The
Iraqi crisis reminds us of how difficult it is to assist a country that is deeply
divided along ethnic and cultural lines. The fracture line between Sunnis and
Shias cuts the country in two. This is a very high risk divide. It needs to be
managed with great balance. Leaders from both sides of the line have to be
brought together all the time. Our role, as international community, is to
encourage them to cooperate, to help them to build the platforms that bring
their interests together, to underline the common ground and look into the
future from there.
In
many ways, the experience tells us that to intervene in countries that are at
the frontier of great divides is not a very easy thing. The best solution is to
stay out, as much as possible. If that is not advisable, then the international
community must act in a very well informed way, with great prudence and
a strong sense of the risks.
That´s
true in Iraq as it is also true in Sudan, Mali or Chad, in the Balkans, or any other
country that has national communities that are very different, both from a
physical point of view and from a religious or cultural perspective. These are
countries with a very high risk of falling into major internal conflicts. Outside
interventions that are just naive and ill prepared can only accelerate the
hatching of the crisis.
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