This a longish piece but well worth the effort. The important lesson from this is not so much that women must be at the table in order to achieve best results but that civil society must be at the table in full measure. As it stands, the women likely at the table will typically be inclined to talk for that civil society. Thus the best solution today is to insist on the involvement of women because the chances of the men actually at the table having the correct sensibilities is pretty slim.
It took the lesson of world war two to redress the monstrous peace of 1918 and enlightened common sense then on the part of the Americans to gain a sane peace. Even then Russian jockeying was needed to complete the first step of restoring the defeated.
Had attention been paid immediately to the protection of civil society, far wiser decisions would have been made earlier. At least today, no one debates the need to restore such society as been the best guaranteer of success.
The UN connected the dots and put in the appropriate resolution. Fear still keeps it from been used because the men involved can see no advantage that they can extract.
Ann Jones, Can Women Make Peace?
Posted by Ann
Jones at 8:00am, January 13, 2011.
Last week, Pentagon budget “cuts” were in the headlines, often almost
luridly so -- “Pentagon Faces the Knife,” “Pentagon to Cut Spending by $78 Billion, Reduce Troop Strength,”
“U.S. Aims to Cut Defense Budget and Slash
Troops.” Responding to the mood of the moment in Washington (“the
fiscal pressures the country is facing”), Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Admiral Mike Mullen made those headlines by
calling a news conference to explain prospective “cuts” they
were proposing. Summing the situation up, Mullen seconded Gates this way:
“The secretary's right, we can't hold ourselves exempt from the
belt-tightening.”
Gates then appeared on the PBS NewsHour to explain the nature of
Pentagon “belt-tightening,” while reminding anchor Jim Lehrer that last year
the Pentagon announced plans to cap or cut “programs that, had they been built
to conclusion, would have cost the taxpayers about $330 billion.” The
newest $78 billion in cuts over five years was to be considered but an add-on
to already supposedly staggering savings, which he described as “changes in the
expected dollars that we thought we were going to have when we prepared last
year's budget.” According to the Secretary of Defense, this massive set
of cuts would, in fact, guarantee “modest growth” in the already monstrous Pentagon budget for at least the
next three years.
Keeping Mullen’s “belt-tightening” image in mind, what you have here,
imagistically speaking, is an especially obese man cutting down on his own
future expectations for how much he’s planning to overeat, even as he continues
to increase what he’s actually eating. In other words, this is actually
a belt-loosening operation. (And by the way, the
Secretary of Defense knows perfectly well that some of his “cuts,” announced
with such flare, will never make it through a Congress where powerful Republicans, among
others, prefer to exempt the national security budget from
serious cuts, or any cuts at all.)
Consider this indicative of the new thinking we can expect from Washington in a crisis.
As new, in fact, as the announcement less than a week into 2011 -- the year
President Obama once targeted for a major drawdown of U.S. forces in
Afghanistan -- that 1,400 more Marines were being sent into that country.
It was a small but striking reminder that, as in 2009 and 2010, when it comes
to the widening war in the region, the path of “more” (and more of the same)
would invariably trump the idea of “less.” This is the war-zone version
of “belt-tightening.”
Similarly, when the President decided to “shake up” his administration for a new era of
split-screen government in Washington, he called on a top JPMorgan Chase exec (also deeply
enmeshed in the military-industrial complex and Big Pharma) and a former Goldman Sachs advisor, both Clintonistas of
the 1990s, to do the shaking. This passes for “new blood” in our nation's
capital. Think of it this way: if you fill the room with the same old
same old, you’ll always end up with some version of the same old same old.
Today, just to shake things up a tad, TomDispatch offers some actual
new thinking of a sort you won’t find in Washington .
It's from Ann Jones, a hands-on aid worker, TomDispatch regular, and remarkable writer. Her
eloquent new book, War Is Not Over When It’s Over: Women Speak Out from the Ruins
of War, will undoubtedly go largely unreviewed, because when wars “end”
even as the destruction of women (and children) continues, it’s no longer
really news.
