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Viewing cable 06PARIS846, DEPUTY SECRETARY'S MEETINGS WITH SENIOR GOF

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06PARIS846 2006-02-09 15:39 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL Embassy Paris
VZCZCXRO1533
OO RUEHFL RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHPA RUEHROV RUEHSR
DE RUEHFR #0846/01 0401539
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 091539Z FEB 06
FM AMEMBASSY PARIS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 4081
INFO RUCNFUR/DARFUR COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE
RUEHZK/ECOWAS COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE
RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE
RUCNIAD/IGAD COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE
RUEHAB/AMEMBASSY ABIDJAN IMMEDIATE 0853
RUEHUJA/AMEMBASSY ABUJA IMMEDIATE 0999
RUEHDS/AMEMBASSY ADDIS ABABA IMMEDIATE 0648
RUEHAE/AMEMBASSY ASMARA IMMEDIATE 0297
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING IMMEDIATE 1167
RUEHKH/AMEMBASSY KHARTOUM IMMEDIATE 0051
RUEHKI/AMEMBASSY KINSHASA IMMEDIATE 1227
RUEHNJ/AMEMBASSY NDJAMENA IMMEDIATE 0944
RUEHSA/AMEMBASSY PRETORIA IMMEDIATE 1028
RUEHYD/AMEMBASSY YAOUNDE IMMEDIATE 0791
RUEHTRO/USLO TRIPOLI IMMEDIATE 0031
RUEHIN/AIT TAIPEI IMMEDIATE 1292
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK IMMEDIATE 0641
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 PARIS 000846 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/08/2015 
TAGS: PREL PHUM PREF IV CD SU FR
SUBJECT: DEPUTY SECRETARY'S MEETINGS WITH SENIOR GOF 
OFFICIALS ON SUDAN, CHAD, AND COTE D'IVOIRE 
 
 
PARIS 00000846  001.2 OF 005 
 
 
Classified By: Ambassador Craig R. Stapleton.  Reasons 1.4b,d 
 
1.  (C) Summary:  The Deputy Secretary met separately on 
February 3 with Presidential Counselor for African Affairs 
Michel de Bonnecorse and Chief of Defense General Henri 
Bentegeat for exchanges on Sudan and Chad.  French 
interlocutors concurred AMIS should transition into a UN 
mission, while emphasizing an Abuja peace settlement was 
indispensable to UN engagement.  Bonnecorse and Bentegeat 
said the Darfur crisis had left Chad's President Deby 
isolated and vulnerable.  France recognizes Deby's failings 
but warns that Deby has no successor and his demise or 
departure could lead to civil war.  Bentegeat said France had 
emergency evacuation plans for the international community. 
He stressed that French troops would not fight in support of 
Deby.  Bonnecorse said France had engaged to encourage an 
AU-chaired 8 February meeting in Tripoli between Deby and 
Bashir which could result in a border-monitoring agreement 
involving some role for French forces.  Bentegeat said France 
was already engaged in aerial monitoring.  Bonnecorse asked 
about the possibility of postponing elections in Chad on the 
condition that Deby step down from power within one or two 
years.  He suggested Chad may break relations with Taipei, 
with implications for PRC positions on Darfur.  On Cote 
d'Ivoire, Bonnecorse feared the onset of civil war. 
Concerted international pressure -- sanctions and a robust 
UNOCI -- were needed to force the "fascist" Gbagbo to hold 
elections.  Bentegeat appealed for UNMIL reinforcement of 
UNOCI.  End Summary. 
 
2.  (C) The Deputy Secretary explained the U.S. approach on 
Sudan as building on the 2005 North-South Comprehensive Peace 
Agreement (CPA) as the cornerstone for a broader Sudan-wide 
peace that would encompass Darfur and the Beja region.  The 
Darfur crisis required efforts to ameliorate the humanitarian 
situation, to reinforce security through deepening AMIS 
capacity and readying the transition to a UN mission, and to 
bolster the difficult peace process in Abuja.  Despite an 
overall reduction in Darfur mortality rates, the situation in 
West Darfur continued to deteriorate with violence washing 
across the border with Chad and shaking up the regime of 
President Deby. 
 
Presidency Views: CPA stagnating, Darfur weakening Chad 
--------------------------------------------- ---------- 
 
3.  (C) Michel de Bonnecorse, Presidency Counselor for 
African Affairs, observed with regret that the original 
dynamic was gone from the CPA since the death of John Garang. 
 Salva Kir, Garang's successor, was less engaged, and the 
position of Vice President Taha, the SPLM's principal 
interlocutor, appeared to have weakened.  The impact of the 
Darfur crisis on Chad was France's immediate concern and 
Bonnecorse worried about the regional implications.  The 
effects of Darfur instability could radiate further into 
Central African Republic and also incite Libyan activity. 
 
