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Why the Arab League cannot become a genuine ‘Arab Union’

June 16, 2021 by Kévin Thiévon

Photo Credit: Nicolas Raymond, licensed under Creative Commons

The Arab League has not succeeded in unifying the Arab world. Since Arab states are deeply divided on issues such as Iran, Islamism or Israel, some argue that the Arab League is a name without a meaning; others that it is under U.S. dictation; and still others that it continues to struggle with disunity and dysfunction. This general sentiment has been fostered by the Israel-United Arab Emirates (UAE) normalisation of August 2020 which, as many Twitter users claimed, represents a “death certificate” to the Arab unity – that is, the irrevocable coup to this unity which allegedly ends any hope.

It can be argued that the Arab League’s dysfunction is due in large part to the dilution of its normative structure. To support that, it is necessary to focus on the two norms that have laid the foundations of the League – unity and sovereignty – and argue that the contradictions which lie in these foundations have impeded the League from being truly effective. A case is made that these contradictions ended with the prevalence of sovereignty upon unity. This came along with a weakening of the League in dealing with mediation or conflict management. Finally, the sovereignty norm itself has faced inconsistencies which continue to weaken the League’s normative structure. Difficult, then, to find the possibility of a coherent “Arab Union”.

At the end of WW II, the struggles for independence re-emerged from where it stopped before the war – e.g. Iraq in 1932. These led to a period of decolonisation movements in the Arab world: Lebanon (1943), Syria (1946) Jordan (1946), Libya (1951), to name a few. The legal principle of uti possidetis juris, through which Arab states could assert ‘the inviolability of their boundaries from external interference’, had accelerated the importance given to the sovereignty norm in the Arab world. Colonial powers were then simultaneously rejected yet considered as a model to follow embodied by the Westphalian structure. In the meantime, another norm has recovered some influence: the Arab unity. Drawn from the Nahda – the Arab Renaissance – and encouraged by independence movements and the Palestinian cause, the notion of a shared Arab identity gave force to the unifying ideology of pan-Arabism – i.e. the maximalist version of Arab nationalism. Eventually, this identity seems to have ‘prioritised independence from and unity against these [Western] non-Arab actors’.[1]

Therefore, in 1945, the Arab League was built upon the conjunction of these two norms, sovereignty and unity. Initially, the League was indeed viewed as ‘a prelude to Arab identity’ after having escaped from colonial domination; and sovereignty was considered as a necessary means by Arab nationalists.[2] Constructivist scholars go further in explaining the League’s foundations. They contend that the mutually constitutive relation between international organisations and its member states sheds light on the identity of both the Arab League and Arab states. In particular, unity and sovereignty norms were constitutive of Arab states, meaning that they were part of their identities and interests. Whilst the unity norm was the expression of a shared belief in a common destiny – pan-Arabism –, the sovereignty one was the condition for head states to ‘legitimise their regimes’.[3] These norms were then central parameters in the sense that they were necessary to make the League emerge.

Within the normative structure of the League, the centrality of these norms also lies in their regulative function. As Griffiths stated: ‘international institutions have both regulative and constitutive functions.[4] First, although the Arab League’s Charter does not clarify what is an Arab state, the ethno-cultural criteria to enter it seems beyond doubt. Thus, it can be argued that the unity norm is regulative since only Arab states are eligible for pan-Arabism ideology. Concerning the second norm, sovereignty is also regulative as officially stipulated in the Charter: ‘safeguard their independence and sovereignty’. Finally, these two norms have been central to build the Arab League, constituting and regulating Arab states behaviour. Yet, a contradiction lies in this centrality and will lead a norm to prevail on the other.

The League, in its practice, has sought to encapsulate the contradiction between the Westphalian structure – encouraged by the governing elite – and pan-Arabism. As some argued, Arab nationalism pushed ‘Arab states to embrace the rhetoric of Arab unity […], and to fear Arab unity in practice because it would impose greater restriction on their sovereignty’.[5] Indeed, pan-Arabism precisely denies the legitimacy of states and, thereby, their sovereignty. The creation of the Federation of Arab Republics in 1972, made up of Egypt, Libya and Syria, well illustrates the incompatibility between unity and sovereignty aspirations: this union lasted barely six years. Likewise, the union between Egypt and Syria, which started in 1958, ended in 1961.

