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Andrea Bartoli
Director of the International Conflict Resolution Program of Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs, and Chair of the Columbia University Conflict Resolution Network
Topics: track I diplomacy, track II (citizen) diplomacy, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)
Interviewed by Susan Allen Nan and Andrea Strimling 2003
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Q: I think we
can begin now. How have you been involved in the interactions between Track I
and Track II? What have you seen? What has worked? What hasn't worked?
A: I think the
best way for me to start is a line that I'm in a sense ??? for Africa. And
when he was presenting there was a meeting in 1992 at the USAIP symposium in
July of 92 on ??? peace and he was presenting our work as ?????? ????? in
Mozambique and he said "this is the first time that a Track II organization is
leading a Track I process" and I'd never heard that expression before. I was
a younger colleague at that time. ????????
sentence with organization???? For a few years but to be totally honest, I was
not aware even of the expression. We were coming from a non-Engligh speaking
culture, we were not exposed to the work of Joe Montreal and Ken Lenin? And
others and we didn't know there was such a distinction. We were doing work
that was clearly political in nature and was clearly societally sensitive and it
was clearly geared towards the identification of little or no communication that
could eventually lead to the unified independent and peaceful Mozambique that we
see today. But we didn't have any
clue that it was an attempt to distinguish in a way the 2 contributions, there
was 1 for us. There was a sense of unity that was derived by the final goal of
attaining peace as something that clearly supercedes any specific contribution.
It was very clear to us that peace was in a way more found and given to those
that were seeking it and honestly enough. So our role was more to facilitate the
undoing of delineation and hassles and hargles that would prevent these from
emerging rather than something that would impose peace on a situation. And in
that framework we were clearly in conversation with a state organization, with
political actors that did have the power to make the peace happen but especially
interesting for us, they had the power to not make it happen and to keep the
conflict going. So I thnk it's important to start from that observation
because it is a follow of language. When we addressed the issue of collective
participation in peace processes, especially in successful peace processes.
Through the rubric of Track I/ Track II, we had already identified
categories that were created in Norht America and make sense in Norht America
where you do have a certain institutional strength and where you do have a
certain language. Now it's very clear athat there is still society everywhere
in the world and that there are political insolutions and arguments everywhere
in the world but I just wanted to give you this to appreciate how new some how
all of these ideas are. I think it's important for us to appreciate how it
plays out differently in different parts of the world. The other observation is
that from ?org? that was identified by ?Gestor Vidal? Has a Track II condition
leading a Track I process is a catholic organization that doesn't have
official role in any way, it's an NGO. It
has a very catholic traditional dealing with political representation. The
catholic church is one of the oldest institutions, it is clearly perceived to be
the oldest of all in the world. The family I'm living with, languages in
practice of international diplomacy that really was exposed to very early on
where a significant part of this patrimony. So for us to deal with states was
just a normal thing. It would've been funny otherwise. Sometimes I discuss
this with John Paul (Lederach) and for a Mennonite to get involved in
international politics requires an enormous change and an enormous investment in
differeing yourself from your own tradition that tells you that power is bad and
most of the time insolutions, political insolutions are oppressive realitites
that tend to enforce you and make your life miserable. So for a Mennonite, for
many Mennonites, what John Paul is doing, he is exceedingly daring. Because he
would be better off not doing anything at all. Being peaceful on your own,
you're always at peace with anybody. But we are here getting involved, doing
something in the world requires a level of political consciousness and
understanding of political realities and especially insolution of realities that
it's quite a departure from the tradition. For us, it was more the
reinterpretation of something that has been there for a while. The pope speaks
with Gorbachev with a lead that no other leader may have. You have a place to
start. And that fact that our involvement in Mozambique was in many ways
mediated throught the Bishop of Bayor? Who was a friend of ours who became
Bishop because when the Portuguese got the news that the leftist group of
soldiers with power had decided to get **rid of the colony, the Vatican changes
policy to only have white Portuguese bishops in the colony and appointed this
poor guy who was one of the few native Mozambique black priest. And this is how
we got involved with the priest becoming a bishop and the bishop playing a role
of expressioning the needs and mediation, cultural representation that was
essential throughout. It started in the mid-70s and it was included October 4,
1992 and still continues today. Why I'm saying this is because I think there
are realitites like a local Bishop or a local minister that fell easily into the
Track 1/Track II diplomacy structure that we may want to help official
communities to appreciate. That is to say, when you have a person like Bishop
??? in the DRC [Democratic Republic of Congo], who is he? Is he an NGO, what is
he? And he's clearly not the "official" static almost rigid secular state
formation that counts, but more lively in the making of gaining presence of
communities as they are. So what I see as important in the NGO state debate is
the NGO side represents more easily the dynamism, the effort to bring about
change in a situation that are simply unbearable. I think that sometimes, as in
the case of Mozambique, this process can be exceedingly successful, sometimes
it's simply indispensable. One of the reasons ?Santa org?? got involved in
Algeria when we had the Platform for Peaceful Resolution of Algerian ?Tribes? in
1995, it was simply because Algerians couldn't meet in Algeria and welcomed
immigration of the community because we were in touch with Muslims from the
Middle east that were doing some Christian movement dialog with us. And the
result was this incredible document of socialist, nationalist and islamist?
