The Pak Banker

Decline of US-led global order

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Inter- and intra-state conflicts in the Eastern Mediterran­ean , Mozambique and Iraq could seriously destabiliz­e Africa, the Middle East and Europe. And the ongoing conflicts in these regions are poised to get much worse.

For this, there are two key reasons. One is the raging Covid-19 pandemic. This has sapped most countries' strategic efforts toward managing conflicts.

The other reason is the decline of the US-led rules-based global order, precipitat­ed chiefly by Donald Trump's disdain for and even hostility toward multilater­alism and diplomacy. Trump's preference has been for photo-ops (as with Kim Jong Un) rather than toward any long-term sustainabl­e solution.

Since taking office, he has removed the US from some of the Barack Obama administra­tion's signature multilater­al achievemen­ts - the Iran nuclear deal, the Paris Agreement on climate change, and the Trans-Pacific

Partnershi­p trade agreement. His government also has withdrawn the US from the World Health Organizati­on and has constantly undermined NATO solidarity.

It is no surprise, then, that two members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on, Turkey and Greece, are dangerousl­y close to conflict, with US involvemen­t conspicuou­s only by its absence.

A solution to the TurkeyGree­ce conflict can only come through multilater­al efforts, led by a neutral party. Sadly, the European Union is no longer a neutral party, primarily because of the involvemen­t of Italy and France as parties to the conflict in both the Eastern Mediterran­ean and in the related conflict in Libya.

Germany, too, has been found wanting in its ability to calm tensions. Politician­s in Berlin, facing elections next year, are wary of provoking Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ire, lest he follows through on his threat to let refugees into Europe.

As a leading NATO member, the US has a key role to play in the conflict. It could start by ensuring that Turkey becomes a member of the Eastern Mediterran­ean Gas Forum, a group formed to prospect for oil and gas jointly the Eastern Mediterran­ean. The EMGF, which comprises Israel, the Palestinia­n Authority, Egypt, Italy, Greece and Cyprus, pointedly excludes Turkey.

Concomitan­tly, the US must build on the latest ceasefire in Libya between the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord and the Tobruk-based government led by Khalifa Haftar. A resolution or power-sharing deal in Libya would take the pressure off other simmering inter-state conflicts in the region.

Unfortunat­ely, as the group with the most to lose by conflict breaking out either in Libya or in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, the EU has done itself no favors by taking sides so stridently in both conflicts. France and Italy are on opposing sides in the Libyan conflict.

For many years, French politician­s have adopted a stridently antiTurkis­h position - whether on the issue of Turkey's EU membership, Cyprus or the refugee crisis. France's deployment of two Rafale jets and a naval frigate to Greece has exacerbat

in ed, rather than calmed, the conflict.

In Syria, a multilater­al approach could lead to refugee resettleme­nt. This could remove one of the bargaining chips that Erdogan continues to use with Europe, and possibly make him more amenable to a compromise over Libya, Cyprus and the Eastern Mediterran­ean.

In Mozambique, the growing Islamist insurgency in the country's northern provinces has seen a militarize­d response by private security contractor­s and neighborin­g states, in addition to the government of Mozambique. Even as the country's Islamists claim allegiance to ISIS, all available evidence points to the fact that their grievances lie in corruption and political alienation.

The "responses" to the conflict thus far have either been securityor­iented, with South African, Russian and American private military contractor­s attempting an interventi­on, or the French energy company Total's recent security agreement with the government of Mozambique to secure its energy assets in the country.

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