Arab News

Growing risks of EU’s deliberate failures in North Africa

- HAFED AL-GHWELL

Political crises and deepening structural and governance deficienci­es throughout North Africa have become emblematic of a troubled EU approach to the region that emphasizes illusory ideals over difficult, albeit common sense, engagement­s. Over the past decade alone, puzzling stumbles in its attempts to navigate the region’s complex challenges have decimated any confidence in the ability of Brussels to confront the grave threats brewing right on its doorstep.

Given the speed at which a new Middle

East and North Africa is emerging, spurred by Washington’s “right-sizing” of its presence in the region, time is quickly running out for Europe to develop a coherent, sustainabl­e approach to its engagement­s with its Mediterran­ean neighbors.

Granted, much of the attention in Europe and the wider world currently is focused, rightly, on the troubles in Eastern Europe and their potential to spill over into a global landscape replete with woes. However, it should not be understate­d how a resilient democracy in Tunisia, the peace, prosperity and sustained stability of Algeria, Libya and Morocco are of similar strategic importance.

Instead, the reality is a dismal, decade-long record of bumbling, knee-jerk reactions and gross strategic miscalcula­tions that will continue to hamper EU institutio­ns and the ability of the bloc to coordinate its responses to crises unique to North Africa.

The Tunisian president’s dissolutio­n of parliament and the shutting down of almost all political life, echoes the authoritar­ian rule that the Arab Spring aspired to undo. What first appeared to be remarkable decisivene­ss is now a jumble of incoherent, out-of-touch responses to a worsening socioecono­mic crisis and the reintroduc­tion of systemic repression by the security forces to curb opposition.

Instead of a great turnaround, there is an accelerati­ng slide into state bankruptcy, governance failures and a return to instabilit­y. Given the likelihood of such a worst case scenario, the EU could have applied indirect pressure on Tunis to wrap up this political project as soon as possible. However, the bloc would rather “reward” the president’s lunge for one-man rule by lending Tunisia about €450 million ($470 million) in budget support, in addition to maintainin­g its access to a €200 million fund, shared by Morocco, Algeria and Egypt, to mitigate disruption to global grain supplies.

Libya, meanwhile, is spiraling into a selfinflic­ted festering mess the longer the will of its war-weary populace remains subordinat­ed to the pursuit of extremely narrow interests by a gilded few and their external backers. What is left of the country’s tattered, ineffectua­l, multitrack transition processes are cults of personalit­y vying to rewrite a long-overdue first chapter of Libya’s democratiz­ation in the post-Muammar Qaddafi era. The actual transition to a stable, democratic and unified state — capping off a multi-year standoff — remains a distant, elusive priority, if it happens at all.

This woeful state of affairs has only become more entrenched given the complete disinteres­t of Brussels in mounting serious, wellcoordi­nated and well-managed interventi­ons to correct the unraveling of Libya’s post-2011 order.

The EU faces numerous internal challenges resulting from resurgent nationalis­m and EU-skepticism, which distract from the complex efforts to stabilize its southern neighborho­od and invest in its longterm resilience.

Europe must quickly come to terms with its undeniable role as a major actor in an increasing­ly multipolar world, and the first place to do so assertivel­y would be in North Africa. Collective action there must be guided by coherent strategies and clear-sighted objectives, not narrow transactio­nalism.

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