4.  (C) Bonnecorse favored AMIS transition to a UN mission. 
To cover an interim AMIS funding gap of 160 million USD, he 
expected the EU to provide for a third of the needs, he hoped 
the USG would provide another third, and that other parties 
-- Canada and Arab states -- would cover the remainder.  In 
terms of AMIS and UN assistance, France preferred an 
EU-driven solution, though a NATO logistical and planning 
role was admissible.  Advancing the Abuja peace talks was 
indispensable to a UN transition, he asserted.  He understood 
the AU summit in Khartoum seemed to have energized the 
negotiations.  While only an observer at the Abuja talks, 
Bonnecorse said France would be available to help if the USG 
wanted. 
 
5.  (C) Bonnecorse asked whether Darfur parties may demand a 
reworking of the CPA in order to introduce a tripartite 
redistribution of wealth and power in lieu of the present 
 
PARIS 00000846  002.2 OF 005 
 
 
North-South accord.  Was the CPA at risk of unraveling? 
There was no serious risk in the view of the Deputy 
Secretary, who noted that the framework of the Abuja talks 
 
SIPDIS 
was closely mirroring the CPA structure of power-sharing, 
wealth-sharing, and security reform.  The security sector was 
especially thorny, since there could be no peace without 
dismantlement of the Janjaweed. 
 
Presidency Views: Defusing Chad-Sudan Friction 
--------------------------------------------- - 
 
6.  (C) France, for instance, could play an active role in 
addressing friction between Deby and Bashir, and Bonnecorse 
admitted there had been much French engagement in recent 
days.  He informed the Deputy Secretary that Deby and Bashir 
had now agreed to attend an 8 February meeting in Tripoli 
under the auspices of AU Chairman Sassou-Nguessou, and 
facilitated by Qhadaffi.  CAR President General Bozize and 
Chairperson Konare would also attend.  There were hopes to 
reach an accord to interdict proxy assistance by either party 
to either Darfur rebels or breakaway Chadian military 
elements, Bonnecorse said.  The fact that the AU would 
technically host, instead of Libya, was pivotal in Deby's 
decision to attend the meeting, according to Bonnecorse. 
 
7.  (C) In Tripoli Deby and Bashir would also broach 
monitoring of the border with Darfur.  France, he suggested, 
could make available aerial photography.  Probed by the 
Deputy Secretary about the French project to monitor the 
border, Bonnecorse underscored the surveillance would 
necessarily be incomplete, and would also involve Sudanese 
and Chadian parties.  Deby would only agree to the monitoring 
on condition that Bashir engaged regular Sudanese troops. 
Bashir however wanted to use Sudanese militias. 
 
Presidency Views: Deby at Risk, Chad could fracture 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
 
8.  (C) Deby faced serious problems in Chad which Darfur had 
exacerbated.  His position was extremely fragile and he had 
lost the support of at least half of the Zarghawa clan.  His 
clash with Sudan and his sparring with the World Bank left 
Deby deeply isolated, and France worried that it remained his 
last support.  Justifying French support, Bonnecorse warned 
Deby's departure would leave a vacuum that could lead to 
violent civil war, with three to four different ethnic groups 
ready to divide the territory, and Qhadaffi on the margins 
prone to a misstep.  Nonetheless, Deby would not collapse due 
to a military attack, Bonnecorse thought.  France meanwhile 
continued to advise Deby to renew dialogue with the World 
Bank and to go forward with the organization of fair and 
transparent elections in May, inviting international 
observers. 
 
9.  (C) Bonnecorse asked the Deputy Secretary about a recent 
report that the USG may be amenable to a prolongation of 
Deby's presidential mandate and the postponement of the 
elections on the condition that Deby agree to step down 
within 1-2 years.  The options, according to Bonnecorse, were 
either to force Deby to hold fair elections this spring -- in 
which Deby will handily triumph, Bonnecorse predicted --- or 
to support Deby for an agreed interim period.  France would 
not object to the latter scenario, Bonnecorse declared.  The 
Deputy Secretary said he was unaware of any USG discussion of 
that nature.  He said the USG was still trying to get a 
better sense of Deby's current viability.  Bonnecorse offered 
that France did not yet have much of a reading about possible 
successors, though a Zarghawa seemed likely.  He noted that 
this would be a bad sign considering their increasing 
radicalization.  Bonnecorse's deputy, Labriolle, dismissed as 
Zarghawa fantasizing the rumor that Mini Minawi wants to 
exploit the Darfur rebellion to take power in Chad. 
 
