---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: 6 Jul 2017 17:55
Subject: “A Trump Decision Within the Week My Accelerate Genocide in
Darfur,” The Huffington Post
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Cc:

*“A Trump Decision Within the Week My Accelerate Genocide in Darfur,” The
Huffington Post*

 www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/595e49ade4b08f5c97d06783

Eric Reeves, July 6, 2017

Within the coming week the Trump administration will make a decision
unlikely to break through the furor of bizarre presidential behavior, the
health care debate, or any of the foreign policy issues that have dominated
the past six months—from North Korea to ISIS and Syria to relations with
Europe to dangerous frictions among the Gulf States.

But the decision—whether to make permanent President Obama’s lifting of
U.S. economic sanctions on the Khartoum regime in Sudan—will have immense
implications for the people of that desperate country. And for the western
Darfur region, a permanent lifting of sanctions will likely result in
cataclysmic human destruction. Perhaps not immediately, although there will
be significant and direct consequences for the 3 million non-Arab/African
Darfuris displaced from their homes and lands (http://sudanreeves.org/2017/
05/22/displacement-in-sudan-and-darfur-un-figures-
continue-to-be-careless-or-inadequate/ ). But sooner or later many of these
desperate people will join the more than half a million people who have
already died, directly or indirectly, from violence unleashed over the past
fourteen years during Khartoum’s genocidal counter-insurgency in the region
(http://sudanreeves.org/2017/04/27/violent-mortality-in-
the-darfur-genocide-a-matter-of-international-indifference-
and-prevarication/ ).

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/trump_flicker_face_yess.jpg>

Who has said that that the violence was genocidal? For the moment, let’s
focus on senior members of the Obama administration, beginning with
Senator, candidate and President Obama himself. He campaigned declaring
that Darfur was a “stain on our souls,” and that he would never “turn a
blind eye” to such human slaughter (https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=QEd583-fA8M/). His National Security Advisor, Susan Rice, wrote in
these pages during the Bush administration that genocide was occurring in
Darfur and that the U.S. should be prepared to undertake unilateral
humanitarian intervention if necessary to stop it (
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64717-
2004May28.html?utm_source=huffingtonpost.com&utm_medium=
referral&utm_campaign=pubexchange_article/). Obama’s Ambassador to the UN,
Samantha Power, also wrote frequently and powerfully about Darfur, and did
not hesitate to use the “g-word” (https://www.facinghistory.
org/resource-library/video/samantha-power-responding-genocide-darfur/).

Did the genocide somehow stop? Did it burn out? There is absolutely no
evidence that this is the case. Indeed, beginning in the 2012 – 2013 dry
season, violence escalated dramatically, particularly in the region known
as East Jebel Marra. This violence was perpetrated chiefly by Khartoum’s
new Arab militia force, the heavily armed and well-organized “Rapid Support
Forces” (RSF). An important report from Human Rights Watch (September 2015
| https://www.hrw.org/report/2015/09/09/men-no-mercy/rapid-
support-forces-attacks-against-civilians-darfur-sudan ) gave us our best
insight into the character of RSF violence—and the ambitions of the
Khartoum regime. Vice President Hassabo Abdelrahman delivered a speech to
the RSF in December 2014, according to a defecting militiaman, in which he
declared:

*“Hassabo told us to clear the area east of Jebel Marra.*

*To kill any male. He said we want to clear the area of insects…*

*He said East Jebel Marra is the kingdom of the rebels.*

*We don’t want anyone there to be alive.”*

The chilling echoes of the Rwanda genocide and Hutu characterizations of
Tutsis as “cockroaches” has been remarked by no one in the Obama
administration—or to date by the Trump administration. But in fact
Hassabo’s comments had ample precedent in Darfur, perhaps most notoriously
in a memo ten years earlier from the headquarters of brutal *Janjaweed *leader
Musa Hilal: “Change the demography of Darfur…empty it of African tribes.”

