Re: Modeling Geostrategic Dynamics for the Indian Subcontine
Posted: 18 Mar 2011 01:56
From Nightwatch on understanding violence in instability problems
March 16 2011
March 16 2011
We can see this cycle in Andhra Pradesh of long duration cycles of 30 years or so.
Notes for new analysts: understanding violence in instability problems (Long essay alert)
Internal instability problems are not chaotic, despite the way many people describe them. They move through definable phases that have benchmarks indicating progress in the processes. Violence is a particularly important indicator because it occurs twice, but its significance depends on when it occurs.
Background
Political authority flows back and forth between the government and the opposition, depending on their respective strengths. Usually the government will under-react to the first outbreak of protests. That will start the three phase under-reaction, over-reaction, concession cycle, which characterized government actions in all the Arab states under stress. In Tunisia and Egypt, the Army sided with the protestors for parochial reasons and brought an early end to those crises. Instability persists because no fundamental changes that address the causes of instability have occurred. The unrest is resetting and recycling.
The three-phase cycle enables analysts to track government management of the instability, but its context is the shift in authority between the government and the opposition, represented by the youthful protestors in the Arab world. As the government's authority weakens, the opposition's strengthens. They converge. Right before the division of authority equalizes, either or both sides will resort to violence.
The government will use the army to prevent sharing power with the opposition, which an equal division of authority makes inevitable. The opposition resorts to violence because it judges the government might topple from a violent surge. It is compelled to test the government because that is how the opposition gains authority.
The use of extraordinary armed force always signals that convergence has reached the point that the government fears it will have to share power… and make changes if it fails to fight. This is convergence violence.
Convergence Violence
If there has been no government sharing of authority with the opposition - no power sharing -- before the use of extraordinary force, then the violence is always convergence violence and the government is in grave danger.
This is where Bahrain and Yemen are. Oman has not yet reached that point. In Bahrain, at the end of one three-phase cycle, the Crown Prince offered significant concessions for greater political participation by the Shiite opposition, but which preserved the monarchy. By 8 March, when the opposition started to demand systemic change in the form of a republic, that demand set the condition for a violent crackdown or capitulation by the monarchy. The chronology indicates the monarchy's unsuccessful use of violence in the earlier "over-reaction phase" caused the Shiites to escalate their demands.
In a convergence fight, government force must be overwhelming and must succeed or the government will change for a time, possibly permanently. As early as 21 February, Bahrain's King apparently doubted he had the forces for the task, and asked the Arab monarchs for the Peninsula Shield Forces.
Most governments have no allies willing to add more guns to their side of the fight to prevent further convergence. Bahrain does. It is not clear whether Saudi or UAE forces participated in today's crackdown in Manama. They at least freed up Bahraini forces to enable the government to try to break the protest movement.
The Bahrain monarchy with the backing of the Peninsula Shield Force contributors has raised the stakes substantially, and maybe existentially. If this escalation fails, which it could, the Bahrain government must change. If the monarchy survives a failure, it probably would be as a figurehead or ceremonial head of state.
The Peninsula Shield Forces also carry another dimension of risk because of the linkage to other governments -- Saudi Arabia and UAE plus any other Gulf Cooperation Council contributors. The Peninsula Shield Force makes Bahrain a regional problem. If the Forces fail now, authority will decline in other Arab capitals. The downside of integration is that, if it fails, it threatens to bring down the whole architecture. That consequence suggests the Forces in Bahrain will fight to the last Shiite to prevent the collapse of the monarchy.
If the Forces succeed in routing or deterring protestors or in inducing them to accept the offers of the Crown Prince, then the authority of the monarchy will have been restored. The side with the most or the best guns wins, provided the forces remain loyal and respond to orders. The introduction of outside forces - the Saudi and UAE personnel -also has reduced the likelihood of mass desertions by the Bahraini forces. This is what China did in the Tiananmen massacre at an identical stage of its successful convergence struggle.
Yemen also is in a convergence fight, but it has not yet escalated as Bahrain's has. President Saleh, however, is using violence in a way that is similar to Bahrain. The trend is towards escalating uses of force, but Saleh will be guided by what happens in Bahrain.
Divergence Violence
Leaders in Bahrain and Yemen might have been heartened by Qadhafi's successful counterattacks in Libya. If so, that would be a misread of the Libyan fighting. Qadhafi lost his convergence fight, but is winning a divergence or breakout fight. Two weeks ago, when the rebels took towns just west of Tripoli, they achieved de facto power sharing. Qadhafi had Tripoli and parts of Tripolitania. The Benghazi Council had control of Cyrenaica and was moving into Tripolitania.
Power Sharing and Divergence Violence
The division of authority manifest by a geographical split is a rare form of power sharing, usually associated with secession - fragmentation of the state. But the Benghazi-based rebels went for Tripoli.
Libya has showcased several key points about instability problems. Most important is that the opposition will not win if it does not take the capital, Tripoli in Libya's case. Instability is centripetal because authority and political power reside in the center, which explains the rebels' march into Tripolitania and that the only serious confrontations in Bahrain occur in Manama.
Second, power sharing is relatively quiet. For a short time before the Qadhafi counterattack, there was very limited violence. Qadhafi famously offered talks, almost certainly a ruse to build his forces, but the kind of overture that takes place in power sharing.
Third, it is always temporary, though the length of time varies widely. It is temporary because the parties seek to prepare for a breakout. The breakout need not be violent and might take a long time to develop. Hezbollah demonstrated this in its parliamentary procedural ouster of the Hariri government in Lebanon. It took from 2006 to 2011 for Hezbollah to make its parliamentary breakout that toppled the Hariri coalition.
Even in Lebanon, there was fear of violent street protests. If violence associated with a breakout occurs, it is divergence violence.
Qadhafi began a successful breakout last week. His success may be measured by the distance from Tripoli that Qadhafi's forces are fighting. Divergence violence always happens after there has been de facto or de jure power sharing.
Qadhafi's successful breakout also reinforces the most salient and predictive point of instability. The side with the most and best guns wins. If Benghazi falls in 48 hours, the rebellion is crushed and Qadhafi's authority will be fully stronger than ever…for a time.
To recap, convergence violence, as in Bahrain, means the government is in so much stress that it is resorting to extraordinary means to prevent power sharing. Divergence violence means a party is trying to break out of power sharing to seize control of the government.
Finally, successful convergence or divergence fights are never final solutions, but they can add decades to the longevity of a regime as in Libya and Algeria. Instability always resets and recycles, even if it takes 30 years, until the underlying problems are solved or changed.