Monthly Archives: October 2015

The next US president should try listening to advice

http://www.thenational.ae/opinion/the-next-us-president-should-listen-to-advice

Recent foreign policy blunders are seriously raising the question of whether the American political system is capable of learning from its mistakes. The George W Bush and Barack Obama administrations committed the same basic error by ignoring the advice of their own experts in favour of politicised judgments that proved disastrous.

The Bush administration’s decision to invade Iraq in 2003 was obviously a dreadful mistake at the time, and the magnitude of the fiasco has only become increasingly evident. It’s a good candidate for the biggest blunder in American foreign policy history. Both Iraqis and Americans will count the costs for many years to come.

Yet the overwhelming consensus of professionals within the American government – in the military, intelligence community and foreign service – knew and warned that the invasion itself was a mistake and that the mishandling of the occupation was a staggering tragicomedy. Almost all serious planning was systematically disregarded.

The faction that demanded the invasion, and then so badly flubbed the occupation, was an ideological clique centred in the defence department and the vice president’s office. Almost none of them knew anything about Iraq or had any experience of war. Nor did they agree on the exact purpose of the war. They had wanted an invasion of Iraq for years and seized on the entirely unrelated September 11 terrorist attacks to push that agenda. They prevailed mainly because they, alone, had a specific plan, and something usually – though not always – beats nothing.

Experts were against it but were overruled for political and ideological reasons. As with all wars, the invasion was initially popular, but the occupation went bad, very quickly. Combined with an almost equally bitter experience in Afghanistan, it prompted the American public to turn against the notion of Middle Eastern conflicts in an irrational and all-encompassing manner.

Sins of omission can be almost as dangerous as sins of commission. The Obama administration was faced with a serious conundrum in Syria in 2012. A solid consensus urged the administration to begin arming and funding rebel groups to help shape the nature and character of the conflict so that the US could influence its outcome.

For both ideological and domestic political reasons, Mr Obama and some of his key advisers – and again it was those who knew nothing about Syria or the Middle East – decided to do nothing. Even when Bashar Al Assad crossed the American “red line” by using chemical weapons, he became the beneficiary of an agreement that only enhanced his political and diplomatic standing.

It’s probably true that avoiding any engagement whatsoever in Syria, with the recent exception of a decidedly half-hearted and profoundly ineffective campaign against ISIL, has been popular with a public soured on conflict. But the former senior American officials tasked with Syria policy say that when Mr Obama announced that Mr Al Assad must go, they considered it their “duty” to make it happen. Yet they received no policy support from their superiors. This time nothing has beaten something, with similarly lamentable results, although the costs may be less immediately evident to the public.

Still, the US finds itself totally outmanoeuvred by Russia and Iran, and in an apparent self-inflicted eclipse from influence in the Middle East without any objective correlative that can explain it beyond a completely irrational policy paralysis. Because the administration refuses to identify a preferred outcome in Syria within the realm of the possible, it finds itself unable to adopt, much less implement, a coherent policy in support of that outcome. All plausible outcomes are deemed unacceptable, and all acceptable outcomes are deemed unattainable.

Thus the world’s sole superpower finds itself at the mercy of not only second-rate global powers like Russia but even mere regional bullies like Iran, simply because they know what they want while Washington cannot, or rather will not, choose.

Most recent American presidents who get reelected experience a major scandal in their second term.

For Mr Bush and Mr Obama, these scandals were, respectively, the wild overreach in Iraq followed by the massive overcorrection in Syria.

In both cases these elementary blunders could have been avoided, or at least significantly mitigated, by listening to the considered opinion of the professionals and experts employed, in many cases in their hundreds, by the government precisely to guide the politicians and their advisers on complicated matters which they may not fully comprehend. Regarding the Arab world, misunderstandings by both the American politicos and the public appear to be chronic.

No one would seriously advocate a government of technocrats in a mature republic. But surely two disastrous blunders in a row, against the strong objections of the policy professionals, ought to strongly recuperate the standing of the judgments of those who are fundamentally informed.

The least we can expect is that future American presidents will pay more attention to what their own military, intelligence and diplomatic professionals have to say about the biggest decisions regarding the Middle East.

What’s driving the surge of violence in East Jerusalem?

http://www.fpri.org/articles/2015/10/tragedy-palestinians

The current surge of violence among Palestinians in the territories occupied by Israel in 1967 is highly unusual in many respects. It is demographically heavily concentrated among youths, primarily aged 13-16, and geographically concentrated in East Jerusalem. It is largely leaderless and appears to be mostly spontaneous actions of individual rage. If there is an organizing force of any kind, it appears to be social media such as Twitter and Whatsapp, through which these youths communicate on their mobile phones. But this is hardly a strong structuring or guiding factor. Those such as Hamas and extremist religious preachers who have been attempting to take advantage of the situation and stoke the flames of rage demonstrate all the hallmarks of opportunists seeking to latch onto an existing phenomenon. The notion that they are genuinely inspiring, let alone driving or directing, the violence is almost certainly wrong. And they don’t appear to have directly benefited socially or politically from the unrest, at least thus far.

