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Baghdad.
Beirut. Doha: Trade Talks Failure a Blow to US Strategy in Mideast
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
DIGG THIS
In addition
to being the capitals of three Middle Eastern countries, Baghdad
(Iraq), Beirut (Lebanon) and Doha (Qatar) have something else in
common, and its U.S. President George W. Bush's global policy. While
the violence taking place in Baghdad and Beirut is a direct consequence
of the collapse of Bush's Middle East policy and much of its geo-strategic
approach, the breakdown of the Doha round of trade talks is a reflection
of the failure of the Bush Administration to project US leadership
in the geo-economic arena. If Washington does not take immediate
steps to reevaluate and re-energize its role in global affairs,
then not only the United States but the entire international system
could be threatened.
Clearly, the
Doha Round was a way to link America's strategy to promote its interests
and values in the Middle East, the efforts to continue to liberalize
global trade and the US-led war on terrorism. In fact, one of the
reasons that the latest round of trade negotiations was launched
in the capital of one of the most prosperous economies in the Middle
East after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 was to demonstrate
that contrary to al-Qaeda's ideology, Islam and capitalism were
compatible, and that an economy like that of Qatar, committed as
it is to the principles of free trade, can thrive at the center
of the Arab Middle East.
Moreover, the
message coming out of the post-9/11 Doha meeting was that liberalizing
global trade which creates the conditions for economic growth in
the Third World could also be the most effective way to weaken the
appeal of Islamic radicalism. It was al-Qaeda and its terrorist
networks – and not the Middle East and the Muslim world – that were
not compatible with free markets and economic prosperity.
It is in this
context that we have to consider the collapse of the talks in Geneva
aimed at reaching a global market-opening agreement under the auspices
of the World Trade Organization. Yes, the breakdown in the talks
had to do with the technical and somewhat esoteric problems involving
farm subsidies and related trade policies and their intertwining
with domestic politics. But against the backdrop of the mess in
Iraq and Lebanon and the inability of the US and its allies to resolve
the crises there, the decision to shelve the five-year-old talks
to dismantle market barriers provided a very dramatic and even tragic
soundtrack to the current depressing Middle Eastern movie.
Indeed, the
original ambition of the Doha Round was to produce an agreement
by the end of 2004 and boost trade by as much as US$800 billion,
according to the World Bank. The bank has already scaled back its
prediction of a trade accord's value to as little as US$96 billion,
and the current deadlock would threaten even this kind of modest
gains. Estimates show that relatively open economies had a gross
domestic product more than seven times higher, and grew at a rate
more than eight times as fast, than the least open economies. Hence
the stalemate in the Doha Round will only make it more certain that
it would be impossible to lift out of poverty millions of people
in the Middle East (and elsewhere), ensuring that the environment
in that region would be conducive to promoting Osama bin Laden's
strategy of hatred and violence.
As most analysts
agree, there is a lot of blame to go around in trying to figure
out who was responsible for the collapse of the trade negotiations,
including the refusal of India and Brazil to cut Customs duties
in industrial goods and the resistance by the European Union to
cut its protective tariffs on commodity tariffs. But the main obstacle
to the agreement was the failure by political leaders in the major
economies to stand up to their respective agricultural lobbies.
From that perspective, the Bush administration has been certainly
guilty of pandering to American farmers by dispensing to them huge
subsidies.
But in the
previous global trade rounds, US officials recognized that America's
willingness to open its markets to foreign imports was not really
a form of concession but a necessary step to be taken by the driving
force in the multilateral trading system to ensure that it remains
open. After all, it is the American economy that ends up enjoying
the highest benefits from global free trade. Unfortunately, the
White House and Congress seem to be more inclined now to respond
to protectionist pressure than to pursue the kind of trade policy
that will benefit both the American and the global economy. And
after the White House loses its fast-track trade negotiating authority
next year, it will become even more difficult to push for trade
liberalization in Washington.
There is no
doubt that President George W Bush's political weakness at home,
resulting primarily from the growing costs of US policies in Iraq
and the Middle East, made it challenging for him to win domestic
support for adopting a more courageous stand in Geneva, which could
have prevented the collapse of the talks.
But
the irony is that this blow to the Doha Round and the new obstacles
to the process of free trade will make it even more difficult to
ignite economic growth in the Middle East. That could prove to be
a setback to the effort to deal with the core political problems
affecting Baghdad and Beirut, or for that matter, Gaza, Cairo and
Amman.
August
5, 2006
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is
Washington correspondent for the Business
Times of Singapore and the author of Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan). Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2006 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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