U.S. Middle East Policy As It Should Be

Embrace your friends, stand up to your enemies and ignore the UN.

w.by Barry Rubin, PJ MEDIA

Since there is so much bad policy on the Middle East to critique and since there’s no hope of the Obama Administration listening to alternative strategies, I often focus on the former. There is no great mystery, however, to what a good Middle East policy would be for the United States. You can apply this to any article I write as my constructive answer to the messes, crises, and dangers being faced.

The United States should take leadership. This is what its allies and dependents want and its enemies fear. The UN at times can be a useful instrument but why depend on an organization often dominated by anti-American dictators and totally indifferent to U.S. interests?

Identify the greatest threat today as revolutionary Islamism. Build a broad alliance with all those opposed to revolutionary Islamism. This list includes:

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Canada; European allies; Israel; and the remaining relatively moderate Arab governments on international affairs: Morocco; Algeria; Saudi Arabia, Kuwait; Bahrain; Oman; the United Arab Emirates; Iraq, South Sudan, and Jordan. Add to that the oppositions in Lebanon, Iran, and Turkey, and the truly moderate elements in Syria. Work with the real moderates and the army in Egypt (though these two are at loggerheads) and Turkey (where it is being weakened near or beyond the point of no return).

Plug in also with India, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and a number of other governments in Asia and Africa, too that face radical external and internal threats . China’s interests should be appealed to based on its desire for stability, need for secure sources of energy and supply routes, and concerns over its own Muslim minority becoming radicalized.

The goal is to keep revolutionary Islamists out of power wherever possible, as was done with Communists in the Cold War. Revolutionary Islamist states and movements should be subverted and weakened. It should be comprehended that terrorism is a tactic used sometimes by some revolutionary Islamist groups and not a movement in itself.

The connections between what is today the mainstream interpretation of Islam and revolutionary Islamism should be honestly recognized and U.S. personnel should be given truthful training. The idea that apology, appeasement, or concessions will moderate Islamists should be abandoned. The idea that the West can somehow produce its own moderate brand of Islam or will be rescued by tiny groups of doctrinally moderate Muslims should be dropped.

The direct use of force should be limited to circumstances where it is unavoidable, and it is almost always avoidable, certainly at this point in time. Most of the time the United States can rely on local forces, which have their own interest in stopping revolutionary Islamism. But they must be the right local forces There is no purpose to be served by maintaining combat troops in Afghanistan, just as is true of Iraq. U.S. policy should use a full arsenal of aid to aligned forces along with economic instruments and covert operations.

Democracy is a nice idea but if it is merely a fig leaf allowing for the creation of new dictatorships what good is it either in strategic terms or even for the people who live in those countries? Pushing for elections no matter what the actual social and political conditions are isn’t a sensible policy, especially because the enemies of real functional democracy (rule of law; fair treatment of minorities, civil liberties) have caught on to the idea of using democratic forms to impose majority-backed dictatorships.

Have no illusion that there is going to be any serious progress on Arab-Israeli or Israel-Palestinian issues. You can keep up a pretense of diplomatic activity but don’t let that get in the way of real priorities. The Palestinian side’s leadership has rejected a two-state solution repeatedly and has no desire for a final end to the conflict.

Iran’s regime is not going to change course or stop seeking nuclear weapons. The answer is not to attack Iran militarily now but to prepare for the day when that might be made necessary by Iran’s own actions. A failure to counter Tehran credibly makes war more likely because that country will become overconfident and overreach. Containing Iran requires combatting the spread of its influence and power in every possible way. As with the USSR, the Iranian challenge goes far beyond the scenario of its launching a nuclear attack.

Recognize that a massive crisis is about to develop as Egypt becomes a radical anti-American, and probably revolutionary Islamist, state. Here, it is probably too late to put into effect a good policy. Instead, the United States must define the red lines that would trigger an aid cut-off or a tough response. In addition, U.S. policymakers should see the army as the principal–but quite inadequate–bulwark there and the Muslim Brotherhood as the problem an not the solution.

Most important of all do not empower America’s enemies. Not only al-Qaida but also the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Hizballah, Iran, and Syria are foes. The Turkish regime is a more subtle and insidious enemy. Pakistan cannot be trusted and there is no sense pumping billions of dollars into that regime.

A problem here is that recognizing the huge threats and dangers is more disconcerting to the domestic American audience than is pretending that everything is going pretty well, that Obama won the war on terror by getting Usama; that democracy is the answer; that Israel-Palestinian peace is just one Israeli concession away from realization; and that Middle East Muslims now love America because Obama showed that he loves them.

Remember the traditional rules of diplomacy. Strength produces credibility that does more to deter conflict against self-identified foes than does weakness and concessions. You cannot successfully apologize to those who want and need to hate you in order to further their own political agenda and to seize power. If you don’t support your allies you won’t have any.

Much of this is a traditional realpolitik and Realist approach to international affairs. Before the era in which counterproductive and even anti-American views took over U.S. academia, media, and elements of the government, such a strategy would have been taken for granted on a bipartisan basis.

There are many details to be developed in addressing this framework to specific issues but they should arise from these themes. But until there is some basis of reality underlying U.S. policy there is no sense giving detailed advice to those who are not merely mistaken but are headed in the diametrically opposite direction from where they should be going. It all depends on whether the next secretary of state is John Bolton or John Kerry.