Many have suggested that there is a link to anger over holy places, given that East Jerusalem is such a focal point of the upsurge in attacks. This is plausible, but far from certain. Because the nature of the attacks are “lone wolf” stabbings of random Jewish Israelis, there is an entirely different explanation for the focus on East Jerusalem. It is the one place in the occupied territories where Palestinians living under military rule and Jewish Israelis mix freely and readily. Compared to most other cities in the world, Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem is radically segregated, as well as separate and unequal to a remarkable degree. But compared to the rest of the occupied West Bank, and particularly the Palestinian population centers in “Area A,” Arabs and Jews interact regularly in East Jerusalem, certainly to an extent unheard of in, for example, Ramallah. Therefore the random stabbings in Jerusalem may well reflect greater opportunity, as well as a stronger sense of the Israeli presence generally.

This distinction between East Jerusalem and “Area A” also reveals much about the nature of Palestinian anger. “Area A” refers to the self-administered Palestinian areas established by the Oslo agreements in 1993, under the control of a five-year transitional ruling body known as the “Palestinian Authority” (PA). The five-year transitional period has become permanent since 1993, given that 1998 passed by without so much as a whimper. With a few minor adjustments, the opening salvo of the Oslo adjustment to occupation in practice proved to be not the beginning of an end to Israeli rule, but rather the start of Palestinians policing themselves in their own population centers on behalf of Israel and its ongoing settlement program. Palestinians did not achieve the independence they expected to follow the Oslo agreements in 1993, and which they believed had been set in motion through those arrangements. Instead they have found themselves caught in a situation in which, except for East Jerusalem, they are stuck living under the direct rule of a discredited local Palestinian leadership and the broader control of Israel’s military with no end in sight.

It is precisely this feeling of total stagnation that seems to be driving the rage being expressed in the stabbing attacks. Palestinians are not by nature nihilistic. But Palestinian youths, and much of the rest of society, are experiencing a nihilistic moment, in which they do not believe in or identify with much of anything beyond the immediate nuclear family, because there really is nothing for them to latch on to, politically or socially. The PA, and its elderly and decrepit leader Mahmoud Abbas, has lost all credibility with ordinary Palestinians. It is seen as corrupt, ineffective and as representing a diplomatic and political approach to national liberation and independence that is a complete failure. Negotiations with Israel have proven totally fruitless, and the current Israeli government under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is universally regarded by Palestinians as openly hostile to peace based on a two-state solution. Mr. Netanyahu’s comments during the last Israeli election are seen as definitive and reflective of Israel’s real policies, which completely reject the idea of Palestinian statehood. Mr. Netanyahu’s appointment of the extremist settler and annexationist leader Danny Danon to represent Israel at the United Nations is regarded as further confirmation that Israel absolutely rejects the prospect of living in peace with an independent Palestine. Mr. Netanyahu’s protestations that he is prepared to negotiate at any time, without preconditions, and that he is still committed to a two-state solution have virtually no credibility among any Palestinian constituency whatsoever.

The collapse of the diplomatic horizon regarding peace talks with Israel is compounded by the widespread realization among Palestinians that Mr. Abbas’ “alternative” approach of initiatives at multilateral institutions such as the United Nations and the International Criminal Court is a similar dead end. Palestinians have seen enough speeches and document signings reflective of this approach that have produced no changes whatsoever on the ground to understand this is not a viable alternative for realizing their national and political rights. Moreover, the tragic collapse of the state and institution building program led by former Prime Minister Salam Fayyad destroyed the once-promising parallel track of developing institutions, governing frameworks and economic structures of an independent state, in spite of the occupation and in order to end the occupation. The amazingly shortsighted Israeli and Western response to Palestinian multilateral initiatives by attacking the PA budget and destroying Mr. Fayyad’s ability to not only pay for his programs but even meet payroll and ruining his credibility as an interlocutor with international donors allowed Fatah cadres and other Palestinian rivals to do away with this annoying reformer and his effective but independent policies.

Indeed, the Israeli and Western attack against Mr Fayyad in a misguided effort to lash out against Palestinian multilateral initiatives, which he ironically was virtually alone in questioning, reflects a consistent failure to consider the impact of their own policies on Palestinian politics and political culture. So does the current wave of unrest. The present upsurge in violence is a tragic and misguided, but also virtually inevitable, response to the new Palestinian generation’s inability to find anything with which it can identify, or through which it can express its political and national identity. All of their potential ideals have been suppressed, trivialized or made into a mockery by either their own failed leadership, or the continued occupation and total lack of any political or diplomatic horizon for ending it. Young Palestinians also find nothing to believe in from Hamas or other extremist groups. Their policies offer nothing but the greater suffering that is readily evident in Gaza, and their rhetoric similarly fails to strike a chord, except perhaps in terms of raw rage and violence. But there is no evidence that such organizations are benefiting in any meaningful sense from the current spasm of violence, and every reason to see them as equally, or perhaps even more, discredited among young Palestinians.

