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Stubborn
Stalemate in Western Sahara
Jacob A. Mundy
(Jacob A.
Mundy, co-author of a forthcoming book on the Western Sahara with
Stephen Zunes, was a Peace Corps volunteer in Morocco from 1999 to
2001.)
June 26,
2004
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Further Info
For
background on the Baker plans, see Toby Shelley, "Behind
the Baker Plan for Western Sahara," Middle East Report
Online, August 1, 2003.
For
additional background, see Yahia Zoubir and Karima
Benabdallah-Gambier, "Western
Saharan Deadlock," in Middle East Report 227 (Summer
2003). The article is accessible online at
Order back
issues of Middle East Report, or subscribe, via a secure
server on MERIP's home
page. |
On June 11,
2004, the United Nations announced that former Secretary of State
James Baker had resigned his position as the secretary-general's
personal envoy to the Western Sahara. Despite his personal prestige
and the explicit backing of the US government, Baker failed to bring
the Moroccan government around to his vision for resolving its
almost 30-year old dispute with the Algerian-supported POLISARIO
Front, a Western Saharan independence movement active since 1973. If
Morocco does not agree to Baker's most recent settlement proposal
soon, the Security Council has threatened to turn the impasse over
to the General Assembly come October, thereby admitting that its
16-year, $600 million effort to resolve the conflict has come to
naught.
After his
appointment by Secretary-General Kofi Annan in 1997, Baker convened
numerous high-level meetings and presented two different proposals
to give the Western Sahara four to five years of autonomy within the
Kingdom of Morocco. The proposals also contained provisions whereby
a "final status" referendum, at the end of the autonomy period,
would determine whether the desert territory is to be independent or
permanently integrated into Morocco. Protected by its allies France
and the US from UN sanction or other penalty, Morocco has thus far
refused to accept the plebiscite. Annan's new envoy to the Western
Sahara, Alvaro de Soto, inherits a stubborn stalemate that he is
unlikely to break.
A REFERENDUM
DEFERRED
Morocco has
occupied Western Sahara since "reclaiming" the territory from Spain
in November 1975. King Hassan II moved aggressively to prevent Spain
-- then the colonial occupier -- from holding a self-determination
referendum recommended by the International Court of Justice and
mandated by the UN. Yet the POLISARIO, which had been fighting
Spain, soon turned their guns on Moroccan troops and found strong
backing from Algerian President Houari Boumedienne, who sought to
check Hassan's expansionism. A war for the Western Sahara raged
until the UN got serious about resolving the dispute in the late
1980s. Based on a plan drawn up by the Organization of African Unity
(now the African Union), the UN proposed to hold a referendum on
self-determination for the people of the Western Sahara. Morocco and
the POLISARIO, however, held different views on who is really a
Western Saharan. The Sahrawi independence movement rejected the
eligibility of thousands of Moroccan settlers introduced into the
territory since 1975. From 1991 to 2000, the UN Mission for a
Referendum in the Western Sahara (MINURSO) attempted to verify the
legitimacy of over 200,000 prospective voters, the vast majority of
them presented by Morocco. The identification process ground to a
halt in 1995.
In 1997,
according to Marrack Goulding, former head of UN peacekeeping, Annan
approached Baker to see if he could convince Hassan II and the
POLISARIO to accept an alternative settlement based on autonomy for
Western Sahara. Instead, Baker reconciled the parties so that
MINURSO could finish its initial vetting of prospective referendum
participants. MINURSO published preliminary lists of all eligible
voters in late 1999 and early 2000. Morocco quickly cried foul,
pointing to the fact that most of its candidates failed to pass the
UN identification process, which had employed Spanish colonial
records and tribal leaders from Western Sahara (chosen by both
Morocco and the POLISARIO) to verify an applicant's legitimacy. At
that point, Annan pushed the Security Council to drop the
referendum, arguing that the winner-take-all nature of the poll,
along with the lack of an "enforcement mechanism," could lead one
party simply to reject the outcome of the vote. Unconfirmed rumors
have maintained that the US and France were the ones doing the
pushing, aiming to protect Morocco's newly crowned monarch, Mohammed
VI, from a scenario similar to East Timor, where Indonesia was
eventually forced to honor the results of a plebiscite in favor of
independence.
In 2000, Annan
called on Baker to resume his position as the secretary-general's
personal envoy to the Western Sahara. The former secretary of state
ostensibly set out to find a way to bridge the mutually exclusive
goals of Morocco and the POLISARIO. In fact, he presented a whole
new endgame for the dispute, one that aimed to settle the fate of
the Western Sahara once and for all.
"OPTIMUM
POLITICAL SOLUTION"
The
secretary-general unveiled Baker's first Western Sahara "autonomy"
proposal in 2001. Morocco's satisfaction with the "framework
agreement" was obvious; King Mohammed subsequently told Le Figaro
that he had "solved" the issue. For Algeria and the POLISARIO,
Baker's proposal looked like a total sellout. Not only did the
proposal offer the Western Sahara minimal autonomy, but it also gave
Rabat a better chance at winning the desert territory than the
original UN-OAU settlement plan had. Baker's proposal also called
for a "final status" referendum after four years of autonomy -- the
difference being that, under Baker's proposal, Moroccan settlers in
the Western Sahara would be able to vote. As the settlers vastly
outnumber the indigenous Western Saharans, the autonomy proposal
prompted a predictable backlash from supporters of
independence.
In order to
correct Baker's aim, the Security Council passed Resolution 1429.
