By Alastair Crooke
November 05, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - Oh,
oh, here we are again! In 1967, it was then the
‘threat’ of the standing Arab Armies (and the
ensuing six-day war on Egypt and Syria); in
1980, it was Iran (and the ensuing Iraqi war on
Iran); in 1996, it was David Wurmser with his
Coping with Crumbling States (flowing
on from the infamous Clean Break policy
strategy paper) which at that time targeted
secular-Arab nationalist states, excoriated both
as “crumbling relics of the ‘evil’ USSR” and
inherently hostile to Israel, too; and in the
2003 and 2006 wars, it was Saddam Hussein
firstly; and then Hezbollah that threatened the
safety of the West’s civilizational ‘outpost’ in
the Middle East.
And here we are once more, Israel cannot
safely ‘live’ in a region containing a militant
Hezbollah.
Not surprisingly, the Russian Ambassador in
Beirut, Alexander Zasypkin, quickly recognized
this all too familiar pattern:
Speaking with al-Akhbar on 9
October in Beirut (more than a week before the
protests in Beirut erupted), the Ambassador
dismissed the prospect of any easing of regional
tensions; but rather identified the economic
crisis that has been building for years in
Lebanon as the ‘peg’ on which the US and its
allies might sow chaos in Lebanon (and in Iraq’s
parallel economic calamity), to strike at
Hezbollah and the Hash’d A-Sha’abi — Israel’s
and America’s adversaries in the region.
Why now? Because what happened to Aramco on
14 September has shocked both
Israel and
America: the former Commander of the Israeli
Air Force
wrote recently, “recent events are forcing
Israel to recalculate its path as it navigates
events. The technological abilities of Iran and
its various proxies has reached a level at which
they can now alter the balance of power around
the world”. Not only could neither state
identify the modus operando to the strikes (even
now); but worse, neither had any answer to the
technological feat the strikes plainly
represented. In fact, the lack of any available
‘answer’ prompted one leading western defense
analyst to suggest that Saudi should
buy Russian Pantsir missiles rather than
American air defenses.
And worse. For Israel, the Aramco shock
arrived precisely at the moment that the
US began its withdrawal of its ‘comfort
security blanket’ from the region – leaving
Israel (and Gulf States) on their own – and now
vulnerable to technology they never expected
their adversaries to possess. Israelis – and
particularly its PM – though always conscious to
the hypothetical possibility, never thought
withdrawal actually would happen, and
never during the term of the Trump
Administration.
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This has left Israel completely
knocked, and at sixes-and sevens. It has
turned strategy on its head, with the
former Israeli Air Force Commander
(mentioned above)
speculating on Israel’s uncomfortable
options – going forward – and even
postulating whether Israel now needed to
open a channel to Iran. This latter
option, of course, would be culturally
abhorrent to most Israelis. They would
prefer a bold, out-of-the-blue, Israeli
paradigm ‘game-changer’ (i.e. such as
happened in 1967) to any outreach to
Iran. This is the real danger.
It is unlikely that the stirring of protests
in Lebanon and Iraq are somehow a direct
response to the above: but rather, more likely,
they lie with old plans (including the recently
leaked strategy paper for countering Iran,
presented by MbS to the White House), and with
the regular strategic meetings held between
Mossad and the US National Security Council,
under the chairmanship of John Bolton.
Whatever the specific parentage, the
‘playbook’ is quite familiar: spark a popular
‘democratic’ dissent (based on genuine
grievances); craft messaging and a press
campaign that polarizes the population, and
which turns their anger away from generalized
discontent towards targeting specific enemies
(in this case Hezbollah, President Aoun and FM
Gebran Bassil (whose sympathies with Hezbollah
and President Assad make him a prime target,
especially as heir-apparent to the leadership of
the majority of Christians). The aim – as always
– is to drive a wedge between Hezbollah and the
Army, and between Hezbollah and the Lebanese
people.
