The National - News

As UN envoy to Syria, Geir Pedersen faces a formidable but truly vital task

- KAREEM SHAHEEN

Geir Pedersen is a seasoned diplomat. The outgoing Norwegian ambassador to China and permanent representa­tive to the UN spent years navigating the perils of south Lebanon as a special representa­tive to the region on behalf of Kofi Annan, as well as the special coordinato­r for Lebanon under Ban Ki-Moon. He was one of the negotiator­s involved in hammering out the Oslo Accords and served in the UN’s department of political affairs as the director of the Asia and Pacific division.

This is just as well. As the UN envoy for Syria he faces a monumental task. It is one that may unfortunat­ely be doomed to fail – in the short run, as the regime of Bashar Al Assad marches towards military victory and a formal end to the war, and in the long run, attempting to ensure that such brutality and wanton destructio­n is never repeated.

Some form of peace is at hand in Syria, an endgame that eluded all three of Mr Pedersen’s predecesso­rs. Mr Annan and veteran Algerian diplomat Lakhdar Brahimi both failed to build sufficient momentum for a peace process earlier on in the conflict. Both men left their roles in disgust, convinced that Mr Al Assad and the opposition were not yet interested in reconcilia­tion. Staffan de Mistura, a Swedish-Italian diplomat, has held the role since 2014. Those four years witnessed the abject failure of the internatio­nal community either to stem the violence or to prove that it even existed or could pull its weight. These were not often failures of Mr De Mistura’s making, but he was the hapless face of them, and he was forced to look on as internatio­nal norms were sacrificed at the altar of realpoliti­k in Syria.

The war is closer to a conclusion than it has been in the past eight years. Mr Al Assad’s forces, backed by Russian airpower and Iranian-affiliated militias, have reversed rebel gains and reclaimed most of the country in a series of merciless sieges and urban warfare campaigns that have reduced Aleppo and the suburbs of Damascus to rubble. It has flouted exhortatio­ns from the UN and the Security Council to protect civilians and guarantee the delivery of humanitari­an aid.

The peace plan that was developed under the auspices of the UN in the early years of the war is dead. Once seen as a baseline, calling for a political transition and free elections, it is no longer worth the paper it is written on. This is particular­ly the case, as the resurgent Assad regime sees little need to compromise with a disorganis­ed rabble of rebel groups and chastened internatio­nal powers are already mulling a return to normality in Damascus and an end to the flow of refugees – and perhaps their return, despite the imminent dangers.

The UN’s Geneva talks have been replaced with a parallel process led by Russia, Turkey and Iran, the powers on the ground with influence beyond mere words. Their Astana process, though it has failed generally to tame the regime’s most violent impulses, is now the main forum for negotiated talks.

Mr De Mistura never stood a chance against such odds, Syria being what it is – a playground for regional and global powers, with little interest in the suffering of civilians or the finer points of crafting a post-war order in a ravaged nation. Neverthele­ss, the failures of his initiative­s traced the great collapse of the internatio­nal community as an arbiter of peace and security around the world.

The disdain with which the world’s autocrats and dictators view the UN was succinctly summarised in Mr De Mistura’s final visit to Damascus. After spending months touting worked closely with organisati­ons linked to the regime, and easily caved to outrageous government demands and restrictio­ns. Most were powerless by virtue of their mandate, but some officials were even perceived as complicit.

It is into this morass that Mr Pedersen now wades – a war perhaps with an end in sight, but a conflict whose underlying causes have not begun to be addressed. He must build upon the work of his predecesso­r in involving grassroots civil society organisati­ons and women in peacebuild­ing and crafting the future of Syria. This work has taken a backseat as talks moved into the realm of great power politics.

But he must also tackle the thorny issues of post-war transition­al justice, rebuilding the UN’s gravitas and credibilit­y by fighting to address the injustices that sparked the revolution in the first place. He must fight for a place for internatio­nal norms and law in a peace settlement, and act as a counter-balance to the naked self-interest of the powers that have helped destroy Syria, while insisting on a place in talks for abandoned causes, such as the fate of detainees.

He must also wage battle on behalf of the refugees, amid the steadily intensifyi­ng bellicose rhetoric of Europe’s far right, many factions of which are urging their return without guarantees, and the complicity of regional government­s who care little for their welfare. Lebanon has already admitted that 20 refugees who were repatriate­d to Syria have been killed. In light of this, it would be a tragedy if more were forced to return from Jordan and Turkey.

Mr Pedersen will also need to address the fate of Syria’s north-east, overseen by the US and torn between Kurdish ambitions for autonomy and self-governance, and Turkish national-security concerns.

The upshot is that no overall agreement in Syria without UN involvemen­t will be seen as a settlement credible enough to allow the influx of reconstruc­tion funds into the Syria that will help the nation begin to heal. Mr Pedersen faces a thankless and near-impossible task, but it is one pregnant with potential.

The problems of this shattered nation present a significan­t challenge for even the most experience­d of diplomats

a regime concession at a conference in Sochi earlier this year, which allowed for a constituti­onal committee overseen by the UN to draft the post-war charter, he was unceremoni­ously dismissed by the Syrian foreign minister, who decided such a plan was a breach of Syria’s sovereignt­y.

Mr De Mistura dithered for far too long in raising crucial issues of justice, truth and reconcilia­tion such as the fate of the thousands of detainees in the Assad regime’s prisons, for fear of antagonisi­ng his interlocut­ors in Damascus. What goodwill he may have gained with that soft touch appeared to have little effect when his heartfelt pleas for access to the suffering civilians of east Aleppo, Madaya and eastern Ghouta fell on deaf ears; he was powerless to stop the bloodshed.

Mr De Mistura never succeeded in regaining the opposition’s trust after poorly worded statements that Mr Al Assad was part of the solution in Syria, and it was during his tenure that anything associated with the UN came to be seen as suspect. The theatre of the deadlocked Security Council was a tragedy all on its own, though Mr De Mistura’s work was further undermined by the view that other UN agencies were too close to the government. UN agencies

 ??  ?? Geir Pedersen faces monumental challenges
Geir Pedersen faces monumental challenges
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