“What are the range of options open to the United States, and
other powers, in the face of the large-scale violence that the Assad
regime has unleashed on the Syrian people?”
Reporters covering the Obama Administration’s foreign policy have
provided the answer: “the U.S. sees few good options in Syria” (Washington Post,
12 Feb 2012). Those living in a time of revolution, it has been said,
often don’t realize it. Washington does not seem to understand that
what is going on in the Middle East is a world-historical (not merely
regional) event.
Whatever is to be done or not done about Syria has to start with the
recognition that the U.S. must now devise a new foreign policy, or grand
strategy, toward the entire Middle East; nothing can make much sense
outside a new departure of that magnitude.
President George W. Bush’s response to the attacks of 9/11, 2011 was
to announce, and begin to carry out, a new American grand strategy of
immense scale and significance: nothing short of “The Transformation of
the Greater Middle East.” The autocrats, theocrats, colonels, and
kleptocrats would have to go. America had done all too much to enable
them for all too long; the U.S., Bush declared, must return to its roots
as a beacon for those searching for freedom and democracy. The first
step was to overthrow Saddam Hussein whose war and terror and
oil-corrupt regime was the linchpin of the region’s dysfunctional
culture. The toppling of Saddam had consequences: the first sign of the
Arab Spring was not in Tunisia in 2011, it was Lebanon’s Cedar
Revolution in 2005.
The U.S. had lifted a rock in Iraq, and a snake pit writhed out. It
would take five years of American travail in Iraq before Bush’s
steadfastness – in “the surge” gained a foothold for positive change.
In the process Bush and his new policy were reviled, the Democrats took
charge of the Congress in 2006, and Barack Obama took the presidency in
2008, proceeding to reverse the Bush strategy, most notably by signaling
that America would step back from supporting freedom and
democratization, and no longer intended to take a leading role in the
region.
But what the world has witnessed across the past year or more is
precisely “The Transformation of the Greater Middle East” erupting
across a confused, chaotic, and vicious array of forms. The Syrian
Revolution and Assad’s bestial attempts to suppress it are the most
vivid and potentially consequential phenomena of this world-historical
event.
The Arab Awakening of 2011 ignited the Middle East’s third civil war
in our time. The first, labeled by the U.S. “The War on Terror” could
in fact be traced to the fall of the Ottoman Empire and Caliphate and
was waged between those Muslim states in the region who were, and wanted
to be, members of the international system and radical Islamist
terror-using groups who rejected the very idea of the state as
un-Islamic and who aimed to destroy and replace the established regional
and world system of order.
The second civil war smoldered for countless generations but erupted
in 2006 in Iraq pitting Shia against Sunni. This war has continued in
various forms in Lebanon, Yemen, Bahrain and on other Sunni-Shia fronts.
Today’s third civil war has now transmogrified into a vast struggle
that contains elements of the first and second civil wars and is
conducted on two levels: Arab Spring freedom fighters versus the old
regimes and movements that want to suppress them – as do the Army and
the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt – and a larger war between Iran’s empire
of the ayatollahs and all the rest of the region. The revolution now
ripping through Syria is a struggle to overthrow the Iranian surrogate
dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad. If the rebels succeed, other links in
the Iranian archipelago of power, from western Afghanistan to the
Mediterranean where Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza rule, will
fracture. If the Syrian revolution is crushed – as Lebanon’s Cedar
Revolution was crushed – Iran’s theocratic empire will continue its
drive for hegemony over the entire region.
For all the attention given to Iran at present, its true significance
has not been fully appreciated; it is a terrorism-sponsoring theocracy
that has lodged itself both in the international system as a state yet
at the same time is a rogue entity that opposes world order at every
turn, squirming from one role into the other as suits its purposes. It
is ruled by an ideologically driven, apocalypse-tempted hierarchy,
unswervingly anti-semitic and relentlessly ever-closer to acquiring
long-range deliverable nuclear weapons.
Politically, practically, morally, the U.S. now has only two options:
to stay with the Obama approach of a reduced, reluctant, if wishfully
meliorative, policy – or to face the roaring reality that
“Transformation” is underway and if the U.S. does not return to steering
it, the outcome surely will be worse than ever before for the region
and international security as a whole.
Three categories call for American action: first, a full-court
diplomatic campaign in tandem with material measures to stabilize and
advance democratization in the places where Arab Spring already has
ousted the old regime and begun to build for the future: those in the
Maghreb and, most importantly, Egypt.
Second, to work calmly but firmly with the monarchies of the region
to carry forward transitions toward greater openness and responsiveness
to their peoples.
Third, most importantly and urgently, to recognize that the Iranian
quasi-empire must be deconstructed and its regime changed. Syria is the
linchpin, for if Assad’s regime can be taken down and replaced by a
democratizing process along the current Tunisian mode, then Iran’s
imperial archipelago can be broken, with Hezbollah next in line. In
this context, the Palestinian Authority and its treacherous deal-partner
Hamas must be seen for what they both are: variations on the old gang
systems that the Arab Spring has risen against; neither can expect to be
part of a truly transformed Greater Middle East.
Israel recognizes that Iran is shaken as never before: new sanctions
have sharper teeth; the economy is groaning; subversive actions have
rattled the turbans. This is the moment when even greater American and
international pressure should be piled on. To get that added boost, the
Israelis ramped up their rhetoric about striking Iran’s nuclear
facilities. This caused international alarm all right, but the wrong
kind, as American officials made it publicly clear that they opposed
such an attack, compelling Israel to consider that such a strike might
not get American backing after the fact. Similarly there have come
calls on the U.S. to negotiate because “Iran is ready to talk,” and
Obama is responding The record of many years however shows that the
Iranian dictatorship plays an exquisite game of “dictaplomacy”,
manipulating every such engagement to its advantage to calm fears
falsely and buy more time. The time to talk to Iran is when it sues for
peace.
With American re-involvement, considerable potential exists for
shaping an informal Saudi-Arab League-Turkish-UN coalition that can stop
the slaughter in Syria, oust Assad, and hasten the end of the Ayatollah
rule over Iran– as well as garner greater international support for
helping the Arab Spring come to full flower.
Charles Hill is the Brady-Johnson Distinguished Fellow in Grand
Strategy at Yale University and co chair of the Herb and Jane Dwight
Working Group on Islamism and the International Order, Hoover
Institution
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