The messages to ordinary Palestinians from all quarters fuels this anger and despair. Israel’s unmistakable message is: “You are defeated and subjugated, now accept your lot.” Palestinian political leaders are all seen as essentially saying: “We are your champions, but we have absolutely no idea about how to advance your interests, promote your cause or gain your independence.” The West, and the international community generally, seems to be saying: “We’ll get back to you as soon as Israel seems to be interested in peace again, now in the meanwhile here are some kind words and limited aid.” And, significantly, the Arab world has no clear message for the Palestinians, since it is completely wrapped up in more immediate crises such as the wars in Syria, Libya and Iraq, and the rise of the “Islamic State” terrorist movement. Palestinians, like all Arabs, get their international political information mainly from pan-Arab TV news channels like Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya. Therefore they have a keen sense of the extent to which their issues are very much on the Arab back burner, and to which they have lost the attention of even their most ardent champions. The sense of isolation, hopelessness, abandonment and despair can hardly be overstated.

This is the immediate context for the surge in violence, which is also being powerfully fueled by violent repression from Israeli occupation forces and even more violent attacks by fanatical Jewish settlers. So that on top of the existential crisis facing Palestinian political identity comes a cycle of tit-for-tat retaliation with settlers, and to some extent even the Israeli military, that further fuels the flames of rage. Without having read, or almost certainly even heard of, Frantz Fanon or his still-relevant essay “Concerning Violence,” the knife-wielding shabab of East Jerusalem do seem to be channeling his notion that, “At the level of individuals, violence is a cleansing force. It frees the native from his inferiority complex and from his despair and inaction; it makes him fearless and restores his self-respect.” This would certainly seem to be the de facto answer that the violence posits to the despair and defeat-inducing messages coming from the quarters listed in the previous paragraph.

Of course it is a tragic illusion. No people’s history better illustrates the self-defeating and counterproductive effects of violence, whether collective or individual, random or systematic, than the modern Palestinian experience. Defeat after defeat — beginning with the uprising against the British in the mid-30s and running straight through the Gaza wars of recent years — has been the only real legacy of lashing out. And yet, because of the psychic truth in Fanon’s terrifying formulations, when young individuals see no plausible alternatives and have nothing with which they can identify, or through which they can channel their most basic existential and political needs, violence becomes all-but unavoidable. Violence defines the Palestinian reality. Israel’s occupation is inherently a system of violence, and not just because it is a structure of dominance and military rule over millions of disenfranchised non-citizens. It also facilitates and enforces the ongoing settlement project, which lies at the heart of the occupation, and which relies on the constant reality and threat of brute force. Try imagining a nonviolent settlement program in which persuasion is used to convince Palestinians to voluntarily abandon their property, and individual or communal lands, and hand them over to recent arrivals from Brooklyn, Latvia or Ethiopia. The absurdity of such a scenario readily demonstrates the violence that lies behind the settlement project, as directly expressed daily in the checkpoints and other systems of surveillance, discipline and control which defines the lives of Palestinians, including in East Jerusalem.

The greatest tragedy is that to the youths who are lashing out, the fact that they do so in vain, or are even engaged in a self-defeating project, is almost certainly virtually irrelevant. The psychic logic articulated by Fanon trumps these irrefutable arguments, especially for a new generation of youngsters in East Jerusalem, surrounded and totally suffocated by the occupation. This is a nihilistic moment in which individualized violence against random Israelis as a form of self-assertion becomes more important than the reality that such actions are not only politically and morally indefensible, but also counterproductive to anything constructive. The terrible reality of occupation with no end in sight, and with absolutely no plausible or even implausible framework or horizon for ending it, virtually mandates the emergence of a terrifying “new normal” between Israelis and Palestinians. In those places where they interact daily and routinely, such as East Jerusalem, this almost certainly means the constant threat of individualized and random violence by Palestinians in response to the collectivized and systematic violence of the Israeli occupation. Only a change in the fundamental reality of occupation, an alteration of the basic terms through which the occupiers and the occupied, the dominant and the subjugated, are presently interacting, or the sudden and unexpected emergence of a new political horizon, is likely to succeed in avoiding the routinization of this new and tragic “normal” between Jewish Israelis and the Palestinians living under their control.

Crude rewrite of history demonises Palestinians

http://www.thenational.ae/opinion/crude-rewrite-of-history-demonises-palestinians

It’s rare that a seemingly incontrovertible aspect of modern history suddenly gets a new interpretation. And it’s even rarer when that comes from a major national leader. But Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has recently posited that Adolf Hitler wasn’t primarily responsible for the Holocaust after all. The real culprit was, Mr Netanyahu claims, a Palestinian.

This is not just bad history. In a conflict in which false claims abound and drive incendiary rhetoric, it is a most unwelcome addition to the witches’ brew of incitement.

Before he met the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin Al Husseini, in Berlin in November 1941, according to Mr Netanyahu, Hitler was rather modest in his aspirations. Drawing on a claim already made in his 1993 book A Place about the Nations, Mr Netanyahu told the 37th World Zionist Congress in Jerusalem on October 20: “Hitler didn’t want to exterminate the Jews at the time; he wanted to expel the Jews.” He asserts that it was Al Husseini who convinced Hitler to change his plans.

