Day: December 30, 2011

The Arab League monitors improve the odds

Two things are clear about the impact of the Arab League human rights monitors in Syria:  they have prompted the protesters to turn out in very large numbers, but they have not stopped the Assad regime from killing, which appears to be the only response the security forces can muster.

What we need now from the monitors is some serious reporting on what is going on.  Initial indications are not good.  Their Sudanese leader, Mustafa al Dabi, has already indicated he saw “nothing frightening” at Homs, where the security forces have been firing indiscriminately on peaceful protesters for months.  Much as I share concerns about his background and qualifications, I still hope we will find a few of the monitors willing to communicate clearly and directly about regime abuses.  It doesn’t have to be al Dabi.

At the same time, I am hoping we see a renewal of nonviolent discipline among the protesters.  The Free Syrian Army’s feeble attempts to harass the security forces are provocative and counterproductive:

They will reduce the numbers of people in the street and allow the regime excuses for violence.  I don’t like to see unprotected people who are standing up for their rights killed, but the toll will be far worse if Syria deteriorates to civil war.

On other fronts:  the Russians are still stalling UN Security Council action and the Iranians are pumping resources in to help Bashar al Assad.  There is little we can do to block the Iranian assistance, but we should take some satisfaction that they are being forced to spend precious coin at a time when their economy seems to be deteriorating rapidly.  Their threats to the strait of Hormuz may even be an effort to lift oil revenue at a time of pressing need.

The Russians must be beginning to wonder whether their interests in maintaining their naval facilities in Syria are best served by supporting the regime.  Contacts between Moscow and the Syrian National Council (SNC) last month were in principle a good sign.  The SNC has to keep at it.  It might also help if President Obama would tell Prime Minister Putin directly that Russia needs to get on the right side of history before it is too late.

Bashar al Assad is still trying to outlast the demonstrators.  His odds of doing so have gone down with the arrival of the Arab League monitors, however serious their limitations.  That is a good thing.

PS: This video purports to show observers running from gunfire, and the Syrian Free Army creating the excuse for the security forces to shoot.

PPS:  And this one memorializes a brave soul:

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The strait of Hormuz: go around

Tehran has been threatening this week to close the strait of Hormuz if sanctions are levied against its central bank, preventing export of Iranian crude.  I’m with Simon Henderson:  the right response to Iran’s threats is rapid development of alternative routes.  He long ago laid out the geography and suggested some options.

It is really rather extraordinary that nothing has been done about this in the several decades since the strait of Hormuz became a key choke point for world oil supplies and a major (and expensive) preoccupation of the U.S. Navy.  America spends something like $100 billion per year on military capabilities to protect oil routes.  Easily a quarter of that is attributable to the strait of Hormuz.  A pipeline from the UAE through Oman that circumnavigates the strait, another through Iraq to Turkey and a couple to get Saudi oil out to the Red Sea are all that is needed to devalue Iran’s geographic trump card. Put one through Yemen and the transit fees will be enough to solve that country’s economic troubles for decades.

I find it puzzling that none of this ever gets done.  I was in charge of our preparations for an oil supply disruption in the State Department in the mid 1980s.  We spent a small fortune accumulating the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and considerable diplomatic coin getting a few allies to do likewise.  We also got them to commit to coordinated, early drawdown, a policy that has been implemented several times successfully over the last couple of decades.

But somehow we have never managed to get oil suppliers to use some of their gigantic flow of cash to circumnavigate the strait of Hormuz.  I have to wonder whether we’ve got a moral hazard here:  we protect the sea lanes and guarantee that the strait remains open, so Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and others conclude there is no need to invest in the pipelines that would make the strait less critical.  We are hard-strapped now and need to reduce many commitments.   Some even propose that we withdraw entirely from the Gulf.  That is a a flaky idea in my book, but it is perfectly reasonable to expect oil producers–and other consumers–to carry more of the burden of ensuring that Gulf oil continues to flow.

PS:  Michael Rubin views the Iranian threat as a hollow because Tehran needs to import gasoline and American military superiority more than suffices to keep the strait open.  But he neglects the economic damage that even ineffective military action in the strait (or anywhere in the Gulf) will cause worldwide.  He also emphasizes Iraqi vulnerability, which would be significantly reduced if  oil could be exported in larger volumes to Turkey.

 

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