How Trump Can
Defeat ISIS
Attacking Iran will not win the war on terror. Working
with Russia and Syria might.
By Sharmine Narwani
February 08,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "American
Conservative" -
If you were
betting on an unpredictable Donald J. Trump to transform
America’s bankrupt Mideast policy scene, these next ten
words will burst your bubble.
“As of today, we
are officially putting Iran on notice,” National
Security Advisor Michael Flynn told reporters a mere
thirteen days into the new administration.
Iran?
If you
recall, Trump came roaring off the campaign trail with
the foreign policy priority of defeating ISIS, so why
the sudden confrontation with the Islamic Republic of
Iran? Though Flynn apparently
thinks otherwise,
ISIS and Iran are not the same thing at all—they are the
exact antithesis of each other.
Iran is a
natural regional hegemon by virtue of its size,
population, and development indicators. The Shia-majority
nation has not initiated war in centuries, forges
state-to-state relations using soft power tools, and
prides itself on its diversifying knowledge-based
economy, rich cultural heritage, and
respect for diversity.
ISIS is a
non-state actor driven by a radical, Wahhabi-infused
interpretation of Islam that uses violent terror tactics
to seize territory and subjugate populations. ISIS’s
reign of terror has been marked by extreme intolerance
for other views, the destruction of cultural and
historic sites, and the wholesale massacre of people it
considers infidels—the Shia in particular.
And now
Trump looks set to ignore the foundational truth that
scuppered both Obama and Clinton efforts in the Mideast:
you cannot pick fights with
both
ISIS and Iran and expect to win anything. You have to
pick one—or
prepare to hunker down for endless conflict.
Terror groups like
ISIS, al-Qaeda, and other Salafist militants in their
strongholds of Syria and Iraq view Iran as their core
regional adversary. The Islamic Republic of Iran, after
all, is allied with both Damascus and Baghdad. Iran
trains, arms, or guides the armies and militias now
successfully mowing down jihadists.
Every time the
U.S. intervenes to isolate or diminish Iran’s role, it
only undermines the regional ground forces that do the
heavy lifting against ISIS and al-Qaeda.
Washington’s Iran
hawks panic over Tehran’s recent ascendance from the
Levant to the Persian Gulf, but Iran’s improved regional
stature comes courtesy of the rise of ISIS and al-Qaeda
in these areas. All this is fueled directly by the U.S.
and its NATO and Arab allies, who backed the extremist
rebels who drew in Iran.
You can’t
have your cake and eat it too.
Regional states
view the fight against ISIS and al-Qaeda as an
existential one and will fight them to the death. The
stakes are not nearly as bleak for the U.S., many miles
away from the gory battlefields. But the consequences of
unleashing jihadi terror—in part, to contain Iran and
its allies—have now seeped onto western shores and made
security a national priority.
Is Washington
prepared to break from its failed policy trajectory and
make the crucial choice between Iran and ISIS? Because
if Trump is willing to do that, a plan to defeat ISIS
and al-Qaeda is in easy reach—and it will barely cost
the deal-making businessman a dime.
Big Bang,
Small Bucks
All the military
components necessary to defeat ISIS and al-Qaeda
currently exist inside Syria and Iraq. There are the
armed forces of both states, accompanied by large
volunteer-based militias operating under a central
command structure. They are assisted by the Russian air
force in Syria and the U.S.-led coalition air forces in
Iraq, and flanked by secure western borders in Lebanon
and eastern ones in Iran.
But what’s missing
is a commitment by all external parties to coordinate
their mission around a singular goal—the destruction of
ISIS and al-Qaeda, to the exclusion of all other
ambitions or interests.
That means
Washington will have to cast aside its long-held claim
that the only force available to fight ISIS is a
Kurdish
and Sunni Arab one. The multi-sect and multi-ethnic
Syrian and Iraqi national armies and their allied
militias would beg to disagree, and they now wield the
evidence of many victories against ISIS and al-Qaeda.
