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Collective Insecurity?- Critical Diagnosis of Ghana’s
Position on the Ivorian Electoral Crisis
Kofi Nsia-Pepra, Ph.D.
Ghana is entangled in a diplomatic
conundrum following President Mills’ declared position
of noninvolvement militarily in the Ivorian crisis and
allegations of supporting Gbagbo. President Mills
pronouncements on ECOWAS’ decision to use force to
compel incumbent Gbagbo to respect the will of Ivorians
by ceding power to president elect-Ouattara has ignited
an interesting conversation among experts and government
officials.
This article contributes to the conversation objectively
examining Ghana’s position, especially some remarks by
President Mills, in an attempt to unravel the validity
of the allegation. It also analyzes the ramifications of
the rhetoric on Ghana’s reputation and geostrategic
interests in the sub-region, Africa and the
international community of nations.
As a security analyst, international relations and legal
scholar and former service personnel, I acknowledge and
appreciate the sincerity in President Mills‘ position of
Ghana’s non-involvement militarily in the Ivorian crisis
due to obvious political, economic and social
considerations.
Ghana’s noninvolvement, argued by President Mills and
Gen. Smith, stems from its overstretched Armed Forces
and potential reprisals against Ghanaians resident in
Ivory Coast and our oil rigs (mine). Ghana with pending
elections, informed by the 2008 electoral violence,
requires adequate internal security for a violence free
2012 elections. Ghana‘s decision is well informed by the
rational choice theory that postulates that decision
makers impute cost benefit -analysis before acting, and
actions are taken if the benefit exceeds the costs and
vice versa. Guided by his own cost-benefit analysis,
President Mills rejects an immediate use of force and
proposes patient diplomacy because an immediate use of
force will intensify the crisis and reignite the Ivorian
conflict with dire consequences for the Ivorians and
Ghana. Ghanaian residents in Ivory Coast and our oil
rigs will be targets of attack by aggrieved conflict
parties.
There is no doubt that Ghana, a “safe haven” and most
stable closest Ivory Coast’s neighbor, will be burdened
with hosting Ivorian refugees with attendant strains on
our economy and related adverse social and political
implications. The Liberian war and refugees in Ghana
attest to these concerns. President Mills has genuine
concerns and we must appreciate them. I support
President Mills’ proposed patient diplomacy in line with
Chapter VI of the UN Charter that encourages the
exhaustion of pacific mechanisms before the initiation
of Chapter VII enforcement mechanisms that include the
use of force. The use of force is the last resort.
Very worrying however, are President Mills other remarks
and whether President Mills concurred or not to the
decision at the meeting of ECOWAS Heads of State to use
force to oust incumbent Gbagbo if he refuses to cede
power to the legitimately elected President of Ivory
Coast-Lasane Ouattara. It seems he agreed in principle
to the decision to use force without advancing Ghana’s
concerns at the meeting. President Mills’ publicly
declared position is therefore incongruous and
paradoxical to his position at the meeting with fellow
West African Heads of State. This, in international
diplomacy, constitutes a stab in their back, a mark of
diplomatic dishonesty and a betrayal of trust by
President Mills that may give credence to the
allegations of supporting Gbagbo. Ouattara’s spokesman
Patrick Achi, in reference to Ghana’s position,
articulated this allegation when he stated, “I am not
surprised by their position. There’s a close
relationship between them. At first people felt like
this would be easy then, as time goes by, some feel they
owe something to the guy.”
President Mills’ diplomatic blunder, due to decisional
inconsistency, has suicidal ramifications for Ghana’s
reputation and integrity in international diplomacy that
requires immediate rectification. President Mills could
have avoided this blunder if he had stated his position
at the ECOWAS meeting of Heads of State. He could also
have had confidential bilateral discussions with each of
his fellow Heads of State to discuss Ghana’s position to
tactically court their support and court their
understanding prior to the meeting of the Head of
States. I am confident they would have understood our
position cognizant of Ghana’s unique historic
contributions to the West African Collective Security
system in Liberia and Sierra Leone, and United Nations
peacekeeping.
Gen. Smith also introduces an interesting dimension to
the conversation. While advancing the security related
reasons of Ghana’s non-involvement in the use of force,
Gen Smith seems to blame the ECOWAS Secretariat for not
consulting experts before making and submitting their
decision to ECOWAS Heads of State. Gen. Smith stated -
“ECOWAS Secretariat should have consulted experts to
critically analyze the crisis before asking Head of
States to take a decision on that country”. Gen. Smith’s
statement reveals an information gap between Ghana’s
representatives on ECOWAS and the home government in
relation to decision-making on sensitive diplomatic
issues such as the use of force. This is a serious
diplomatic anomaly that defies a well acknowledged
common diplomatic practice -“phone-home syndrome” - that
requires state representatives on international
organizations to consult and collaborate with their home
states before diplomatic decisions are made. On a
sensitive issue such as the use of force, it is
imperative that state representatives’ contributions to
the decision be informed by the interests and goals of
their states to avoid distortions and contradictions in
foreign policies. This relational collaborative gap must
be bridged to ensure coherent, congruent and competent
foreign policy decisions very much absent in our Ivorian
crisis-related foreign policy.
