How to Sustain Momentum after the Resignation of Personal
Envoy Horst Köhler
Following
the unexpected resignation of Horst Köhler as the UNSG’s Personal Envoy for the
Western Sahara on May 22, chances to advance the Western Sahara dossier in the
coming year seem seriously diminished. However, other factors may keep the
Americans pushing the parties forward.
John
Bolton, the National Security Advisor, has been insistent that the UN
peacekeeping mission, MINURSO, either make progress or its funding will be cut
off. Amy Tachco, the political coordinator for the United States mission to the
UN stated a year ago, “MINURSO is a peacekeeping mission that should have
finished its job a long time ago… we as a Security Council have allowed Western
Sahara to lapse into a textbook example of a frozen conflict. And MINURSO is a
textbook example of a peacekeeping mission that no longer serves a political
purpose.”
The
State Department however seems to understand that the region can be volatile
without a peacekeeping force in the Sahara. Renewed hostilities could lead to
armed conflict through a misstep by the Algerians or Polisario without this UN
buffer zone, unlikely as it may seem today.
In
the past, American progress to advance the Sahara issue relied significantly on
senior Administration officials’ interest and an understanding of the
existential nature of the conflict to Morocco. Under President Clinton,
Assistant Secretary Martin Indyk understood the issue as an impediment to
US-Morocco interests and in 1999 took the lead to advance a new compromise
political policy of granting autonomy under Moroccan sovereignty for the people
of the Sahara region.
During
the George W. Bush administration, Deputy National Security Adviser Elliot
Abrams pushed the Moroccans to advance their own initiative which he then
labeled as credible and serious. Hillary Clinton, as Secretary of State under
President Obama, said she was clear in supporting Moroccan sovereignty over the
Sahara and firmly stated that the policy remained the same as under the Clinton
and Bush administrations, calling the Morocco proposal not only credible and serious,
but also realistic.
When
Hillary Clinton left office, Moroccan-American relations entered a more
troubled period when then NSC Adviser Susan Rice attempted to dilute the
long-standing US policy of supporting Moroccan sovereignty over the Sahara and
autonomy for the citizens by using human rights issues to undermine the
legitimacy of Morocco’s presence in the territory. This broke the warm and
largely cooperative relationship between Morocco and the United States in our
mutual effort to resolve this issue with a realistic political compromise. I am
not sure that this relationship has yet fully recovered from that episode.
The
State Department now has as its Undersecretary for Political Affairs David
Hale, a professional diplomat with a deep understanding of policy across the
region, from Morocco to the Gulf and beyond. As a career Ambassador with
significant experience in the region, Under Secretary Hale has shown particular
interest in the affairs of Morocco and in solving the Western Sahara problem.
Further, I believe that he seems predisposed to want to keep MINURSO in place,
as he sees it as vital and cost-effective to the stability of North Africa. But
he also knows that NSC Adviser Bolton will not tolerate spending more dollars
on this mission without some demonstrable progress in resolving the underlying
political dispute.
There
is no doubt that with the resignation of Köhler, the UN process faces a
transition and a slowing of the process before a new UN Personal Envoy is
announced. His resignation is not the best timing, given the high level
interest at the State Department. After more than a year at the helm, Under
Secretary Hale has gained the trust of the Moroccans, an essential ingredient
if they want to encourage the Moroccans on a path forward. He is also as
trusted by Algeria and the Polisario as a fair and balanced diplomat. What then
can the US do to keep the momentum moving?
Perhaps
it’s time for State to work with its allies in the UN Security Council to offer
the outlines of a new proposal, one still based on the only viable political
compromise available, a trade-off between sovereignty and autonomy. Working
quietly with key members of the UN Security Council on a new initiative could
be tabled in the Security Council with appropriate incentives offered to both
parties to continue negotiations.
This
was the approach used by the United States in 1999 under the leadership of
President Bill Clinton. The Americans presented to the Moroccans a secret
proposal to grant an internationally acceptable form of autonomy for the people
of the Sahara under Moroccan sovereignty, a compromise between the Polisario
proposal for total independence and the Moroccan demand for total integration.
In
order to persuade the Moroccans, the Americans promised in writing to the
Moroccans that they would not support any negotiated solution that failed to
protect Morocco’s sovereignty over the Western Sahara. The Americans could
restate this commitment privately as part of any new initiative.
In
order to entice the Polisario, the Americans could guarantee that they would be
assured a confirmatory referendum by the people of the Sahara for any
negotiated solution they agree to, and that any autonomy would be based on
common international standards. Both Parties should be willing to enter serious
negotiations without preconditions, so they would not feel as though they were
forced to accept preconditions or redlines of the other before negotiations
began.
The
advantage here is that a new initiative would be seen as originating not with
the current Moroccan initiative, but rather from a consensus position of the
international community. This kind of face saving maneuver for all of the
Parties could be the key to making serious progress, especially if it truly
emerged from a consensus among the key players on the Security Council, or
separately as a US proposal which had the clear support of many in the
international community.
The
Moroccans should not pass up this opportunity with a senior US official who seems
genuinely interested in solving the Western Sahara conflict, which has gone on
for too long, and has caused too much hardship for so many. The Moroccans
should therefore take the lead in pushing for such a process to begin.The
Americans will be further encouraged by the Moroccan lead and may see it as a
valuable window of opportunity. There is nothing to lose for the Moroccans by
at least testing the approach with the Americans. It’s better than the
alternative of another stalemate.
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