If you hijack an airplane, you are a hijacker

Belarus’ hijacking of a Ryanair flight crossing its territory in order to arrest a dissident journalist is a quantum jump in contemporary autocratic behavior. No doubt autocratic governments will justify it on the basis of exerting national sovereignty over their own air space. But it endangered close to 200 innocent people and set a precedent for future actions of this sort. The punishment in most countries is life imprisonment or death.

What can be done about Belarus’ perfidy? The objectives should be the freeing of the journalist and making it clear that there is nothing to be gained from state hijacking of aircraft. The US, EU, UK, and other willing countries should engage as quickly as possible with both Minsk and Moscow to determine if there is any possibility of an early release of the journalist and to convey their willingness to take further action if he is not released right away.

That effort may well fail, so here are a few ideas of next steps to pressure Minsk:

  1. The US, UK, and EU could expand their travel and financial sanctions on regime figures and institutions in Belarus. These could include SWIFT restrictions on transactions involving Belarusan banks.
  2. They could end EU, World Bank and International Monetary Fund grants, lending, and programs in Belarus.
  3. They could prevent Belavia, the national airline, from landing on their territory.
  4. They could recall their ambassadors for consultations, expel Belarusan diplomats, or break diplomatic relations with Minsk.
  5. They could pledge to detain for questioning about the incident Belarusan officials found on their territory, including but not limited to President Lukashenko (yes, I know heads of state are supposed to have diplomatic immunity).
  6. They can insist on an investigation by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).

While this hijacking was manifestly a threat to peace and security, convening the UN Security Council may not be useful, as Belarus can likely rely on Russia to prevent any serious action there, even a presidential statement. After all, that’s what the US did for Israel just in the past couple of weeks to prevent a statement on the Gaza war.

I am not advocating any of the above options, just pointing them out. The trick is to craft some reasonable combination of them and other ideas. Most important is that the US, EU, and UK act together. If they do, the message will be greatly amplified.

There is a real possibility that this is the beginning of the end of Belarusan independence. Russian President Putin, while nominally backing Lukashenko’s right to do what he did, might take the opportunity to defenestrate him (figuratively if not literally), knowing that the West won’t seriously object under current circumstances. Even before this incident, the Russians were taking over. Why not take advantage of the opportunity to complete the process?

President Biden now faces a second crisis situation he doesn’t want, following on the Hamas/Israel war. He looked reasonably adept in that instance. With Belarus, he should expect the EU to play a stronger role, but he has to be prepared to lead if need be. The world will notice if the West is unable to deal with state hijacking. Let’s see what Biden can do.

Tags : , , , ,

Yes, it’s time, but only you can make it happen

I was up at 5 this morning to spend 6-8 on Zoom with Circle 99, the venerable intellectuals’ club in Sarajevo. The topic was “Is It Time for a post-Dayton Bosnia and Herzegovina?” Here are the speaking notes I used:

  1. Let me first say that it is a great pleasure to be back at Circle 99. Yes, I’ve been there before, in late 1995 or maybe early in 1996.
  2. I was then Special Envoy for the Bosnian Federation, helping to construct its institutions and get them functioning, along with Michael Steiner, then a German diplomat.
  3. Bosnia and I have come a long way since then. When I sit with friends drinking a coffee in Sniper Alley, I find it impossible to agree with their frequent declarations that nothing has changed.
  4. Lots of things have obviously changed. I think what they mean is that they are disappointed in the changes.
  5. Also for me, Bosnian politics too closely resembles war by other means: ethnically defined forces fighting a zero-sum game, each trying to enlist the support of powers outside Bosnia.
  6. I’d like to start today by explaining why this is the case, then move on to my analysis of what is wrong and what needs to be done to set it right, despite the odds.
  7. Notoriously, the Americans imposed the Dayton agreement on the warring parties of the 1990s.
  8. That is true, but we imposed what the three warring parties wanted: a power-sharing arrangement among “constituent peoples,” one based on its own ethnically defined 49% of the territory and the two others sharing power in the remaining 51%.
  9. Here it behooves me to explain why there was no third entity at Dayton.
  10. After all, the Herzegovinian Croats were in a very strong position in 1995: they had the backing of Croatia, which had successfully retaken most of its Serb-occupied Krajina, commanded the HVO, and controlled the flow of arms to the Bosnian Army, which by August 1995 were advancing rapidly towards Banja Luka.
  11. But President Tudjman, no great enlightenment figure, did not want Herzegovina inside his state or separated from Sarajevo, which would necessarily have meant a radicalized rump Muslim republic in central Bosnia.
  12. He agreed with the Americans and Germans that was something to avoid. The Federation was the means of doing so.
  13. By late 1994, when I first met with Herzeg-Bosna officials, Tudjman and Croatian Defense Minister Susak had removed the previous more radical, secessionist leadership of the Bosnian Croats and were pressuring them hard to participate constructively in the Federation.
  14. I spent many days in Zagreb lining up the details of Tudjman’s and Susak’s support. They never asked for a third entity, which they realized was not in Croatia’s interest.
  15. Fast forward to today: is a non-viable, radicalized, rump Muslim state or entity in central Bosnia a better idea today than it was in 1995? I think not.
  16. It is no better an idea for Serbia than it is for Croatia, never mind for the many Bosniaks who identify as politically moderate Europeans, or the Americans, the UK, and the member states of the European Union.
  17. At Dayton, the representatives of the three constituent peoples made their peace within a single sovereign state and agreed not only to share power but also to distribute it in a way that makes it difficult for anyone to gain power without identifying unequivocally with one of the constituent peoples and foreswearing support from the other two.
  18. No wonder the ethnonationalist leaders were prepared to accept what the Americans imposed at Dayton: it was as close to a guarantee they could stay in power indefinitely as they could hope to get.
  19. And no wonder Dragan Covic and Milorad Dodik want to strengthen the ethnonationalist hold on power.
  20. So to those who are hoping for a post-Dayton Bosnia, my first word is one of warning: be careful of what you wish for.
  21. The various non-papers tell you precisely what Covic and Dodik want. And who is Izetbegovic to object to the Green Garden, which had some appeal to his father during the war?
  22. There are more ways of making things worse in Bosnia and Herzegovina than making them better, as the Mostar election agreement showed.
  23. Electoral reform is a dangerous trap, full of technical issues that really matter in determining the outcome.
  24. I’d much prefer to see constitutional reform first, in the direction of making Bosnia and Herzegovina a more liberal democratic state.
  25. During the war, the President of the Federation, Kresimir Zubak, called me into his office one day and read me the riot act: one man one vote, he said, will never work in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
  26. He was correct in that moment. The war had convinced each of the constituent peoples that they would never get a fair shake from the other two.
  27. Which is why Bosnia today has three presidents, two entities, houses of peoples, vital national interest vetoes, and dozens of other guarantees of group rights over and above individual rights.
  28. But now it is more than 25 years later. Does Bosnia and Herzegovina need its elaborate and dysfunctional governing structures in order to protect Croats, Bosniaks, and Serbs as groups, or could it begin to dismantle those structures in favor of individual rights?
  29. My answer would be yes. I think the group rights guaranteed at Dayton are now threatening the integrity and functionality of the state.
  30. What Bosnia needs now is a shift of power away from the entities and cantons towards Sarajevo for some things and towards the municipalities for other things.
  31. The “state” government in Sarajevo should have all the responsibility and authority required to negotiate and implement the EU’s acquis communautaire. It should set the rules of the game.
  32. The municipalities, many of which have Croat or Serb majorities, should be the main providers of citizen services, with the budgets and authority required to do so effectively and efficiently.
  33. The prerequisite for such a reform is to refocus the constitution away from protecting group rights and towards protecting individual rights.
  34. But I confess what I think really doesn’t matter. I’m an American who likes the fact that as a member of a minority group and descendant of immigrants I can claim exactly the same rights as any other citizen, without reference to my ethnic group.
  35. I interact much more often in my private life with my municipality, where my voice is more readily heard, than with the Federal government.
  36. But in Bosnia and Herzegovina 25 years after the war, the choice is yours, not mine.
  37. You can continue to fight your ethnic battles by political means for another 25 years, or you can choose to end what we call in English the consociationalism that has proven itself so dysfunctional in practice, even if it was necessary for peace.
  38. I would note here that you are not alone in facing that choice: Lebanon, Iraq, and Israel—each in its own way—is facing a similar choice, whether to continue with ethnically based governance or begin to reward competence.
  39. In all three of these Middle Eastern countries, people are taking to the streets to demand a change in the constitutional system in favor of individual rights and cross-ethnic and cross-sectarian political organization.
  40. Therein lies a lesson: it can only be done if the citizens demand it. It is not enough for you here at Circle 99 to analyze and criticize.
  41. Someone —one of you or someone else—needs to lead the way, backed by a mass movement of citizens demanding their voices be heard, organizing to ensure candidates emerge who represent them, and voting to end the monopoly power of the ethnic nationalists.
  42. I occasionally hear the rumbling of such mass movements and electoral coalitions across ethnic lines in Bosnia: after the floods, when the plenums convened, in the cries of Justice for David and Dzenan.
  43. So far though, they have failed so far to generate the required political weight, partly due to repression.
  44. But what happened to Milosevic in Serbia and to Gruevski in Macedonia can happen in Bosnia: a politician secure in his hold on power and his control of the state apparatus—so secure in Milosevic’s case that he called early elections—can fall to the popular will.
  45. It is high time for Bosnians who are tired of the ethnic state to try to create something better.
  46. So I conclude: yes, it is time for a post-Dayton, civic state in Bosnia and Herzegovina. But only you can make it happen.

