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From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 26 May 2017 10:59
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Crises in Context: South Sudan
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Crises in Context: South Sudan with Alan Boswell

POSTED ON MAY 25, 2017
RFK HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANISATION
By Ariun Enkhsaikhan, Communications AssociateSouth Sudan Crisis in Context

Alan Boswell is a journalist, writing on South Sudan, conflict and
statebuilding. This interview was conducted as part of the “Crises in
Context” educational awareness campaign at Robert F. Kennedy Human
Rights.

In what context and in which environment did you experience South Sudan?

I first came to South Sudan as a journalist in 2009, and then moved to
South Sudan in early 2010 through the April 2010 elections and 2011
referendum and independence. I’ve traveled in and out of South Sudan
and Sudan ever since doing journalism and conflict research.

How have your feelings towards the situation in South Sudan evolved
over the past six years, since its independence?

Thanks to my travels around South Sudan and up-close exposure to South
Sudan’s toxic politics, I never was bullish on South Sudan as a stable
country or the [Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM)] as a ruling
party, which is evident in the articles I wrote leading up to
independence and soon after. Still, all of us who witnessed South
Sudan’s birth as a country experienced the hope embodied in its
independence. The collapse of South Sudan may not be a surprise but
that has made the catastrophe no less depressing to watch.

As far as an evolution in my thinking on South Sudan: At first, as a
journalist, I was very focused on America’s problematic and
largely-deluded love affair with South Sudan’s ruling party, the SPLM.
In the years since, I’ve come to view South Sudan’s challenges as far
more rooted in its structural deficits as a political or security
entity than in any particular shortfalls of its leaders and
institutions. (This perspective is very much a minority one in the
policy world, which instinctually adheres to the Great Man theory of
history.) South Sudan was a radical political experiment in
reverse-engineered statebuilding – a radical experiment really without
precedent, undertaken without the depth of consideration or care that
such an experiment demanded. The experiment failed and continues to
fail at the cost of far too many lives and the destruction of whole
societies. We didn’t care enough to know better. We still don’t. Thus
far there has been very little attempt to even try and learn the
lessons of what went wrong.

In your experience, how different is the interethnic struggle during
the Second Sudanese Civil War compared to the current interethnic
conflicts in South Sudan?

Most of the current ethnic animosities are rooted in past grievances.
However, this war is not – as some commentators and policy makers
lazily assert – merely a continuation of previous “tribal” fighting.
South Sudan’s war is a war of state formation. As those versed in the
history of atrocities know, ethnic cleansing often accompanies state
formations as groups battle for control over the new nation-state. For
those more interested in this topic, I would recommend the work of
Andreas Wimmer of Columbia University. This historical comparative
perspective is also why I have little sympathy for those policy makers
who plead they were blindsided by the current war: the most egregious
mistake of all is to not have structured a transition to guard against
these risks or to have seriously contingency planned for this
potentiality.

It’s important to understand why the groups in South Sudan are
fighting – not out of ancient ethnic animosities, but over a very
modern political game created by the rules of Westphalian sovereignty.
A crude state formation has produced a new game of King of the Hill,
and this game of King of the Hill is the driver of the conflict. Calls
for interethnic reconciliation, as if this crisis is just a matter of
tribal animosities, may be well meaning but is fundamentally
misguided. It is not tribal hatreds tearing South Sudan apart, but an
incongruous political structure pitting groups against other groups in
a winner-take-all system that no one can win. It is impossible in the
near-term for any state to achieve monopoly of force over South Sudan
without political consensus, but one party can hang onto Juba
indefinitely without political consensus. This is the root of the
conflict, and this is the consequence of naïve, programmatic
“nation-building.” Those who hope that new leaders alone would change
these fundamental political dynamics I’m afraid would be disappointed
once again.

How does the current humanitarian crisis in South Sudan differ from
those in other parts of the world, such as the crisis in the Levant?

Both are terrible humanitarian crises. The two are difficult to
compare to each other, as few places on earth are like South Sudan. In
South Sudan, few battles take place: war is against territory and
populations, not combatants.  There are certainly parallels with the
situation in the Levant. Compared to the Levant, South Sudan’s
violence could be described as “low-intensity,” but only if systematic
rape, machete attacks, or wholesale starvation is a less “intense”
form of violence than the aerial bombardment of modern mechanical
warfare. One could make the reverse argument.

What discrepancies do you see between the events unfolding in South
Sudan and its coverage in Western media?