Worse yet, she favors the “less” path in Afghanistan, where any path
heading vaguely in the direction of “peace” (a word now synonymous with
“utopian dolt” or “bleeding heart idiot”) will automatically be waved aside as
hopeless. Since putting any money behind thinking about or testing out
new pathways towards peace in our world is inconceivable, we’ll never know what might work. You
can put $130 million taxpayer dollars into a new
aircraft-fueling system at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan or billions of
taxpayer dollars into the Pakistani military (defending a country in
which the rich go notoriously untaxed), but not one cent for peace.
As for women, well, too bad. (To catch Timothy MacBain's
latest TomCast audio interview in which Jones discusses why wars never end for
women and girls, click here or, to download it to your iPod, here.) Tom
Why Peace Is the Business of Men (But Shouldn’t Be)
A Modest Proposal for the Immodest Brotherhood of Big Men
By Ann Jones
Looking for a way out of Afghanistan ? Maybe it’s time
to try something entirely new and totally different. So how about putting
into action, for the first time in recorded history, the most enlightened edict
ever passed by the United Nations Security Council: Resolution 1325?
Passed on October 31, 2000, more than a decade ago, that “landmark”
resolution was hailed worldwide as a great “victory” for women and
international peace and security. In a nutshell, SCR 1325 calls for women to
participate equally and fully at decision-making levels in all processes of
conflict resolution, peacemaking, and reconstruction. Without the active
participation of women in peacemaking every step of the way, the Security
Council concluded, no just and durable peace could be achieved anywhere.
“Durable” was the key word. Keep it in mind.
Most hot wars of recent memory, little and
big, have been resolved or nudged into remission through what is called a
power-sharing agreement. The big men from most or all of the warring
parties -- and war is basically a guy thing, in case you hadn’t noticed --
shoulder in to the negotiating table and carve up a country’s or region’s
military, political, and financial pie. Then they proclaim the resulting
deal “peace.”
But as I learned firsthand as an aid worker in one so-called
post-conflict country after another, when the men in power stop shooting at
each other, they often escalate the war against civilians -- especially women and girls. It seems to be hard for
men to switch off violence, once they’ve gotten the hang of it. From Liberia to Myanmar , rape, torture, mutilation,
and murder continue unabated or even increase in frequency. In other words,
from the standpoint of civilians, war is often not over when it’s “over,” and
the “peace” is no real peace at all. Think of the Democratic Republic of Congo , the notorious “rape capital of
the world,” where thousands upon thousands of women are gang-raped
again and again although the country has officially been at “peace” since 2003.
In addition, power-sharing agreements among combatants tend to fray,
and half of them unravel into open warfare again within a few years. Consider Liberia throughout the 1990s, Angola in 1992 and 1998, Cambodia in 1997, and Iraq in 2006-2007. At this
moment, we are witnessing the breakdown of one power-sharing agreement in the Ivory Coast , and certainly the femicidal
consequences of another, made in 2001, in Afghanistan .
It is this repeated recourse to war and the unrelenting abuse and
neglect of civilians during fleeting episodes of “peace” that prompted the
Security Council to seek the key to more durable solutions.
They recognized that men at the negotiating table still jockey for power and
wealth -- notably control of a country’s natural resources -- while women
included at any level of negotiations commonly advocate for interests that
coincide perfectly with those of civil society. Women are concerned about
their children and consequently about shelter, clean water, sanitation, jobs,
health care, education, and the like -- all those things that make life livable
for peaceable men, women, and children anywhere.
The conclusion is self-evident. Bring women to the table in
decision-making roles in equal numbers with male participants and the nature of
peace negotiations changes altogether. And so does the result. Or
at least that’s what the Security Council expects. We can’t be sure because in
more than a decade since SCR 1325 was enacted, it has never been put to the
test.
At the time, at the exhilarating dawn of a new millennium, the whole
world applauded SCR 1325 as a great achievement of the United Nations, pointing
the pathway to world peace. Later, when men in war-torn countries
negotiated peace, often with the guidance of the U.N., they forgot all about
it. Their excuse was that they had to act fast, speed being more
important than justice or durability or women. At critical times like
that, don’t you know, women just get in the way.
