The International Crisis Group:
Who Pays the Piper? 
 

PressInfo # 219

 April 15, 2005

By

Jan Oberg, TFF director


 

2005 is the tenth anniversary of the International Crisis Group, ICG. " The
International Crisis Group is an independent, non-profit, multinational
organisation, with over 100 staff members on five continents, working
through field-based analysis and high-level advocacy to prevent and resolve
deadly conflict." - it states on its homepage.* It works with about 50
conflicts.

In a media release of April 13, 2005, Crisis Group describes itself - with
limited humility - as "widely regarded as the world's leading independent,
non-government source of information, analysis and advice to governments and
international organisations on conflict issues."

By whom, one might humbly ask, by what circles? It is true that mainstream
media often describe the ICG as prestigious or well-respected. People who
are not too familiar with politics and conflicts may go for the names and
public relations of an organisation, and in those terms, ICG is certain
world-leading, in spite of the fact that virtually all the top names are
"have-beens". 

However, professionals in conflict-analysis, -resolution and peacemaking may
find reasons to question the image ICG promotes of itself. In what follows,
the focus is on general status and connections as well as on
intellectual/research pertaining to a couple of conflicts - thus not
excluding that Crisis Group may do better work elsewhere. 

 

Non-governmental? Independent? 

A visit to Crisis Group's website reveals that 40% of its funds come from
governments:

Agence Intergouvernementale de la francophonie, Australia, Austria, Belgium,
Canada, the Czech Republic, Holland, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland,
Japan, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Taiwan, Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
Switzerland, Turkey, the UK and the US. Isn't it a bit hard to believe that
those who pay the piper would continue to do so, if reports were critical of
government policies - Western governments and their conflict "management" in
particular?

ICG is also supported by various foundations (covering 43%) - Rockefeller,
Ford, MacArthur, US Institute for Peace (established by Ronald Reagan),
Carnegie, Sarlo Jewish Community Endowment Fund, Hewlett, etc. and private
sector donors (16%). 

In short, major mainstream American policy-oriented foundations, none of
which are known for spending just a fraction of their millions of dollars on
grants that could result in building a knowledge base about, say, peace by
peaceful means, non-violence and reconciliation. Neither have they promoted
studies of why violent conflict-management and so-called humanitarian
interventions - e.g. Kosovo - have failed so miserably since the end of the
Cold War - let alone promoted criticism of the only superpower's reckless
militarist, unilateralist policies these years.

But let's imagine the ideal world in which, year by year, more and more
government funds would come with no strings attached whatsoever. Are
non-governmental people leading ICG?

No, they are not. Among its board members we find Gareth Evans President &
CEO, Former Foreign Minister of Australia and Lord Patten of Barnes, former
European Commissioner for External Relations, Co-Chairman. Two
pro-Kosovo-Albanian Americans, Morton Abramowitz, former U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State and former U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, Stephen Solarz,
former U.S. Congressman. And George Soros. Among other names that catch the
"independent, non-governmental" eye you find: ambassador Kenneth Adelman
(US), Wesley Clark (former NATO-commander who lead the destruction of
Yugoslavia in 1999) (US), Zbigniew Brzezinski, former U.S. National Security
Advisor to the President, Ruth Dreifuss, former President, Switzerland,
Leslie H. Gelb, former President of Council on Foreign Relations, U.S. 

Among other former-governmentals: Bronislaw Geremek, former Minister of
Foreign Affairs, Poland, Lena Hjelm-Wallen, former Deputy Prime Minister and
Foreign Affairs Minister, Sweden, James C.F. Huang, Deputy Secretary General
to the President, Taiwan, Fidel V. Ramos, former President of the
Philippines, Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, former Secretary General of NATO;
former Defence Secretary, UK, Salim A. Salim, former Prime Minister of
Tanzania and former Secretary General of the Organisation of African Unity,
Par Stenback, former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Finland, Thorvald
Stoltenberg, former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Norway, Ernesto Zedillo,
former President of Mexico; Martti Ahtisaari, former President, Finland,
George J. Mitchell, former U.S. Senate Majority Leader, Uffe
Ellemann-Jensen, former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Denmark, and Mark
Eyskens, former Prime Minister of Belgium.

In all fairness, there are also some business people, a novelist and a
professor. But one can't help being struck by a) the overwhelming presence
of (former) politicians and diplomats, b) the virtual absence of people from
academia with professional training in field conflict and peace work, and c)
the degree of overlap between the governments that support the ICG and the
governments these board member once served. 