We could have also averted this blunder if President
Mills and his security advisers, prior to the decisions
by the Secretariat and ECOWAS Heads of State, had
proactively met to discuss and forecast Ghana’s position
on the potential use of force, cognizant of ECOMOG’s
historic involvement in conflict prone member states
militarily.
President Mills also erred and exhibited decisional
inconsistencies by stating that “Ghana will support any
government” while recognizing Ouattara as the winner of
the election implicitly acknowledging his legitimacy as
the President-elect. Supporting any government includes
supporting an illegitimate Gbagbo government. This
position is unfortunate and derails effective resolution
of the Ivorian crisis because it sends wrong signals to
the Gbagbo camp and feeds the allegations of Ghana’s
tacit support for Gbagbo. It emboldens and hardens
Gbagbo’s resolve to ignore the popular demands of the
Ivorian people, ECOWAS, AU and UN to cede power to the
legitimate choice of Ivoirians because Ghana, a prime
troop contributing member of the ECOWAS collective
security system, tacitly supports him. Ouattara’s camp
similarly became hardened in their quest to claim their
legitimate right of leading the Ivorian people by any
means possible as unequivocally articulated by his
spokesman, Achi. In response to Ghana’s dismissal of the
use of force, Achi stated “I don’t think President
Ouattara is only counting on ECOWAS to move this
forward” … “other options of intervention exist”. Both
camps are currently hardened and deeply entrenched in
their subjective positions and the potentialities of
compromises for peaceful resolution of the impasse
remain very limited.
President Mills’ statements that “it is not for Ghana to
choose a president for Cote D’Ivoire” and “Ghana does
not take sides” constitute the most serious and damaging
diplomatic blunder. The policy of not my business
contradicts and damages Ghana’s cherished historic
contribution to international peace and security. In a
globalised world of structural linkages and at a
historic epoch when collective security has assumed
primacy in international security discourse, President
Mills’ position of not my business stigmatizes Ghana as
apathetic, isolationist , divisive, a spoiler and an
advocate of collective insecurity. Ghana by this policy
finds itself on the wrong side of history opposed to
collective security as an effective mechanism of
attaining international peace and security reflected in
the purpose and goals of the United Nations once headed
by a proud son of Ghana, former United Nations Secretary
General Kofi Annan. Involvement in collective security
to respond to a threat to international peace and
security does not denote partiality or taking sides.
Rather it denotes impartiality in the pursuit of the
collective interests and resolution of a collective
problem.
A state’s non-involvement in a collective security
system in dealing with a violator/spoiler may imply its
normal relations with the spoiler whose behavior has
been censored by the international community. This may
expose that state to the accusation of condoning that
behavior by the spoiler. This is the situation we find
ourselves now.
ECOWAS’ military option, if used as a last resort,
challenges the usurpation of the sovereign rights of the
Ivorian citizenry to elect their leader. The use of
force serves as a deterrence to would-be violators and
signals to the defenseless citizens that society does
not brook brutal acts against innocent people. Refusal
to act encourages further human rights violations and
the cycle of impunity. Ghana is a signatory to the UN
Charter and Article 1 of the UN Charter proclaims the
realization, protection and promotion of human rights,
through international cooperation, as the purpose of the
United Nations. Articles 55 and 56 of the Charter impose
obligations on members to this end. In Articles 55 and
56 of the Charter, all members “pledge themselves to
take joint and separate action in cooperation with the
Organization” to achieve the purpose in Article 1 of the
Charter. Chapter VIII of the UN Charter addresses the
utilization of regional bodies such as ECOWAS to deal
with matters relating to international peace and
security consistent with the purposes and principles of
the UN. Article 53 provides that regional bodies may
take enforcement measures with the authorization of the
Security Council.
The situation in Ivory Coast constitutes a threat to
international peace and security reflected in global
condemnation and measures to compel Gbagbo to cede power
to Ouattara. Apart from Gbagbo’s usurpation of the
legitimate rights of the Ivorians, reports of extra
judicial killings along ethnic fault-lines , refugee
flow (22,000) and potential conflict spillage, the
sequels of Gbagbo’s recalcitrant and illegitimate cling
to power, constitute threats to international peace and
security. The impasse has assumed an international
dimension that requires international collective action.