At the end of the 1970s, the contradiction between these two foundational norms reached the point of no return with the prevalence of sovereignty upon Arab unity. The first blow against unity came when Sadat, the Egyptian President, signed in 1979 a separate Peace Treaty with Israel that excluded other Arab states. Realism is useful to understand this shift in Egyptian interests. Here, the material structure reflected by the self-help principle – namely, defending Egyptian interests first and exiting from the state of war – prevailed on the normative structure: the Arab unity. Finally, the coup de grâce to pan-Arabism was given by the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Then, the collapse of the unity norm that followed these two geopolitical facts weakened the normative structure of the Arab League which, for some, ‘would never truly recover’.[6] This latter feeling may be explained by a second contradiction that the League will face: sovereignty per se restricts the mandate of the League.

The sovereignty norm, which both constitutes and regulates Arab League states’ behaviour, has indeed particularly constrained its practice. To deal with mediation and conflict management in the Arab world, the League is as limited as its member states are because any intervention in a member state might be seen as a violation of the sovereignty norm. This logic can explain the African Union decision, in 2003, to modify its rule about sovereignty in order to allow intervention within its member states. The argument advanced was to ease the practice of defending democracy. With this empowerment of an international organisation similar to the League, many critics emerged in the Arab world against the constraint of non-intervention.[7] Thus, a parallel could be drawn between the African Union decision and, in the same year, the interference of the Arab League in the Iraqi political process – as if intervention was becoming tacitly possible. Indeed, in the name of Arab identity, the League openly criticised the Iraqi Governing Council for allowing Kurds and Shia to build a regional autonomy in Iraq. Therefore, being more and more violated, the sovereignty norm seemed to gradually lose its prevalence during the 2000s, until almost completely in 2011.

Scholars tend to agree on qualifying the year 2011 as a ‘major change’ regarding the Arab League policy of intervention, even though some interventions occurred in the past such as in 1976  during the Lebanese civil war. The second foundational norm, sovereignty, was strongly marginalised in the salient case of Libya. In the context of the civil war, the League condemned mass killings for the first time, something that it did not do before with, for instance, Saddam Hussein’s crimes in Iraq. More than this, the League was deeply involved in enforcing the United Nations’ norm of Responsibility to Protect.[8] Indeed, its endeavour to push for a no-fly zone above Libya, claiming that Gaddafi’s government had lost its sovereignty, illustrates well this policy change. This push, together with many other negotiations, led to the adoption of the resolution 1973 authorising an intervention to protect Libyan civilians. Thus, it is interesting to notice that despite the decline of its two foundational norms and the consequent confusion of its normative structure, the League still succeeded in reaching positive outcomes. The case of Libya mentioned above (2011), the creation of the Arab Peace Initiative for the Palestinian cause (2002) or the role of mediator the League played in the Lebanese crisis (2008), all are instances of relative successes that some scholars put forward.

But to conclude, these fragile achievements should not hide the substantive contradictions that lies in the normative structure of the Arab League: two foundational norms have lost their centrality and, therefore, undermined this international organisation. The more salient example might be its ‘complete inability to deal with active civil wars,’ which have turned into humanitarian disasters. Thus, the Arab League has probably missed the opportunity to embody a genuine union that would at least, such as the European Union, guarantee peace among its members. It is a pity given that the Arab world is the only place on Earth where so different countries share as many attributes as they do – a common language, to name the most obvious one. The weakening of the League’s normative has blurred the overall mandate of this organisation.

[1] Raymond Hinnebusch, “Identity in International Relations: Constructivism versus Materialism and the Case of the Middle East,” The Review of International Affairs (2003): 360.

[2] Farah Dakhlallah, “The League of Arab States and Regional Security: Towards an Arab Security Community?”, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies (2013): 399. https://doi.org/10.1080/13530194.2012.726489.

[3] Michael Barnett and Etel Solingen, “Designed to Fail or Failure of Design? The Origins and Legacy of the Arab League,” in Crafting Cooperation: Regional Institutions in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2007),181. DOI: 10.1017/CBO9780511491436.006.

[4] Martin Griffiths, Fifty key thinkers in international relations, (London: Routledge, 2009), 123.

[5] Barnett and Solingen, “Designed to fail”: 181.

[6] Dakhlallah, “The League”: 404.

[7] Ibid: 400.

[8] In Luke Glanville, “Does R2P matter? Interpreting the impact of a norm,” Cooperation and Conflict (2016): 188.

Filed Under: Blog Article, Feature Tagged With: Arab League, Jordan, Kévin Thiévon, Lebanon, Libya, Middle East, Syria

The Coup May Have Failed, But Jordan’s Troubles Are Far From Over

June 2, 2021 by Jack Cross

King Abdullah delivers the Speech from the Throne opening the second ordinary session of the 18th Parliament. Amman, 12 November 2017, Royal Hashemite Archive, public domain.

