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EDITORIAL: The Mediterranean union
The newly established Union for the Mediterranean
is not yet fully formed, but members have already announced rather
lofty ambitions for the organization, such as ridding the Mideast of
weapons of mass destruction. The union was praised by leaders from the
start, including Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who hailed its
grounding focus on "practical projects" - as compared to the previous
union established in Barcelona in 1995. However, its nuclear
proliferation goals are unrealistic.
The revived Euro-Mediterranean vision began as a
proposal during French President Nicholas Sarkozy's election campaign,
and subsequently evolved from ambitions to generate dialogue between
the 27 EU member-states, North Africa and Middle Eastern nations. The
new Mediterranean organization calls for a North-South co-presidency
and a permanent secretariat. In order to equally distribute power and
representation, heads of state from each of the member nations will
hold a summit every two years.
While the Sarkozy-generated initiative can
strengthen diplomatic ties and increase economic interdependence in the
Euro-Mediterranean region, it is unlikely that nations will disband
their programs. A united quest for disarmament will likely meet the
same fate of failure as past attempts made at the 1972 Biological
Weapons Convention and the 1992 Chemical Weapons Convention.The goal of
disarmament has more implications than merely promoting peace - it
forces a nation to discount sovereignty and defense and to inherently
trust other nations in a less-than-trustworthy international context.
The goal may be timely, with Iran's missile test
expected to exacerbate existing tensions with Israel, and amid
speculation over weapons programs in Syria and Israel, but that does
not mean it is realistic. For example, to expect Israel to do more than
sign the declaration to "pursue a mutually and effectively verifiable
Middle East Zone free of weapons," when Israel continues to face
considerable threat from Iran (which would not be part of the
agreement) is unrealistic. As for other member states, such as Syria,
which is known to have weapons programs, it seems unlikely to yield its
weapons capabilities for the greater good.
Rather than fruitlessly attempting to disarm the
Middle East of WMDs, members of the Union for the Mediterranean should
strive to accomplish more realistic objectives, particularly the
creation of a free-trade area in the Euro-Mediterranean region by 2010.
These more realistic projects have the potential to coalesce the
leadership around a message that leads toward a more peaceful and
prosperous region.
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