ECOWAS’ response, including the use of force, is
legitimate once authorized by the Security Council or
once it receives ex post support as per ECOMOG’s
interventions in Liberia and Sierra Leone. I advocate
the exhaustion of pacific means to give Gbagbo enough
time to blink but if proved otherwise, the use of force
should not be off the table- the last resort. I must
caution that we should be watchful he does not utilize
this period to rearm and fortify himself rendering all
other measures impossible. Ghana’s position of not my
business rather derails the efforts of the West African
Collective Security System and sends wrong signals to
would-be violators that their acts will be unchallenged
and unpunished thereby perpetuating the cycle of
impunity. Ghana by this creates an environment and a
precedence of collective insecurity in the sub-region.
Ghana proudly recognizes and has obligations thereof
under the international norm of “responsibility to
protect “(R2P). R2P redefines sovereignty to include
states responsibilities to protect their citizens from
genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes
against humanity. Should the state be unable or refuse
to protect them, the international community has a
responsibility to take prompt and decisive collective
action either diplomatically or militarily to protect
the victims. If the Ivorian crisis reaches the threshold
of invoking R2P, it will be morally wrong for Ghana to
ignore its moral obligation “to protect” defenseless
Ivorians.
Some commentators have questioned ECOWAS legitimacy in
intervening to restore democracy invoking the provision
in Article 2 (4) of the UN Charter that prohibits the
use of force by member states against the territorial
integrity or political sovereignty of any state in any
manner inconsistent with the purpose of the UN.
Exceptions are for self defense and when authorized by
the UN Security Council. However, a new customary
international law seems to have emerged in international
law discourse that supports intervention to restore
democracy as an exception to Article 2 (4) reflected in
the Haiti case and ECOMOG’s involvement in Sierra Leone
to restore the democratically elected President Kabbah
to power. Pro-democratic interventions do not threaten
the state’s territorial integrity and violate the
political independence of the state. Rather,
interventions to restore democratically elected
government support the political independence of a state
by enforcing the nation’s political will and sovereignty
which is violated by the dictator who usurps the will of
the people. This position is predicated on the fact that
sovereignty derives from the will of the people informed
by social contract theory. Thus, pro democratic
interventions are consistent with the purpose of the UN
as they seek to further human rights in accordance with
the preamble and Article 55 of the UN Charter as well as
the principle of self determination. Usurpation of the
will of the Ivorian people by Gbagbo rather violates the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Ivory
Coast. An intervention by ECOWAS to restore the will of
the Ivorian people (Ouattara as the president), restores
the sovereignty and protects the territorial integrity
of Ivory Coast.
A new historical epoch has dawned on Africa with strong
commitments to collective security with ECOWAS cited in
collective security discourse as a success story of
regionalism worthy of emulation by the rest of Africa.
ECOWAS needs our support to restore the legitimate will
of the people of Ivory Coast as articulated by former UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan. Kofi Annan states that “I
join the many, led by the Economic Community of West
African States and African Union who call on former
President Laurent Gbagbo to step aside and respect the
will of the people. They have chosen Alassane Outtara
and no repression, however brutal and long, can undo
this decision nor Mr. Ouattara’s legitimacy”.
In conclusion, Ghana has genuine reasons for its
noninvolvement in ECOWAS’ potential military
intervention in the Ivorian crisis. Ghana’s reasons are
overstretched service personnel and related internal
security requirements, fear of reprisal against
Ghanaians resident in Ivory Coast and our oil rigs
(mine). The president’s suggestion of exhaustion of
peaceful mechanisms is also laudable however his remarks
such as “ I support any government” “it is not for Ghana
to choose a president for Cote D’Ivoire” and “Ghana does
not take sides” elicit inherent contradictions in his
avowed position that betray the genuineness of his
intentions for noninvolvement. These inconsistencies may
also be deem as acts of betrayal and distrust by ECOWAS
Heads of State and other stake holders such as African
Union, European Union, and the UN. Ghana seems to
champion collective insecurity system in the region with
damaging ramifications for Ghana’s cherished global
reputation and our future interaction within the
community of nations. The tag of tacitly assisting
former President Gbagbo is damaging . Ghana requires an
immediate damage control mechanism to redeem our image.
We need an immediate diplomatic spin to reframe our
position and adopt a strategic, balanced, concerned and
objective foreign policy on the Ivorian issue in order
to reclaim our reputation in international diplomacy.
By Kofi Nsia-Pepra, Ph.D.
Kofi Nsia-Pepra Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of
Political Science (International Relations/Comparative
politics, public policy, conflict analysis and
resolution and American politics) at Ohio Northern
University, USA. He taught at Wayne State University,
University of Michigan Dearborn, Central Michigan
University (USA) and Hanyang University, South Korea. He
has Master of Laws degree (International Human Rights
Law), Essex University, UK. His research and publication
interests are: critical international security, conflict
analysis and resolution, good governance, diplomacy,
foreign policy, human rights and UN peacekeeping.
Kofi was a former officer of the Ghana Air Force (rank:
Flight Lieutenant) and served with United Nations
Assisted Mission in Rwanda and was Ghana Air Force
detachment Commander with ECOMOG in Sierra Leone.
E-mail: k-nsia-pepra@onu.edu |