Peace? Not a Chance
My special concern is Afghanistan ,
and I’m impatient. I’d like a speedy conclusion, too. It’s been nine years
since I started doing aid work there, and in that time several of the young
Afghan women who were my colleagues and became my friends have died of
illnesses they would have survived in better times under the auspices of a
government that cared about the welfare of its citizens. Even its women
citizens.
Yet now, whenever I present my modest proposal for the implementation
of SCR 1325 to American big men -- thinkers, movers, and shakers -- who lay
claim to expertise on Afghanistan ,
most of them strongly object. They know the theory, they say, but
practice is something else again, and they are precluded from throwing their
weight behind SCR 1325 by delicate considerations of “cultural relativism.”
Afghanistan, they remind me, is a “traditional” culture that regards women as
less than human. As Westerners, they say, we must be particularly careful
to respect that view.
Yet the eagerness of Western men to defer to this “tradition” seems
excessive, and their tenderness for the sentiments of bearded men who couldn’t
clear airport security in Iowa City strikes me as deliberately obtuse,
especially since very few of the Afghan men who actually governed Afghanistan
between 1919 and 1989 would have shared their sentiments.
Afghan culture is -- and is not -- traditional.
Modern ideas, including the idea of equality between the sexes, have been at
the heart of internal Afghan cultural struggles for at least a century.
In the 1920s, King Amanullah founded the first high school for girls and the
first family court to adjudicate women’s complaints about their husbands; he
proclaimed the equality of men and women, banned polygamy, cast away the burqa,
and banished ultra-conservative Islamist mullahs as “bad and evil persons” who
spread propaganda foreign to the moderate Sufi ideals of Afghanistan. His
modern ideas cost him his crown, but Afghans still remember Amanullah and his
modern, unveiled Queen Suraya for their brave endeavor to drag the country into
the modern world.
Thousands of Afghan citizens have shared King Amanullah’s modern views,
expressed later by successive leaders, kings and communists alike. But at
least since 1979, when the United States and Saudi Arabia joined Pakistan in
promoting the ideology and military skill of Islamist extremists who sought to
return the country to the seventh-century world of the prophet, Afghanistan’s
liberal modernists have taken flight for North America, Europe, and Australia.
Last summer in Afghanistan
I talked with many progressive men and women who were running for parliament,
hoping to push back against the inordinate power of the Afghan executive in the
person of President Hamid Karzai. To them, he seems increasingly eager to
do deals with the most extreme Islamists in opposition to all their progressive
dreams for their country.
Yet in August, when President Karzai flagrantly stole the presidential election, President Obama telephoned to
congratulate him and the U.S.
officially pronounced the fraudulent election results “good enough.” We
might ask: In this contest between entrenched Islamist extremists and
progressives who favor equality and democracy, why is the United States
on the wrong side? Why are we on the side of a mistaken notion of Afghan
“tradition”?
Our Big Man in Kabul
In 2001, the U.S.
and by extension the entire international community cast their lot with
Hamid Karzai. We put him in power after one of those power-sharing
conferences in Bonn , Germany , to which, by the way, only
two Afghan women were invited. We paid hundreds of millions of dollars to stage
two presidential elections, in 2004 and 2009, and looked the other way while
Karzai’s men stuffed the ballot boxes. Now, it seems, we’re stuck
with him and his misogynist “traditions,” even though a growing number of Afghanistan watchers identify the Karzai
government as the single greatest problem the U.S. faces in its never-ending war.
We could have seen this coming if we had kept an eye on how President
Karzai treats women. George W. Bush famously claimed to have “liberated” the women of Afghanistan ,
but he missed one: Hamid Karzai’s wife. Although she is a gynecologist
with desperately needed skills, she is kept shut up at home. To this day,
the president’s wife remains the most prominent woman in Afghanistan
still living under house rules established by the Taliban. That little detail,
by the way, should remind you of why you ought to care what happens to women:
they are the canaries in the Afghan political coal mine.
And what has President Karzai done for the rest of the women of Afghanistan ?
Not a thing.
