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A Palmerston-inspired policy on C'te d'Ivoire

Sun, 23 Jan 2011 Source: Nelson, Ekow

Ekow Nelson, London

I have just finished watching the second appearance of the former British Prime

Minister Tony Blair before the Iraq War Inquiry; the fourth such investigation into

the reasons why Britain went to war in Iraq in 2003, which by all accounts is the

most bitterly disputed conflict in recent British history. Many of the families of

the soldiers who lost their lives and would ordinarily have accepted the deaths of

their loved ones in their line duty as one of the risks of their chosen occupations,

are seething with anger and much of it is directed at Tony Blair who took the

decision to invade Iraq along with the United States in 2003.

The gravest decision any elected leader can be called upon make is to commit young

men and women to war in the certain knowledge that some of them will not return home

alive to their family and friends. By the same token, the greatest sacrifice any

citizen can make is to die in defence of his or her nation. For this reason, any

decision to wage war cannot be made casually and in my view can only be justified in

the face of existential threats.

It is in this context that I find myself alarmed at the shrill voices that are being

raised in protest against President John Evans Atta Mills' decision to rule out the

use of military force by Ghana in the Ivorian crises. It is true that in ruling out

the military option, the President of Ghana appears to be in conflict with the

interventionist stance of his colleagues in the Economic Community of West African

States (ECOWAS). But as President of a country with a shared border with Cote

D'Ivoire, Mills also has a duty to balance the interests of the country he was

elected to govern, against ECOWAS's policy of intervention. After all, President

Mills was not elected by ECOWAS and his primary duty is to the people of Ghana and

not some regional organization that has neither a democratic mandate nor is indeed

accountable directly to the peoples of West Africa.

Predictably critics of the President argue that his policy risks undermining ECOWAS,

smacks of isolationism and will ultimately harm the reputation of Ghana. But there

is nothing new here: throughout history nations have had to grapple with foreign

policy conflicts that pit alliances against national interests. One is reminded of

Lord Palmerston's oft-quoted foreign policy dictum: nations do not have permanent

friends; they have permanent interests - which has served Britain well when it has

been followed and not so well otherwise.

Defending himself against charges of not involving Britain in what he described as

"perpetual quarrels from one end of the globe to the other" in the House of Commons

in March 1848, Lord Palmerston who served as Foreign Secretary and twice as Prime

Minister of Britain argued for a foreign policy principle based on "maintaining

peace and friendly understanding with all nations, as long as it was possible to do

so consistently with a due regard to the interests, the honour, and the dignity of

[one's] country". On alliances with other nations - not dissimilar to ECOWAS in our

part of world - he maintained that England was "sufficiently strong, sufficiently

powerful, to steer its own course, and not to tie herself as an unnecessary

appendage to the policy of any other Government". Rather, in addition to elevating

questions that involve her own national interests above others, England should also

be the "champion of justice and right; pursuing that course with moderation and

prudence, not becoming the Quixote of the world, but giving the weight of her moral

sanction and support wherever she thinks that justice is, and wherever she thinks

that wrong has been done." In anticipation of the charge of isolationism he

expressed a conviction "that as long as England keeps herself in the right-as long

as she wishes to permit no injustice-as long as she wishes to countenance no

wrong-as long as she labours at legislative interests of her own-and as long as she

sympathises with right and justice, she never will find herself altogether alone.

She is sure to find some other State, of sufficient power, influence, and weight, to

support and aid her in the course she may think fit to pursue." And in the climax to

the speech that gave birth to the aphorism attributed to him he enunciated this

foreign policy principle that is both universal and true: "[w]e have no eternal

allies, and we have no perpetual enemies. Our interests are eternal and perpetual,

and those interests it is our duty to follow". And he warned that "it is our duty

not lightly to engage this country in the frightful responsibilities of war, because

from time to time we may find this or that Power disinclined to concur with us in

matters where their opinion and ours may fairly differ." In a final flourish, he

admonished every British Minister to remember that "the interests of England ought

to be the shibboleth of his policy".

Lord Palmerston's pragmatic principles for the conduct of foreign affairs has

provided the foundation for British foreign policy since and served his country well

even as its imperial Power has waned. Indeed, the diminution of British power and

reputation has accelerated at precisely the points when it has deviated from

Palmerston's sound advice as we witnessed in the Suez Crisis in 1956 and with the

invasion of Iraq in 2003.

In much the same way, President Mills' Palmerstonian policy on Cote D'Ivoire is

right and ought to be commended rather than condemned. Like Palmerston, Mills'

primary responsibility and loyalty is not to ECOWAS or even to Ivory Coast, but to

the interests of the people Ghana and it is through that prism that he must make his

policy decisions and choices. As President of a neighbouring country with one

million Ghanaians residents, President Mills has a responsibility to prioritize his

national interests - however narrow they may appear - above those of a regional

alliance and not to commit to sending young men and women in uniform to wage war in

a dispute that can be resolved without further unnecessary bloodshed.

For what is really at issue here? A dispute over the outcome of democratic

elections. Grave as it, there is nothing novel about this. From Samuel J. Tilden v.

Rutherford B. Hayes (in the 1876 US elections), Al Gore v George Bush (in 2000) to

Mwai Kibaki v Raila Odinga (in Kenya in 2008) election disputes have always erupted

from time to time. And in nearly all cases, particularly in the advanced world, the

use of force and military intervention is not even remotely part of the options

considered for settling such disputes. So why are we so quick, as Vice President

John Mahama opined in his op-ed pages of the HuffingtonPost last week, to reach for

the military option as a way of resolving these disputes?

We seem to have forgotten all too quickly that only two or three decades ago Africa

thought the only answer to Africa's big man problem and authoritarian rule was

military intervention. But where did that get us? A descent into a spiral of decline

that led to failed States, increased violence, dysfunctional governments, famine and

human devastation on a scale not witnessed in modern times and arguably the largest

migration of Africa's most talented and able people since the end of slavery in the

nineteenth century.

Military intervention may appear to provide temporary relief but it is more likely

to lead to unintended deleterious consequences that are sure to set Africa back once

again. There are options available from diplomacy to economic and military sanctions

that can be explored without even countenancing military intervention as a

fall-back. They may take longer but they are likely to produce a more enduring

solution than a quick-fix intervention which itself is not as easy an undertaking as

some might imagine.

Much of the civilized world is capable of resolving similar disputes without

resorting to military conflict; Africans are equally capable of doing the same

without sacrificing the lives of their future generation unnecessarily and for

President Mills, without the risk of destabilising the country over which he

presides. And that surely must be right.

(c) Ekow Nelson

London, January 2010

Columnist: Nelson, Ekow