Obama’s Nightmare
The scandal engulfing two of our top military
and intelligence officers could not be coming at a worse time: the
Middle East has never been more unstable and closer to multiple,
interconnected explosions. Virtually every American president since
Dwight Eisenhower has had a Middle Eastern country that brought him
grief. For Ike, it was Lebanon’s civil war and Israel’s Sinai invasion.
For Lyndon Johnson, it was the 1967 Six-Day War. For Nixon, it was the
1973 war. For Carter, it was the Iranian Revolution. For Ronald Reagan,
it was Lebanon. For George H.W. Bush, it was Iraq. For Bill Clinton, it
was Al Qaeda and Afghanistan. For George W. Bush, it was Iraq and
Afghanistan. For Barack Obama’s first term, it was Iran and Afghanistan,
again. And for Obama’s second term, I fear that it could be the full
nightmare — all of them at once. The whole Middle East erupts in one
giant sound and light show of civil wars, states collapsing and refugee
dislocations, as the keystone of the entire region — Syria — gets pulled
asunder and the disorder spills across the neighborhood.
And you were worried about the “fiscal cliff.”
Ever since the start of the Syrian
uprising/civil war, I’ve cautioned that while Libya, Egypt, Yemen,
Bahrain and Tunisia implode, Syria would explode if a political resolution was not found quickly. That is exactly what’s happening.
The reason Syria explodes is because its
borders are particularly artificial, and all its communities — Sunnis,
Shiites, Alawites, Kurds, Druze and Christians — are linked to brethren
in nearby countries and are trying to draw them in for help. Also,
Sunni-led Saudi Arabia is fighting a proxy war against Shiite-led Iran
in Syria and in Bahrain, which is the base of the United States Navy’s
Fifth Fleet. Bahrain witnessed a host of bombings last week as the
Sunni-led Bahraini regime stripped 31 Bahraini Shiite political
activists of their citizenship. Meanwhile, someone in Syria decided to
start lobbing mortars at Israel. And, Tuesday night, violent
anti-government protests broke out across Jordan over gas price
increases.
What to do? I continue to believe that the
best way to understand the real options — and they are grim — is by
studying Iraq, which, like Syria, is made up largely of Sunnis, Shiites,
Christians and Kurds. Why didn’t Iraq explode outward like Syria after
Saddam was removed? The answer: America.
For better and for worse, the United States in Iraq performed the geopolitical equivalent of falling on a grenade — that we triggered ourselves.
That is, we pulled the pin; we pulled out Saddam; we set off a huge
explosion in the form of a Shiite-Sunni contest for power. Thousands of
Iraqis were killed along with more than 4,700 American troops, but the
presence of those U.S. troops in and along Iraq’s borders prevented the
violence from spreading. Our invasion both triggered the civil war in
Iraq and contained it at the same time. After that Sunni-Shiite civil
war burned itself out, we brokered a fragile, imperfect power-sharing
deal between Iraqi Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds. Then we got out. It is not
at all clear that their deal will survive our departure.
Still, the lesson is that if you’re trying to
topple one of these iron-fisted, multisectarian regimes, it really helps
to have an outside power that can contain the explosions and mediate a
new order. There is too little trust in these societies for them to do
it on their own. Syria’s civil war, though, was triggered by
predominantly Sunni rebels trying to oust President Bashar al-Assad and
his minority Alawite-Shiite regime. There is no outside power willing to
fall on the Syrian grenade and midwife a new order. So the fire there
rages uncontrolled; refugees are now spilling out, and the Shiite-Sunni
venom unleashed by the Syrian conflict is straining relations between
these same communities in Iraq, Bahrain, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Turkey
and Kuwait.
But Iraq teaches another lesson: Shiites and
Sunnis are not fated to murder each other 24/7/365. Yes, their civil war
dates to the 7th century. And, yes, when they started going after each
other in Iraq, they did so with breathtaking
chainsaw-nails-pounded-into-heads violence. There is nothing like a
fight within the faith. Yet, once order was restored, Iraqi Shiites and
Sunnis, many of whom have intermarried, were willing to work together
and even run together in multisectarian parties in the 2009-10
elections.
So the situation is not hopeless. I know
American officials are tantalized by the idea of flipping Syria from the
Iranian to the Western camp by toppling Assad. That would make my day,
too, but I’m skeptical it would end the conflict. I fear that toppling
Assad, without a neutral third party inside Syria to referee a
transition, could lead not only to permanent civil war in Syria but one
that spreads around the region. It’s a real long shot, but we should
keep trying to work with Russia — Syria’s lawyer — to see if together we
can broker a power-sharing deal inside Syria and a United Nations-led
multinational force to oversee it. Otherwise, this fire will rage on and
spread, as the acid from the Shiite-Sunni conflict eats away at the
bonds holding the Middle East together and standing between this region
and chaos.
NYT
NYT
Yeah, sure.
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