2024 é um ano crucial, a exigir coragem e respostas à altura (dn.pt)
Friday, 5 January 2024
To start the New Year: reflections about ongoing conflicts
2024 is a crucial year, demanding courage
and responses to match
Victor Ângelo
I spent decades leading United Nations
political, peace and development missions. It was at the UN that I grew
professionally and learned how to resolve conflicts, some quite serious, in
which death and pain lurked behind every dune, tree or rock. I thus gained a
broader view of the international system and the way in which the relationship
with the Security Council should be carried out. Then, for years, I worked as a
civilian mentor at NATO, preparing future heads of military operations,
repeatedly highlighting the need to obtain the support of populations and
humanitarian organizations in these operations.
Experience taught me the paramount importance
that must be given to safeguarding people's lives. When I addressed generals,
police force commanders and UN security agents, the priority was to emphasize
the value of life. That of ours, who were part of the mission, as well as
protecting the lives of others, simple citizens, whether or not suspected of
collaborating with the insurgents, and even the lives of enemies.
Nothing can be resolved in a sustainable way
if there is not deep respect for the civilian populations living on either side
of the barricades, if others are treated as worthless people, to whom access to
vital goods, such as mere animals, can be cut off. to slaughter without mercy
or mercy. Killing does not resolve any conflict. For every death today, new
fighters emerge tomorrow, with even stronger feelings of revenge. The
fundamental thing is to create the conditions for peace, open the doors to negotiations
and understanding. A retaliatory war is a mistake. It is a retaliatory
response, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, inspired by an ancient legal
order. Or, in a more current hypothesis, it is a war directed by political
leaders who lack common sense and foresight.
I also had in mind, in my guidelines, the
wisdom of the brilliant Charlie Chaplin, in the moving character of the clown
Calvero. In his film Highlights (1952), Chaplin at one point makes the clown
Calvero say that “life is a beautiful, magnificent thing, even for a
jellyfish”. Yes, even for a jellyfish, a gelatinous invertebrate for whom
few will have any sympathy. I have always thought that this phrase, so simple,
should occupy a top place in our way of facing conflicts. Politics only makes
sense when it allows everyone to live in freedom and safety.
One of the great challenges of 2024 is to be
able to explain this understanding to the medusa, the life and work of the
United Nations in a language that certain leaders are able or forced to
understand. How can we say this in the perverse and sophistry patois that is
said in the Kremlin? How can we express this wisdom in progressive Hebrew or
Arabic with accents of peace? How can we make the speech of reconciliation
heard by people responsible for conflicts in other regions of the world, taking
into account that 2023 was a year of acceleration in multiple expressions of
hatred and radicalism?
We have two issues here that will need to be
clarified and resolved as quickly as possible.
First, anyone who doesn't understand Charlie
Chaplin and the value of life should not be at the head of a nation. The place
of war criminals is in The Hague or before a special court created for that
purpose, as happened in Yugoslavia or Rwanda. I say this, and I emphasize it,
so that there is no doubt, in my capacity as someone who was at the forefront
of the founding of the Arusha Court, in Tanzania, established to judge those
mainly responsible for the genocide that took place in Rwanda in 1994. The precedents
exist and those responsible for the massacres in Ukraine and the Middle East
know them. As criminals always fantasize, they may even think that they will
escape these trials. At the speed at which things are changing, they should not
be calm.
Second, the Secretary-General of the United
Nations must go far beyond humanitarian issues. Humanitarian assistance is
essential, without a doubt, and cannot be forgotten. But this is something
short-term and precarious, as there are many situations of need, tragedies are
enormous in various parts of the world, and resources are always scarce. The UN
Charter is above all about political solutions. The Secretary-General must
maintain tireless dialogue with the parties and present without further delay a
peace plan for Ukraine and another for Palestine. Plans that address the roots
of the problems, that are based on international law and that courageously
point out the political steps that the Security Council must consider.
We have to rise to the very serious challenges
that lie ahead, in what has everything to be a crucial year in contemporary
history.
Published in Portuguese in today's edition of Diário de Notícias, Lisbon, 5 January 2024.
Thursday, 28 December 2023
Security Council Resolution 2720 on Gaza and its tragedy
1. The UN System, under the leadership of the SG, is fast moving to be ready to implement SC res. 2720. This should be acknowledged.
2. The Israeli government is ignoring the resolution and expanding the military aggression. The SC should draft a new resolution to impose sanctions on key Israeli leaders, in view of their disregard of res. 2720.
