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Old 07-03-2008, 01:58 PM   #1 (permalink)

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Mugabe Calls Africa’s Bluff

By Roger Bate

At long last, African nations have begun to pressure Zimbabwe dictator Robert Mugabe to end his reign of terror. The leaders of Botswana, Burundi, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia have condemned his systematic use of violence to retain power. Nelson Mandela himself has denounced what he called “a tragic failure of leadership.” Yet the increasingly deluded Mugabe — who was sworn in again as president on June 29 after fraudulently winning a presidential run-off — sees himself as a kind of emperor, claiming that “only God” can remove him from power. He responded to his neighbors’ criticism of his regime in chilling but illuminating fashion: “Some African countries have done worse things,” he told Zimbabwe’s state-run Herald, ‘I would like some African leaders who are making these statements to point at me and we would see if those fingers would be cleaner than mine.”

Mugabe’s digital-era update of “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone” effectively calls Africa’s bluff.

After all, skeptics have long called the Africa Union — previously, the Organisation for African Unity — the “Dictator’s Club.” The joke goes that the only difference between the old OAU and the new AU is the “O” — the dictators are all the same. Although some AU member states are democracies these days — far more than in the past — many are democracies in name only, with leaders employing repressive violence to remain in power for decades. Reasonable estimates differ, but somewhere between 30 and 53 African countries are dictatorships. Mugabe, then, is not alone.

Educated Africans with whom I’ve spoken don’t credit Mugabe’s claim that white foreigners are concerned about Zimbabwe only because they want to recolonize it — but most do believe we’re only interested in the country because of displaced white farmers. They say “Why aren’t you dealing with Bashir in Sudan, Zenawi in Ethiopia, Dos Santos in Angola . . . ” to name but a few. But overlooking failures in other African nations does not make Zimbabwe a success.

The shared post-colonial history of tolerating one-party rule in so many African nations suggests that we should expect little action from the AU’s senior leadership — indeed, Mugabe was guardedly welcomed at the ongoing AU conference in Egypt. Action will be left up to new leaders of democracies in Zimbabwe’s back yard. Zambia’s President Levy Mwanawasa has made increasingly strong statements against the regime and tried to coordinate action among southern African states. And according to the Sunday Times of London, “Officials from Tanzania and Botswana have said they would be prepared to send in troops.” And it is increasingly clear that military action is required to oust Mugabe and restore democracy.

After Mugabe won the rigged 2005 election, I asked various sources in the U.S. and U.K. governments about the possibility of military intervention in Zimbabwe. The widespread consensus saw intervention as a political non-starter. “We would only support a military action if countries in the region decided to act” one expert told me. The support from one or more nations in the region would be required as a matter of military logistics, as well.

Fast forward three years and local political opposition to military intervention is changing. Last week, the U.N. Security Council (including permanent members Russia and China and current member South Africa) criticized the Mugabe regime for the first time. UN action is unlikely, but it may be that China and Russia might not openly object to local action.

British politicians continue to play down the likelihood of military action. The Foreign Office minister, Lord Mark Malloch Brown, said last week, “It’s not a plausible course and would not enjoy international support. I have not heard anyone here or in any other capital suggest military action is a solution.” But instead of dismissing the idea, Malloch-Brown ought to be saying that if Africans themselves want military support, Britain would be prepared to give it.

Not everyone in London is as dovish as Malloch-Brown. According to military sources, two British action plans are on the table — one to provide troops to Zimbabwe to deal with a humanitarian crisis, and the second to help evacuate remaining British nationals from the country — drafted at the request of the Defence Crisis Management Organisation of the Ministry of Defence. The fact that such plans even exist underscores how bad the situation has become in Zimbabwe. But such humanitarian involvement will depend on Africa acting first.

Tanzanians should be proud that it was their country’s military action, under then-president Nyerere, that brought an end to the monumental brutality of Idi Amin’s Ugandan regime. President Kikwete of Tanzania played a part in that action as an officer in the Tanzanian army. Today, Tanzania and other countries in the region have an opportunity to rescue another African people from brutal tyranny. The UK and other western nations should make it clear that they are prepared to bring their own military forces to assist.

At the moment there are few other useful options. The banking and travel sanctions that the U.S. and EU currently have in place on the 200 or so people involved in the violence have proven effective. And increased pressure against corporations enabling Mugabe’s criminal regime has had some effect, as well, isolating Zimbabwe economically. But broader sanctions are probably counterproductive, as they would likely harm the African nation’s population far more than its politicians.

What is sure is that the status quo is increasingly untenable.

— Roger Bate is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute

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