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Source: Getty

In The Media
Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center

Brahimi Won’t Risk His Reputation in Vain

Veteran Algerian diplomat Lakhdar Brahimi knows the fears, concerns, and mentality of the Syrians, which may prove valuable in securing a diplomatic solution to the crisis.

Link Copied
By Sami Moubayed
Published on Aug 14, 2012

Source: Gulf News

Former Algerian top diplomat Lakhdar Brahimi is set to become the new UN-Arab League envoy to Syria coming on the heels of Kofi Annan’s August 2 resignation. He has not accepted the posting yet, and nor has the Syrian government approved him.

Many are sceptical, saying that the ingredients for a breakthrough remain lacking; that Brahimi will face the same obstacles that torpedoed Annan’s mission since last April. Others are saying that the man who helped end Lebanon’s civil war, who managed Iraq’s troubled post-Saddam elections, and propped up Hamid Karzai as president of Afghanistan, cannot go wrong. Let us take a look at Brahimi’s pros and cons for Syria.

First, unlike Annan, Brahimi is an Arab Muslim who knows the Middle East inside out; not through the narrow prism of the UN, but from hands-on experience from having lived and worked with Arabs for his entire career. He was a Nasserist during his youth, and served as his country’s ambassador to Egypt and Sudan in the 1960s. Additionally in 1984-1991, he was assistant secretary-general of the Arab League, and in 1991-93, served as his country’s foreign minister. Briefly in 1983-84, he was special consultant to Algerian president Chadli Bendjedid.

His positions brought him often to Damascus, his last visit as part of The Elder’s delegation in October 2010. In 1989, he worked with the Syrians on hammering out the Taif Accords to put an end to Lebanon’s civil war. He knows their fears, concerns and mentality, and has dealt with every Syrian administration from Nour Al Din Al Atasi to Bashar Al Assad. Annan, however, knew absolutely nothing about Syria, except what was fed to him systematically by Syrian officialdom, along with the US and Israel, during his tenure as UN secretary-general in the 1990s. Brahimi won’t sound like an Orientalist approaching the region with white gloves, stating the obvious, like, for example, that the situation is “critical” in Syria. He won’t be using strong words like “horrified” and “optimistic” when describing his inner feelings towards the Syria Mission. He knows that such nonsense reads very poorly on the Syrian Street. Those statements made Annan look silly in the eyes of ordinary Syrians, who were struggling with war, poverty, and displacement, while Annan was learning his Syrian ABC.

Brahimi won’t take things at face value, as Annan did. He would know when the Syrians are lying to him about something. Unlike the Sudanese general Mustafa Al Dabbi, who led the Arab League mission to Syria and was accused of genocide in his own country, or Annan, who has shouldered accusations of corruption at the UN, Brahimi has an exceptionally unblemished political and financial record.

People trust and respect him, not only in Syria but globally. Brahimi’s setbacks are also plenty. First is his age. At 78, Brahimi is far beyond retirement age, and there is little fight left in him. Second is the firm gridlock in Syria itself, where neither the regime nor the Free Syrian Army (FSA) is ready to lay down their arms.

The Syrian opposition remains painfully disunited, and the international community divided on how to deal with Syria. Russia and Iran are still firmly committed to their Damascus allies, while the US, France, Saudi Arabia and Qatar are pushing for regime change, without providing a clear roadmap as to how and when that can be achieved.

They insist that no Libya-like strike will happen in Syria, and speak vaguely of a Yemen-like solution, forgetting perhaps, that unlike Ali Abdullah Saleh, Al Assad is not even close — not the slightest bit — to even thinking of stepping down.

The armed rebels have no single authority to take orders from; meaning even if Brahimi brokers a ceasefire, like Annan did, it is highly doubtful anybody would abide by it. The US still refuses to give Iran any role in mapping out Syria’s post-Baath future, and Brahimi knows that with no air strike, no engagement of Iran, no desire to lay down arms, and no roadmap, Syria would remain firmly grounded at Square One.

Additionally, the US is simply too busy, three months ahead of the presidential elections, to mind Syria or Brahimi.

More importantly, what will Brahimi’s point of reference be? Would it be Annan’s original six points, which called for an end to violence “from all sides”, humanitarian aid for war-torn cities, a proper observer mechanism, and a political process that, according to the Arab League, would call on Al Assad to delegate powers to his vice-president? Or would it be the recent Geneva conference, which calls for a “transition body” that would run Syria, in parallel with Al Assad, for one year?

Both ideas are seemingly dead, and neither the regime nor the opposition are interested in revisiting them. Brahimi knows the above only too well. After a prolific and successful career dating back to the 1960s, he has nothing left to prove for his legacy.

That actually might serve as a plus, since he won’t accept the Syria mission unless he gets guarantees from the UN that the Russian-American divide has been healed. He won’t risk his reputation for a failed mission in Syria which, if it materialises, would probably be his last before retirement.

This article was originally published in Gulf News.

About the Author

Sami Moubayed

Former Visiting Scholar, Carnegie Middle East Center

Moubayed, a political analyst and historian, focuses his research on Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and the Arab-Israeli conflict.

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Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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