The Media Misses
the Point on ‘Proxy War’
By Gareth Porter
May 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "MEE"
- The term “proxy
war” has experienced a new popularity in stories on the Middle East. Various
news sources began using the term to describe the conflict in Yemen immediately,
as if on cue, after Saudi Arabia launched its bombing campaign against Houthi
targets in Yemen on 25 March. “The Yemen Conflict Devolves into Proxy War,” The
Wall Street Journal headlined
the following day. “Who’s fighting whom in Yemen’s proxy war?” a blogger for
Reuters
asked on 27 March.
And on the same day the
Journal pronounced Yemen a proxy war, NBC News
declared that the
entire Middle East was now engulfed in a proxy war between Iran and Saudi
Arabia.
It is certainly time to
discuss the problem of proxy war in the Middle East, because a series of such
wars are the heart of the destabilisation and chaos engulfing the region. The
problem with the recent stories featuring the term is that it is being used in a
way that obscures some basic realities that some news media are apparently not
comfortable acknowledging.
The real problem of proxy
war must begin with the fact that the United States and its NATO allies opened
the floodgates for regional proxy wars by the two major wars for regime change
in Iraq and Libya. Those two profoundly destabilising wars provided obvious
opportunities and motives for Sunni states across the Middle East to pursue
their own sectarian and political power objectives through proxy war.
Is Yemen really a proxy
war?
Prominent 20th century
political scientist Karl Deutsch
defined “proxy war”
as “an international conflict between two foreign powers, fought out on the soil
of a third country, disguised as a conflict over an internal issue of the
country and using some of that country’s manpower, resources and territory as a
means of achieving preponderantly foreign goals and foreign strategies”.
Deutsch’s definition makes
it clear that proxy war involves the use of another country’s fighters rather
than the direct use of force by the foreign power or powers. So it obvious that
the Saudi bombing in Yemen, which has killed mostly civilians and used
cluster bombs that
have been outlawed by much of the world, is no proxy war but a straightforward
external military aggression.
The fact that the news
media began labelling Yemen a proxy war in response to the Saudi bombing
strongly suggests that the term was a way of softening the harsh reality of
Saudi aggression.
The assumption underlying
that application of “proxy war” is, of course, that Iran had already turned
Yemen into such a war by its support for the Houthis. But it ignores the crucial
question of whether the Houthis had been carrying out “preponderantly foreign
goals and foreign strategies”. Although Iran has certainly had ties with the
Houthis, the Saudi propaganda line that the Houthis have long been Iranian
proxies is not supported by the evidence.
Far from proving the
Iranian proxy argument, the Houthi takeover of Sanaa last year has actually
provided definitive evidence to the contrary. US intelligence sources recently
told the Huffington Post that before the
Houthis entered the capital, the Iranians had advised against such a move, but
that the Houthis
ignored that advice.
Gabriele vom Bruck, a leading academic specialist on Yemen at the School of
Oriental and African Studies, said in an e-mail to this writer that senior
Yemeni officials with links to intelligence had told her the same thing weeks
before the story was leaked.
The Houthis rejected the
Iranian caution, vom Bruck believes, because former President Ali Abdullah Saleh
and his son Ahmed Ali Saleh (the former commander of the Republican Guard) had
indicated to them that troops that were still loyal to them would not resist the
Houthi units advancing on the capital unless the Houthis attacked them.
So the Houthis clearly
don’t intend to serve an Iranian strategy for Yemen. “Certainly the Houthis do
not want to replace the Saudis with the Iranians,” says vom Bruck, even though
they still employ slogans borrowed from Iran.
Regional proxy war?
The NBC story on a
“regional proxy war” completely misses the seriousness of the problem. It turns
its proxy war concept into an abstract and virtually antiseptic problem of
limiting Iranian influence in the region through the US bombing Iraq. It ignores
the fact that the regional actors behind the wars in Syria, Iraq and Libya are
pulling the region into a new era of unbridled sectarian violence and
instability.
The crimes committed by the
Syrian regime in the war are unconscionable, but the policies of external
countries pursuing a proxy war to overthrow the existing regime have created a
far more ominous threat to the entire region. Washington Post columnist David
Ignatius has
detailed the process
by which Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar competed with one another to create
proxy forces with which to overthrow the Assad regime.
Such an unbridled
competition in the creation of armies for regime change was by its very essence
a reckless and cynical use of power that carried the obvious risk of even worse
chaos and violence of the war in Syria. But they have made the costs of proxy
war far greater by targeting the most aggressive armed groups they could find as
their clients, and their weapons soon “made their way to the terrorist groups,”
wrote Ignatius, to which the Turks and Qataris “turned a blind eye”.
Once it became clear that
Sunni states were creating a proxy war in Syria that could tip the balance
against the Syrian regime, Iran and Hezbollah intervened in support of the
regime.
But what the conventional
view of the Syrian proxy war leaves out is the linkage between Syria in Iran’s
deterrence strategy. Iran is militarily weak in relation with Israel and US
military power in the Middle East, and has been the target of US and Israeli
military threats going back to the 1990s.
Iran’s deterrent to such
attacks has depended on the threat of retaliatory rocket attacks against Israel
by Hezbollah from Southern Lebanon - destroying the ability of Hezbollah to
retaliate for an attack was the
single biggest reason
for Israel’s 2006 war against Hezbollah.
The Assad regime was part
of the Iranian deterrent as well. Not only did Syria have a force of
several hundred missiles
that Israel would have to take into account but also, Syrian territory is the
shortest route for Iranian resupply of Hezbollah.
The Saudi fixation with
bringing down the Iraqi Shi
regime appears to reflect
the sentiment that Prince Bandar bin Sultan
expressed to
Richard Dearlove, then head MI6, before 9/11. "The time is not far off in the
Middle East, Richard,” said Bandar, “when it will be literally 'God help the
Shia'. More than a billion Sunnis have simply had enough of them."
The Saudis have never been
reconciled to the establishment of a Shiite regime in Iraq since the United
States occupied the country and set up a Shia-dominated regime. They began
facilitating the dispatch of Sunni extremists to Iraq to overthrow the Shiite
regime early in the US war. After the US withdrawal from Iraq, the funding from
the Saudis and other Gulf Sheikdoms for Sunni fighters in Iraq and arms moved
toward the best organised forces, which ultimately meant ISIS.
The NATO war for regime
change Libya, like the US occupation of Iraq, opened a path for the regional
proxy war that followed. That war took the form of
competitive intervention by regional actors
leading to worsening violence. This time Qatar and the UAE were competing for
power through their support for Libyan expatriates in their own countries.
The Qataris steered their
support to the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, which the US State Department had
identified as a terrorist organisation
as early as 2004. The Sisi regime in Egypt joined the proxy war as the chief
sponsor of counter-terrorism. The UAE aligned with that position, while Qatar
remained in opposition. The regional proxy war has led to a longer-term
structure of conflict.
The media stories have
offered only anodyne references to the problem of proxy war. What is needed in
media coverage is a focus on the nasty realities of proxy war and their origins.
Gareth Porter is
an independent investigative journalist and winner of the 2012 Gellhorn Prize
for journalism. He is the author of the newly published Manufactured Crisis: The
Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.