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Washington Cannot Afford to
Neglect Algeria
Jonathan Eric
Lewis
Traditionally viewed as part of
France’s
sphere of influence and as peripheral to
Washington’s
national interests in the
Middle
East, Algeria has long been an afterthought in American
foreign policy decision-making. Since Algerian
militants constitute a significant core of the new
cadres of al-Qaeda and similar Islamist groups hostile
to the United States and its allies, Washington can no
longer relegate Algeria to the margins of its national
security policy. Given that Algerian members of the
Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat are active in
Western Europe and are engaged in international
terrorism that directly threatens vital American
national interests, it is imperative that Washington
begin to vigorously press for a more stable, pro-Western
Algeria that no longer produces large numbers of
militant Islamic groups and one that will eventually
join with Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, and Tunisia in
seeking a rapprochement with Israel.
This
coming April,
Algeria
will have its presidential election. This will be a
good bellwether for the political future of
North
Africa.
In many ways,
Algeria
is a laboratory for the relationship between Islam and
the West and for many of the political conflicts
engulfing the Arab-Islamic world. Such fundamental
questions as the roles of both Islam and military
authoritarianism in politics, the relationship between
Arabism and ethnic minorities, the role of a free press,
and attitudes toward Israel, have all been contested in
the Algerian public sphere throughout the 1990s and up
until today. Washington would be well-advised to
seriously engage with both the government and the
legitimate, non-Islamist opposition movements, all in an
effort to help foster a more open, pluralistic Algerian
society in which free-market reforms and economic
development might stem the tide of both radical Islam
and the mass emigration of unemployed men who are easy
converts to Islamism in Western Europe and, if holders
of European passports, hidden threats to American
national security.
While
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika is generally expected to
handily win re-election and continue on with his
authoritarian style of rule, there have been recent
political developments that might jeopardize what was
once widely considered a fait accompli and may indicate
that Algeria is slowly climbing out of the political
turmoil and violence which engulfed the country
throughout much of the past decade. The initial
challenge to Bouteflika‚s increasing authoritarian rule
hailed from the so-called “Group of 11,” a loose
coalition of Algerian political personalities who have
accused the government of obstructing presidential
challengers and, in a recent statement excerpted in the
Algerian newspaper La Tribune, called for “a regular,
sincere, and transparent election.”
Further
challenges have arisen from two significant quarters:
the Algerian military and the country’s significant
Berber population. Although the Algerian military had
been on the forefront of the war against Islamism in
Algeria and initially supported President Bouteflika,
some generals are now having second thoughts regarding
the sitting president. In a stunning announcement,
General Mohamed Lamar announced the neutrality of the
generals in the upcoming election, prompting one
Algerian commentator to bluntly state to a leading
newspaper that the military “no longer wants Bouteflika.”
As if
this weren’t already enough of a challenge to his rule
and assumed re-election, Bouteflika is now also facing a
major challenge from the country’s large Berber, or
Kabyle, population. The descendents of the indigenous,
pre-Arab population of North Africa, the Kabyles
constitute close to one-quarter of Algeria’s population
and have faced discrimination at the hands of the
Arab-speaking government and violence at the hands of
the Islamists, many of whom deliberately targeted
secular Kabyles such as the novelist Tahar Djaout for
execution in their violent jihad of the early 1990s.
Although Kabyles have achieved a great deal of success
in post-independence Algeria, the greater and more
nationalist Kabyle community has recently threatened to
sit-out the April election unless their demand for
government recognition of their ethnic language,
Tamazight, as an official language is met. The Kabyles
have rejected the suggestion of Prime Minister Ahmed
Ouyahia (himself a Kabyle) that the only way Algeria
could make Tamazight an official language on par with
Arabic was through a national referendum.
Given
their hostility to Islamism and their relatively
pro-Western, pro-democratic outlook formed through their
experience in local government councils called ârchs,
the Kabyles should be given ample consideration by
Washington. Under President Bush, the United States has
taken a more active role in pressing for democratization
and minority rights in the Middle East with the
assumption that more democratic and pluralistic
societies will not produce terrorists. Should
Washington view a degree of Kurdish autonomy in a
federal
Iraq
as in its interest, it should likewise consider the
possibility that a degree of Kabyle autonomy might be in
the best interest of both promoting stability in Algeria
and in defusing a possible ethnic conflict that neither
Algeria
nor Washington would want.
Algeria,
paraphrasing the words of the liberal Algerian
journalist Mohamed Benchicou, will have its April 2004
election out of the international spotlight. Aside from
scattered references in the French media and occasional
slight mention in the Anglophone press, Algeria’s
political future is really not on the radar screen for
many in the international community. Given the fact
that Algerian Islamic militants now constitute a clear
and present danger to the American homeland and to vital
American interests overseas, Washington can no longer
afford to continue its policy of benign neglect toward
Algiers. Even though President Bush did meet with
President Bouteflika following the September 11
terrorist attacks, Washington has still not done nearly
enough to promote a peaceful and pluralistic Algeria
that is at peace with itself. With European
intelligence agencies arresting anti-American Algerian
militants on a fairly regular basis, it is high time
that Washington ends its relatively hands-off policy
toward Algerian politics.
Jonathan Eric Lewis is a political analyst and
consultant specializing in minority rights in the
Middle
East.
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