When news of political turmoil comes out of the Middle East, there are a variety of states that you would expect to be involved, but one that you would not expect is the quiet kingdom of Jordan. For a number of decades now the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan has stood as a reliable, stabilising force within a region that too often descends into crisis and chaos. However in April, King Abdullah II announced that a number of individuals, including former Crown Prince Hamzah had been arrested on suspicion of plotting a coup against the Crown and government. Intercepts of phone conversations appeared to show Hamzah’s staff seeking pledges of allegiance from various tribal leaders and military officers. This was the first time in Abdullah’s twenty-two year reign that there had been a serious threat to his rule. The former Crown Prince was imprisoned in the Royal Family’s compound, before it was announced that Hamzah had re-pledged his loyalty to the king . So, what does this mean for Jordan’s future? This new opposition has exposed significant faults within the country’s governance, with its population experiencing a third wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic and the economy in serious peril. There have also been rumours that foreign governments, including Jordan’s allies, were involved in the failed conspiracy. So, can the Royal Family maintain its position over the country and international backing or are there further crises to come?

It is important to understand the key position that Jordan holds within the Middle East policy of the US and its western allies. The US maintains a military presence in the country at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, which has been used extensively in the bombing campaigns against the former so-called Islamic State. The Jordanian Crown also holds the position of the custodian of the Muslim and Christian Holy Sites of Jerusalem and so along with its accommodation of large numbers of refugees, plays an important role in the Israeli-Palestine conflict. Moreover, the country , as of 2019, hosts the third highest population of Syrian refugees. Historically, the support offered to Jordan by the US and the West has invested in the personage of the Royal Family, who have since the independence of Transjordan in 1946 effectuated a pro-western foreign policy. During the attempted coup, US support for Jordan was reaffirmed in a telephone call between President Biden and the King. But it is worth noting that this support was given once the coup was over, not in the midst of the crisis. US support for the Jordanian Crown is not infinite and is based on the monarchy’s continual ability to provide stable leadership over the kingdom, capable of adaptation and reform.

One of the great strengths of the Jordanian regime has been its ability to adapt to demands for liberalisation. It is why the monarchy came out of the Arab Spring of 2011 largely unscathed. The use of a parliamentary model, albeit with a powerful monarchical head of state, has allowed Jordan to liberalise where necessary, without descending into the civil wars or counter-revolutions that other parts of the region have experienced. To this end, Jordan has been a good choice for a US ally, as it allows them to promote a reformist agenda, that could spread to the rest of the region. But despite this obvious strength, years of regional turmoil have taken their toll on the Jordanian people and Crown. Since before independence was granted, the supremacy of the Hashemite family had been based on two aspects: the support of foreign powers and the consent and fealty of tribal factions within the country. As long as the country and its parliamentary system prospers, the monarchy can be confident of this support. But recent years have exposed underlining flaws in the Jordanian economy and political system. It’s worth noting that the leader of the failed coup, the former Crown Prince Hamzah, has been a vocal critic of government policy, particularly over the issues of corruption and social policy. Jordan is not a resource rich country and often relies on foreign tourism and investment to sustain its economy, but the huge cost of supporting its refugee population and the current pandemic have taken their toll. In 2013 alone, the housing and supporting its refugee population cost the Jordanian government more than 620 million dollars. All this has robbed the country of vital revenues from tourism and as of this time last year, unemployment stood at a staggering 23%. Even before the pandemic took hold, Jordanian unemployment was still very high. The bleak economic picture has also led to a significant increase in negative attitudes within Jordan towards the refugee population. The combination of the refugee crisis, an already weak economy and the current pandemic has resulted in a situation in which at least 1 million Jordanians live below the poverty line, out of a population of 10 million. But this domestic fragility has been further exacerbated with the failed coup and increased tensions in recent years with Israel over small areas of disputed territory, thus presenting a risk that  the monarchy’s international position  may become as precarious as its domestic one.

It is easy to offer to support to someone who has just claimed a victory. The Biden Administration can offer such friendship to the Hashemite Monarchy as it will cost them little in political capital at present. But what of those crises to come? King Abdullah may have been able to keep his government and family together through sheer will on this occasion, but that there is no guarantee this will continue. For years now, Jordan has been a convenient ally for the West, as governments may use its military bases and provide it with assistance, without most of the moral questions that come attached with other Middle Eastern states. While the rumours of foreign backing of the coup may prove to be false, if true they would suggest that the strong diplomatic position that Jordan has enjoyed within the region may not be as strong as it once was. The Hashemite Monarchy, for better or worse plays an important role in the Middle East, as a fairly neutral neighbour of Israel and with a relative independence that allows it to mediate in regional disputes. But as the country declines further, this role could be over and uncertainty about the future could become even greater.