Apart from the fact that Hitler did meet Al Husseini, none of this is true. Not only had the mass killing of Jews commenced in the previous summer when Nazi forces invaded the Soviet Union, more importantly, it was not the Mufti of Jerusalem who brought Hitler and his henchmen to the decision to undertake a genocide against Jews. Hitler’s own fanatical anti-Semitism drove Nazi state officials to arrive at ever more lethal responses to the “Jewish Question”, culminating in the Final Solution.

Why then does Mr Netanyahu seek to exculpate Hitler and undermine an established historical premise? Simply put, he is rather cynically trying to reposition blame for the Holocaust on to the Palestinians.

Al Husseini was a reprehensible person and a terrible leader. He was also a Nazi sympathiser and a hater of the Jews. He saw Hitler as a foe of the British who had exiled him and of the Jews who were colonising Palestine, and he sought his support. Al Husseini does not appear to have gained much from his meeting with Hitler, and certainly not the public statement in support of Arab independence he wanted. Hitler probably took away even less from the meeting.

Blaming Al Husseini for the Holocaust is irresponsible and dangerous, as well as factually wrong. This marginal figure neither had the gravitas nor influence to persuade Hitler of the desirability of exterminating Jews, nor did Hitler need a push in that direction.

Following the war, Al Husseini was completely marginalised in Palestinian and Arab politics, owing to his miscalculations and delusions of grandeur. He died in relative obscurity, never having again reached a position of political influence. Far from being “revered” as Mr Netanyahu claims, he is generally ignored by Palestinians as an embarrassment and a failure. Even Hamas dismisses him in favour of his contemporary, Izzedine Al Qassam, whose memory they really do champion.

Mr Netanyahu’s historical revisionism is reflective of the kind of archetypal thinking for which his historian father, Benzion Netanyahu, a fiery revisionist zionist, was well known. In every generation, to this mindset, there is an “Amalek” seeking to destroy the Jews. The “Amalek” of the moment, of course, are Palestinians, and linking them as strongly as possible, and however mistakenly, to the Holocaust serves that paranoid narrative.

This is not only bad history. It makes for dangerous policy.

Palestinian leaders are often accused of inciting their followers to hatred on the basis of false historical claims, sometimes even including their own versions of Holocaust denial, and more typically a refusal to acknowledge a deep Jewish connection to Palestine or to the Western Wall. This can and does descend into a kind of demonisation that encourages violence and persuades Israelis that Palestinians are not ready for peace.

But Mr Netanyahu’s attempts to pin the Holocaust on the mufti are a barely concealed attempt to shift the blame for this great historical crime on to the Palestinians of today. Just as some today whitewash the ignominious history of Christian anti-Semitism in favour of a facile Islamophobia, so Mr Netanyahu has in stunning fashion lifted the yoke of historical responsibility for the Holocaust from the Nazis and placed it on the Palestinians.

No good can come of regarding the Palestinians as the embodiment of a Nazi-like existential threat to Jews. A statement such as this will further poison the waters in the region, which is boiling over in violence as it is. It will seriously erode the confidence needed to return to negotiations, which Israel needs if it is to remain meaningfully either Jewish or democratic, and which Palestinians need if they are to gain their freedom and independence. And it does a profound disservice to future generations, who are placed at risk of growing up with dangerously mistaken views of the past on the basis of which they will be inclined to act.

Simply put, Mr Netanyahu’s crude attempt to rewrite history demonises Palestinians, who’ve already suffered enough, and undermines the prospects for peace on which the future of both peoples depends.

Hussein Ibish is a senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington and David N Myers is the Sady and Ludwig Kahn Professor of Jewish History at UCLA

The world should urgently support the Tunisian experiment

http://www.thenational.ae/opinion/tunisia-shows-the-power-of-the-possible

On Friday the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the National Dialogue Quartet in Tunisia, a group of organisations that played a critical role in guiding the country towards stability with good governance and accountability. The choice is excellent and timely. It reminds the world of how much progress the country has made, how deep the challenges remain, and how much the international community has at stake in helping it to continue to move forward and avoid the pitfalls of violence, confrontation and corruption.

The four organisations are the Tunisian General Labour Union; the Tunisian Confederation of Industry, Trade and Handicrafts; the Tunisian Human Rights League and the Tunisian Order of Lawyers. But the Nobel committee rightly insisted that the award is for the quartet as a unit. This vital distinction recognises that what’s being rewarded is their willingness to work together and promote dialogue and cooperation. In another significant achievement, Tunisia has been recognised by the American NGO Freedom House as fully “free” in its latest report measuring civil rights and liberties around the world.

One can certainly understand why. Tunisia has adopted a new constitution by consensus, which is not perfect but which balances various interests in a constructive and reasonable manner that generally defaults towards protecting individual rights, including for women. It has held a series of free and fair, and genuinely contested, elections, with real campaigning and robust national debates about policy differences.

Even more significantly, last year came the peaceful transfer of power between the former troika government led by the Islamist Ennahda party and a new administration led by their secular rivals, the Nidaa Tounes party. The quartet played a crucial role in arranging for the most recent elections and then brokering this peaceful transfer of power.