3. This is not just about averting “a greater catastrophe and uphold dignity”. It is also about full respect for international law and the SC’s decisions. The Israeli behaviour violates international law and must be dealt with as such as well.
4. The peace in the region is about to unravel. This should be mentioned as a major concern.
5. Hamas leaders must also be prosecuted.
6. The call for a total and immediate ceasefire must be loud, clear, and express a strong sense of urgency.
7. Special responsibility lies with the UNSC. We must bring the UNSC back to the centre of key peace processes. Its members, particularly the P5, must show they can force the parties to implement a resolution like the 2720. Enforcement must become a very central priority for the SC.
8. The humanitarian response should go together with the launching of a political process.
9. The sovereign rights of the Israeli and Palestinian peoples are unquestionable.
Friday, 1 December 2023
Israel e Palestina: urge falar claro e agir com equilíbrio
Wednesday, 29 November 2023
Sunday, 26 November 2023
Friday, 17 November 2023
Não cabe à ONU colar os cacos nem administrar Gaza
Monday, 11 September 2023
Commenting on the G20 Final Communiqué
I share the frustration expressed by many regarding the outcome of the G20 just held.
The final statement reiterates many of the commitments made elsewhere. Particularly, in many United Nations meetings. As I said in the Portuguese media, the main issue is that promises are made but their implementation lacks far behind or never happens. That is the best way to undermine the leadership, be it at the county level or in the global arena. It explains why the credibility of the international leaders is so low.
This said, it was important to bring back to the final communiqué all those points that are being discussed in the key international conferences. That includes the SDG, the climate discussions, the gender issues, the inequality problems, the respect for the UN Charter and for people’s rights. And the matters of peace and war.
The point on the reform of the World Bank is also a wise play.
Words and statement most be seen as significant, even when we know that human rights or any other key issues are not respected in the country whose leader has pledged to. It gives those who care and who fight for those rights a leverage point. Strength, I would say.
Regarding the African Union, I agree it is a crucial move. It is also a smart move for South Africa, that has now a reason to say no to Nigeria or Egypt in the G20.
In the end, I think we should see India and others encouraging multilateral approaches and multilateralism but planning to play in small groupings and betting as much as possible in bilateral relations and pure and tough national interests.
Thursday, 15 September 2022
2022 political rentrée: the complexities ahead
A very complex rentrée: now what?
Victor Ângelo
We are back after the August break. It
is the so-called political rentrée, at the international level always marked by
the opening of a new annual cycle of the United Nations General Assembly. The
Assembly will start next week, with world leaders putting the finishing touches
to the speeches they will deliver. The Secretary-General would like them to
talk mainly about peace, the food crisis afflicting various regions of the globe,
climate change, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the poorest countries
and youth education. But this is a very special rentrée, with a war taking
place in the "first world" - something unthinkable a few months ago,
when conflict was associated with lack of development, that is, when we were
all deluded with theories that wars were the province of poor people living in
distant horizons.
This has been a summer without a truce
of any kind. Crises and uncertainties have increased and at the same time have
shown us that the leaders who weigh on the international scene are unable to
present reasonable and convincing proposals. The confusion caused by Vladimir
Putin's adventurous and illegal policy is a case in point. We will go to the
General Assembly after almost seven months of armed aggression against a
sovereign state, our neighbour in Europe, and it will be almost certain that we
will not hear any proposal that can respond to this immense challenge. The main
European leaders, starting with Emmanuel Macron, are wandering in a political
labyrinth. They know that the Kremlin cannot be allowed to win this war. That
would be like giving a prize to autocrats and outlaw rulers, and an invitation
to further violations of the international order. They also know that
assistance to Ukraine may not be enough, however much they repeat the contrary
in their public interventions, and that without such support there will be no
Ukraine. But they do not draw the necessary conclusion: it is crucial to move
to a higher stage, to an even more complete response, leading to an end to the
aggression and a change in Russia's foreign policy.
In this context, which is not seen as
worrying only by those who are playing political make-believe or preparing the
next holiday, the group of former UN officials who wrote an open letter to
António Guterres in April has now prepared a second public appeal. On the eve
of the General Assembly, the group, of which I am one, is once again insisting
on the need to propose political initiatives that will freeze hostilities and
make it possible to start a process leading to peace. The agreements on the
export of cereals and the inspection of the Zaporijia nuclear power station
must be explored politically. The proposal now submitted by Guterres to the
Security Council concerning the demilitarisation of the Zaporijia plant is a
good starting point and should be strongly supported.
