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From Challenge # 68
July - August 2001
Editorial
Bush Discovers
a New Middle East
America's main strategic goal in the Middle East is to secure the supply
of oil. In this light, what is the place of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?
The Clinton Administration thought that solving it was the chief precondition
for stability in the Gulf. President George W. Bush, in contrast, at first
gave top priority to bringing down Saddam Hussein. This would convince
the Arab world, he thought, that it had no options left but to stick with
America.
The US regime has begun to understand, however, that it faces a new
Middle East, different from the one that George Bush the Elder bequeathed
to America in the early nineties. Bush the Younger inherits a region that
is bitter and rebellious; Arab public opinion has turned largely anti-American.
Both axes of US policy here, the front against Iraq and the Oslo process,
are falling apart. On June 19, Edward S. Walker, former US Ambassador to
Israel - now president of the Middle East Institute - addressed the second
Annual Middle East Oil and Gas Conference in Houston, Texas. (The speech
is published in MEES, The Middle East Economic Survey, Vol. XLIV, No. 26,
June 25, 2001.) Walker's address presents an assessment of the hard realities
America confronts today. We shall consider three of the reasons he cites
for the erosion of Washington's position in the region: 1) the new role
of Arab public opinion; 2) Arab perception of the sanctions against Iraq;
and 3) Arab perception of America's bias toward Israel.
The representative of the "free world" registers a certain pique at
the effect of free information among dictatorial allies abroad:
"There is a new phenomenon in the region called public accountability,
which we have seldom had to factor into our projections of Arab behaviour
in the past. The information revolution, and particularly the daily dose
of uncensored television coming out of local TV stations like al-Jazira
and international coverage by CNN and others, is shaping public opinion,
which, in turn, is pushing Arab governments to respond."
This new phenomenon affects the two other main factors eroding America's
position:
When Bush took office, says Walker, "the sanctions regime was disintegrating
in front of our eyes." On the other hand, the Arabs placed high hopes in
the new president. ("They had prayed for his victory over Gore, whom they
saw as being in the pocket of the Israelis.") And in fact, Bush did attempt
a change of approach that should have found favor. "He wanted to treat
the region as a whole, keeping in mind that our interests went well beyond
Israel alone." He assembled a knowledgeable and experienced team (Cheney,
Powell, Rumsfeld). In particular, he developed a new concept of sanctions
against Iraq, "based on targeted arms control." Yet the modification of
sanctions policy has not brought Bush the expected credit:
"I just finished a trip to the UAE, Qatar and Kuwait and if there was
any one consistent theme, it was criticism of the Bush administration.
One reason for this was that the Administration has never enunciated a
clear and firm public position on sanctions relief. The message was purposefully
nuanced because the President did not want to give false signals of weakness
or concession to Saddam Husain. … "As a result, the 'Arab street' has not
noticed any change in US policy, and it is still responding to Iraqi propaganda
about the plight of the Iraqi people. This means that Arab governments
remain under pressure over their relations with the US because of an Iraq
policy that no longer exists."
Walker sees the Clinton approach as a second reason for the erosion
of American prestige:
"Clinton was too intimately engaged; he gave Arafat too easy and quick
access to the White House and he picked up the phone on the first ring
whenever Barak or Arafat called. Clinton did not consult with those in
the Arab world whose support he would have to depend on if there was to
be a deal on Jerusalem and refugees. [We assume the reference is to Egypt
and Saudi Arabia. - Ed.] He didn't fully take into account the sensitivity
of Jerusalem to Islam. He put too much stock in Arafat's ability to make
decisions for the refugees, the Arab world and Islam. "It was these mistakes
that the new Administration wanted to avoid. This was the genesis of the
quiet and calibrated engagement policy of the new Administration toward
the Palestinian problem."
Walker supported this change. "Unfortunately," he says, "the approach
did not work." Violence escalated. Snubbed by the White House, Arafat cultivated
relations with Europe. He took his demand for international observers to
the UN Security Council, forcing the US to cast a veto - and thus further
alienate the Arab world. "To put it mildly, we were all grievously irritated
with Arafat. For the President, this was his first exposure to Arafat tactics
and it was not a pleasant experience."
"Because of Sharon's diplomatic skill and Arafat sticking his finger
in the President's eye, the operative premise in the Bush Administration
has been to give Sharon a chance. He was not prejudged nor treated as a
known quantity. … By contrast Sharon is taken in the Arab world as a given
in the worst sense."
Let us set Walker's speech aside for a bit and consider the sequel:
The hands-off policy proved short-lived. As Bush seemed to side with Israel,
shunning Arafat, the situation heated up to the point of the suicide bombing
on June 1 in Tel Aviv. Israel prepared a massive retaliation. It was clear
that if America did not intervene at once, the area would burst into flames.
The Mitchell Report, hardly more than aspirin, was abruptly upgraded to
the status of a "political program". Bush dispatched CIA Director George
Tenet to the area, followed by Secretary of State Colin Powell. Thus he
began to feel the pull toward the kind of "intimate engagement" that had
proved such a trap for Clinton. These latest interventions will not suffice
to stabilize the region. Arab public opinion refuses to accept the American
view of Saddam Hussein as villain and warmonger. The Arabs agreed to dance
to Washington's tune once, in 1991, expecting to get a piece of the global
economy. When this didn't happen, and Israel alone reaped wealth from the
Oslo Accords, they discovered that Saddam Hussein, even under sanctions,
had more to offer than the White House. Iraq supplies Jordan with most
of the oil it needs at half the market price, taking goods - not money
- in exchange (Al Hayat, June 24). Syria runs an Iraqi pipeline in its
territory, earning much thereby. Iraq also supplies it with 100,000 barrels
daily at a discount price. Turkey too, though a NATO member, enjoys smuggled
Iraqi oil. (Ibid.) In short, the surrounding nations have begun to grasp
the benefits of regional cooperation.
The Arab world views Sharon as the basic obstacle to peace. It sees
America's reluctance to pressure Israel as the cause of violence. The US,
however, cannot so easily change its stripes. To retain its control of
the oil wells, it has to keep the Arab world both undemocratic and backward.
That means, on the one hand, clipping the wings of Saddam Hussein (no longer
an easy task, given the opposition of Russia and France), and, on the other,
maintaining a military force in Saudi Arabia, in case the Gulf regimes
collapse from within. (See article in this issue.) In relation to Israel,
the US position is mixed. Says Walker:
"(F)or many Arabs in the region, the problem of the ceasefire is not
the real test for US policy. Even if the ceasefire holds, the question
is what the US will do when Sharon refuses to negotiate on any premise
that could conceivably be acceptable in the Arab world."
"More than any other single issue," Walker continues, Bush's public
attitude toward Sharon and his "ability to stare him down in a confrontation
will define how the Arab world sees us." Indeed, America will work to prevent
Israel from upsetting the region. Yet it cannot apply much pressure. That
would mean to strengthen the Arab world. This it does not want, for again:
it needs an Arab world that will follow its dictates concerning the supply
of oil. Between these poles American policy will continue to waver, while
the crises of the Middle East grow more severe.
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