
"375,000
Syrians have come to Jordan since March 2011, which is 6-7% of our population.
In American numbers, at that rate, this is 17-18 million people." The spillover effects of the Syria
conflict were very much on the mind of Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh
during a wide-ranging conversation over coffee in Washington last week. His government’s
focus for Syria was very much on finding a political transition which, he said,
"everybody realizes at this stage is the only game in town." His other primary preoccupation was to advance a narrative of successful reform following Parliamentary elections against my more cynical perspective.
On the problem of Syrian refugees, Judeh and I had little about which to disagree. Jordan has good
reason to be concerned about the impact of Syrian refugees on the Kingdom.
The flow from
Syria has been more intense than the wave of Iraqi refugees during the last decade: faster,
more concentrated, and with no end in sight. The early accommodations for a much smaller refugee flow have struggled to keep pace, and Jordanians are feeling the strain from hosting this massive influx (things have only gotten worse since this sharply reported FP account by Nicholas Seeley a few months ago). [[BREAK]]
Judeh presented at length the plight of the
Syrian refugees in the Kingdom, who often arrive in desperate conditions, fleeing fighting and
needing urgent medical care. For a
long time, he said, 500 to 700 people a night crossed the border. But now it is up to 3,000 to 5,000 a
night. Jordan never
established a refugee camp for Iraqi refugees, preferring that they disperse
through the cities, but has already established one for Syrians (and has plans
for a second). Conditions in that
camp have been grim during a harsh winter. And while there is a great
deal of "goodwill" in the international community, including substantial
pledges of humanitarian aid at the recent Kuwait donors crisis, the cold fact
is that the international community has failed to deliver needed assistance for
these refugees. Jordanian
officials estimate costs of nearly $500 million in 2013 in energy, food, water,
education, health and subsidies. They should get it.
The impact of the refugee flow and fears of militarized spillover give some urgency to Jordan’s efforts to find some solution. Foreign Minister Judeh repeatedly emphasized the goal of an inclusive political
transition agreement for Syria, and brushed aside questions about possible plans for arming rebels or no-fly zones. He
worried about the potential territorial breakup of Syria, which he described as
"a danger that we should avoid at all cost." He told me the same that he told several other interviewers: "for all intents and purposes this is a
civil war of a political nature," but the worst scenario would be that it
devolves into a true "ethnic sectarian civil war."
For Jordan, he insisted, "what is most important to us as a country
contiguous to Syria is to preserve the territorial integrity of Syria, to do
everything in our power to ensure that whatever transition takes place in Syria
is all inclusive." Judeh seemed encouraged by recent signals from Moaz al-Khatib,
head of the Syrian National Coalition, of a willingness to engage in talks, and
supportive of the ongoing efforts of United Nations Special Envoy Lakhdar
al-Brahimi. He couldn’t point to signs that the Assad regime was interested,
but emphasized again: "I think everybody realizes that at this stage the
political transition is the only game in town."
Our
conversation ranged over a wide range of issues besides Syria, of course. He emphasized yet again Jordan’s view
of the urgency of engaging on the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, and
emphatically dismissed any suggestions that Jordan wanted any role in the West
Bank other than one supporting the creation of a sovereign, independent and
territorially contiguous Palestinian state. (I joked that I should program my
recorder to automatically replay his rejection of Israeli ideas about the "Jordanian Option"
every six months.) He also emphasized the serious economic stakes
involved in Jordan’s ongoing discussions with Egypt over its failure to provide
promised levels of natural gas, upon which the Jordanian economy is highly
dependent.
But the lion’s share of our conversation following the discussion of Syria focused on Jordan’s domestic politics, which turned into a long, interesting and productive (if inconclusive) debate. As Judeh knew well, I’ve been publicly and privately skeptical about the extent and implications of Jordan’s reforms, after long years of watching royal promises of change fail to materialize. Why, I asked, should we expect these reforms to be any different from the repeated cycle of past empty promises, to significantly empower the elected Parliament or to meaningfully change the nature of monarchical authority?
Judeh
was keen to convince me that these reforms were different. He
stressed that Jordan had met the benchmarks it laid out for itself in the
reform process: revising the constitution, enacting relevant laws, establishing
an independent election commission and a constitutional court, and holding
elections. "This marks the end of
the constitutional phase of the reforms," he argued, and the beginning of a new
phase of consolidating Parliamentary government. He portrayed the process of government formation now
unfolding, in consultation with Parliamentary blocs, as an historic change. Now, he insisted, we would see the unfolding of a new culture of Parliamentary government and the crystallization of genuine political parties and blocs. Who could have imagined, he argued, that the King would go before Parliament and demand that it launch a "White Revolution"?
But why would this be any different than before, I pressed him? He acknowledged past failures, but argued that this time the reforms were irreversible, fully
embedded in the constitution and new institutions and fully supported by the
King. He argued that the new institutions and authorities embedded in the Constitution would prevent any relapse; I countered that the law hadn’t really prevented government by emergency law from 2001-2003. He pointed to the many new faces in Parliament and the high electoral turnout; I noted that the "new" Parliament selected as Speaker Saad Hayel Srour.. for the sixth time. He pointed to the high turnout and the genuinely impressive performance of the new Independent Election Commission; I pointed out the continuing controversy around the election law and gerrymandered districts, and the fragmented and conservative Parliament it produced. (For more on this, see my conversation with Yale’s Ellen Lust, who was in Jordan for the election.) And around it went.
The bottom line is that the Palace is clearly feeling its oats on reform after the election, and thinks it has a positive story to sell at home and abroad. Casual observers will likely be easily convinced by the narrative they are offering. Skeptics like me are going to want to see a lot more: the new institutions actually functioning to constrain executive power, the Parliament actually behaving like a Parliament, and so on. Judeh’s trump
card was that after all that had happened in the region, the overthrown regimes and wars and economic crises, "we are still here. We
must be doing something right."
Perhaps.