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Are there any reasons for hope in the Middle East? Maybe

12 Comments

The winds of change are unexpectedly blowing through the Levant.

In the aftermath of the Iran nuclear agreement, there was a broad expectation, both in the region and beyond, that sectarian tensions and conflict would intensify and deepen the proxy battle between Iran and Saudi Arabia. In the United States, even some strong supporters of the nuclear deal emphasized that Washington needed to respond aggressively to the inevitable push by Tehran to expand its regional influence at the expense of traditional U.S. allies.

What we are seeing on the ground, however, looks quite different. There is an increasing possibility for new geopolitical alignments throughout the region. The confluence of the growing fear in both Saudi Arabia and Iran of the threat posed by Islamic State; the weakening of President Bashar al-Assad's regime in Syria; Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's policy shift to cooperate with the United States in Syria, and Moscow's and Washington's growing shared interests in steering the Saudi-Iran rivalry onto a less escalatory path, while also creating a broad coalition against Islamic State, is creating real political fluidity.

As diplomatic moves accelerate, the United States and its allies look to be preparing a serious onslaught on Islamic State in both Iraq and Syria. The opening of Turkish air bases to coalition aircraft, manned and unmanned, will enable the allies to prepare for a major ground offensive by local allies to recapture Mosul. Iraq's third-largest city has been under Islamic State control for more than a year. More inchoate is the parallel jockeying around Syria's political future, and whether a compromise framework can be found to end that country's civil war.

The first sign that a diplomatic offensive was in the works was President Barack Obama's fulsome praise of the Russian role in the endgame of the Iran negotiations during his interview with New York Times op-ed columnist Thomas Friedman. This was reciprocated by the Kremlin ratcheting down the virulent anti-Americanism that had dominated its narrative of world events since the annexation of Crimea and the imposition of Western sanctions last year.

Then both Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov were recently in Doha to meet with Gulf leaders, which included a joint meeting with their Saudi counterpart. This was followed by a visit to Riyadh by Assad's intelligence chief and the dispatching of the Syrian foreign minister for meetings in Oman, the only Gulf state not actively supporting anti-Assad rebels in Syria.

Critical to the new diplomacy is the flurry of unusual diplomatic activity between senior Russian and Saudi officials in recent months. In the aftermath of Saudi Arabian King Abdullah's death in January, the Russians sought to explore prospects for Saudi flexibility in Syria. The new Saudi leadership, expecting a nuclear deal with Iran and frustrated with the United States, looked to test whether Moscow was willing and able to moderate Iranian regional policy. The Saudis are particularly focused on Yemen, which is critical to Saudi security and where anti-Saudi Houthi rebels had taken control, with what Riyadh believes was direct Iranian support.

The rapidity with which Saudi Arabia has, unlike Israel, dropped its active opposition to the Iran nuclear deal speaks to the importance it gives to the new regional diplomacy. Recent apparent successes by the Saudi-led military force seeking to drive the Houthis out of power, if consolidated, may provide the Saudis with the confidence they need to give on-the-ground momentum to the new diplomatic momentum building in the region.

It is still too early to tell what role Iran intends to play. In the nuclear negotiations with the six world powers, regional issues were explicitly excluded from the discussions to maximize prospects for success on the nuclear front. But some Western leaders, particularly Obama, clearly hoped that a successful conclusion of the talks might create space for a broader diplomacy. Obama also expressed his view that a solution to the continuing conflict in Syria requires Iran's participation at the negotiating table, a reversal of his previous position.

The regime in Syria would not survive without Iran's contributions in manpower and armaments. Hence, it seems unlikely that the recent initiatives would have taken place without Tehran's acquiescence, at minimum. Iraq, which also coordinates closely with Iran, recently assured visiting Defense Secretary Ashton Carter that Sunni militia would play a significant role in the coming offensive to retake Anbar province from Islamic State, with Shi'ite militias playing a less prominent role. Both the United States and Saudi Arabia had been urging just such an approach on Baghdad.

It remains uncertain whether Iranian hard-line elements, especially the Revolutionary Guards, will go along with a policy of cooperation, especially one that may endanger the Assad regime and, by extension, Iran's most prized ally, the Hezbollah militia. Nor will the Russians easily jettison their ally Assad. This was clear in Lavrov's comments that the Syrian strongman is a perfectly acceptable partner in fighting Islamic State.