Presidency Views: Chad may break with Taipei 
 
PARIS 00000846  003.2 OF 005 
 
 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
10.  (C) Continued USG and EU pressure on Khartoum was 
imperative, the Deputy Secretary said, especially on behalf 
of CPA implementation.  He acknowledged French ability to 
contribute, particularly with Chad, and thanked Bonnecorse 
for efforts in support of the February 8 Tripoli meeting and 
the potential agreement on border monitoring.  Chad, Libya 
and Eritrea all exercised influence on Darfur rebels.  He 
suggested France and the USG could work together on Libya and 
noted that the PRC has some leverage with Eritrea. 
Bonnecorse commented, without elaborating, that Chad may look 
into the option of breaking its relationship with Taiwan. 
(Comment:  The unstated implication was that the decision 
could alter PRC positions on Darfur.) 
 
Presidency Views: Cote d'Ivoire and Civil War 
--------------------------------------------- 
 
11.  (C) Bonnecorse stated France believed Cote d'Ivoire was 
on the brink of civil war.  Divisions were profound and 
hatred ran deep between extremists in the camps of Gbagbo and 
the Force Nouvelles.  It was a miracle, he said, that civil 
war had been averted, thanks in large part to the strong 
engagement of the UN and the AU.  Presidential elections 
appeared the only viable exit strategy and the only hope for 
reconciliation.  However, the international community -- the 
AU, the Security Council, and the P-5 -- would have to deepen 
its engagement in order to meet the 31 October target. 
Sanctions, coupled with a more robust UNOCI, were the chief 
counter to slippage on the election calendar.  Otherwise, 
Cote d'Ivoire would degenerate further and become like 
Liberia in the 90's.  Bonnecorse branded Gbagbo a fascist, 
who commanded only a minority of the population and would 
lose in elections.  Gbagbo, like all fascists, employed 
street agitators, armed thugs, and targeted propaganda.  The 
international community must never give the impression of 
vacillation. 
 
MOD: Yes on AMIS Transition, but a Hard Chore 
--------------------------------------------- 
 
12.  (C) Concurring with the Deputy Secretary's analysis, 
General Bentegeat, Chief of Defense, declared that France 
shared the USG view on the need for AMIS transition into a UN 
mission, noting the continuing financing challenges for AMIS, 
whose budget will run out end March.  The Deputy Secretary 
observed that the USG budgetary processes, like those of the 
EU, were geared toward UN peacekeeping.  General Bentegeat 
observed that AMIS had patent weaknesses, namely in terms of 
intelligence, logistical planning, and transportation; the 
chain of command was especially poor.  Perhaps a NATO role 
would be effective but to only a limited degree, he 
suggested, adding that AMIS also needed technical advisers 
"in the right places" to establish order. 
 
13.  (C) The General judged the transition to a UN mission 
would be challenging.  The General averred, speaking from 
personal experience, that UN peacekeepers, when operating in 
the absence of a peace accord and without a clearly defined 
mission, were "absolutely ineffective."  Hence, achieving 
success at the Abuja talks should be the top priority.  Given 
notional projections of a 20,000-large force for Darfur, the 
General added that the UN would also be hard put to find 
adequate peacekeepers to deploy, even if current AMIS troops 
took part.  Sudanese President Bashir's rejection of 
non-African peacekeepers was a further complicating factor, 
he observed.  The Deputy Secretary said he had urged Sudanese 
VP Taha to look at a UN deployment as less problematic for 
Khartoum than a continued worsening of the Darfur crisis and 
consequent international opprobrium.  There could also be 
benefits, he suggested, from joint-integrated units comprised 
of government, SPLA and potentially SLA troops operating 
under UN oversight.  Such units would have better chances to 
 
PARIS 00000846  004.2 OF 005 
 
 
reintegrate Darfur rebels than standard Sudanese military. 
At the same time, their deployment would enable the 
government somewhat to reestablish sovereignty over Darfur. 
 
MOD: Chad at Risk 
----------------- 
 
14.  (C) General Bentegeat said France provided some 
assistance to refugee camps in Chad and through support for 
NGOs.  He called the French military role minor, apart from 
helping with transportation between N'djamena and Abeche.  By 
all reports, the humanitarian situation near the border was 
"very bad."  French forces remained vigilant, worried at the 
potential for a surge in cross-border refugees that would 
exceed Chadian capacity.  However, the chief French concern 
was the existence of an ongoing Chadian rebellion. 
 
15.  (C) The Chad-Sudanese relationship remained "conflicted 
and confused," the General commented.  The cross-border 
population lacked any national identity apart from their 
particular ethnic group.  In his measured response to the 
Darfur crisis, Deby, a Zarghawa, had cut himself off from his 
own ethnic group, and now was threatened by 2,000 armed 
Zarghawa rebels based in Darfur, equipped by disparate 
Sudanese parties.  (Note:  Bentegeat described Deby as a true 
citizen of Chad, unlike other Zarghawa; he was trained in 
France and spoke French, unlike his clansmen.)  The Darfur 
risk was not the main threat however to Deby.  France worried 
more about a possible coup in Chad, given the endemic 
corruption of Deby's Zarghawa entourage.  France had decided 
to reinforce its garrison in N'djamena (now 1 battalion), who 
would be prepared to evacuate the approximately 3,000 foreign 
citizens through Cameroon in the event of upheaval. 
 
