be
freedom fighters, including those in Darfur. But to
reduce genocidal violence, we must withhold support for
the cynical provocations of militants who bear little
resemblance to our founders.
Alan J. Kuperman,
an assistant professor of public affairs at the
University of Texas, is an editor of "Gambling on
Humanitarian Intervention: Moral Hazard, Rebellion and
Civil War."
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