It began when, during his meeting with
President Aoun in March 2019, US Secretary of
State, Mike Pompeo reportedly presented an
ultimatum: Contain Hezbollah or expect
unprecedented consequences, including sanctions
and the loss of US aid. Leaked reports suggest
that Pompeo subsequently brought ally, PM Hariri
into the picture of the planned disturbances
when Hariri and his wife hosted Secretary Pompeo
and his wife for a lunch banquet at Hariri’s
ranch near Washington at the end of the Lebanese
premier’s August visit to the US.
As the Lebanese demonstrations began, reports
of an ‘operations room’ in Beirut managing and
analyzing the protests, and of large scale
funding by Gulf states proliferated; but for
reasons that are not clear, the protests
faltered. The Army which originally stood
curiously aloof, finally engaged in clearing the
streets, and returning some semblance of
normality – and the Central Bank governor’s
strangely alarmist forecasts of imminent
financial collapse were countered by other
financial experts presenting a less frightening
picture.
It seems that neither in Lebanon or in Iraq
will US objectives finally be achieved (i.e.
Hizbullah and Hash’d A-Sha’abi emasculated). In
Iraq, this may be a less certain outcome
however, and the potential risks the US is
running in fomenting chaos much greater, should
Iraq slip into anarchy. The loss of Iraq’s 5
million barrels/day of crude would crater the
market for crude – and in these economically
febrile times, this might be enough to tip the
global economy into recession.
But that would be ‘small beer’ compared to
the risk that the US is running in tempting ‘The
Fates’ over a regional war that reaches Israel.
But is there a wider message connecting these
Middle East protests with those erupting across
Latin America? One analyst has coined the term
for this era, as an Age of Anger
disgorging from “serial geysers” of discontent
across the globe from Equador to Chile to
Egypt. His theme is that neoliberalism is
everywhere – literally – burning.
We have noted before, how the US sought to
leverage the unique consequences arising from
two World Wars, and the debt burden that they
bequeathed, to award itself dollar hegemony, as
well the truly exceptional ability to issue fiat
credit across the globe at no cost to the US
(the US simply ‘printed’ its fiat credit). US
financial institutions could splurge credit
around the world, at virtually no cost – and
live off the rent which those investments
returned. But ultimately that came at a price:
The limitation – to being the global rentier
– has become evident through disparities of
wealth, and through the incremental
impoverishment of the American middle classes
that the concomitant off-shoring brought about.
Well-paid jobs evaporated, even as America’s
financialised banking balance sheet ballooned
across the globe.
But there was perhaps another aspect to this
present Age of Anger. It is TINA:
‘There is no alternative’. Not because of an
absence of potentiality – but because
alternatives were crushed. At the end of two
World Wars, there was an understanding of the
need for a different way-of-being; an end to the
earlier era of servitude; a new society; a new
social contract. But it was short-lived.
And – long story, short – that post-war
longing for ‘fairness’ (whatever that meant) has
been squeezed dry; ‘other politics or economics’
of whatever colour, has been derided as ‘fake
news’ – and in the wake of the 2008 great
financial crisis, all sorts of safety-nets were
sacrificed, and private wealth ‘appropriated’
for the purpose of the re-building of bank
balance sheets, preserving the integrity of
debt, and for keeping interest rates low. People
became ‘individuals’ – on their own –
to sort out their own austerity. Is it then,
that people now are feeling both impoverished
materially by that austerity, and impoverished
humanly by their new era servitude?
The Middle East may pass through today’s
present crises (or not), but be aware that, in
their despair in Latin America, the ‘there
is no alternative’ meme is
becoming reason for protestors ‘to burn the
system down’. That is what happens when
alternatives are foreclosed (albeit in the
interests of preserving ‘us’ from system
collapse).
Alastair Crooke, Former British diplomat,
founder and director of the Beirut-based
Conflicts Forum.
This article was originally published by
"SCF"
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