Tunisians are an intelligent people, as demonstrated again by the reaction to the Nobel Prize. The general response has been expressions of pride, but almost immediately followed up by requests for international help. The thoughtful message being communicated is: “Thank you very much for this pat on the back, but what we really need is systematic help with our economy and counterterrorism efforts, which, by the way, are inextricably linked.”

The West and those Arab countries that are in a position to help, including Gulf countries, ought to do as much as possible to respond to this call. Tunisia is a model, not for revolution (which it really didn’t have, at least in the classical sense), but for evolution through dialogue, which is what actually took place after Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, the former president, was deposed.

If Tunisia’s experiment succeeds, it will be a major demonstration that evolution by consensus works better for everyone than revolution by force. The alternative model lies just across the border in Libya, where competing governments are fighting over everything. ISIL terrorists have just raised their hideous black banner over Sirte, the home town of former dictator Muammar Qaddafi, where they are starting to impose their demented form of fanatical misrule.

ISIL is a major threat to Tunisia, which has contributed more foreign fighters to the group than almost any other country. There is also a significant threat from several home-grown terrorist organisations, as was recently demonstrated by the attempted assassination of Ridha Charfeddine, a Nidaa Tounes MP. The country is still reeling from the 2013 assassinations of non-Islamist politicians Chokri Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi which helped bring down the Ennahda-led troika government. Earlier this year, over 50 people were killed in two major attacks by extremists in recent months, both of which targeted tourists and the crucial tourism industry.

Tunisia also desperately needs growth. Its private sector remains bogged down in excessive bureaucracy and interference by the government. It also needs help in the continuing struggle against corruption, which remains a huge challenge to both economic growth and political and social stability. The West ought to move quickly to establish free-trade agreements with Tunisia, and help it implement mechanisms to promote international investment. Investment conferences have proven effective in other cases. Arab states, too, can do more by way of both aid and direct foreign investment in Tunisia’s economy.

Both the West and the Arab world must recognise that promoting economic vitality in Tunisia constitutes a major counterterrorism initiative, as well as support for a positive, constructive model for change in the Arab world and, for that matter, Africa. In the Arab world today the areas dominated by ISIL fanatics occupy one dystopian extreme, and while Tunisia is hardly a utopia, it offers a better alternative.

Tunisia’s solutions are specific to Tunisia’s problems, and are not made for export. But the Tunisian example shows what’s generally possible when dialogue and compromise prevail over confrontation and violence. Tunisia deserves support for its own sake. But it’s also an important model of constructive Arab politics that all responsible actors should be clamouring to support and which cannot be allowed to fail.

Putin’s Partition Plan for Syria

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/20/opinion/putins-partition-plan-for-syria.html?ref=opinion

WASHINGTON — Taking advantage of the paralysis of American policy in Syria, Russia’s dramatic escalation of military activity in that country seeks to reorder the strategic landscape of the Middle East.

Few appear to grasp the full scope of what Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin, is attempting. This is partly because, in theory, this should be beyond Russia’s capabilities. But Mr. Putin cannily senses an opportunity, at the very least, to restore Russia to the role in the Middle East that it lost in the 1970s.

Russia’s intervention anticipates a resolution of the Syrian conflict through de facto partition. The Reuters news agency reports that, months ago, Iran proposed the joint offensive, now underway, to save the dictatorship of President Bashar al-Assad from imminent collapse. Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps’ elite Quds Force, is depicted poring over maps of Syria with Russian officials in the Kremlin.

Russian firepower is aimed at securing the larger, western part of the rump Syrian state that is still controlled by Mr. Assad — in particular the air and naval bases near Latakia and Tartus. And aside from forays into northern trouble spots like Aleppo, Iranian and Hezbollah forces will mostly concentrate on the lower half of this strip, which runs from the Lebanese border through Qalamoun, up to Damascus, and from there to the port cities and coastal heartland of the Alawites, the Syrian Shiite sect loyal to Mr. Assad.

For all of the talk of combating the Islamic State, Russia’s real aim is to push back rebel groups and secure this ministate. Given what Mr. Assad’s allies are willing to do to salvage this “Little Syria” — compared with the limited intervention being considered by Mr. Putin’s international antagonists — this is probably an achievable goal.

Such a partition of Syria would leave other parts of the country in the hands of nationalist and Islamist rebels, a Kurdish area in the north, perhaps some smaller enclaves and, most ominously, the “caliphate” of the Islamic State in the north and east. Despite Kremlin propaganda, the Islamic State is already among the biggest winners from the Russian intervention.

At the end of last week, for example, the group took advantage of Russian airstrikes, some 90 percent of which have reportedly targetedother rebel groups, and captured several villages near Aleppo. The militants also killed some of Iran’s most senior commanders in Syria, including Brig. Gen. Hossein Hamedani. These advances are realizing Mr. Assad’s goal of making the choice for both Syrians and the world at large appear to be between him and the jihadists.