The resolution specifically called on Annan and Baker to seek a
solution that would uphold the Western Sahara's right to
self-determination. Baker's second proposal paid obvious yet
superficial heed to the Security Council's wishes. Unveiled in 2003,
the Peace Plan for the Self-Determination of the Western Sahara
offered the Western Sahara a significant degree of self-governance
and reduced the overall number of potential Moroccan settlers who
could vote in the final status referendum. The secretary-general
wholeheartedly endorsed the proposal, calling it an "optimum
political solution" whereby both sides would get some, but not all,
of what they wanted. Annan also claimed that the plan guaranteed
that the "bonafide" inhabitants of the Western Sahara would be able
to express their right to self-determination, as called for in
Resolution 1429. It was strange enough that Morocco and the
POLISARIO had been offered another paradoxical winner-take-all
"compromise." But Annan also seemed intent on blurring the lines
between Moroccan settlers and indigenous Western Saharans, the
majority of whom are ethnic Sahrawis who speak Hassaniyya, a
distinct Arabic dialect.
FLEXIBILITY VS.
INTRANSIGENCE
With the second
proposal, however, Baker managed to get Algeria and the POLISARIO on
board. Emmhamed Khaddad, the POLISARIO's coordinator with the UN
Mission in the Western Sahara, told me in September 2003 that the
second Baker proposal offered the POLISARIO a chance to prove to the
world that the liberation front could govern fairly, democratically
and transparently. Khaddad dismissed as an unproven assumption the
notion that the final status referendum would be tilted in Morocco's
favor. Indeed, many observers did question whether Moroccan settlers
would stick with Rabat in the referendum, knowing that their
subsidized existence would end the day Morocco's claim to the
Western Sahara gained international legitimacy. Would they, as some
have suggested, choose independence in Western Sahara, where fish,
phosphates, tourists and maybe even oil are plentiful?
Morocco, for
its part, quickly rejected Baker's second proposal, feeling that it
would lack control over the Western Sahara during the autonomy
period, and also fearing the unpredictable outcome of the final
status referendum. A palpable sense of betrayal by Baker and the
Bush administration, which pushed the Security Council to endorse
the plan, led Rabat to adopt some of its most intransigent rhetoric
in years. The Moroccan government still repeats that it will not let
the international community question the status of its "Saharan
provinces." Yet it is obvious, as even the secretary-general has
noted, that the international community will recognize Morocco's
chance to win these "provinces" if and only if Morocco also has a
measurable chance of losing the Western Sahara.
FOUNDATIONS OF
STALEMATE
Morocco's
obstinacy is rooted in the fact that it has everything to lose --
and not much to gain -- by playing Baker's game. Rabat is in
effective control of over 70 percent of the Western Sahara,
including the coast and the rich phosphate mines at Bou Craa. In
recent years, Morocco has expanded its investments in the territory,
including a new $42 million fishing port at Dakhla and offshore oil
exploration contracts with France's TotalFinaElf and the US-based
Kerr-McGee. The only thing Morocco would have to gain by the Baker
plan would be possible international legitimation of its claim to
the Western Sahara. Rabat clearly does not want to take the risk.
The US and
France will make sure that no undue pressure is brought to bear on
King Mohammed VI, who is embroiled in his own internal war on
terror. In 2003, when former US Ambassador to the UN John Negroponte
(now ambassador to Iraq) tried to shove Baker's second proposal
through the Security Council, France jumped to Morocco's defense,
successfully watering down the language in the resolution
"endorsing" the proposal to the blander word "support." Mohammed's
recent calls for direct negotiations with Algeria on the Western
Sahara, bypassing the POLISARIO, have been taken up by Paris, with
French President Jacques Chirac waiting in the wings to reconcile
his country's former Maghribi possessions. For its part, the US
recently concluded a bilateral free trade agreement with Morocco and
declared the North African nation a major non-NATO ally. When
Washington deals with Rabat, the Saharan issue is on one track and
mutual interests are on another.
Calling
Morocco's bluff on the Baker plan in mid-2003 was perhaps the only
diplomatic gambit left for the POLISARIO. Without the high profile
of Baker, and given the Security Council's looming abandonment, the
independence movement could be facing tough times ahead. Yet the
POLISARIO and the 160,000 Western Saharan refugees under its
supervision in Algeria are ready to play a waiting game as well.
While the POLISARIO has suffered some political defeats, the Sahrawi
refugees near Tindouf in Algeria are as dug in as their Palestinian
counterparts. With remittances and overdue pensions from Spain
improving living standards in the camps, along with the rise of a
small economy and almost guaranteed support from the international
aid community, the exiled Sahrawis can hold out for some time to
come. As several refugees told me in the summer of 2003, the thought
of returning to the Western Sahara with the Moroccan army and
settlers still resident, if only for four years, is chilling. Some
were shocked to hear that their leadership had considered this idea
before it could be ratified at the refugees' popular congress in
October. Many said they would return only if the international
community could guarantee their safety, although they were quick to
cite the UN's dismal performance in Rwanda and, before 1999, East
Timor.
Baker's
departure, long threatened, leaves the UN efforts to achieve a
rapprochement in Western Sahara without a center of gravity. If one
of the most powerful players in Washington could not resolve the
Western Saharan conflict, who can? The fact that Annan has assigned
de Soto to the Western Sahara, while he is still devoting attention
to his previous portfolio, Cyprus, indicates that the secretariat's
peacekeeping office might be stretched so thin thinking about Iraq
and the Sudan that it cannot devote substantial time to the
deadlocked Western Saharan issue. Since the POLISARIO's Algerian
patrons are not likely to bless a return to armed struggle by the
front, a resolution might have to wait for a new generation to come
of age in Rabat, Algiers and the refugee camps, or for a monumental
historical event like the fall of Suharto in Indonesia. So long as
would-be mediators of the Western Sahara dispute seek a
winner-take-all solution, one that implicitly grants the Moroccan
and POLISARIO positions equal legitimacy, is it any wonder that no
progress has been made since 1975? 
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