Algerians all gathered together in a Catholic convent discussing human rights.
Sometimes thing happen in a non-official setting because they can not happen
otherwise, there's simply not the space. The NGOs sectors can provide the
quaker model of ?re-armament? And the ??de-moralizing??, I have demonstrated
some of these all over again. Especially the moment of ?condition? you can not
pay attention to the margins of society where space is created for a creative
solution to emerge, to a situation that are available to the population. So I
think htat what I hope this occasion will give us is a sense of the situation
and that the debate is not just between American organizations seeking funding
from the state but that the NGOs sectors is actually representing a much larger
sector of society that are frequently at odds with structured form of a state
that doesn't necessarily dialog with its citizenry easily. So in many ways
NGOs are better positioned than others, I wouldn't necessarily frame it in an
either-or in a no position of, but more in this collaborative, I would say that
what I saw in Mozambique, at ??Osama-gia?? Was this moment when the official
diplomacy recognized that there are certain limitations that pertain to rigidity
that pertain to the black opportunity, and involvement that pertain to the
narrow focus on national interests and that the NGO sector actually has lots to
contribute in terms of articulating the needs of society that are going through
deadly conflict and violence. So I
think the proper mentality is very much there.
**My experience is also that usually states, when they are led by
result-oriented individuals, they tend to dialog with the NGO sector and the
independent sector very well. Sam Noone? Doing work for the UN in Somalia was
working better than the American military in many ways, prior to the invasion.
He was having consultations and these things, it's not by sense that the
soldiers in Salvador or ?Bahimi? in 1980 and Afghanistan and so on has a very
keen sense of involving the independent sector because if only this we
understand that in a situation of flux, of transition, you do want to have
contributions from all different areas. So the areas I know the best as I said,
are Mozambique, Algeria, I know a little about Kosovo but I would say that USIP
is most aware of the work in Mozambique; they have worked very well. There is a
chapter in ?Hurting Cats? Irving Carts? If it is of any interests, I'd be
happy to elaborate further on the certain intuition that were born there.
Q: OK, well, I
have that chapter and I think that as we move forward through shaping what focus
your remarks would take and how they would fit with the rest of the agenda that
I should probably read that chapter again.
A: I'm
definitely happy to do something new. As I said, I think that the problem is
that it is to important not to take the occasion.
Q: If you
could not repeat the chapter but build on it through your comments today.
That's really helpful to hear about the Track I/Track II distinction wasn't
clear at all in Mozambique.
A: No, it was
practiced, but not understood in many ways. Not real.
Q: So it sounds like you have a clear vision of government
and NGOs working well together and successful because you have experienced that
happening. I think your experience is very much a success story.
A: Yes, and I think we frequently have some sort of
political community or moral community, I think that all the success stories I
know, in El Salvador, Mozambique. All these have a very strong political
component, that is to say, you have a situation in which the understanding of
different roles and contributions go back to involving the peace process is
clearly enough to address a point, induce collaborative processes.
I think the intuition that Track I needs Track II and Track II needs
Track I is very basic and I think that everyone can grasp that when they realize
how much better a situation is when you do have full investment from civil
society, from NGOs, from churches, from all sectors of society.
Many observers make the point that many peace processes like Oslo and
Israeli peace process fail when they do not have that kind of support. So I
think that the division, the model, the ideal of a collaboration, of a
complimentality is very much that and the more we can do that day to stress that
not only as a possible future that I ??????, certain areas, in certain moments,
in certain situations, successfully for ????, the NGO sectors and the Track I
the better it is for us. I think
anyone has anything to gain by quarreling or competing.
I think that the point is that what I perform at this collaboration and
it clearly must be based on trying ??????? what are the ????? and challenges of
the two sectors that can contribute to the over all??????
Q: Your
comments have actually raised another question for me which is that it sounds
like in your Mozambique work and in Algeria too, that it was really clear there
were things that the NGOs could do that the governments were not in the position
and were not structured to do and that the two needed each other.
What form that cooperation took would be of interest in terms of what are
we suggesting for other conflict areas where it is clear that civil society does
need to be engage in some way. What
form does that take? Is it leaders
of the NGO after it meets with various ambassadors ???? capital where the
conflict is happening? Is it
headquarters kinds of activities at the UN? Is it personal relationships
developing with trust between the various actors; do they trust each other and
can focus each other? What is the
form that the cooperation takes?
