Tunisia: Joint letter to Biden to press Saied for restoration of democracy

US former diplomats and foreign policy experts, including government officials, former US ambassadors, and MENA analysts say Tunisian President Kais Saied’s coup against democracy threatens the foundations of the US-Tunisia relationship

The letter stressed that the US should not be accomplice to Kais Saied’s dictatorial consolidation in Tunisia.

The US diplomats urged Biden that any additional forms of economic assistance, including Millenium Challenge, should be given only upon completion of the concrete institutional steps specified here.

On 3 March 2022, 50 experts, including government officials, former US ambassadors, and MENA analysts, sent a letter to US President Joe Biden urging him to increase U.S. efforts to help Tunisia reverse its rapid slide back into authoritarianism.

“The absence of a strong US reaction to Saied’s assault on democracy may have encouraged him to press forward on his destructive path. We now urge your admin … to press President Saied to take concrete steps to return Tunisia to democratic governance,” the letter read.

In the letter sent to the US president on Thursday, the ex-diplomats and experts, including three former envoys to Tunisia, called on Biden to press Saied to “take concrete steps to return Tunisia to democratic governance”.

Otherwise, the US should apply conditions to its assistance to the country, including bilateral aid and loan guarantees, as well as support for loans from international financial institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the letter said.

“Saving Tunisia’s democracy is ultimately up to Tunisians, but the United States should do whatever it can to help, both to protect U.S. interests and to uphold democratic values,” said the letter, led by the Project on Middle East Democracy.

‘Saving Tunisia’s democracy is ultimately up to Tunisians, but the United States should do whatever it can to help’

Earlier this month, Saied cemented his grip on power by dissolving the Supreme Judicial Council – the body that deals with judicial independence – and granting himself control over the selection and promotion of judges.

The move came months after he suspended parliament and assumed executive powers in a move seen by critics as a coup.

In addition to freezing parliament, he also shut down the country’s independent National Anti-Corruption Authority and sidelined the Independent High Authority for Elections.

A decision to stop assistance to Tunisia would likely have serious ramifications for the north African nation, which is heavily in debt and reliant on nearly $7bn in loans to fund its budget.

Tunis and the IMF are in preliminary talks, with an eye on a potential multibillion-dollar rescue deal for an economy battered by the Covid-19 pandemic over the past several years.

While many US lawmakers criticized Saied’s moves and called on Biden to denounce them, the administration’s response has so far been filled with ambiguity.

Washington has urged Saied to restore the country’s parliamentary democracy, but stopped short of calling the power grab a coup.

The US has supported the country with infusions of aid, contributing more than $1.4bn evenly spaced out between economic and security assistance since the Arab Spring.

The United Nations Agency for International Development (USAID) has also sent nearly $685m to Tunisia since 2011, and that support has continued unabetted.

In December, when Saied announced a political “roadmap”, the State Department issued a statement welcoming the news and saying it remained “committed to the U.S.-Tunisia partnership”.

In their letter, the experts noted that the roadmap lacked detail, transparency, or input from other Tunisian political actors.

“Far from being a path back to democracy, the roadmap extends Saied’s unchecked power through at least the end of this year,” they said.

“Saied’s reversal of Tunisia’s hard-won democratic gains threatens the foundations of the strong post-2011 U.S.-Tunisia relationship.”

The text of the joint letter:

President Biden Must Help Reverse Tunisia’s Authoritarian Slide

The Honorable Joseph R. Biden
President of the United States of America
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President:

During the Summit for Democracy you convened in December, you rightly noted: “As we continue to work at home to bring the United States closer to what we call a ‘more perfect union,’ we’re doubling down on our engagement with and support of democracies around the world.” This principle is driving your efforts to lead the free world in defending Ukrainian democracy against Russian aggression. Yet Ukraine is not the only country facing grave threats to its democracy, which is why we now write to urge your administration to significantly increase U.S. efforts to help Tunisia reverse its rapid slide back into authoritarianism. 

Since President Kais Saied’s power grab on July 25, 2021, he has effectively imposed one-man rule on Tunisia, securing unchecked control over the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government. He has unconstitutionally frozen parliament, shut down the independent National Anti-Corruption Authority, dissolved the Supreme Judicial Council, sidelined the Independent High Authority for Elections (ISIE), and disregarded the country’s prized 2014 democratic constitution. In December, in response to domestic and international pressure, Saied finally announced a political “roadmap” for the period ahead. The roadmap, however, lacked important detail and was produced unilaterally, without transparency or input from other Tunisian political and civic actors. Far from being a path back to democracy, the roadmap extends Saied’s unchecked power through at least the end of this year. Saied’s other anti-democratic actions include prosecuting citizens—some in military trials—for criticizing the government, using police brutality against peaceful protesters, and drafting a restrictive new NGO law. ​​

While many Tunisians initially welcomed Saied’s power grab in the hope that he would resolve the country’s economic malaise and increasing political dysfunction, that support has steadily decreased as months have passed. Saied has failed to provide a serious plan to address the economic crisis, and he has refused to work with Tunisia’s political parties or civil society (including the Nobel Peace Prize-winning National Dialogue Quartet) to overcome Tunisia’s challenges. A January 2022 poll indicates that pessimism about the country’s future has nearly doubled since July. 