The Washington office of the Crisis Group consists of only Americans who -
no exception - have a background in the US government - Peace Corps, State
Department, the National Security Council, USAID. In a couple of cases
Bachelor and Master degrees are stated.

If Crisis Group was really non-governmental - rather than so clearly
near-governmental - it would work with civil society and promote early
warning, conflict-prevention and policy-proposals from below, in partnership
with local groups in conflict regions. It doesn't even try, it has an
exclusivist, elite-policy of change, expressed in this manner in its Annual
Report:

"Much of Crisis Group's most successful advocacy is done behind closed
doors. Our major advocacy offices, in Brussels, Washington DC and New York
[notice the choice among 191 UN members, JO] continued to ensure Crisis
Group had the access and influence at the highest levels of the U.S. and
European governments, the UN, EU and NATO; our Moscow office improved our
access to Russian decision-makers; and our London office continued to
strengthen Crisis Group's high profile and influence in the UK. All Crisis
Group offices, both advocacy and field, receive a regular flow of senior
political and official visitors."

Elsewhere it is stated in these self-flattering terms, "Crisis Group today -
with its 110 full-time staff spread across some 25 locations on five
continents, working simultaneously on around 50 areas of actual and
potential conflict, and with an annual operating budget of nearly $12
million - is universally regarded not only as a serious player in the policy
debate on just about every major conflict prevention and resolution issue,
but as probably now the world's leading independent, non-government source
of information, analysis and advice to governments and international
organisations on conflict issues."

Closed doors, close interaction with elites who have all the formal and
informal connections to power! What power? Most often the power of
governments, such as the US, the UK - but also Australia, Japan and Denmark
- that have repeatedly chosen to not do something about conflicts when they
could but later chose to aggravate the conflicts by exporting their arms and
simplifying images of "good" versus "evil" by bombing and occupying - power
who does not even bother to learn the history, philosophy, vocabulary,
methods or potentials of non-violence but, instead, increasingly promote
violence as an integral part of their worldwide conflict "prevention" -
power that is pretty isomorphic with the structure of ICG and its worldwide
operation.

 

 

Research or commentarism?

"Crisis Group's staff administer the organisation, develop policy proposals
for consideration by the Board and promulgate Crisis Group analysis. They
are professionals with extensive experience in advocacy, law, politics, the
private sector, humanitarian assistance, peacekeeping and human rights," one
reads on the homepage.

So, what about the reality of another statement, namely that "Crisis Group's
approach is grounded in field research"?

The President was a university lecturer in law and practising barrister
1970-78, but since then a politician and prolific writer. What about the
advisory board? One would believe that an advisory board had some
professionals. But supporters who contribute more that U.S.$25,000 p.a. are
offered International Advisory Board membership, so the advisory board, it
seems, consists mainly of people who have donated money but are not
necessarily experts in, say, conflict analysis or -resolution, peacemaking,
dialogue and negotiation, or early warning. 

The CVs of the staff list what Crisis Group members have done before
joining, but conspicuously leaves untold educational background in quite a
few cases. About Nicholas Whyte, PhD and director of Europe Program, it is
written that he is Trifun Kostovski Research Fellow. You wonder who Trifun
Kostovski is? He is an MP in Macedonia, founder of Kometal Trade Gmbh,
supported as Mayor of Skopje by the opposition and - you guessed it - member
of Crisis Group's board. One looks forward with excitement to Whyte's
forthcoming independent research reports on Macedonia's future.

Would you be reading this now,
if it wasn't useful to you?
Get more quality articles in the future 

The HQ in Brussels has four staff members with titles indicating research.
You're informed that one is director of advocacy and research (sequence
hopefully accidental), he has a BA and MA and has worked as a commercial
lawyer. One has worked at an embassy and holds both a BA and MA. One is
completing his PhD after internship at the EU Commission. And one has been
an intern with the EU Commission and holds an MA in international studies. 

It appears that, contrary to the research image, none of those doing
research at the HQ have reached the level of PhD yet. 

What about ICG staff around the world? A "senior analyst" on Central Africa
is a former officer in the Australian Army and "slowly progressing a PhD".
About some of the regional project directors and analysts, it is stated that
they have PhDs. Not so with everyone. For the main/only analyst listed under
Macedonia, no CV is provided on the website. The analyst on Serbia and
Montenegro joined Crisis Group as late as 2004 "while keeping his academic
base in London" but otherwise no academic background is provided; his
presentation mentions columns, media analysis, legal and business
consultancy and NGOs work. Having checked a few CVs, but admittedly not all,
we found one with a PhD in conflict studies. Hopefully there are more, or
will be more soon.