Khartoum’s human rights record continues to be abominable, as does its
persecution of Sudan’s small Christian population. And yet current U.S.
Charge d’Affaires Steven Koutsis recently gave an interview in which he
declared emphatically that issues of human rights, political and religious
persecution, and freedom of expression were irrelevant to the decision
about sanctions:

“None of these other issues were the point of sanctions, and none of these
other issues, therefore, should be linked to the lifting of sanctions."
(Agence France-Presse, June 24, 2017 | http://www.dailymail.co.uk/
wires/afp/article-4635304/Sudan-positive-steps-meeting-
sanctions-terms-US-envoy.html/)

But Koutsis is dead wrong: the Preface to the Executive Order by President
Clinton imposing economic sanctions in 1997 explicitly asserts that in
addition to the Khartoum regime’s support for international terrorism,
sanctions were being imposed because of “the prevalence of human rights
violations, including slavery and the denial of religious freedom” (
https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Documents/13067.pdf /).
Unsurprisingly, Sudan remains one of only three countries remaining on the
State Department’s annual list of “state sponsors of terrorism.”

Perhaps the most egregious violation of international human rights law in
the recent past occurred last year during Khartoum’s savage military
campaign against the people of the Jebel Marra region in central Darfur.
Amnesty International published an exhaustively researched report in
September 2016, demonstrating beyond reasonable doubt that Khartoum had
used chemical weapons against civilians nowhere near the fighting (
https://www.amnestyusa.org/reports/scorched-earth-poisoned-air-sudanese-
government-forces-ravage-jebel-marra-darfur/). Most of the victims were
young children. The international community has been silent about Amnesty’s
finding—indeed, in an action grotesque even by African Union standards,
seven AU members elected Khartoum to the position of Vice-President of the
executive body of the Organization for the Prohibition of chemical weapons,
the very body with a mandate to investigate allegations of chemical weapons
use (https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2017/03/sudan-
elevation-to-opcws-governing-body-a-slap-in-the-face-for-
victims-of-chemical-attacks/).

Certainly the Sudanese economy is a mess. But that isn’t a function of U.S.
sanctions, which have been largely undermined by French banking giant BNP
Paribas, convicted in 2015 of massive criminal violation of U.S. financial
sanctions (http://www.reuters.com/article/us-bnp-paribas-settlement-
idUSKBN0F52HA20140701/). The Khartoum regime is a powerful, ruthless
kleptocracy—maintaining a monopoly on Sudanese national wealth and power
since it came to power as the National Islamic Front on June 30, 1989—28
years ago (http://sudanreeves.org/2015/12/09/7041/). It has failed to
invest in infrastructure, agriculture, or health services. It failed to
anticipate the consequences of the loss of oil revenue with the 2011
secession of South Sudan and now confronts staggering inflation, a
plummeting currency, and an almost complete lack of foreign exchange
currency (Forex) with which to import critical commodities, including wheat
for bread, cooking fuel, and essential medicines.

The Sudanese people—across the political spectrum—desperately want range
change; they have been told by the U.S., however that this is not what *we*
 want:

“We [the Obama administration] do not want to see the ouster of the
[Khartoum] regime, nor regime change. We want to see the regime carrying
out reform via constitutional democratic measures.” (Interview with *Asharq
al-Awsat*, December 3, 2011 | http://english.aawsat.com/
2011/12/article55244147/asharq-al-awsat-talks-to-us-special-envoy-to-sudan-
princeton-lyman*)*

The notion that this brutal, profoundly repressive, and serially genocidal
regime is capable of “carrying out reform via constitutional democratic
measures” is simply too preposterous to take seriously. Rather, it is the
way in which the Obama administration, and so far the Trump administration,
choose to put a fig-leaf over the real reason they want to keep the regime
in power: supposedly valuable counter-terrorism intelligence, this from one
of three countries that remains on the State Department’s annual listing of
“state sponsors of terrorism.” But whatever the putative value of
counter-terrorism intelligence expediently provided by the regime, is this
really the time to be giving such brutal men an economic and financial
lifeline? denying Sudanese people their political aspirations and ensuring
that the regime feels it has a “green light” to continue its genocidal ways
in Darfur, South Kordofan, and Blue Nile?

There was a time before the Obama administration when Americans broadly
said “no!” That should be our answer now.

[*Eric Reeves* has written extensively on Sudan for almost two decades; he
is a Senior Fellow at Harvard University’s François-Xavier Bagnoud Center
for Health and Human Rights | https://fxb.harvard.edu/people/eric-reeves/ ]

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