Russia’s unspoken but unmistakable message is that Moscow is trying one— and perhaps the only— way of ending the conflict by means of a Lebanese-style segregation of Syria into zones controlled by rival militias. To Washington’s perennial concern in any Middle Eastern imbroglio, “Tell me how this ends,” Moscow responds: The Syrian conflict will be “resolved” on Russia’s terms, even if Mr. Assad proves dispensable to the Kremlin in the long run.

Meanwhile, the Obama administration’s desire to see the conflict end without actually doing anything itself means that, as Bloomberg Viewsuggested recently, there is a group of senior American officials prepared to go along with the Russian plan. After all, America’s own policy in Syria has rapidly moved from tragedy to farce. The latest fiasco was the cancellation of the $500 million military training program for anti-Islamic State rebels that produced barely a handful of fighters on the ground.

So if Moscow has a policy, and Washington doesn’t, why not just support that?

Beyond the fact that it’s absurd to hope that Mr. Putin’s approach is likely to benefit American interests, giving way to Russia’s policy would, in effect, entail abandoning the fight against the Islamic State in Syria. And the militants cannot be effectively countered in Iraq alone. So what this final, ignominious capitulation would really mean is that not only would Mr. Assad (or some Russian-appointed successor) menace Syrians for the foreseeable future, but so too would the Islamic State.

No wonder Gen. John R. Allen, America’s envoy to the international coalition against the Islamic State, recently announced his resignation. Being in charge of a farce is bad enough; no one can accept being the front for a fraud.

Even worse, viewed through a broader regional framework, American acquiescence to this Russian initiative would ultimately mean an accommodation with a major reshaping of the strategic order in the Middle East. Moscow is clearly trying to accomplish the creation of a powerful alliance with Iran, Iraq, Hezbollah, “Little Syria” and others. To secure this new compact, Russia is willing to risk not only confrontation with the West, but also its recently improved relations with other regional powers like Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

There’s no good reason Washington should go along with any of this. Russia is manifestly less powerful militarily, economically and diplomatically than the United States. But it’s no longer a matter of capabilities; it’s become a matter of will. On paper, Russia is in no position to barge into the Middle East and throw its weight around. But after the interference in Ukraine, the annexation of Crimea and the Syrian chemical weapons debacle, Mr. Putin correctly judged that nobody would stop him.

Mr. Putin is canny enough to know that he is already overstretched, faces potential quagmires and has core differences with putative allies like Iran. So, at any given moment, he’ll be ready to pocket his gains and do a deal with the Americans — from an already advantageous position.

The remaining question is: How far will he be allowed to go? At the moment, the astonishing answer appears to be: all the way.

Rushin’ to Syria: Riyadh Pledges to Counter Moscow’s Sudden Escalation

http://www.agsiw.org/rushin-to-syria-riyadh-pledges-to-counter-moscows-sudden-escalation/#

The civil conflict in Syria has been a major concern for many Gulf Arab states since the outbreak of the uprising against the Baathist dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad over four years ago. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Kuwait, among others, have been some of Assad’s leading regional opponents and strong proponents of regime change in Damascus. They have therefore reacted strongly to Russia’s escalation in Syria and are among the harshest critics of Moscow’s direct intervention into the conflict by conducting airstrikes against rebel groups and building up Russian ground forces. These developments will likely encourage a deeper engagement by Gulf Arab countries in the Syrian conflict in the coming months.

Saudi Arabia and its allies see Syria, along with Yemen, as the key battlegrounds against rising Iranian hegemony in the Arab world. Moreover there is a powerful moral indignation against the tactics of the Assad regime. His forces are widely blamed for hundreds of thousands of deaths, and millions of displaced Syrian civilians, the large majority of them Sunni Muslim Arabs. This is the overriding context through which the Gulf states view the Syrian conflict and its outcome. These countries have funded both political and paramilitary opposition movements in an effort to promote a change of government in Syria. They have also joined the coalition led by the United States countering the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), and Saudi and Emirati warplanes have been involved in bombing attacks against targets in Syria as part of that effort. But the Gulf countries have not introduced any of their own ground forces into the conflict, nor are they likely to do so in the foreseeable future. They readily admit to funding nationalist and some Islamist rebels, but deny supporting the al-Qaeda franchise in Syria, al-Nusra Front. On the ground, however, distinctions between rebel groups and their frequently shifting alliances and coalitions are often amorphous, difficult to track, and overlapping.

The anti-ISIL and anti-Assad coalition of Gulf Arab states and NATO powers has taken a strong, unified stance against the Russian intervention (which the Syrian opposition now refers to as an “occupation” of Syrian territory by Russia). Several Gulf countries signed a joint statement along with the United States, Britain, France, Germany, and Turkey accusing Russia of a “further escalation” of the conflict and warning that its actions would promote terrorism and extremism. The statement, which was published on the German Foreign Ministry website, said, in part, “We express our deep concern with regard to the Russian military build-up in Syria and especially the attacks by the Russian Air Force on Hama, Homs and Idlib since yesterday which led to civilian casualties and did not target Daesh.” It continued, “We call on the Russian Federation to immediately cease its attacks on the Syrian opposition and civilians.”