I recognise that such an appeal is very
much inspired by an idealistic vision of international relations. It would,
however, be a mistake to set idealism and principles aside. But the new
position is also based on a very realistic observation: in a war, in these
times of global interdependence and high technology, everyone loses, and a lot.
Even more so when the threat comes from a superpower and therefore generates
large-scale responses from rival powers. The authors of the Charter of the
United Nations already thought so in 1945. And our planet is far more fragile
today than it was 77 years ago.
It is time to be frank and direct. The
ongoing aggression presents us with three options and requires a firm and clear
decision. A solution inspired by the bain-marie technique will not work. In
fact, over time, it ends up encouraging the offender and others with similar
intentions. Here, either we light the fire to the maximum - in the conviction
that in the end we will be on the side of the winners and the survivors - or we
look for an alternative recipe, a political path. That is the decisive choice
that our leaders must make.
(Automatic
translation of the opinion piece I published in the Diário de Notícias, the old
and prestigious Lisbon newspaper. Edition dated 9 September 2022)
Sunday, 17 July 2022
Joe Biden and his Middle East mistake
Joe Biden, the Middle East and consistency in politics
Victor Angelo
After two days spent in Israel and
Palestine, the American President is today in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Even having read what Joe Biden wrote in the
Washington Post on July 9, to try to justify his voyage, I am one of those who
do not agree with the political opportunity of this trip. I see it as a move of
mere opportunism.
In the present context of
confrontation with Russia, the trip weakens those who use the arguments of
respect for international law, democracy and human rights. The Middle East is a
maze of problems with no solution in sight. A geopolitical labyrinth where,
among others, the United States is also lost. In the region, in addition to the
suffering in the countries visited and in occupied Palestine, we still have the
inhuman violence of the Syrian regime, with a fratricidal war that has dragged
on since 2011, the barbarity of the conflict in Yemen, the chaos in Lebanon,
the Iranian threat, the oppression of the Kurdish populations, fundamentalist
extremism and the deadly rivalries between Sunnis and Shiites. It is a question
of dealing with a powder keg that explodes according to the interests of the
different local or international players.
A visit that does not bring any kind
of response to the Palestinian question, to the obscurantism and cruelty of the
Saudi regime, or to the containment of the Iranian threat, can only be noted in
the negative. Biden was in Israel with the November mid-term elections in his
country in mind and to please a part of his domestic voter base. And he is in
Saudi Arabia to seek to increase oil production in order to contain the price
of a barrel. This is also an electoral concern: the cost of petrol, when it
comes time to fill up the tank, is a strong political argument in the USA. But
it will not be easy to convince the Saudis, who are already adding 400,000 barrels
a day more compared to what they were doing in February. Note, moreover, that
Saudi daily production is now equivalent to Russian, both occupying (almost ex
aequo) second place in the world.
Israel is not comparable to Saudi
Arabia. But the systematic violation of the rights of Palestinians is one of
the strongest arguments used by those who accuse the US of using a double-edged
sword in international relations. The Palestinian cause has for decades been
one of the most important thorns in the throat of those who speak of the need
to respect the international order and the rights of oppressed peoples. You
can't fight for that in the case of Ukraine and turn a blind eye when it comes
to the same in Palestine.
Saudi Arabia is a country of
contradictions. Modern in technology, medieval in the rights of women, of poor
immigrant workers or in the treatment of political opposition. The Crown
Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, personifies well these contradictions and the
brutality of the regime. He will go down in history for having had opposition
journalist Jamal Khashoggi murdered and hacked to pieces in 2018. Joe Biden had
said during his election campaign that this crime had turned Saudi Arabia into
a pariah state. Today, he will shake hands with the ringleader of the killers
and discuss cooperation and oil. The prince will look good in the photo, even
more arrogant than usual. The American president, on the other hand, will be
more vulnerable.
It is time to repeat that in
international politics not everything counts. And to underline once again that
believing in principles has a cost. The narrative has to become clearer.
Political leadership will only be credible if it is coherent. Spending time
thinking about the next elections, political manoeuvring and expedients that
vary according to the interests at stake may lead to the re-election of
presidents, prime ministers and secretaries-general, but it does not contribute
to solving the major problems. The current crises, in the Middle East, Eastern
Europe, Sri Lanka, Pakistan or Myanmar, in parts of Africa or Central America,
as well as in the field of climate change, nature conservation or food
insecurity and the fight against poverty, should teach us to be truthful,
responsible and courageous. In these times of great problems, this way of doing
politics is the greatest challenge.
(Automatic
translation of the opinion piece I published in the Diário de Notícias, the old
and prestigious Lisbon newspaper. Edition dated 15 July 2022)