That’s the conclusion of a recent report issued by the Human Rights
Research and Advocacy Consortium (HRRAC), an association of prominent aid and
independent research groups in Afghanistan, including such highly respected
non-governmental organizations as Oxfam, CARE, and Save the Children. The
Afghan researchers who did the study conducted extensive interviews with
prominent male religious scholars, male political leaders, and female leaders
locally, provincially, and nationally.
The report notes that President Karzai has supported increasingly
repressive laws against women, most notoriously the “Taliban-style” Shia
Personal Status Law, enacted in 2009, which not only legitimizes marital
rape but “prevents women from stepping out of their homes” without their
husband’s consent, in effect depriving them of the right to make any decisions
about their own lives. The report points out that this law denies women even
the basic freedoms guaranteed to all citizens in the Afghan Constitution, which
was passed in 2004 as part of a flurry of democratic reforms marking the start
of Karzai’s first term as elected president. The democratizing spasm
passed and President Karzai, sworn to defend that Constitution, failed to do
the job.
In fact, Karzai’s record on human rights, as the HRRAC report documents,
is chiefly remarkable for what he has not done. He holds extraordinary
power to make political appointments -- another indicator of the peculiar
nature of this Afghan “democracy” our troops are fighting for -- and he has now
had almost 10 years in office, ample time to lead even the most reluctant
traditional society toward more equitable social arrangements. Yet today,
but one cabinet ministry is held by a woman, the Ministry for Women’s Affairs,
which incidentally is the sole government ministry that possesses only advisory
powers. Karzai has appointed just one female provincial governor, and 33
men. (Is it by chance that Bamyan -- the province run by that woman -- is
generally viewed as the most peaceful in the country?) To head city
governments nationwide, he has named only one female mayor. And to the
Supreme Court High Council he has appointed no woman at all.
Karzai’s claim that he can’t find qualified women is a flimsy -- and
traditional -- excuse. Many of his highest-ranking appointees to government
offices are notorious war criminals, men considered by the great majority of
Afghan citizens to have disqualified themselves from public office. The
failure of many of his male appointees to govern honestly and justly, or even
to show up for work at all, is a rising complaint of NATO commanders who find
upon delivery of “government in a box” that the box is pretty much
empty.
If fully qualified women are in short supply, having been confined and
deprived for years thanks to armed combat and the Taliban government, isn’t
that all the more reason for a president sworn to uphold equality to act
quickly to insure broad opportunities for education, training, jobs, and the
like? The HRRAC report sensibly recommends “broad sociopolitical reform”
to provide “education and economic opportunities for real women’s
leadership.” Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, former minister of finance, former
president of Kabul University, and presidential contender, spoke in favor of
such a “sensible and regular process.” As he noted, however, “Our
government is not a sensible government.”
Flimsy, too, is the argument that Afghanistan ’s cultural traditions
eliminate women from public service. Uzra Jafari, the mayor of Daikundi,
reports that the city’s inhabitants did not believe a woman could be a mayor,
but they soon “accepted that a woman can serve them better than a man.”
“Social obstacles can be overcome,” she says, “but the main problem is the
political obstacles. We have problems at the highest levels.” The
problem, in other words, is President Karzai, the only person in Afghanistan who
has the power to install women in political offices and yet refuses to do
so. In short, the president is far more “traditional” than most of the
people.
Without the support of male leadership, women leaders (and their
families) become easy targets for harassment, threats, intimidation, and
assassination. When such threats come from the ultra-Islamist men who dominate
the Afghan parliament, they prevent women parliamentarians from uniting in
support of women and, in most cases, from speaking out as individuals for
women’s rights. Death threats have a remarkable silencing effect,
disrupting the processes of governance, yet President Karzai has not once taken
a stand against the terrorist tactics of his cronies.
The Brotherhood of Men
Let’s acknowledge that there are limits to what the West can and cannot
do in the very different and more traditional culture of Afghanistan . Judging by what
we have already done, it seems to be perfectly all right for the West -- aka
the U.S. -- to rain bombs upon this agrarian country, with its long tradition
of moderate Sufism, and impose an ultraconservative Islamist government and
free market capitalism (even at the expense of indigenous agricultural markets)
through the ministrations of thousands of highly paid private American
“technical assistants.” But it is apparently not okay for any of those
multitudinous, extravagantly paid American political and economic consultants
to tweak the silken sleeve of President Karzai’s chapan and say,
“Hamid, my man, you’ve gotta get some more women in here.” That would be
disrespectful of Afghan traditions.