A: I think
that it is hard to define ????? of something that will necessarily express
cooperation in the sense that as we all know very well that something that works
in one setting may not work in another. Everything
is context dependent. The most
important valuable has to do with confidence or has to do with relevance.
I think that the imperative in transitional situations, in conflict
resolution transitions, in peace processes, is what is useful to the process.
Whatever is not central, whatever is not positively contributing to the
process is simply dismissed. It
doesn't matter if it comes from the UN Secretary general or the US President
it just doesn't work. You can try
to impose that on situations but it will not be effective.
The same works for the NGOs even worse because the NGOs do not have a
power base that can impose it???. So
I think that what the for????? In a way seems to allude is that the NGO sector
???? is supposed do work that is consistent with their own mandate independently
of the Track I, almost independent of Track I, that would be my ???? at least.
Because of the specific contribution competence and relevance are built
in. What happens is that you end up having the right
relationship, you end up being the only quaker person who knows the rebel in
that area or you end up being the only well-known scholar who has adapted to
that language or you ended up being the only one who experimented for five years
a very successful ????? development process that allows communities to end their
internal conflict.
Q: ??????????????following
your mandate and doing it well?
A: It will
position yourself to be relevant to the Track I community and then there is an
opportunistic element that if you want it is something a little bit of a, it is
a mystery if you want. But how does
it happen that John Pentergast ??? became the assistant secretary for Africa or
now he is working for ICG, International Crisis Group.
But before he was in the NGO sector.
He was working for the Center of Concern and he working out of the ?????
in Africa and he became an expert and he knew the area and his knowledge became
relevant and significant for the government.
Then President Clinton invited him to join the National Securtiy Council.
Now that morphing is happening all the time.
Sometimes it takes the form of joining the government.
Sometimes it takes the form of joining the NGO.
Sometimes it takes the form of doing something together because it is
needed. Sometimes the activities
that can be designed NGOs that are purposely doing that, designed to do that and
have a mandate to do that and this can have a double agenda.
An example more related to the work at Columbia University.
When the State Department gave us the first contract to do work in
Iraqi????, they were clearly concerned about the very tense relationship between
the ??? and the ??? that were fighting eachother and militarily on the ground.
These were two Kurdish groups killing each other at the time in which the
Americans wanted them to be united to fight against Saddam, 95-96.
We at the Columbia University Center for Conflict Resolution were
mandated to teach and do urgent conflict resolution.
So we were asked to see if there was an interest among the three
universities in Northern Iraq to establish conflict resolution center in ????
universities. That was our job, but
it clearly had a political implication. The
????????? joined ??? effort 2003. It
was clearly not only functional Columbia work but we have no doubt that the
informal channels that ???? communication, the training we gave, the classes
that we explained and all that contributed to certain conflict resolution
activities. We were doing what
???????????????????. I mean doing
Track I work but it had a Track I effect and I think there is much that many are
doing around the world that has exactly the same relevance.
Things you do, Search for Common Ground is another example.
Much of what they do is not necessarily ????? first of all ????????
amount obviously Track I. But when
you have a very successful TV show that shows Macedonian kids of Albanian
descent I ?????? can get together. You
probably do have an effect. I
am joking but if the producer of that program became the minister of culture we
would not be surprised. You see the
idea? You know, ????? is now going to be assistant secretary for
humanitarian affairs at the UN, I don't remember, but he used to be the deputy
foreign minister for Norway and was heavily involved in, actually it would be
nice to invite him. Because the
advantage of Yen is for the last few years he has been with Norwegian Red Cross
so he has been in the NGO sector. Not
defending the fact that the Red Cross has a very long standing independent
independence in different stages but I think it would be nice to have somebody
from the Red Cross speaking because he gives a very good historical perspective
of how a neutral ????state actors is actually needed in the moment of conflict.
So it could be an interesting contribution.
Q: I think
that is a really good suggestion and his name has come before and we want to
consider what the whole agenda will look like and it is helpful now knowing the
kind of comments that you would be making to know what else would be needed in
the mix so we get a breadth of perspective for the day. This is really helpful and really interesting
and will be
very helpful in shaping the approach we will take at this symposium especially
Track I and Track II not even seeming at all distinct. That is very powerful.
A: I would say
this is almost an ideal. You know
you want to work these processes in which everybody is contributing to something
that is higher and greater then any ?????.
It is a successful peace process to whom should the credit go?
I don't believe in the one man show kind of deal but I do believe in
collective decsion making processes that do actually shape the emergence of
peaceful resolution.
Q: Well thank
you so much for sharing those comments and thank you so much for holding
November 24 to speak. As we speak
to every potential speaker and turn up the agenda I think then we will have a
clear idea of what we would ask you to speak and how long your remarks would be
and so on. ??????????????
A: I would be
more then happy to do it.
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