Filed Under: Blog Article, Feature Tagged With: coup, Jack Cross, Jordan, Middle East

The limits of US security cooperation in Jordan

April 22, 2016 by Peter Kirechu

By: Peter Kirechu

Barack_Obama_and_Abdullah_II
President Barack Obama Meets with King Abdullah II of Jordan in the Oval Office on 26 April, 2013. Source: Wikimedia.

The most notable feature of President Barack Obama’s partnership-based counterterrorism doctrine­–roughly defined–is its central focus on training and arming local security services to independently deal with emerging terrorism threats. The President’s doctrine is unfortunately fraught with inconsistent performance of US-trained security services, especially among fragile states in the Middle East and beyond. Whether in Iraq, Yemen, or Afghanistan, singular focus on capacity building within the security sector has failed to remedy the governance failures that fuel instability within the region.

In Jordan, the United States (US) enjoys a long history of sustained political, economic and military cooperation which dates back to 1951. However, since the self-styled Islamic State established a cross-border presence in Syria, concerns with the contagion of trained militants across Jordan’s borders have led to substantial increases in US security assistance. In February 2015, the United States expanded its annual aid to Jordan from $660 million to $1 billion. The funds were directed towards core counterterrorism priorities (border protection, C4ISR, quick-reaction airlift capabilities) and also the immediate humanitarian demands incurred by the Syrian refugee crisis.

Though the US-Jordanian security relationship is less fraught with discord when compared with other states in the region, this assessment slightly deceives a growing angst within the Jordanian public. Since the brutal loss of Jordanian pilot, Muath al-Kasaesbeh, to the Islamic State in 2014, the public is increasingly apprehensive of its government’s support of US policy prerogatives. The pilot’s death stood as a stark reminder of the costs paid by the Jordanian military–and the public writ large–in small part due to the government’s role within the US-led anti-Islamic State coalition.

Despite this fomenting anxiety, the United States appears squarely focused on the more proximate security threats borne by the Syrian conflict. But as the Salafi-Jihadist landscape evolves throughout the region, Jordan will remain an attractive target due to the available reservoir of disenchanted locals eager for a brighter economic future and resentful of the government’s stunted reforms. Unless the United States adopts a more balanced security assistance approach, one that emphasizes comprehensive governance reforms, the current policy will remain inadequate to the underlying causes of domestic instability. 

Jihadist entreaties on a vulnerable public

Since 2013, Jordan has served as the training and staging ground for Syrian rebels battling the Islamic State in Southern Syria. This training effort has slowly expanded and now includes the provision of Anti-Tank Guided Missiles (ATGM) to various US-supported rebel factions. This covert effort proceeded under limited public scrutiny until the Islamic State’s capture and subsequent beheadings of several western journalists and aid workers. These gruesome executions ultimately triggered the US-led aerial bombing campaign against the jihadist group in both Iraq and Syria.

The Jordanian government joined the US effort, viewing its participation as a necessary measure aimed at shoring up Jordan’s national security. At the outset, the public’s response was initially quite supportive but subsequent research polls conducted by the Arab Center for Research and Studies revealed that a majority of respondents viewed the campaign as more beneficial to the United States, Israel and Iran, rather than to Jordan’s security and stability. Though Jordanians expressed early support for their government’s role within the coalition, many did not consider the country’s security interests under direct threat.

But once Lt. Muath al-Kasasbeh was captured and gruesomely executed, his death elevated formerly muted discontent with Jordan’s role within the coalition. Those who not normally involve themselves with the ebbs and flows of foreign affairs found themselves participants in a growing conversation on the merits of their government’s continued involvement in the US-led coalition.

Nonetheless, the participation of roughly 2,200 Jordanian citizens in active battlefronts in Syria and Iraq underscores the government’s concerns with the return of trained militants who may seek to undermine the current governing order. As such, the government’s participation in the US-led coalition appears to be a reasonable response to the rising threat of both domestic and foreign militancy.

On the domestic front, Jordanian authorities have banned cleric that are sympathetic to the Islamic State from delivering public sermons. Other measures include the release of some prominent Salafist clerics with the intent of enlisting their assistance in combatting jihadist rhetoric within the public domain. The government has also adopted a more repressive approach to public dissent, detaining Muslim Brotherhood members and introducing new amendments to the Anti-Terrorism Law. These changes have criminalized the criticism of foreign countries and their leaders while permitting the prosecution of journalists and activists for speech-related crimes–as widely interpreted by the State Security Court.