The Russian escalation in Syria puts Saudi Arabia in a somewhat awkward position. The Saudis have been reaching out to Russia for better ties in an effort to widen their support base beyond the traditional intensive reliance on the United States and as an alternative source of trade, weapons sales, and military technology. The most recent effort in that direction was the visit to Moscow in July by a very senior Saudi delegation led by Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. These meetings produced agreements strengthening military and energy ties. However, Saudi Arabia’s strong stance on Syria has left it little choice but to be harshly critical of the unexpectedly aggressive Russian moves. Indeed, Riyadh’s reaction has gone further than most other members of the coalition in warning Moscow of the consequences of its adventure and insisting on the need to counter Russia’s aim of securing the Assad regime.

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir wistfully recalled the more positive “atmosphere that prevailed two months ago” when he visited Russia, which has dissipated as “all of a sudden Russia stepped up its military role in Syria and announced its political position backing Assad.” He said, categorically, that in Syria, “the solution does not depend on Russia.” Instead, he said, there were two options for the future in Syria. “One option is a political process where there would be a transitional council,” which he called “the preferred option.” Or, he continued, “the other option is a military option, which also would end with the removal of Bashar al-Assad from power. This could be a more lengthy process and a more destructive process, but the choice is entirely that of Bashar al-Assad.”

Jubeir did not outline what a “military option” would look like, or what the specific Saudi role might be. But his formulation suggests a fundamental change in the Saudi approach of trying to secure regime change in Damascus, and indicates that nothing that has transpired so far constitutes a full-fledged iteration of this military option. He noted that Saudi Arabia already supports the Free Syrian Army and other moderate rebel groups, and that such support from Riyadh and elsewhere “will continue and intensify.” Beyond that, he hinted, “Whatever we may or may not do we’re not talking about.”

Saudi Arabia speaks for many of its Gulf Cooperation Council allies on Syria, an issue in which the heterogeneity and division of opinion that is often a hallmark of GCC perspectives is less prevalent. Most of the Gulf Arab states have been strong supporters of the rebellion while opposing extremists, especially ISIL. The strong Gulf support for the Syrian opposition disrupted an emerging but mistaken narrative holding that Arab monarchies, especially in the Gulf, were taking a straightforward “counterrevolutionary” line on the “Arab Spring” uprisings, rather than evaluating each case according to their national interests. The Saudi position, which indicates a willingness to intensify the Gulf engagement in Syria and support for the opposition, comes in the context of the development of a more assertive and proactive regional security posture by Riyadh and a number of its allies including the UAE and Qatar. The most dramatic manifestation of this evolving proactive security doctrine is the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen.

Saudi Arabia and its allies are hedging on their practical response to the Russian escalation. But a more robust Gulf engagement in Syria in the coming months was extremely likely anyway, given the new policy direction being crafted, especially in Saudi Arabia. Moscow’s direct military intervention in the Syrian conflict on behalf of the Assad dictatorship, which is Iran’s most important client in the Arab world, will undoubtedly prompt a reevaluation among Gulf countries. But it is likely to only increase their determination to do as much as possible within the scope of prudence and their capabilities to thwart the Russian goal of maintaining the dictatorship, and instead focus on securing regime change either through a political agreement or a rebel victory.

Gulf countries have few means of directly pressuring Russia. But they will undoubtedly join with Western and other countries in pushing for a strong diplomatic response against the Russian escalation. Moreover, they will probably continue to press, along with others, for the creation of no-fly zones, safe havens for refugees and similar measures. These steps would dovetail with European and border state concerns about the flood of refugees coming out of the Syrian conflict. Refugee safe havens might serve a dual purpose, and, if implemented thoughtfully, could certainly constitute a political and even military blow to both the dictatorship and ISIL. No-fly zones are an even more direct means of denying the regime the full benefits of its air power. In addition to Turkey and the Gulf states, U.S. Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton, as well as some Republican presidential candidates, is calling for no-fly zones in Syria. However the presence of Russian warplanes over the Syrian skies and, presumably, enhanced air defenses on the ground, will only strengthen the already established opposition to such measures by the U.S. military leadership. Therefore the United States, which would be indispensable to success, is unlikely to participate in such an initiative under current circumstances.

ISIL remains an alarming wildcard, but the Gulf countries are likely to stick to their guns that only by confronting the dictatorship and ISIL simultaneously can the conflict end and peace be restored to Syria. Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies will continue to push Washington to recognize that Assad is as much of a threat as ISIL and to therefore take a more proactive role in trying to shape both the nature and the eventual outcome of the Syrian conflict. The Obama administration seems to remain convinced that while the Assad regime has lost all legitimacy and must go, the dangers of the sudden collapse of governance institutions in the country – a lesson derived from bitter U.S. experience in Iraq in the past decade – mean that he must not go precipitously. This viewpoint, which could be sympathetically called complex or uncharitably deemed self-contradictory, has certainly militated against any U.S. policy that directly confronts the Assad regime. Gulf countries and others argue that in effect this approach has meant ceding the field to Assad’s backers such as Iran, Hizballah, and now Russia.

