Editor's Note: Since 1978, President Jimmy Carter's Camp David peace accords, which ended hostilities between Egypt and Israel, has created space for a possible long-term settlement of the Middle East conflict, but hardliners in Washington and Israel successfully rallied to prevent any further territorial concessions by Israel to the Arabs.
Now that three-decade period is coming to a crashing end with the impending collapse of Egypt's dictatorship and the start of a new and uncertain future, as Gareth Porter notes in this guest article:
The death throes of the Mubarak regime in Egypt signal a new level of crisis for a U.S. Middle East strategy that has shown itself over and over again in recent years to be based on nothing more than the illusion of power.
The incipient loss of the U.S. client regime in Egypt is an obvious moment for a fundamental adjustment in that strategy. But those moments have been coming with increasing regularity in recent years, and the U.S. national security bureaucracy has shown itself to be remarkably resistant to giving it up.
The troubled history of that strategy
suggests that it is an expression of some powerful political forces at
work in this society, as former NSC official Gary Sick hinted in a
commentary on the crisis.
Ever since the Islamic Republic of Iran was established in 1979, every
U.S. administration has operated on the assumption that the United
States, with Israel and Egypt as key client states, occupies a power
position in the Middle East that allows it to pursue an aggressive
strategy of unrelenting pressure on all those "rogue" regimes and
parties in the region which have resisted dominance by the U.S.-Israeli
tandem: those "rogues" are Iran, Iraq, Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas.
The Bush administration's invasion of Iraq was only the most extreme
expression of that broader strategic concept. It assumed that the
United States and Israel could establish pro-Western regime in Iraq as
the base from which it would press for the elimination of resistance
from any of their remaining adversaries in the region.
But since that more aggressive version of the strategy was launched,
the illusory nature of the regional dominance strategy has been laid
bare in one country after another.
--The U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq merely empowered Shi'a
forces to form a regime whose geostrategic interests are far closer to
Iran than to the United States.
--The U.S.-encouraged Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 2006 only strengthened the position of Hezbollah as the largest, most popular and most disciplined political-military force in the country, leading ultimately to the Hezbollah-backed government now being formed.
--Israeli and U.S. threats to attack Iran, Hezbollah and Syria since 2006 brought an even more massive influx of rockets and missiles into Lebanon and Syria which now appears to deter Israeli aggressiveness toward its adversaries for the first time.
--U.S.-Israeli efforts to create a client Palestinian entity and crush Hamas through the siege of Gaza has backfired, strengthening the Hamas claim to be the only viable Palestinian entity.
--The U.S. insistence on demonstrating the
effectiveness of its military power in Afghanistan has only revealed
the inability of the U.S. military to master the Afghan insurgency.
And now the Mubarak regime is in its final days. As one talking head
after another has pointed out, it has been the lynchpin of the U.S.
strategy. The main function of the U.S. client state relationship with
Egypt was to allow Israel to avoid coming to terms with Palestinian
demands.
The costs of the illusory quest for dominance in the Middle East have been incalculable.
By continuing to support Israeli extremist refusal to seek a peaceful settlement, trying to prop up Arab authoritarian regimes that are friendly with Israel and seeking to project military power in the region through both airbases in the Gulf States and a semi-permanent bases in Iraq and Afghanistan, the strategy has assiduously built up long-term antagonism toward the United States and pushed many throughout the Islamic world to sympathize with Al Qaeda-style jihadism.
It has also fed Sunni-Shi'a tensions in the region and created a crisis over Iran's nuclear program.
Although this is clearly the time to scrap that Middle East strategy,
the nature of U.S. national security policymaking poses formidable
obstacles to such an adjustment Bureaucrats and bureaucracies always
want to hold on to policies and programs that have given them power
and prestige, even if those policies and programs have been costly
failures.
Above all, in fact, they want to avoid
having to admit the failure and the costs involved. So they go on
defending and pursuing strategies long after the costs and failure have
become clear.
An historical parallel to the present strategy in the Middle East is
the Cold War strategy in East Asia, including the policy of
surrounding, isolating and pressuring the Communist Chinese regime.
As documented in my own history of the U.S. path to war in Vietnam, Perils of Dominance, the national security bureaucracy was so committed to that strategy that it resisted any alternative to war in South Vietnam in 1964-65, because it believed the loss of South Vietnam would mean the end of Cold War strategy, with its military alliances, client regimes and network of military bases surrounding China.
It was only during the Nixon
administration that the White House wrested control of national
security policy from the bureaucracy sufficiently to scrap that Cold
War strategy in East Asia and reach an historic accommodation with
China.
The present strategic crisis can only be resolved by a similar
political decision to reach another historical accommodation -- this
time with the "resistance bloc" in the Middle East.
Despite the demonization of Iran and the
rest of the "resistance bloc," their interests on the primary issue of
al Qaeda-like global terrorism have long been more aligned with the
objective security interests of the
United States than those of some regimes with which the United States
has been allied (e.g., Saudi Arabia and Pakistan).
Scrapping the failed strategy in favor of an historic accommodation in the region would:
--reduce the Sunni-Shi'a geopolitical tensions in the region by supporting a new Iran-Egypt relationship;
--force Israel to reconsider its refusal to enter into real negotiations on a Palestinian settlement;
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).