Tags :

Stevenson’s army, May 23

NYT says risk of nuclear war in 1958 Taiwan crisis was much higher than once thought. Story based on document leaked by Dan Ellsberg. BEWARE: NYT has links to the declassified version and the still-classified sections. If you have a security clearance, you could be in jeopardy if you download and open the still-classified version.
Iran blocks IAEA inspectors.
– Wired has long story about 2011 hack by China.

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

Tags : , , , ,

Eurovision needs better singers

A few quick comments on yesterday’s Eurovision song contest, which was won by an Italian heavy metal band. Some may think this out of my lane, but the event all too clearly reflected current international realities. San Marino and Australia are represented, but not Kosovo? Israel but not Palestine? No Turkey but Greece and Cyprus voting for each other? No Bosnia, because they haven’t paid their bills? It all sounds very familiar to me.

Then there was language. The hosts said “good evening” in the languages of many countries, but everyone spoke English except, of course, a French presenter. The accents were more American than British. That is understandable in the music world. The Europe Union communicates well in a language that is not native to any of its current members! Like much of the rest of the world.

What isn’t so understandable is how a heavy metal band wins in 2021. During ten years living in Italy I never once listened to heavy metal, which in any case strikes me as a throwback. Did today’s young Europeans really sit at home during the epidemic refining their taste for rock and roll in that direction?

I heard a lot of wonderful music in the 1970s, 80s and 90s in Rome, from Roberto Murolo to Luciano Pavarotti. If you don’t know who Murolo was, here is a sample:

If you don’t know who Pavarotti was, try this:

Neither would have had half a chance at Eurovision, but I guess that is beside the point.

Eurovision isn’t meant to be high art, either folk or operatic. We used to call its category “camp.” I suppose some will hear “Ziiti e Bouni” as “artifice, frivolity, naïve middle-class pretentiousness, and shocking excess,” which Wikipedia tells me is Susan Sontag’s definition of camp:

But it sounds more “noisy and terrible” to me. “Rock and roll will never die” the lead singer shouted when given the award. Or is it already dead?