The GCC countries also point out that relative U.S. inaction on Syria, and its at least perceived disengagement from the region, meant that Washington was not only “taken aback” (as U.S. officials themselves put it) by the new Russian military offensive, but also appears to have been surprised by the recently announced intelligence-sharing agreement Iraq reached with Russia, Iran, and Syria. Riyadh and its allies are sure to note that this is not only another development that strengthens Iran’s hand at the expense of the Gulf states, but that it is harmful to U.S. interests as well. Whether or not a change of heart in Washington takes place, the Gulf Arab counties appear more determined than ever to confront and thwart Iran in Syria. Russia’s direct intervention only raises the stakes. The introduction by the Arab Gulf states of their own ground forces into the Syrian conflict is a remote contingency, but everything short of that now appears to be very much on the table.

PA’s bombshell was a bluff, so what is next?

http://www.thenational.ae/opinion/pas-bombshell-was-a-bluff-so-what-is-next#full

It was a sad and sorry spectacle, but entirely symptomatic of the slow-burning crisis facing the Palestinian national movement. Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority and chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, rose at the UN general assembly last week to deliver a much-ballyhooed “ultimatum” to Israel. It was initially hyped as a “bombshell”. Then expectations were lowered to the “dramatic”.

In the event it was a largely meaningless announcement that Palestinians are no longer bound by the Oslo Accords because – as is perfectly true – Israel has systematically violated them to the point of mockery.

But, practically speaking, what does that mean? It’s one thing to say one feels no longer bound by the terms of an agreement and quite another to start changing the day-to-day practices that have been shaped by ongoing realities.

There’s no basis for expecting Mr Abbas to cease security cooperation in the West Bank between the PA and Israeli authorities. These arrangements are politically very difficult for Palestinians. At some level they do aid the occupiers, and co-operating in any significant way with the forces of the status quo is both humiliating and galling.

But there’s no questioning the practical value to both sides of these arrangements, or the severe dangers and difficulties that would be courted if they were permanently suspended. Therefore, as a practical matter, it makes no sense for Palestinians – in their own pragmatic interests – to abandon this cooperation even if it would be emotionally satisfying and politically popular.

Security cooperation is only one example of the many daily arrangements under the Oslo framework that pose a stark choice for Palestinians. Is it better to abandon these systems merely to spite the Israeli occupiers even though that would create much more severe problems for Palestinians themselves and offer no plausible benefits at all?

Non-cooperation is one way of pushing back against occupation, but it’s hard to imagine that giving up on the limited forms of self-government Palestinians have created in the past 30 years would do more to harm Israel than themselves. The Israelis have many options. But their own self-rule is one of the few tools Palestinians have which, as former PA prime minister Salam Fayyad’s policies briefly but convincingly demonstrated, can be used to both develop society and promote international expectations for Palestinian statehood. Giving it up in favour of a return to direct occupation would be painful for Israel but catastrophic for Palestinians at every register from daily life to the prospects for independence. Therefore, it won’t happen.

Meanwhile, the world moves on, impervious to the Palestinian conundrum. Benjamin Netanyahu devoted almost all of his own UN speech to Iran. Indeed, he frequently gives major addresses without mentioning the Palestinians at all. Mr Netanyahu’s government is obviously opposed to the prospect of Palestinian statehood, even in theory, despite his protestations to the contrary. His offer to negotiate without conditions is the height of cynicism.

Mr Netanyahu’s real policy is amply illustrated by his government’s outrageous plan to legally recognise five wildcat settlement outposts, including hundreds of buildings constructed in violation of even Israel’s own laws and on privately-owned Palestinian land.

The Arab world, too, is focused on other matters. And the United States not only seems to have lost interest in brokering peace, doubts are now raised regarding its own long-term commitment to a two-state outcome. Major Jewish American groups like ­AIPAC, J-Street and Americans for Peace Now are focused on, and squabbling about, Iran and the nuclear deal, not anything to do with the Palestinians.

The Palestinian leadership does not know what to do. Its options are so limited, and its ability to craft creative alternatives so restricted, that it has all but given up. Both will and imagination seem exhausted. Hamas’s approach offers nothing but adding considerable human suffering to further failure. Its misrule in Gaza is so bad it now faces creeping encroachment by ISIL.

In the West Bank, events are being driven by the brutal logic of reciprocal violence embedded in the occupation. A settler couple were shot dead in front of their four young children by unknown gunmen. Militant settlers carried out reprisal attacks on Palestinian homes and vehicles.

While it would make no sense for Palestinians to dismantle their own nascent national institutions, however imperfect they may be, Israel cannot expect that another wave of massive violence would be manageable or containable. Any such delusion would be an even greater failure of political and social imagination.

The UN says six Israelis and 24 Palestinians have been killed in the simmering tensions in the occupied territories this year. That’s a small but sobering reminder of how the violence at the core of relations between occupiers and occupied inevitably bubbles to the surface even when no one welcomes it.

Mr Abbas was bluffing in New York. Israel knows this. His speech might as well never have been delivered. But what faces both parties in any system defined by violence, and by dominance and subordination with no end in sight, is no mystery and no bluff.