The general ICG report does not seem to be based on any consistent
theoretical or conceptual framework pertaining to conflict analysis, early
warning or world system/international relations schools. While ICG reports
are certainly not without information and knowledge, much remain on the
level of commentarism and piecing together data from interviews with
representatives of formal power, such as politicians, and readings of
newspapers. 

CrisisWatch is a 12-page monthly bulletin "designed to provide busy readers
... with a succinct regular update on the state of play in all the most
significant situations of conflict or potential conflict around the world."
It is based on a Crisis Watch database and a Conflict Histories database,
country by country. However, for the former Yugoslavia for example, there is
no history database for the whole entity and thus no understanding possible
of the interrelatedness of the region. Those for Serbia and Kosovo leave
much to be desired as they are merely journalistic and contain both some
factual mistakes and simplified interpretations as well as lack every
systematic conflict- theoretical approach, thus making impossible
cross-country comparison. By the way, there does not exist any conflict
history database for Bosnia-Hercegovina and Croatia. 

In these databases - in reality very short descriptions - as well as that
for Iraq, one notices a conspicuous absence of any information that could
place Western interests, historic and contemporary co-responsibility for
conflicts, counterproductive conflict-management or failed peace-keeping in
a problematic light.

Anyone who has worked a few years/decades with just a few complex conflicts
can only wonder how it would be possible to say something deeper or
analytically original about 50 conflicts - early warning, conflict
management and peacemaking in a broad sense - in so many different cultures,
even with 100 highly qualified and experienced professionals. 

It is worth discussing whether the above-mentioned deficiencies are
compatible with characterisations such as "the world's leading
conflict-prevention organisation." Let's hope that there is actually much
more professional substance behind the real ICG than meets the eye, and that
it is only the virtual ICG, i.e. the homepage, that doesn't do justice to
such de facto excellence.

 

Conflict prevention: No!

Part of the ICG's logo is the text: Working to prevent conflict worldwide.
This, in a nutshell, gives you the level of intellectualism and vision. For
- can there be any life, any family, any work place or any country in which
there is no conflict, i.e. no differences, different views, disagreements,
disputes, no differing world views, norms and visions of the future? Can
there be any individual or civilisational development without conflict? Of
course not! Preventing conflict literally means making life poorer. Without
conflicts, there would be no need for democracy, no possibility of freedom.
It would be an Orwellian world. Conflicts happen. Conflicts exist. "Conflict
prevention" is intellectual nonsense. 

What we all need to work with instead is, how to prevent, reduce and,
admittedly long-term, abolish violence and war as legitimate means to deal
with unavoidable differences and conflicts. 

The day the ICG could work for that as successfully - in terms of public
relations, funds, civil-society based and for non-violence - as it does
today its near-governmental conflict "management" work, the world and the
times would indeed have changed.

Finally, Lord Patten of Barnes, Chair of Crisis Group's Board of Trustees
writes in the Anniversary media release that "What Crisis Group does is to
fill the need that policy-makers in national governments have for smart,
honest analysis and practical proposals for preventing disaster, or at least
mitigating its consequences. We often find ourselves saying the things that
governments would like to say but find too difficult".

The last sentence is probably slightly more revealing than the Lord himself
intended. But in spite of the intellectual crisis in his Group, it's getting
well paid for saying exactly that. Media that gladly quote neon signs on
shiny facades would perhaps be surprised at what is sometimes found, or not
found, behind them. 

Political correctness is rewarded in our increasingly authoritarian times.
Crisis Group is not the only near-governmental organisation posing as
non-governmental in the field of conflict "prevention" and peacemaking.

It's time to separate the sheep from the goats.

 

* To mark the occasion, Crisis Group has published a concise history of the
organisation, 1995-2005: A Decade on the Front Lines.

 

More about Crisis Group here

The Accumulating Crisis in Kosovo

TFF PressInfo 197 - April 29, 2004
Peace-Making coming to an End in Kosovo - for predictable reasons
With a critique of the International Crisis Group

 

  
Get free articles & updates

Fa gratis artikler og info fra TFF

C TFF and the author 2005



http://www.transnational.org/pressinf/2005/pi219_IntCrisisGroup.html






                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [email protected]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to