http://rightweb.irc-online.org/rw/4009
Right Web | Analysis |
Is Washington Being Sidelined on the Middle East?

Leon Hadar | February 20, 2007

IRC Right Web
rightweb.irc-online.org

Once upon a time, an American president would have been a leader in 
the effort to bring peace between Israel and its neighbors, since, 
after all, such reconciliation would bring stability to the Middle 
East and serve long-term U.S. geopolitical interests.

In that context-with the struggle over the Holy Land at the core of 
the Mideast conflict-finding ways to end the dispute between Israelis 
and Palestinians would be central. In the past, the working 
assumption in Washington and in Jerusalem was that as part of any 
Israeli-Arab process, the occupant of the White House would, at some 
point, have no choice in the negotiations but to exert pressure on 
its ally in Jerusalem to make the necessary concessions to the Arab 
side.

But recently the U.S. president seems to be unable or unwilling to 
play the role assigned to him in that old Mideast script. Take the 
recent diplomatic coup achieved by Saudi Arabia when it succeeded in 
brokering a deal between the two leading Palestinian factions, 
allowing Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah 
party to join a government headed by the radical group Hamas.

The accord not only brings an end to the bloody fighting between 
Fatah and Hamas, but also creates conditions-like setting the stage 
for overcoming Hamas' refusal to recognize Israel- that are more 
conducive for restarting negotiations between Palestinian and Israeli 
officials. Now, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert could hold direct 
talks with President Abbas as the legitimate representative of the 
Palestinian Authority.

But while America's Arab allies, members of the European Union (EU), 
and Russia have welcomed the Saudi-brokered deal, Bush administration 
officials have expressed wariness and have given it the diplomatic 
cold shoulder. In fact, the lack of diplomatic progress during 
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's trip to the Middle East was a 
direct result of Washington's refusal to back negotiations between 
Israel and a Palestinian government that includes Hamas.

An even more dramatic sign that Washington is refusing to play its 
old role has been the diplomatic pressure it has been exerting on the 
Israeli government to refrain from opening a diplomatic dialogue with 
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus.

Indeed, according to reports in the Israeli press, Assad has sent the 
Israelis diplomatic messages expressing interest in negotiating a 
peace accord that would include recognition of and diplomatic ties 
with Israel in exchange for the return of the Israeli-occupied Golan 
Heights. The proposal has been taken seriously in Israel and has been 
debated by members of the Israeli political elite and public. But the 
Bush administration has argued that Israeli negotiations with Syria 
would reward a regime accused of cooperating with Iran to challenge 
U.S. interests in the Middle East. There is little doubt that the 
hostile U.S. response tipped the balance in Jerusalem in favor of 
those who oppose talks with Syria.

The current role that Washington seems to have taken on vis-à-vis the 
Arab-Israeli peace process, including its skeptical reactions to 
Saudi mediation in Palestine and to the Syrian proposal, suggests 
that the old script has ceased to reflect current foreign policy 
realism and has acquired an air of surrealism.

In a way, the change demonstrates an erosion of U.S. influence in the 
Middle East, which is a direct result of the implementation of the 
neoconservative agenda that has led to the disastrous political and 
military situation in Iraq. These policies have produced a series of 
developments that counter the neocon goal of attaining hegemony in 
the region, including the emergence of Iran as a regional power, the 
growing tensions between Sunnis and Shiites, the failure of Israel to 
dislodge Hezbollah from southern Lebanon, the electoral victory of 
Hamas, and Turkey's increasing impatience with U.S. policy.

It's not surprising that changes in the alignment of forces in the 
Middle East make it more difficult for the United States to use its 
military and diplomatic power to affect policy outcomes in the 
region. After all, the status and success of the United States as the 
indispensable mediator between Israelis and Arabs was tied directly 
to its ability and willingness to pursue that costly task during the 
competition with the Soviet Union (the 1979 Egyptian-Israeli peace 
accord) and after the first Gulf War (the 1991 Madrid Peace 
Conference, which aimed to jump start peace negotiations between 
Israel and its neighbors).

There is a direct correlation between the rising U.S. push for 
hegemony in the Middle East and mounting anti-American sentiments 
there-a situation that emphasizes U.S. ties with Israel. Yet these 
ties make it less likely that Washington would be willing to 
challenge Jerusalem's policies, further eroding the U.S. position as 
an "honest broker" in the eyes of many Arabs.

Now that the cost of the U.S. drive for power in the region is 
producing countervailing pressures at home and abroad, U.S. capacity 
and determination to advance the Arab-Israeli peace process has been 
weakened and has created a diplomatic vacuum in the Middle East that 
is gradually being filled by regional- and outside-players. The 
diplomatic role that Saudi Arabia has played in mediating the 
intra-Palestinian conflict parallels its discussions with Iran to 
stabilize Lebanon, its move to co-opt Syria into the Arab-Sunni camp, 
and its support for the Arab-Sunnis in Iraq.

Similarly, U.S. failures in Iraq, Lebanon, and Palestine have created 
disincentives for Washington to engage Iran and Syria, a step that it 
fears could be perceived as a sign of weakness. But both Syria and 
Israel share common interests in ending their military conflict that 
do not necessarily correspond to those of Washington. In fact, a deal 
between Damascus and Jerusalem could threaten the U.S. position by 
sidelining it to the diplomatic margins. That could also happen if 
Saudi Arabia increases its diplomatic role in the Middle East and 
moves in the direction of engaging Iran instead of confronting it.

 From that perspective, when U.S. officials and pundits warn of the 
"chaos" that would follow a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq, they are 
actually expressing their anxiety over their real nightmare 
scenario-a Middle East in which the United States is marginalized to 
a position of little power, with the other players in the region 
making deals with each other with little consideration of U.S. 
concerns. In other words, the formation of a regional security 
structure in the Persian Gulf that involves Saudi Arabia and Iran but 
not Washington, an organization that could facilitate cooperation 
between Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Syria to stabilize Iraq, and 
foster moves toward a peace agreement between Israel and Syria.

Preventing such a scenario is probably the driving force behind the 
idea of attacking Iran's nuclear and military sites to help reassert 
the U.S. position in the Persian Gulf and other parts of the Middle 
East. President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, and their 
neoconservative advisers are hoping that such a strike would weaken 
Iran's power and lessen the "threat" that a deal between the Saudis 
and Tehran could pose to U.S. hegemony. Similarly, the continuing 
conflict between Israel and Syria helps sustain the position of 
Washington as a powerful outsider whose services are required by the 
local players. It's the classic role of an imperial power pursuing a 
"divide and conquer" strategy.

At the end of the day, the only peace that the Bush administration 
wants to spread in the Middle East is one that preserves the U.S. 
dominant position, a Pax Americana. But whether Washington can 
continue to secure that role remains the central geopolitical 
question of the moment.

Leon Hadar, a Washington-based journalist and contributor to Right 
Web (rightweb.irc-online.org), is author most recently of
Sandstorm: Policy Failure in the Middle East (2006). He blogs at 
globalparadigms.blogspot.com.

 


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