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Dialogue

WHY DIALOGUE FAILS IN CONFLICT ZONES; A LESSON FOR POLICY MAKERS

If the second US – IRAN dialogue too fails, what comes next? Dialogue has come forth as an important terminology in global politics, as the international community increasingly identifies its value as a conflict resolution method. Dialogue is a tool for initiating change and a means of maintaining order and stability.  The United Nations has championed dialogue, designating 2001 as the "Year of Civilizational Dialogue," with then-Secretary-General Kofi Annan emphasizing its importance for achieving lasting peace and prosperity.

 Dialogue isn’t designed for all circumstances and it isn’t just about talk. It can often lead to transformative actions. However rather than resolving conflicts, many dialogues merely manage them temporarily, postponing the phase of stability. Between 1946 and 2005 only 13.5 percent of formal conflicts ended in a peace agreement. The repeated collapse of peace efforts from DOHA TALKS to OSLO ACCORDS exhibits that failure is not accidental but structural.

Dialogue often fails not because of its irrelevance but due to structural, political and psychological barriers that policy makers consistently underestimate.

IR theories have varying views about failure of dialogue. Realists view dialogue as a zero-sum game especially in situations of power disparity, thus resulting in failure. Constructivists argue that the lack of common perception of social reality leads to failure of dialogue between rival nations. On the contrary liberals believe in dialogue through institutions but the failure of dialogue can also be caused due to weak institutions or economic interdependence misused as leverage. With regard to fundamentals a dialogic approach to IR often fails.

Why do intra-state peace negotiations seem to fail so often? The recurring failure of dialogue in conflict zones is not by chance. It displays a set of constraints that continuously undermine peace processes. In order to seek sustainable solutions the policy makers have to understand the ongoing dynamics at the background. A closer examination reveals the patterns of failure emerge in a repeated manner. A central reason for failure of dialogues in conflict zones is the asymmetry of power among rival states. The stronger state doesn’t feel the urge to make a peace deal and dialogue becomes a forced participation for the weak one. Lack of relative balance leads to failure of dialogue. The ongoing trend of multi-polarity creates a multi-layered struggle causing difficulty to find a unified partner for negotiation. This proliferation leads to development of mistrust; negotiations are viewed with suspicion with actors doubting the intentions. Furthermore the absence of credible enforcement weakens the application of peace treaty in practical world. Dialogues in the presence of spoilers – actors who benefit from conflict, not peace are already a fragile matter. Equally significant is the lack of inclusivity and exclusion of stakeholders, making the dialogue unstable. Peace talks being used as a tool for weaponization as in the case of ISREAL – GAZA conflict is an open threat to the complete peace process. Along with this the sole focus on peripheral issues can never eliminate the root cause, giving rise to conflict in the future as well as the meantime. Taken together these factors clarify that the failure of dialogue is rarely incidental.

In 2014, Yemen was referred to as one of the success stories of the Arab Spring, today, it is dubbed “the world’s newest failed state”. The conflict in YEMEN provides a complete scenario of repeated dialogue failures. Experts say that the transitional process failed due to gap in policymakers understanding of YEMEN. Applying the pre-conditions, all the dialogues between 1962 and 2013 have only interrupted rather than ended civil war in Yemen. Efforts such as STOCKHOLM AGGREEMNT were aimed to establish a ceasefire but couldn’t produce lasting peace. A key reason was the distorted nature of conflict involving multiple spoiler actors. The absence of strong enforcement weakened conformity. External involvement turned the conflict into war. These factors combined with mistrust and lack of cohesion made sure that the dialogue remains ineffective.

As seen in Yemen the failure of dialogue has metamorphosed war into a humanitarian crises. The inability of peace processes to succeed showcases the consequences; the war may resume or even intensify leading to continued suffering making it harder to initiate the peace process again. It results in the benefit of spoilers and the conflict spilling to a global level.

The perennial failure of table talks offers critical lessons for policymakers. The existing approaches to peacebuilding must be re-observed. Parties cannot negotiate what they refuse to acknowledge exists. Mutual recognition does not require agreement. It demands acknowledgment that the other side holds views sincerely. The credible commitment mechanisms must be looked over; parties that have been betrayed before, enter new negotiations expecting deception. Violence must be treated as a symptom and the treaty should focus on addressing the root causes. Exclusive processes create spoilers so inclusive design, hearing of marginalized voices and  bridging the gap between elites and the bottom-up must be kept in sight.

The challenge is not to abandon dialogue but to transform it. For policymakers the imperative is clear. Eventually the dialogue in conflict zones cannot make the grade in the absence of inclusivity, deep-rooted trust and genuine participation. Without these it will be a tool to sustain conflict, rather than resolving it – a lesson the policymakers can no longer ignore.