On South Sudan referendum, Obama needs to be more proactive
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Barack Obama is trying to use his presidential 鈥渂ully pulpit鈥 to to permit, as planned, an election next January that could create a new African nation out of southern Sudan. Will his rhetoric be enough?
US policy towards Sudan has changed little under President Obama even though . Just as his predecessor, George Bush, rejected calls for direct US intervention in Sudan, Obama has done the same, choosing instead quiet diplomacy and public exhortation. His latest statements suggest he isn鈥檛 ready to alter the basic US approach towards Sudan.
The danger of course is that the election will fail to take place or the vote will be ignored by Khartoum, igniting a new civil war in the country. There is also the unhappy prospect that a new nation of South Sudan will be created, and the Khartoum will thus receive applause, but then this new state will be covertly destabilized by Bashir鈥檚 northern government 鈥 and then the new state will itself collapse into civil war. This last scenario, which hasn鈥檛 been examined by policymakers in public, is in some ways the most diabolical, costly and depressing. By permitting the formation of the new nation of South Sudan, Bashir鈥檚 government will appear to be following the dictates of international law 鈥 and the exhortations of Obama, the president with an African father. But then by covertly destabilizing South Sudan 鈥 and giving play to the forces of entropy within the South Sudanese geography 鈥 Bashir and friends can set themselves up as the only actor in the regional who can sort out the mess 鈥 by conveniently sending their troops into the new nation to 鈥渞estore order.鈥
With , the pressures on the Obama administration are mounting 鈥 and the possibilities that rhetoric will give way to action increase. Will Obama choose to decisively shape Sudan鈥檚 future?
鈥 G. Pascal Zachary blogs at .