Tags :

Stevenson’s army, May 22

– FT says China snubs SecDef Austin’s requests for mil-to-mil talks.
– NYT says Congress is disagreeing with the generals

– DefenseOne reports fights over what belongs in the Space Force.
– Defense experts say Congress should get more budget details.
– Rose Gottemoeller tells how hard it is for a woman to negotiate with the Russians.

My SAIS colleague Charlie Stevenson distributes this almost daily news digest of foreign/defense/national security policy to “Stevenson’s army” via Googlegroups. I plan to republish here. To get Stevenson’s army by email, send a blank email (no subject or text in the body) to stevensons-army+subscribe@googlegroups.com. You’ll get an email confirming your join request. Click “Join This Group” and follow the instructions to join. Once you have joined, you can adjust your email delivery preferences (if you want every email or a digest of the emails).

Tags : , , , ,

One state, two states, three states, four are all possible

Friends ask: what does the latest Gaza war portend for the two-state solution? Is it dead? Is a one-state solution now inevitable? Are there other possibilities?

It is clearer than ever that Prime Minister Netanyahu is an opponent of the two-state solution. The West Bank settlements and related infrastructure, evictions of Palestinians in East Jerusalem, and unequal treatment of Palestinian citizens of Israel make his preference clear: one state with more rights for Jews than for Arabs. Some call this “apartheid,” which was the more formalized South African system of segregation. Call it what you will, it is not democratic. The days when Israel could be regarded as the only democracy in the Middle East are long gone.

One state with equal rights is conceivable, but in practice impossible. Arabs and Jews are already pretty much equal in numbers between Jordan and the Mediterranean. Even secular Israeli Jews want their state to be Jewish. It can’t be Jewish if there is only one state. Nor are the Palestinians likely to afford Jews equal rights in a one-state Palestine after having been deprived of them for 75 years in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza.

There is another version of the one-state solution that Netanyahu and other Israeli Jewish leaders like. They would be happy to see Egypt take Gaza back and Jordan take the West Bank back. The problem is neither Cairo nor Amman wants the Palestinians or the territory they occupy. Egypt has enough trouble in the Sinai peninsula with Islamist extremists. It has no interest in hosting Hamas, which originates in the Muslim Brotherhood. The Jordanian monarchy figures it already has enough Palestinians, who make up about 50% of the population. Governing the Palestinians in their enclaves on the West Bank would be an enormous challenge for Amman.

There is of course the possibility of a three state solution: Gaza, Israel, and the West Bank. Gaza’s political development for more than a decade has been independent of the Palestinian Authority, whose writ is largely limited to the West Bank. The two Palestinian proto-states are very different: Gaza is a contiguous, crowded, territory without Israeli on-the-ground presence while the West Bank is a Swiss cheese of Palestinian communities surrounded by armed Israeli settlements and the Israeli army. The current situation is close to this model, which in many respects is difficult to distinguish from the one-state solution with unequal rights.

Four states? That would be Gaza, Jewish Israel and West Bank, Palestinians with Israeli citizenship, and West Bank Palestinians. This, too, bears some resemblance to the current situation, because Palestinians with Israeli citizenship are not afforded equal rights or benefits, but they lack their own governing structures. Creating such structures with executive and legislative authority would be a gigantic problem for Israel, but it is the natural course of action now that the latest Gaza war has awakened the political consciousness of Palestinians who live in Israel proper. Judging from my conversations over the years with them, they would not accept governance by Hamas or the Palestinian Authority.

Anyone can have their preferences among these options, and there may be more. I favor the simpler of solutions over the more complicated ones, because life is already complicated. Equal rights is a simple solution. One state won’t work. That makes me conclude two states with equal rights for Jews and Palestinians in both. But I admit it is getting harder than ever to picture the route to this outcome.

Tags : , ,
Tweet