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Doha Events 2011

Doha Events 2011

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Blocking roads or carrying out any act of violence or individual action will not help this case at all.
Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah

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G8’s last hurrah? Summitry evolves, not dead Monday, 30 May 2011 03:14

By alastair macdonald

The latest Group of Eight summit was “historic”, the moment for the great powers to rally their wealth and arms behind the Arab people and staunch a gap in the spread of “Western” values across the world.

Really? Or was it a pointless, costly absurdity, a vanity project for leaders of nations in decline, marginalised by the rise of China and other big, industrialising nations, for whom the forum founded in the 1970s is a neo-colonial throwback?

Some answers in that debate should emerge in the coming year when France, proud host of a summit in Deauville, hands the chair to the United States, where officials have been sceptical of the group’s utility.

The White House has not set a date for the 2012 G8 summit; it may all but merge into the Group of Twenty, which brings in China, India, Brazil and others and became Washington’s favoured global forum after President Barack Obama’s predecessor George W. Bush hosted the first G20 summit three years ago.

On Friday, however, after 24 hours of talk on the Normandy coast, it seemed U.S. attitudes to the smaller G8 might have been warmed by a summit that offered big credits to new Arab democracies and rallied Russia, an often awkward post-Cold War addition, to the cause of ousting Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi.

“This has actually been quite a good G8 and in many respects it has underscored what is best about the G8,” a senior official in the administration said. “We are strong proponents of the G20 as the premier forum for international economic coordination.

“But there is something about the G8 and a small group of leaders who deal with each other across a wide range of issues ... on a very regular basis ... It builds a strong relationship with them and it really came out here.”

The G8’s critics are far from convinced.

“The Deauville summit ... is a monumental waste of time and money,” British commentator Timothy Garton Ash wrote in the Guardian. “If the G8 did not exist today, no one would dream of inventing it. Its core business, the management of the global economy, cannot properly be discussed without the presence at the top table of countries like China, India and Brazil.”

Obama should focus on merging the G8 into the G20 and improving the functioning of that newer, larger forum, he said.

Yet among admirers, John Kirton of Toronto University, whose G8 Research Group tracks the forum’s effectiveness, said it was needed “now more than ever”. He compared its aid for Egypt and Tunisia to its role in Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

The calendar of the coming year’s events may be revealing.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, for whom such gatherings are welcome platforms as he campaigns for re-election, has set this year’s G20 for Cannes in November, six months after the G8.

Obama may prefer a G8 that is essentially a preparatory caucus for the G20 summit to held in Mexico -- last year Canada hosted both G8 and G20 summits on succeeding days.

One senior European official at Deauville said: “If you really want to make something happen in the world, you have to go to the G20.” But the G8 was a less formal “club of friends” where leaders spoke more freely. “It still has a role.”

The world has changed dramatically since the group began.

France hosted the first summit 36 years ago, when President Valery Giscard d’Estaing invited peers from the United States, Japan, Britain and West Germany to Rambouillet to seek consensus on surging global capital flows and soaring OPEC oil prices.

Once Italy and Canada had joined by the next year, 1976, the G7 accounted for two thirds of the world’s economic output. Even with Russia, added in 1998 in hopes of fostering its post-Soviet democracy, the G8 now has only about 40 percent of world GDP. China’s economy has surpassed all but that of the United States.

But Daniel Schwanen at Canada’s Centre for International Governance Innovation said: “You’re talking about very rich countries, with two thirds or more of the military power in the world ... That makes it still a credible and viable institution, and one that need not stand in opposition to the G20 at all.”

“The point is to get together and talk,” one French diplomat said in Deauville. “We know we have diverging views on many issues. Meetings at the highest level are a way of harmonising our positions, even if a decision does not emerge right away.”

European fondness for the club is not always shared.

David Bosco, writing for US magazine Foreign Policy, said: “There is a significant chance that this will be the last major G8 summit meeting. But this forum won’t bury itself; the Obama administration will have to make a point of it.

Reuters

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