16.  (C) Deby had strengthened his position along the border 
in the last month and his troops were able to repulse any 
attack to the north of Abeche, the General judged, but the 
southern border with the Central African Republic would be 
more difficult.  French forces moreover were conducting 
aerial patrols along the Darfur border.  Deby's regime was 
most vulnerable to a coup in N'djamena where his allies are 
corrupt, and there is dissatisfaction over his recent 
alliance with the Darfur rebels.  Chadian troops were amassed 
alongside Darfur, and would have difficulty responding to 
threats to the oil fields in the south.  The General did not 
consider Libya a major threat and noted Qhadaffi's 
willingness to serve as an intermediary between Deby and 
Bashir.  Qhadaffi of course was capable of destabilizing 
Chad, however, Deby could easily retaliate in kind, the 
General asserted, calling the relationship a "balanced game." 
 Although anti-Deby rebels were divided into four different 
cells, they were nonetheless capable of a "decisive victory" 
through a coup in N'djamena, he claimed. 
 
17.  (C) Deby had lived amid uncertainty for years.  He could 
be assassinated in N'djamena at any time, General Bentegeat 
suggested, or he could survive through the full term of 
another presidential mandate.  His health was also poor and 
the General found him to be visibly tiring toward the close 
of a 90 minute meeting together in January.  France, he 
assured the Deputy Secretary, had no illusions concerning 
Deby.  "We know his weaknesses" and Deby "is not a good 
President."  However, France sees no other alternative to 
Deby in the near future.  France does not support the regime, 
the General stressed, and French troops will not fight 
alongside Chadian troops.  France only has a military 
cooperation agreement with Chad, not a defense accord. 
 
18.  (C) The Deputy Secretary cited SRSG Pronk's concern that 
instability in Chad, including the possible overthrow of 
Deby, could exacerbate violence in Darfur and incite attacks 
against refugee camps.  He asked how France would react in 
such circumstances.  General Bentegeat responded that French 
assets in the region were not that strong, but that France 
 
PARIS 00000846  005.2 OF 005 
 
 
would react, as appropriate, in support of refugees in Chad, 
but he could not foresee French intervention within Sudan. 
 
MOD:  UNMIL should help UNOCI 
----------------------------- 
 
19.  (C) The Deputy Secretary expressed USG support for the 
French role in efforts to stabilize Cote d'Ivoire.  Bentegeat 
said France wanted to be working along with the international 
community there, rather than on the front line.  The General 
appealed for the USG to help by supporting temporary troop 
transfers from UNMIL in Liberia to UNOCI.  Such support would 
be consistent with past USG leadership in encouraging the UN 
to look to regional reinforcement and management of UN 
missions.  The French believed that great progress had been 
made on Liberia and the situation was certainly better than 
in Cote d'Ivoire. 
 
 
Participants 
------------ 
 
20.  (U) Meeting at Elysee Palace: 
 
The Deputy Secretary 
Ambassador Stapleton 
Michael Matera, D Executive Assistant 
Taiya Smith, D Special Assistant for Africa and European 
Issues 
Richard Mills, D Senior Advisor for Public Affairs 
Greg D'Elia, Embassy Africa Watcher 
 
Michel de Bonnecorse, Counselor for African Affairs 
Jacques Champagne de Labriolle, Charge de Mission 
Bernard Diguet, Conseiller Technique 
Interpreter 
 
Meeting at Ministry of Defense: 
 
The Deputy Secretary 
Ambassador Stapleton 
EUR PDAS Kurt Volker 
Michael Matera, D Executive Assistant 
Taiya Smith, D Special Assistant for Africa and European 
Issues 
Richard Mills, D Senior Advisor for Public Affairs 
Christine Davies, D Special Assistant for Economic and 
Development Issues 
Greg D'Elia, Embassy Africa Watcher 
 
General Henri Bentegeat, Chief of Defense 
MG Christian Falzone, Deputy Chief of Staff 
Jean-Marie Magnien, Diplomatic Adviser 
MG Patrick de Rousiers, Head of Euro-Atlantic Division 
Col. Charles Deleris 
 
21.  (U) Message cleared by the Office of the Deputy 
Secretary. 
 
SIPDIS 
 
22.  (U) Minimize considered. 
 
 
Please visit Paris' Classified Website at: 
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/eur/paris/index.c fm 
 
Stapleton