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US slips on promises to hold Sudan to account
Published in Daily News Egypt on 13 - 07 - 2010

WASHINGTON: The words of the Obama administration were unequivocal: Sudan must do more to fight terrorism and improve human rights. If it did, it would be rewarded. If not, it would be punished.
Nine months later, problems with Sudan have grown worse. Yet the administration has not clamped down. If anything, it has made small conciliatory gestures.
Activists say the backtracking sends a message that the United States is not serious about confronting Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir, whom an international court charged with genocide on Monday.
"They had a fine strategy. They just haven't implemented it," says Amir Osman, a senior director at the Save Darfur Coalition. "Nobody will take them seriously until they do what they said they would do."
The White House denies that it has abandoned the strict course it had set. It says there have been signs of progress in Sudan despite a recent rise in violence in Darfur and a crackdown on opposition by the government.
Sudan poses many complicated problems for Washington. The United States has long accused it of sponsoring terrorism. The genocide charges against Al-Bashir follow war crime charges filed against him last year.
Militias backed by his government are accused of slaughtering civilians in the western Darfur region in a conflict that has killed an estimated 300,000 people.
The United States also is concerned about preserving a 2005 peace agreement from a separate conflict in Sudan between the mostly Muslim north and predominantly animist and Christian south.
Under the deal, the south is to hold a referendum in January in which it is likely to vote to secede. Details have not been worked out, however, and there are fears the vote could ignite another war.
US officials have been divided about how to deal with Sudan.
Some argue that only a tough line can end Sudan's violence. Others, notably White House envoy Scott Gration, say that it is critical to work with the government to ensure that any secession by the south would occur peacefully.
President Barack Obama settled on something of a compromise. On Oct. 19, his administration announced that the Sudanese government would be rewarded for making progress, but punished if it failed to do so.
The administration did not say what the punishments or rewards would be, but it explained how they would be determined. It planned to establish indicators by which changes in Sudan could be measured.
The White House would undertake regularly reviews of the indicators, which would trigger the rewards or penalties.
"There will be no rewards for the status quo, no incentives without concrete and tangible progress," said the US ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice.
"There will be significant consequences for parties that backslide or simply stand still. All parties will be held to account."
Since October, there has been backsliding, as the administration has acknowledged.
It issued a statement Friday, together with Norway and the United Kingdom, criticizing Sudan for worsening human rights violations throughout the country and for breaking cease-fires in Darfur, noting its use of aerial bombardment and the deployment of local militias.
Yet the United States has not punished Sudan. Instead, it has offered small incentives.
The State Department recently expanded visa services for Sudanese citizens in its embassy in Khartoum. It also sent a low-level representative to Al-Bashir's inauguration.
Administration officials say that Sudan is discussed regularly at high-level meetings.
Officials say they use indicators to measure progress in Sudan, but have refused to say what the indicators are. Even a top lawmaker dealing with Africa issues, Democratic Rep. Donald Payne, said he has difficulty getting information.
"I haven't heard what the benchmarks are or what specifically will be done, if they are not met," said Payne, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Africa subcommittee.
The White House's top Africa policy adviser, Michelle Gavin, said the administration never intended to have specific metrics that would prompt an automatic reaction. Instead, the White House would use the indicators to reassess its policy continually.
"The idea of some kind of one-for-one scenario where for each indicator we look at we deploy some corresponding carrot or stick is an oversimplification. No policy could function that mechanistically," she said.
Gavin and other administration officials point to signs of progress, including Sudan's improved relations with neighboring Chad.
They say the recent elections were important, even though they were flawed.
They also believe that Khartoum is prepared to let go of the south and has acted to facilitate the referendum. Last week, government officials began talks with southern leaders on how to ensure a smooth transition.
But John Prendergast, head of an anti-genocide program at the Center for American Progress, a think tank close to the White House, said the Sudanese government has stalled on major aspects of setting up the referendum and has yet to agree on how to demarcate the border and share oil revenue.
He says that the United States may have sent the wrong signal by gIving Sudan a pass on other issues.
"If the parties, particularly the ruling party, do not understand that there will be real consequences for a return to war, and real benefits for peace in the country, then the US has lost its biggest point of influence in the effort to avert the worst-case scenario," Prendergast said


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