I’m continually disappointed in both the media’s coverage of South
Sudan in relation to comparable crises in the world and the media’s
failure to explain the conflict in context. The main challenge for
media coverage of South Sudan is that the narrative hit an immediate
dead-end. If a conflict is a story only because it is horrendous
beyond belief, there is nowhere to progress the story beyond that. The
failure to put South Sudan’s collapse in a wider context storyline
with new twists and turns is a failure of journalism. Journalists must
find a narrative that continues to develop together with the events on
the ground or else coverage of South Sudan will continue to drop even
as the crisis continually worsens. America’s direct – historical and
ongoing – role in the current crisis offers at least one media
narrative for Western audiences that remains perplexingly
underdeveloped.

What aspect of the humanitarian situation would you like to shed light
on that has not gained the media’s attention?

Since July, South Sudan has produced the largest human exodus in
Africa since the Rwandan genocide. This exodus is separate from the
displacement prior to the July collapse and is a direct result of the
unintended consequences of a C-grade (I’m being generous) peace
process. In many ways, the current war in South Sudan is actually a
new war largely distinct from the 2013-2015 conflict. From a
humanitarian perspective, a very bad situation has now spread to
engulf much more of the country. From a political perspective, a new
war is a new war and must be analyzed as such. You may be surprised
how many policymakers and diplomats fail to do so. At the most basic
level of journalism and diplomacy, we have not invested the resources
to even try and analyze the conflict with any depth. Just because our
international institutions only have the capacity for simple solutions
doesn’t mean that simple solutions will be forthcoming.

Do you have any stories from your work that you would like to share
that would help Western audiences understand the scope of the crisis
in South Sudan?

One of the most appalling aspects of the war has been the rampant,
systematic sexual violence waged on women. Plenty of these stories
have already been told but deserve special attention.

How do you imagine the civil war in South Sudan coming to an end?

It is hard to envision this now, but in the absence of a sustained
diplomatic push to build new regional and international consensus, the
war will continue until some point in the future when the ground is
ripe for a new political settlement based on whatever facts on the
ground emerge. Such a path will also be long, bloody, and involve more
ethnic cleansing and, yes, potentially, genocide.

It is difficult for outsiders to fully appreciate how difficult the
“Give War a Chance” prescription is to implement in South Sudan, a
place so heavily fractured and without even the basic infrastructure
of roads. South Sudan is unwinnable in the near-term, which is one of
the reasons that the political violence is so extreme. The only thing
holding South Sudan together at its birth was crude force and corrupt
patronage. Neither are effective in a stable, sustainable sense.

What gives you hope that the conflict will come to an end?

The collapse of the peace deal in July 2016 was also the final
collapse of more than a decade of failed, naïve Western policy on
South Sudan. Many South Sudanese elite now finally recognize that we
don’t actually have a good prescription for how to build a centralized
state from scratch. There is now a growing consensus among South
Sudanese for the need for a national convention where a South Sudan
union can be negotiated between South Sudanese, a political union of
shared sovereignty that finds a model that fits South Sudan, rather
than trying to violently squeeze South Sudan into a model that doesn’t
fit. This national political settlement should’ve formed the
foundation of South Sudan’s independence all along.

How can ordinary people distanced from the conflict contribute to
helping the South Sudanese people?

MSF (Doctors Without Borders) continues to stand out among aid groups
for its gritty, conscientious, life-saving work in very difficult
circumstances.

I won’t argue for simplistic advocacy solutions because South Sudan’s
current crisis is partially the result of a simplistic advocacy
solution to an incredibly complex problem. Ordinary people who care
should push for diplomatic engagement rather than sound bite
solutions. I’m not optimistic about human rights advocacy groups
reforming their own shortcomings in enough time to assist a collapsing
South Sudan they helped create.

In general, ordinary people should pressure their political
representatives to push for active diplomacy on South Sudan. Right
now, that includes pressuring the current US administration to appoint
a Special Envoy for Sudan and South Sudan and then fully back that
envoy with more than the occasional press statement. The actual
prescription for South Sudan will not fit on a bumper sticker, but
people can go a long way towards making sure the US government
continues to engage the crisis with real diplomatic capital. Anyone
telling you that the US is actively engaged on South Sudan right now
is selling you a convenient fib. The US has largely disengaged and is
without a coherent policy on the way forward. The Obama
administration’s policy collapsed in its final year in office, and the
Trump administration has yet to pick up the issue with any
seriousness.

http://rfkhumanrights.org/news/news/crises-context-boswell/

END
______________________
John Ashworth

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