Tuesday, June 23, 2015

The Middle East is in strategic retreat By Farid El Khazen(DAILY STAR)

The Middle East is in strategic retreat

By Farid El Khazen

Since the downfall of the Ottoman Empire nearly a century ago, changes affecting

the Middle East have largely originated outside the region.

Only recently did the Arab Spring reverse this pattern.

Momentous developments have reshaped the course of Middle Eastern politics

since 2011. The Arab state system is now dysfunctional, as are a number of

regimes and countries – Syria, Libya, Yemen and Iraq. The Arab-Israeli conflict

has lost its centrality, particularly since the collapse of the last major attempt to

bring about a comprehensive settlement to the conflict in 2000. The only course

of action gaining momentum involves the ongoing negotiations between

Washington and Tehran. Turkish interventionist politics have also been on the

rise, reflecting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ambitions. Iran’s active

involvement in regional affairs dates back to the early 1980s, with both it and

Turkey resorting to “imperial” impulses in the region.

Amid these changes, U.S. foreign policy has seemed static. This is a cause for

concern for Arab leaders, especially in Gulf Cooperation Council countries.

Established in 1981 with U.S. encouragement and support in response to Iranian

expansionism, the GCC stands on shaky ground today, as the United States and

Iran may be on the verge of concluding a nuclear deal.

Reacting to the 9/11 attacks over a decade ago, the George W. Bush

administration embarked on hasty wars and made multiple blunders in Iraq

following the toppling of Saddam Hussein’s regime. By the time U.S. forces

withdrew in 2011, Iraq regressed not only to a country characteristic of the old

Middle East, but to its darkest ages. The Obama administration embraced an

entirely new approach: no military intervention in the region, irrespective of the

costs incurred because of Washington’s inaction toward the region’s fate and that

of its people being slaughtered by extremist Islamist groups.

The Arab-Israeli conflict today no longer involves Arabs and Israelis – it mainly

involves Palestinians and Israelis. Remnants of the Cold War era are confined to

the Syrian crisis. Contrary to the mid-1970s, when Arab countries brandished the

“oil weapon,” instigating a global energy crisis which crippled the economies of

major industrialized countries, Arab countries today are a spent force. They are

capable of doing more harm to each other than to outsiders. As for the “war on

terrorism,” Washington can live with terrorism as long as it remains far away

from its shores.

Tested in Egypt after 2011, the Muslim Brotherhood in power was in tune with

U.S. and even Israeli interests. The authoritarian measures of the Islamist regime

were harshest inside Egypt, while the Brotherhood’s foreign policy was highly

pragmatic. For Washington, this is what truly mattered.

Arab and American priorities are far apart and disputed issues are no longer clear-

cut as they were in previous years. Syria and Iraq are the most obvious examples

of the gaping void between Washington’s conflicting agendas and those of state

and nonstate actors engaged in armed conflicts. The complexity is amplified by

the fact that the deepest divide in the region is not over well-defined political

issues but is being driven by sectarianism. The rift between Arab states, notably

in the Arab East and the Gulf, seems beyond repair.

In addition, the traditional dual pillars of U.S. policy in the Middle East – secure

access to oil resources and Israel’s security – have changed. Oil has lost its

strategic significance in comparative terms with the discovery of new alternative

energy sources. U.S. dependency on Middle East oil is at its lowest level since the

mid-1970s.

As for Israel, it is safe and strong, surrounded by crumbling Arab states. If in the

past concern for Israel’s “right to exist” had any significance, today it is the

survival of Israel’s neighbors that is at stake, while Israeli Prime Minister

Benjamin Netanyahu assumes the right to dictate policy in Washington.

Moreover, Iran may be changing status, from foe to friend, or at least from evil to

a lesser evil. The U.S. may not win Iran to its side but nor will it lose Iran’s Arab

neighbors, who do not have many alternatives to maintaining good relations with

Washington.

Since World War II, U.S. presidential doctrines, from the Truman to the Reagan

Doctrine, have focused on the protection of Middle Eastern allies, in line with the

objective of containing the Soviet Union. By contrast, the Obama Doctrine,

outlined in a recent New York Times interview, highlighted the responsibility of

Gulf states to attend to their domestic problems and shoulder the burden of facing

terrorist groups. Yet the U.S. will continue to honor commitments to defend its

allies when necessary, as confirmed by Obama in a recent Camp David meeting

with Gulf leaders.

This is not sufficiently reassuring to Gulf leaders when Obama seems convinced

of the merits of normalizing relations with Iran. The nuclear issue on its own is

less significant for Gulf leaders than Iran’s growing influence throughout the

Middle East, which is being pursued through “conventional,” not nuclear, means.

Arab leaders have yet to adapt to the changing nature of Middle Eastern politics

in an age of internally generated Arab upheavals, which many seem to regret.

They must also adapt to the reality of the declining vital interests of major powers

in a Middle East that is losing its strategic importance both as a regional order and

in its capacity for mischief.

Farid El Khazen is a member of the Lebanese Parliament and a professor of

politics at the American University of Beirut. He is the author of several books on

Lebanese and Arab politics.

He wrote this commentary for THE DAILY STAR.

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