The crackdown on public speech under the cover of combatting terrorism weighed heavily on Jordan’s decline from a ‘Partially Free’ to a ‘Not Free’ State according to the Freedom’s House  Freedom in the World rankings. This ranking has endured since 2010 and is not likely to improve under current conditions. Unfortunately, the government’s embrace of these policy prerogatives harms the state’s long-term security by ignoring legitimate public grievances and broadening public apathy with stagnated reforms that were once viewed as a bulwark against domestic instability.

Crises of Socio-Economic Patronage

The Hashemite Kingdom’s most urgent economic ails are grounded in the patronage and subsidy system which secures the monarchy’s rule. Regime loyalty underscores the long-running history of generous welfare benefits accorded to East Banker tribes and the pervasive use of personal friendships and tribal relationships to secure professional positions throughout the government. The patronage system is particularly acute within some sectors of the security services, where political and personal relationships often supersede professional conduct and competency.

The unprecedented nine to ten percent increase of the overall Jordanian population as a result of Syrian refugees has pushed the import-heavy Jordanian government into further reliance on foreign financial aid. Through IMF, EU, and US financial support, the country’s budget deficits have narrowed though public debt remains at 90 percent and unemployment increased from 14 percent to 22 percent in 2014. Due to the government’s overdependence on a politically motivated patronage system, systemic reforms are anathema to those who have historically thrived under public benefits. Thus efforts to curb this reliance ultimately undermine the Monarchy’s ability to institute meaningful economic changes. Nonetheless, progress towards this difficult objective remains a worthwhile goal for Jordan’s overall security.

The international community’s traditional responses to Jordan’s precarious economic position often focus on broadening the country’s financial reserves through infusions of foreign aid. But as long as foreign direct investments serve as the preferred model of external financial support, the government should channel these funds towards economic activities that utilize the immense labor reserves offered by the refugee population and Jordan’s unemployed youth.

By adopting economic policies that target this readily available labor pool, the government can provide opportunities for a highly vulnerable population in the low-skill manufacturing, agriculture, and construction sectors. Due to the widespread destruction of Syria’s manufacturing output, and the slow disappearance of formerly productive commercial centers and trade routes, the Jordanian government has the opportunity to develop these lost capabilities within its borders. Such an approach similarly coopts the potential diversion of marginalized youths and refugees into criminality or radicalization.

This approach not only addresses the socio-economic grievances that threaten the government’s long-term stability, but also changes public perceptions of the government’s commitment to meaningful reforms.

Due to the inflamed crises that characterize the Jordan’s neighborhood, the opposition movement has so far restrained itself from overt agitation for regime change. This patient resolve is perhaps rooted in the hopes that meaningful change might emerge through cooperation with the monarchy, rather than the revolutionary violence that has resulted in widespread human suffering elsewhere in the region. Unlike other places in the region, the government has the unlikely benefit of a relatively subdued opposition movement. It should capitalize on this level of calm agitation for change and dedicate more of its foreign assistance toward addressing the full breadth of opposition grievances.

The Limits of Narrow Counterterrorism Approaches

It is likely that the more visible results of effective counterterrorism support occur on the operational theater. Local security services elevate their targeting, surveillance, and response capabilities and gain an operational edge against insurgents and terrorist networks through US training and equipment support. However, when partner states accept US assistance, these transactions are also de facto political decisions with immense implications on the governed.

Recipient governments that focus their enhanced counterterrorism capabilities on regime survival or personal enrichment, as seen in Iraq, are unlikely to survive in the long-term. For others, security assistance and cooperation becomes a publically poisonous symbol of US encroachment on state sovereignty as seen in Yemen and Pakistan. In these environments, security-centered assistance is commonly squandered and US national interests harmed in the long-term.

The United States must therefore balance its security-dominant engagement with the Jordanian government and dedicate more resources to the socio-political and economic factors addressed herein. Placing governance and economic reform conditions on US security assistance, is the first step towards changing the United States’ reception within the Jordanian public. These conditions also incentivize the Jordanian government to balance security-based expenditures with the socio-economic investments that target the governance roots of instability. Over time, it is these investments that build economic, political, and social resilience throughout the Jordanian public and prevent radicalization among the most vulnerable sectors of the general public.

 

 

Peter Kirechu is a graduate student at the Mercyhurst Institute for Intelligence Studies where he focuses on civil strife, insurgencies and counterterrorism. Mr. Kirechu was also a 2013 Boren Scholar to Jordan where he studied the security and humanitarian effects of Syria’s civil conflict. Twitter: @PeterKirechu

Filed Under: Blog Article Tagged With: #COIN, Afghanistan, counterterrorism, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, terrorism, us, Yemen

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