After the 2011 revolution, the U.S.-Tunisia relationship flourished, driven by the recognition that a democratic Tunisia is in the interest of the United States. As you outlined in your speech during the Summit, democracy is the best way to “unleash human potential and defend human dignity and solve big problems.” Democratic countries make better diplomatic and trading partners, and they are more effective at resolving crises and providing security and stability. It is this understanding that led the United States to invest in Tunisia’s democratic transition, designating the country a Major Non-NATO Ally, strengthening security cooperation, providing billions in loan guarantees, increasing bilateral foreign aid tenfold, supporting Tunisian and U.S.-based NGOs, and growing bilateral trade over the past decade, including a 45 percent increase in foreign direct investment from the United States. Saied’s reversal of Tunisia’s hard-won democratic gains threatens the foundations of the strong post-2011 U.S.-Tunisia relationship. They also pose serious risks to Tunisia’s stability, as Tunisia’s democratic transition had helped it become an important bulwark against terrorism and insecurity in North Africa. 

Unfortunately, we fear that the absence of a strong U.S. reaction to Saied’s assault on democracy may have encouraged him to press forward on his destructive path. We now urge your administration, in this Year of Action on democracy, to press President Saied to take concrete steps to return Tunisia to democratic governance. As an incentive, we recommend that your administration back additional economic support for Tunisia only upon the completion of those steps. They should include the quick return of a freely elected legislative body; the reinstatement and empowerment of independent bodies including the Supreme Judicial Council and the National Anti-Corruption Authority; and the protection of political pluralism and freedom of association, speech, and the media. This conditionality should apply to all forms of additional assistance, including new bilateral aid and loan guarantees, the Millennium Challenge Corporation compact, and support for loans from international financial institutions.

Such an approach of offering incentives for progress—particularly if done in close coordination with other democratic allies and international financial institutions—would demonstrate support for the Tunisian people while encouraging urgently needed moves to protect democracy. We also encourage your administration to work with Congress to condition U.S. security assistance on the Tunisian government’s ending trials of civilians in military courts and ensuring full accountability for instances of police brutality. Saving Tunisia’s democracy is ultimately up to Tunisians, but the United States should do whatever it can to help, both to protect U.S. interests and to uphold democratic values. 

Sincerely,

Ambassador Jake Walles, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia, 2012–2015, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Ambassador Robin Raphel, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia, 1998–2000

Ambassador John T. McCarthy, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia, 1991–1994

Ambassador Cameron Hume, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Algeria, 1997–2000

Ambassador Michael McFaul, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Russia, 2012–2014

Ambassador William Taylor, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine, 2006–2009

Ambassador James B. Cunningham, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan, 2012–2014

Ambassador Kurt Volker, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to NATO, 2008–2009 

Ambassador Stephen Seche, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Yemen, 2007–2010

Ambassador Patrick Theros, Ret.
U.S. Ambassador to Qatar, 1995–1998

J. Brian Atwood
Administrator, United States Agency for International Development, 1993–1999

Ambassador Mark P. Lagon, Ret.
Friends of the Global Fight Against AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria

Elliott Abrams
Council on Foreign Relations

Anne-Marie Slaughter
New America

Michele Dunne
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Jim Kolbe
U.S. Congressman, 1985–2007

Carl Gershman
Former President, National Endowment for Democracy

Kenneth Wollack
Chairman, National Endowment for Democracy

Larry Diamond
Stanford University

Thomas Carothers
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Nicole Bibbins Sedaca
Freedom House

Stephen McInerney
Project on Middle East Democracy

Elisa Massimino
Georgetown University Law Center

Stephen Grand
Network for Dialogue

Amy Hawthorne
Project on Middle East Democracy

Eric Bjornlund
Democracy International

Tom Hill
Former Senior Professional Staff, House Committee on Foreign Affairs

Daniel Brumberg
Georgetown University Democracy and Governance program

Sarah Yerkes
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Charles Dunne
Arab Center Washington DC

Monica Marks
New York University Abu Dhabi

Shadi Hamid
Brookings Institution

Mohamed Soltan
The Freedom Initiative

Ramy Yaacoub
Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy

Andrew Albertson
Foreign Policy for America

Kate Seelye
Middle East Institute

Nancy Okail
Center for International Policy

Seth Binder
Project on Middle East Democracy

Mai El-Sadany
Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy

Intissar Fakir
Middle East Institute

Sharan Grewal
College of William & Mary

Peter Mandaville
George Mason University

Steven Heydemann
Smith College

Mieczysław P. Boduszyński
Pomona College

Nader Hashemi
University of Denver

Juan Cole
University of Michigan

Stephen J. King
Georgetown University

John P. Entelis
Fordham University

I. William Zartman
School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University

John L. Esposito
Georgetown University