I don’t buy it. What we’re up against is not just the
intractable misogyny of President Karzai and other powerful mullahs and mujahideen,
but the misogyny of power brokers in Washington
as well.
Take, for example, the second most popular objection I hear from
American male experts on Afghanistan
when I raise my modest proposal. They call this one “pragmatic” or
“realistic.” Women can’t come to the negotiating table, they say, because
the Taliban would never sit down with them. In fact, Taliban, “ex-Taliban,”
and Taliban sympathizers sit down with women every day in the Afghan
Parliament, as they have in occasional loya jirgas (deliberating
assemblies) since 2001. Clearly, any Taliban who refuse altogether to
talk with women disqualify themselves as peace negotiators and should have no
place at the table. But what’s stunning about the view of the American male
experts is that it comes down on the other side, ceding to the most extreme
Taliban misogynists the right to exclude from peace deliberations half the
population of the country. (Tell that to our women soldiers putting their lives
on the line.)
Yet these days every so-called Afghanistan
expert in Washington
has a plan for the future of the country. Some seem relatively reasonable
while others are certifiably delusional, but what almost all of these documents
have in common is the absence of the word “women.” (There are a few tiny
but notable exceptions.)
In the Loony Tunes category is former diplomat and National Security
Council Deputy Robert D. Blackwill’s “Plan B in Afghanistan” appearing in Foreign
Affairs, which calls for the U.S. military to flee the south, thus
creating a “de facto partition” of Afghanistan and incidentally abandoning --
you guessed it -- “the women of those areas,” as well as anyone else in the
south who wants “to resist the Taliban.” This scenario may call to mind
images of helicopters departing the American embassy in Saigon
in 1975, but Blackwill clings to his “strategy,” calling the grim fate of those
left behind “a tragic consequence of local realities that are impossible for
outsiders to change.”
In the relatively reasonable category is the plan of the Afghanistan Study Group: “A New Way
Forward: Rethinking U.S.
Strategy in Afghanistan .”
Its first recommendation says, “The U.S.
should fast-track a peace process designed to decentralize power within Afghanistan and
encourage a power-sharing balance among the principal parties.”
Whoops! No mention of women there. And power sharing? We know
where that’s headed. Afghanistan, the undisputed small arms capital of
the world, might easily spontaneously combust into civil war.
But what becomes of women? Even Matthew Hoh, who resigned his position in 2009 as a political officer
in the foreign service to protest U.S. policy in Afghanistan, and now heads the
Afghanistan Study Group, can’t seem to imagine bringing women to the
negotiating table. (He says he’s “working on it.”) Instead, the Study
Group decides for women that “this strategy will best serve [their]
interests.” It declares that “the worst thing for women is for Afghanistan to
remain paralyzed in a civil war in which there evolves no organically rooted
support for their social advancement.” Well, no. Actually, the
worst thing for women is to have a bunch of men -- and not even Afghan men at
that -- decide one more time what’s best for women.
I wonder if it’s significant that the Afghan Study Group, much like the
Bonn Conference
that established the Karzai government in the first place, is essentially a guy
club. I count three women among 49 men and the odd “center” or “council”
(also undoubtedly consisting mostly of men). When I asked Matthew Hoh why
there are so few women in the Study Group, he couldn’t help laughing. He
said, “This is Washington .
You go to any important meeting in Washington, it’s men.”
Maybe the heady atmosphere engendered by all those gatherings of suits
in close quarters was what inspired Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia to
abandon all discretion recently and declare that
the promise of equal protection in the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
does not extend to protecting women against sex discrimination. If states
enact laws discriminating against women, he opined, such laws would not be
unconstitutional. (You can be sure some legislators have gotten right to
work on it.)
