Say Happy New Year despite many cautions

 

2006/12/30
By John J. Metzler NEW YORK, Special to The China Post

 

With the last light of 2006 fast fading, it's time again to consult the
crystal ball and see what's on the horizon for our troubled world in the New
Year. Here are a few of the issues which will dominate the headlines in
2007.

Terrorism: Though effective counter-terrorism has largely been successful
during the past year, one can't assume Islamic jihadists won't hit again in
the USA or Western Europe. Rationalizing the causes of extremism will not
temper the white-heat hatreds of al-Qaida terrorists toward the U.S., Canada
and Europe. 

Iraq: Clearly the USA is losing the political will to sustain military
commitments in Iraq. This is not the fault of the U.S. military which has
performed admirably but has been hampered with too many political
constraints. The Democrat party controlled Congress will press for a quick
solution which will sadly lead to a flawed outcome. It's incumbent that the
Iraqis learn to assume security functions themselves as the U.S. will begin
a phase out. Still any precipitous American pullout will embolden the
radicals and ensure even wider Mid-East instability. 

Nuclear Proliferation: The dual crises in both nuclear North Korea and soon
to be nuclear Islamic Iran has jolted the global community into awareness
and trepidation, but has paralyzed effective counter measures save for some
economic sanctions on North Korea and on Iran.

Through the quaintly titled Democratic People's Republic of Korea has few
international allies and less global support, North Korean dictator Kim
Jong-il plays the role of a wild-eyed villain and gets plenty of "space."
China's game is duplicitous. While working with regional powers such as
Japan and U.S. to manage the Korean crisis, Beijing appears to also profit
from the fact that its erstwhile comrades in Pyongyang threaten the status
quo and thus preoccupy the attention of Washington, Tokyo and Seoul.

The Islamic Republic of Iran is different. Teheran is a major petroleum
producer and thus holds an energy card and trading position with much of
Europe. Though Iran is not ethnically Arab, it does have wider support
throughout the Islamic world. While the West Europeans remain "deeply
concerned" over Iran's nuclear ambitions, those concerns and tepid sets of
sanctions will not deter the atomic ayatollahs from single mindedly pursuing
the bomb, nor Teheran's president unambiguously declaring that "Israel
should be wiped off the map."

Regional: Back to the Balkans! Kosovo, the overwhelmingly Albanian ethnic
region of former Yugoslavia should finally attain its independence from
Serbia. While Russia has delayed the process over the past months, it
appears that Moscow has little to gain from close ties to Belgrade, but will
certainly use Kosovo's status as a tradeoff for other issues. The U.N.
Security Council must approve Kosovo's future -- this is not a done deal. 

Equally Gaza and the Palestinian territories remain a political tinderbox as
ruling fundamentalist Hamas forces face off with the more "moderate" Fatah
factions. Lebanon too, after the crisis of the past summer faces renewed
pressures from Syrian backed elements trying to destabilize this small
democracy. 

Energy: The most dangerous development I believe is Vladimir Putin's
increasingly authoritarian Russia playing its energy cards with neighboring
countries. Natural gas price hikes and cutoffs to Ukraine and Georgia have
carried crudely implicit threats to places like Poland and Hungary. Given
that West Europe has eagerly become dependent on available Russian energy,
one has to question the political price of dependency? 

Moscow's mega-supplier Gazprom is set to become the second largest supplier
of natural gas to France. Similar deals have been done with Italy and
Germany. Already Gazprom supplies 98 percent to Slovakia, 80 percent to
Hungary, 70 percent to the Czech Republic, and 60 percent to Poland. Plainly
stated, Putin is using the energy pipeline arteries to Europe to weave a web
of dependency, coercion and control.

The United States too has a dangerous dependence on foreign petroleum, not
only from the Middle East. Events in Venezuela, a major oil exporter,
clearly point to red flags as the recently re-elected left wing regime of
Hugo Chavez will inevitably clash with Washington.

Humanitarian: Unquestionably the continuing humanitarian crisis in Darfur
merits both the most attention and indeed the most outrage. The Sudanese
regime has continued to hinder and hamper humanitarian assistance to the
troubled region. Over the past few years, a minimum of 225,000 civilians
have died and a further two million people have been displaced. United
Nations relief efforts have been effectively blocked by a Khartoum regime
flush with oil money and secure in its political support from Beijing.

Efforts to expand upon a small and largely ineffective African Union
peacekeeping force have been in checkmated in the U.N. Security Council
where a callous combination of Arabs and the PRC continue to block a serious
intervention force. Look for face-saving steps but Darfur appears doomed.
Some people are too polite to use the word genocide.

Nevertheless with all these cautions, I still say Happy New Year!

John J. Metzler is a United Nations correspondent covering diplomatic and
defense issues. Metzler can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.chinapost.com.tw/news/archives/editorial/20061230/98769.htm

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