April 15, 2012 | 6 Comments »

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6 Comments / 6 Comments

  1. Bland Oatmeal states:

    3. Morocco, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, UAR, Iraq, Jordan. What has Rubin been smoking? Since when has any friendship with an Arab country gotten us anything?

    Agreed, agreed. All other statements by him have some merit

  2. @ Laura:

    The war was being won on the ground until the anti-war movement severely damaged the war effort.

    Right — and pigs fly. Laura, I forgive you for your ignorance, because you were too young to know what was going on then. Richard Nixon won the 1968 Presidential election by PROMISING TO WITHDRAW FROM VIETNAM, AND TURN EVERYTHING OVER TO THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE. He was saying, “We quit” in 1968, before he even became President — THE PRESS DID NOT FORCE HIM TO QUIT; HE PLANNED TO ALL ALONG. The most stupid, and murderous, thing Nixon did, was to announce that we were giving up and then causing the deaths of another 30,000 American boys.

    Concerning the Cuban missle crisis, I didn’t blame Kennedy for doing what he did. I merely said that we nearly started a nuclear war. The Russian submarines in the area were equipped with nuclear torpedoes, and ordered to use them if they were in danger. Those subs were then cut off from communication to the homeland, for security reasons. The sub commanders chickened out, and the situation was defused. Kennedy agreed to withdraw American missles from Turkey, in exchange for the Russians withdrawing theirs from Cuba. We had been threatening them as much as they were threatening us: It was all a VERY high stakes publicity stunt.

  3. Why? The US “took leadership” during the Cuban Missle Crisis, and nearly got us all killed.

    Better to have allowed Russia to place missiles in Cuba? That would have got us killed.

    But then we “took leadership” in Vietnam, and some 60,000 US soldiers lost their lives for nothing.

    Blame those American deaths on the media and the left. The war was being won on the ground until the anti-war movement severely damaged the war effort.

  4. am certain your readers are not aware that CIA personnel of rank upon retirement are given well paying job in any of the thousand Saudi owned US corporations of course depending on their” service” while working for the CIA

  5. Rubin is saying a lot here, so let me digest it, one point at a time:

    The United States should take leadership.

    Why? The US “took leadership” during the Cuban Missle Crisis, and nearly got us all killed. Granted, the Russians were provoking us. But then we “took leadership” in Vietnam, and some 60,000 US soldiers lost their lives for nothing.

    After our bad bruising in Vietnam, we sat back for several years, and let the Russians “take leadership”. They got both hands and both feet stuck in the Afghan tar baby, melted down one of their nuclear reactors and went out of business. Score a point for sitting back on our butts.

    President Reagan did try to reassert America’s leadership role. He invaded Grenada. It worked. Point for Reagan. Then he sent the Marines to Lebanon and, for the most part, to their deaths — again, for nothing. We turned tail and ran then, and left Lebanon to themselves and to the Israelis. It did alright until 2000, when President Clinton again “took leadership” and got the Camp David talks going. As a result of those talks, Israel withdrew from Lebanon and it became a mess again.

    I could cite many more examples. Suffice to note that in 1967, President Johnson was so bogged down in Vietnam, he couldn’t help the Israelis fight the Egyptians. They took matters into their own hands, and knocked the Egyptians’ socks off. Enough said.

    Identify the greatest threat today as revolutionary Islamism. Build a broad alliance with all those opposed to revolutionary Islamism. This list includes:

    Canada; European allies; Israel; and the remaining relatively moderate Arab governments on international affairs: Morocco; Algeria; Saudi Arabia, Kuwait; Bahrain; Oman; the United Arab Emirates; Iraq, South Sudan, and Jordan.

    First of all, I don’t think our main enemy is revolutionary Islamism. If the Russians and Chinese weren’t supporting the Syrians and Iranians, that issue would have been settled by now; and the Russians and Chinese are not revolutionary Islamics. The revolutionary Islamics did not bring down our economy in 2008, and get us tens of trillions of dollars in debt: We did that to ourselves, and believe me, we have more to fear from our national debt than we do from the radical Islamies (who, if nobody has noticed, have been spending most of their time lately killing one another).

    I’ve seen only a little of what Rubin has to say, but am not encouraged to read further. Let me just finish commenting on what he has said: He wants us to build an alliance with:

    1. Canada. They’re good friends. Good idea.

    2. European allies. Read the latest from CFR-Europe, about their failure to accomplish anything in Syria, and add to this their own preoccupation with the sovereign debt crisis. It’s nice to have friends; but those “friends” cannot help us.

    3. Morocco, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, UAR, Iraq, Jordan. What has Rubin been smoking? Since when has any friendship with an Arab country gotten us anything?

    4. South Sudan. They seem like nice enough folks, and they have oil. They also have hardly any roads. Maybe they can use some of their oil to create some roads, so we can drive over and visit them. Then we can strike up a friendship, and take it from there.

    Face it: The United States is not about to make any useful friends any time soon; and “taking leadership” hasn’t gotten us very far. I think Rubin needs to come up with a “Plan B”. Meanwhile, the very best thing Americans can do for their country, is get a President who knows what he’s doing and doesn’t need a teleprompter to say what he thinks.