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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
The
Harare handshake: Soft power, Africa style
Alan Cowell, The International
Herald Tribune
July 25, 2008
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/07/25/africa/letter.php
When Zimbabwe's
political rivals posed for the cameras in a remarkable handshake
in Harare a few days ago, the message resonated far beyond Africa.
After months of bloodletting
in the deeply flawed Zimbabwean elections, after the killings, beatings
and uprooting of opposition supporters, Robert Mugabe clasped the
outstretched hand of Morgan Tsvangirai, the man who would replace
him as president and whom he had reviled as a puppet of the West.
It was a moment that,
only days before, would have seemed utterly improbable, but now
the two politicians stood at the threshold of what Mugabe called
a "new way of political interaction." Whether they will
cross it is another matter altogether. But what exactly brought
them this far?
Was it the culmination
of Western and African pressures on Mugabe and threats of deeper
sanctions in a land so beset with hyperinflation that a newly introduced
100 billion Zimbabwe dollar bill was not enough to buy a loaf of
bread? Or was it, as some Africans and their supporters preferred
to see it, a result of the cautious, painstaking backroom negotiations
conducted for more than a year by Thabo Mbeki, the president of
South Africa?
On a wider canvas, the
handshake seemed to reinforce a lesson in diplomacy that bound a
strife-bound nation in Africa to a onetime war zone in Europe.
On the same day that
Mugabe and Tsvangirai shook hands, the Serbian secret police finally
arrested Radovan Karadzic, the former leader of the Bosnian Serbs
wanted on war crimes charges.
In both cases, proponents
of what is called soft power claimed victory. While Western nations
had threatened Mugabe, it was Mbeki who presided over the first
face-to-face meeting in a decade between Harare's foes as they signed
an agreement to open negotiations. And, in Serbia, the force that
overcame the region's bloodstained nationalism was the lure of integration
with the European Union, which had made clear that Belgrade's future
relationship with Brussels hinged on the capture of suspected war
criminals.
In a world where U.S.
diplomacy is currently associated with "hard" power in
Iraq and a threat of the same in Iran, "soft power" claimed
an unusual twinning of victories. The carrot triumphed over the
stick. Or so it seemed.
Of course, such iconic
moments - a handshake, an arrest - are heavy with symbolism that
does not always translate into substance. Few of those who have
followed events in Zimbabwe would lay money that Mugabe and the
military cabal around him are ready to cede real power in the creation
of the unity government sought by South Africa.
But some conclusions
seem worth underlining.
If Mugabe and Tsvangirai
do indeed reach an agreement on power-sharing, Mbeki will almost
certainly claim kudos, not only within Africa, but also on the broader
stage where he stood firm against the United States and Britain,
with China and Russia at his side, to resist the imposition of broader
United Nations sanctions on Zimbabwe.
And if the Harare handshake
is vindicated by political change, then Mbeki will be in a position
to assert that African diplomacy succeeded where Western diplomacy
failed. That would be no small achievement.
Many Africans feel that
for centuries they have been demeaned, exploited and trivialized
by outsiders from the earliest Portuguese and Arab slavers onwards.
Generations of traders, missionaries and colonial administrators
roamed Africa, eroding or denying the identities and manners they
found there. In 1884-85, at the Conference of Berlin, the European
powers carved up Africa for decades to come.
The underlying message
was that Africa's own ways were inadequate - a notion reinforced
in the post-colonial era by the aid agencies and global financial
institutions whose representatives rode into town to rewrite the
economic rule book according to the precepts of markets dominated
by the West. Throughout the Cold War, sponsors in Moscow, Beijing
and Washington offered rival prescriptions in return for guns or
butter.
Only in 2001 did African
governments come together to create what was ambitiously called
the New Partnership for Africa's Development, or Nepad, which Mbeki
embraced and sponsored enthusiastically as a means of regaining
African self-respect and asserting its right to a place in a globalized
world.
Most significantly, the
arrangement included what was called a peer-review mechanism permitting
African leaders to assess their lands' shortcomings in the pursuit
of "democracy and good, political, economic and corporate governance."
But how could African
governments claim any kind of collective standards in governance
or renewal as long as they countenanced Zimbabwe's viral disarray?
What purpose was there in "peer review" if the peer in
question simply ignored it? In Mbeki's view, an "African solution"
became imperative, not just for Zimbabwe, but for the continent's
redemption. As the exclusive mediator appointed by Zimbabwe's neighbors,
he was in a unique position.
But the cost of the diplomacy
is clear. For months, Mbeki insisted that he could mediate only
if he maintained his neutrality. But that neutrality effectively
shielded Mugabe from reproach or pressure as his supporters rampaged
bloodily against the opposition. While Mbeki maneuvered, Zimbabwe's
economic ruin and political oppression sent ever more of its citizens
fleeing into neighboring countries, his own in particular.
As so often in the continent's
history, Africans themselves paid the price of their leaders' hubris.
An African solution, it seemed, required African pain.
Of course, "soft
power" rarely works without the threat of an alternative. The
carrot requires at least the implicit threat of the stick. In Serbia's
case, the alternative was continued exclusion from Europe's economic
and political mainstream. In Zimbabwe, it was the threat of ever
greater isolation and restrictions on its wealthy elite that laid
the groundwork for the Harare handshake.
That is probably where
the parallel ends.
Much of the history of
both Zimbabwe and the Balkans has been written in blood - from the
ethnic slaughter of Matabeleland in the early 1980s to the massacre
of Bosnian Muslims in Srbrenica in 1995. With his arrest, Karadzic
now faces trial and accountability. But if negotiations in Zimbabwe
lead to a unity government offering some protection for Mugabe,
the survivors of his repression will have no prospect of commensurate
justice.
Any hope of moral equivalence
between the victims of Srbrenica and those of Matabeleland, in other
words, will be lost. But then, Africa is no stranger to double standards
- either from outsiders or from its own.
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