Mainstream U.S.
media frequently dismisses or ignores these advances,
mainly because traditional American foes (and Shiites)
are the driving forces behind them. But it’s silly to
exclude the Shia from a security solution. Today, they
form a majority demographic from the Levant to the
Persian Gulf, and are the obvious local source of
manpower to fight the existential ISIS and al-Qaeda
threat directed at their own populations.
Other
interventions that will not address this central
threat—like defeating or weakening Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad, partitioning states, establishing
Kurdish federations, and backing militant groups—must
stop. The U.S. and its allies must instead focus on the
collective task of securing borders, sharing
intelligence, thwarting financiers of terrorism, and
coordinating sensitive military operations under a
command sanctioned by Russia and Syria.
When Trump sits
down with Russian President Vladimir Putin at their as
yet-unannounced first meeting, there is ample
opportunity for the two leaders to cast their weight
behind a joint singular mission.
At his
inauguration, Trump
promised:
“We will seek friendship and goodwill with the nations
of the world—but we do so with the understanding that it
is the right of all nations to put their own interests
first.”
From this must
come the recognition that Russia, Syria, Iran, Iraq, and
Lebanon also want to pursue their own interests, in
their own regions.
A joint
U.S.-Russian deal to focus primarily on defeating ISIS
and al-Qaeda may result in a Syria with Assad and a
stronger, more secure Iran, but the upside is huge—and
globally significant.
The “war on
terror” will be won, an important notch on Trump’s belt
for both domestic constituents and international
audiences. He will have managed this feat at minimal
cost and with no American boots on the ground.
Washington’s positive collaboration in defeating terror
will open up Mideast markets that were not previously
accessible because of politics or security. The sources
of inspiration and funding for worldwide jihad will be
culled. And Trump can take credit for an extraordinary,
Nixon-like rapprochement with the Russian Federation,
yanking the two states away from the brink of
confrontation and ushering in a new era of bilateral
cooperation.
While
Washington may have to downsize some traditional
relationships in the process, the damage can be
contained. Abandoning the Obama administration’s Kurdish
projects will ensure that U.S.-Turkish
relations
can get back on track, and that Arab-Iranian-Turkish
mistrust of American and Kurdish intentions will fade.
Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, and other
major financiers
of ISIS, al-Qaeda, and Salafist militias will have to be
brought to heel, but their interest in the Syrian and
Iraqi battlefields have lessened anyway as contracting
economies, domestic restiveness, and conflict in Yemen
have intensified. Their security infrastructures are so
intertwined with the U.S. military that they cannot
afford to clash with Trump on a subject as universally
reviled as terror financing.
As for the
Israelis and their Iran fixation, Americans can’t be
expected to sideline vital national security interests
to perpetually babysit that state. Trump can take credit
for making Israel safer, and that’s that.
But none of this
can be achieved if the Trump administration continues to
confront Iran simultaneously. There are no Kurdish or
Sunni Arab troops able to defeat ISIS and al-Qaeda
alone. If the U.S. had been able to amass and train
enough of them, Washington would have already done it in
Iraq, circa 2003.
As Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
points out,
“Iran has never been complicit in any links to IS or Al-Nusra
Front whatsoever. Moreover, Iran contributes to
combatting IS. We have long advocated the idea of
creating a unified anti-terrorist front. I am convinced
that Iran must be part of our common effort if we
evaluate potential contributors to such an alliance
objectively.”
Can Trump slice
through the conventional Beltway mindset on Iran,
particularly given the Iran hawks he has gathered around
him? Will the efficiency of an alternative plan appeal
to him enough to break free? Will the decisive CEO in
him emerge, or are we stuck with an insecure,
inexperienced politician who cleaves to the guidance of
trusted old hands who lack new ideas?
Because here’s the
rub. The Syrians, Iranians, Iraqis, Lebanese, and
Russians are defeating ISIS and al-Qaeda anyway, with or
without the United States.
Let’s see what
happens when Trump meets Putin.
Sharmine Narwani
is a commentator and analyst of Mideast geopolitics,
based in Beirut.
The views
expressed in this article are solely those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
Information Clearing House. |