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Dr. Walid Phares
Middle East Challenges to the Obama Administration
January 26, 2009
Since September 11, 2001, the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East
has been shaped by a new and dominant reality (the War on Terror), which
has been a Jihadi global campaign against democracies in many areas
around the world. Since the US and NATO intervention in Afghanistan in
2001, the challenges have been to maintain stability and freedom in that
country and in Iraq, as well as countering the expanding influence of al
Qaeda in Pakistan, the African Horn and beyond.
In addition, since the invasion of Iraq and the acceleration of the
nuclear program by the Iranian regime, the challenge coming from Tehran
is escalating. We've witnessed Iranian involvement in Lebanon with
Hezbollah and in Gaza with Hamas. So, in short, whatever problems the
Bush Administration has already confronted, the current administration
will have to address, but perhaps with more urgency.
Iraq
The issue is not the principle of withdrawal but what would replace the
Coalition and the ability of the Iraqi Government to resist al Qaeda and
Iran's influence. There is really no new data to process for the Obama
policy architects. If Iraq is ready, the redeployment will take place as
scheduled. But if the Iraqi institutions aren't ready, there will be an
al Qaeda return to the Sunni triangle and an Iranian penetration of
central and southern Iraq. Perhaps the bet of the new administration is
to strike a deal with the Iranians so that the exit from Iraq is smooth.
If this is the case, then the US redeployment will be subject to Iran's
conditions. And if so, one has to wonder what these conditions are and
what Tehran wants to impose on Washington in the region? Already one can
see the challenge, particularly in light of the Iranian race to achieve
nuclear armament.
Afghanistan
A new strategy in Afghanistan must be integrated into a regional
approach covering Afghanistan, Pakistan and India, all three under
democratic governments aimed at weakening terrorism. This is an
opportunity to isolate the radicals across the regional borders. But
that needs a structure that understands the ideological power of the
terror forces.
Syria/Lebanon
The Syrian regime is a strategic ally of Iran, not an extension of it,
as Hezbollah is to the Khomeinists. But Bashar's regime is implicated in
a terror campaign against the emerging Cedars Revolution in Lebanon.
Damascus has an ideological claim over Lebanon and that cannot be undone
without a massive reform of the Baathist regime. Also, Hezbollah, which
receives hundreds of millions of dollars from Tehran, has seized more
power in Beirut and further intimidated Lebanon's fragile democracy. The
question is how will the US Administration deal with Syria and Hezbollah
in the near future? If it wishes to cut a deal with the Syrian regime,
the price is clear, there are no secrets: It is Lebanon. If it wants to
engage Hezbollah, it will have to talk with the masters in Tehran, which
would bring Washington to square one in positioning towards Iran's
regime. The options regarding Lebanon and Syria are very limited and
just biding time is not a policy.
Israel/Palestinians
The Bush Administration said it would support the two state solution,
but Iran's allies in the region have obstructed the process. Can the
Obama Administration do better? It has two choices: either cut a deal
with Iran to tame Hamas or support Mahmoud Abbas in establishing the
state institutions. There are no magic solutions, but there will be
strategic choices to follow.
Conclusion
In the
end, the Obama response to all these challenges is going to be about who
the advisors and experts are and what are their plans. And if you
examine the situation closer -- you'd realize that the expert group
which will be tasked to help President Obama will come from or be
influenced by the Middle East Studies community. Which brings us back to
the state of this field, eight years after 9/11: Is this community ready
and able to provide the new president and his administration with the
appropriate advice?
About Dr. Walid Phares
Dr. Walid Phares is the Director of Future Terrorism
Project at the Foundation for the
Defense of
Democracies in Washington, a visiting scholar at the European Foundation
for Democracy and the author of the War of Ideas. Dr. Phares was one of the
architects of UNSCR 1559. He is also a Professor of Middle East
Studies at Florida Atlantic University and a contributing expert to FOX News.
Dr. Phares teaches Global Strategies at the National Defense
University. Professor Phares’
is the author of two critical books on the Islamofascist threat to Western
Civilization, "Future Jihad: Terrorist Strategies against the West ”
and "The War of Ideas: Jihadism
Against Democracy." |