That opinion puts Justice Scalia cozily in bed with former Chief
Justice Shinwari, President Karzai’s first appointee to head the Supreme Court
of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, who interpreted Article 22 of the
Afghan Constitution, which calls for men and women to have equal rights and
responsibilities before the law, to mean that men have rights and women have
responsibilities to their husbands. (Could this mean that the United States is a traditional
culture, too?)
Women leaders in Afghanistan
complain that their government does not see them as “human,” but merely uses
them as tokens or symbols, presumably to appease those international donors who
still rattle on about human rights. George W. Bush used Afghan women that
way. Obama doesn’t mention them. Here in the U.S. you take your choice between
cynical exploitation, utter neglect, and outright discrimination.
In Afghanistan ,
Karzai names a High Peace Council to negotiate with the Taliban. Sixty
men. The usual suspects: warlords, Wahhabis, mujahideen,
long-bearded and long in the tooth, but fighting for power to the bitter
end. Thomas Ruttig of the Afghan Analysts Network reports that
among them are 53 men linked to armed factions in the civil wars of the 1980s
and 1990s including 13 linked to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Hezb-e Islami, currently
allied with the Taliban. An additional 12 members of the High Peace
Council held positions in the Taliban’s Emirate government between 1996 and
2001.
Under some international pressure, Karzai belatedly added 10 women, the
only members of the High Peace Council with no ties to armed militias past or
present; they represent the interests of civil society, which is to say the
people who might actually like to live in peace for a change and do their utmost
to sustain it. The U.S.
signed off on this lopsided Council. So did Hillary Clinton, a woman who,
as Secretary of State, has solemnly
promised again and again never to abandon the women of Afghanistan ,
though she never remembers to invite them to a conference where international
and Afghan men decide the future of their country.
Okay, so my modest proposal doesn’t stand a chance. The deck is
stacked against the participation of women, both there and here. Even I
don’t expect men in power to take seriously the serious proposition that women
must be equally and fully involved in peacemaking or you don’t get durable
peace. Too many men, both Afghan and American, are doing very nicely
thank you with the present traditional arrangements of our cultures. So,
searching blindly for some eventual exit and burdened by their misbegotten
notions of "peace," U.S.
and NATO officials busy themselves repeatedly transporting to Kabul , at vast expense, a single high-ranking
Taliban mullah to negotiate secret peace and power-sharing deals with President
Karzai. American officials tout these man-to-man negotiations as evidence
that U.S. strategy is finally working, until the “mullah” turns out to be an imposter playing a profitable
little joke on the powers that be. Afghan women, who already suffer the
effects of rising Taliban power, are not laughing.
Consider this. We’re not just talking about women’s rights
here. Women’s rights are human rights. Women exercising their human
rights are simply women engaging in those things that men the world over take
for granted: going to school, going to work, walking around. But in Afghanistan
today -- here’s where tradition comes in again -- almost every woman and girl
exercising her rights does so with the support of the man or men who let her
out of the house: father, husband, brothers, uncles, sons. Exclude women
from their rightful equal decision-making part in the peacemaking process and
you also betray the men who stand behind them, men who are by self-definition
committed to the dream of a more egalitarian and democratic future for their
country.
The sad news from Afghanistan
is that a great many progressives have already figured out their own exit
strategy. Like generations of Afghans before them, they will become part of one
of the world’s largest diasporas from a single country. Ironically, I’ll
bet many of those progressive Afghan men will bring their families to the United States ,
where women appear to be free and it’s comforting to imagine that misogyny is
dead.
Ann Jones is the author most recently of War Is Not Over When It’s Over: Women Speak Out from the Ruins
of War (Metropolitan 2010) on the way war affects women from Africa to
the Middle East and Asia . She wrote
about the struggles of Afghan women in Kabul in Winter (Metropolitan 2006). She
is currently a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at
Harvard.To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast audio interview in which Jones
discusses why wars never end for women and girls, click here or, to download it to your iPod, here.
[Note on further reading: The HRRAC report on “Women and Political
Leadership” can be found online in .pdf format by clicking here.]
Copyright 2011 Ann Jones
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