Recent diplomacy notwithstanding, we remain a long way from resolving the complex problems emanating from the Syrian civil war and the weakening of the Iraqi state. But a critical test will be the speed and extent of success that is achieved in the coming offensive against Islamic State. The militant group is unlikely to be eradicated completely. But if its hold on large parts of Iraq and Syria are broken fairly quickly, momentum would shift and Islamic State would be a substantially weakened adversary.

Ironically, such an outcome would make the Assad regime in Syria more vulnerable. Without Islamic State breathing down its neck, the opposition forces would be freed from fighting a two-front war.

This is the ultimate paradox: By threatening everyone, including the Iranians and the Russians, Islamic State will have succeeded in uniting all to defeat it. Yet the price down the road for both countries will be increased pressure to abandon the Assad regime.

© (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2015.

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

12 Comments
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As long as we have the Sunni & Shia division, or any ideological (read: religious) conflict for that matter, the world will forever be in some form of war. 'My god is the only god' has been the flashpoint for war for thousands of years...

0 ( +2 / -2 )

Wishful thinking. The problem in the Islamic culture is the culture itself. It isn't just Isis or book haram committing atrocities like rape slave girls forced into sham marriages, slavery and other insanity. It us the culture itself. Storues come out across the entire islamic world of so called village elders run by hoky men who do things like order the rape of a sister because of an alleged crime of the brother. We have 14 year old girls being whipped to death for illegal sex, after being raped by an uncle. Children given by fathers as payment for debt. Finally the boys being raised into believing rape, murder, slavery and genocide are approved and encouraged by holy books. This is a deep cultural problem and doesnt appear to be changing. I have no guess as to why most of the rest if the world's cultures changed over a century ago from similar disfunctional violent cuktures and islamic cuktures remain stuck in 11th century states where women are property to be raped, slavery is valid and tge rule of the sword is religiously sanctioned. If the islamic culture does not evolve, it will remain as it is now and the future does not look promising for these people.

0 ( +2 / -2 )

No. the Middle East will be a mess for decades to come.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

So Iran getting more involved offers hope? seems far fetched to me

-2 ( +0 / -2 )

@SighClops

As long as we have the Sunni & Shia division, or any ideological (read: religious) conflict for that matter, the world will forever be in some form of war. 'My god is the only god' has been the flashpoint for war for thousands of years…

I agree extremists using my god v. yours as a basis for war has been part of life for 1,000s of years. But I also would add non-religious extremists have also caused wars, particularly when their leaders have wanted more of someone else’s land and resources. All cultures are based in varying degrees on shared man-made myths and fictions and are united by them, not just Muslims in the Middle East. Yours, whatever it might be, and mine are based on man-made myths and fictions. Yours has gone to war because of them as has mine. To me the key is to find ways to restrict the extremists within one’s own culture. Invading others’ homelands creates more extremists. There might be a better chance for peace in the Middle East if non-Middle Eastern forces were to go back and worry about extremists in their own cultures. But like @Todd T said, that might be wishful thinking

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Winds of change? More like glad-handing hot air from a pair of neoconservative windbags. Peace, especially in the Middle East, is simply not profitable for the military-industrial complex. Here, they're trying to make you feel good about their sinister goal of overthrowing Assad, who is far, far, far from the monster portrayed by the pressitute media.

2 ( +3 / -1 )

I see the whole problem of the rich Western countries with Japan included giving billions of dollars in aid, which gets siphoned off into the dictator's bank accounts and never helping the people as the major problem.

Stop giving money as support. Just stop and let nature balance the whole thing out.

-1 ( +1 / -2 )

And no mention of the oil and gas interests at play here? The writers, if we should even call them that, are trying to spin this. Not buying it!

Yet the price down the road for both countries will be increased pressure to abandon the Assad regime.

I guess they haven't heard from there CFR friends that the Russian army and Air Force have just set up shop in Syria.

This story is an insult to thinking people!!

0 ( +1 / -1 )

To answer your question, no -- there are not any reasons for hope in the Middle East.

0 ( +1 / -1 )

Sure there is: the hope that it will be bad and not worse.

0 ( +1 / -1 )

If the minority Sunny the get the political power they had per 2000. Yes. But will the Marjority Shites have power it will never happen. The Shite will not be happy until Israeli is smashed

-2 ( +0 / -2 )

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