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Barry Rubin
June is the Cruelest Month
May 29, 2009
April, wrote T.S. Eliott, is the cruelest month. But
for hopes of peace, freedom, and moderation in the
Middle East, June will play that role this year.
In Iran, Ahmadinejad backed by the spiritual guide
is about to be reelected. In Lebanon, a regime
backed by Iran and Syria is about to be installed.
It shouldn't be that way. Remember the famous sign
in the Clinton for President Headquarters back in
1992, which said, "It's the economy, stupid," as the
main issue? Well, in the Middle East the equivalent
sign would say, "It's the Islamist revolutions,
stupid."
And yet instead we see strategies based on a desire
to believe or do anything to avoid confronting this
great challenge, this uninvited battle that is sure
to take up the rest of our lifetimes and very
possibly much of this century's first half.
The head are very deep in the sand. For to fit into
the mainstream of Western analysis and strategy
about the Middle East, you must:
Pretend that a two-state solution is possible with a
mostly radical Palestinian Authority and a far more
extreme Hamas running Gaza, neither having done any
preparation for real compromise and a lasting peace.
Pretend that this solution-which isn't going to
happen--will solve all other problems, as if
personal and state ambition, ethnic conflict,
ideological battles, and all sorts of disputes
didn't exist in the region which have nothing to do
with this. Not to mention that fact that any
compromise peace would actually enrage large
elements of opinion and galvanize the Islamists into
even more violence.
Pretend that Iran's regime will be talked out of
having nuclear weapons by either the charm of
Western leaders or relatively limited sanctions when
Tehran already knows everything is a big bluff.
Pretend that Islamists can be moderated when they
think they're winning, believe themselves to be
following the will of the deity, and see daily proof
that their rivals are eager to make concessions.
Pretend that Syria can be wooed into changing course
when it is so dependent on its alliance with the
Iranian regime, thinks that it's on the winning
side, and tightening its control over Lebanon.
Pretend that Hizballah and Hamas will settle down
into moderation disciplined by the task of
governing, the same theory discredited by the
behavior of the PLO, Fatah, and the Palestinian
Authority over the last 16 years.
Ironically, much of the Western left seems to think
that empowering the most reactionary forces in the
world will somehow contribute to its vision of a
better world. Much of the right appears to believe
that this strategy will be pushed far enough to lead
to a grand sell-out of Israel.
But the West isn't so craven while its enemies
aren't so strategically flexible or tactically
clever. After all, both theories expect that the
radicals will meet the West part-way. It's
reminiscent of the expectations for Yasir Arafat and
the PLO. One side thinks they'll make a deal and
keep it; the other that they'll make a deal and
break it. In fact, they see no need to make a deal
at all. They'll do what they want and give not an
inch.
It would be a mistake to overestimate the naiveté of
Western governments but it might be an equal mistake
to overestimate their resolve. Consider the words of
the two Obama administration appointees to the
highest State Department posts focusing completely
on Middle East policy in their confirmation
hearings.
Jeffrey Feltman, to be assistant secretary of Near
East affairs explained:
"When you traveled around the [Middle East] five,
six, seven years ago, almost everywhere you went,
the first thing that came up was the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. When you travel around
today, what you are going to hear about is Iran."
But then he added:
"We want to address the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict in order to remove one of the tools that
Iran uses to distract the region from what Iran is
doing,"
From this, it sounds like, by his own testimony, his
policy is seven years out of date. Even he
acknowledged the paradox that Iran is a "spoiler" on
making progress. So if Iran, along with Syria, the
Gaza Strip regime (Hamas), the soon-to-be Lebanon
regime (Hizballah), and the main opposition groups
seeking power in every Arab country (Islamists) are
all spoilers, how are you going to "address" this
issue effectively? Especially if your
friends-especially the Saudis, Egyptians, and
others-won't do much to help?
Meanwhile, the nominee for assistant secretary of
state for South and Central Asian affairs, Robert O.
Blake, congratulated the Pakistani government for
fighting the Taliban, even while that regime is
quite happy to live with them and al-Qaida as long
as they stick to the Afghanistan-Pakistan border
area. "We do think that important progress is being
made."
Yes, it is: by the enemies of freedom, democracy,
and Western interests. Incidentally, Elliot's poem
was called which opens with the line about April is
entitled, "The Wasteland," which is what the Middle
East is going to become unless Western policies
really wake up and smell the coffins. |