A Mideast Game of Thrones
By Patrick J. Buchanan
July 21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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As President Obama’s nuclear deal with
Iran is compared to Richard Nixon’s opening to China, Bibi Netanyahu
must know how Chiang Kai-shek felt as he watched his old friend
Nixon toasting Mao in Peking.The Iran
nuclear deal is not on the same geostrategic level. Yet both moves,
seen as betrayals by old U.S. allies, were born of a cold assessment
in Washington of a need to shift policy to reflect new threats and
new opportunities.
Several events contributed to the U.S. move toward
Tehran.
First was the stunning victory in June 2013 of
President Hassan Rouhani, who rode to power on the votes of the
Green Revolution that had sought unsuccessfully to oust Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad in 2009.
Rouhani then won the Ayatollah’s authorization to
negotiate a cutting and curtailing of Iran’s nuclear program, in
return for a U.S.-U.N. lifting of sanctions. As preventing an
Iranian bomb had long been a U.S. objective, the Americans could not
spurn such an offer.
Came then the Islamic State’s seizure of Raqqa in
Syria, and Mosul and Anbar in Iraq. Viciously anti-Shiite as well as
anti-American, ISIS made the U.S. and Iran de facto allies in
preventing the fall of Baghdad.
But as U.S. and Iranian interests converged, those
of the U.S. and its old allies – Saudi Arabia, Israel and Turkey –
were diverging.
Turkey, as it sees Bashar Assad’s alliance with
Iran as the greater threat, and fears anti-ISIS Kurds in Syria will
carve out a second Kurdistan, has been abetting ISIS.
Saudi Arabia sees Shiite Iran as a geostrategic
rival in the Gulf, allied with Hezbollah in Lebanon, Assad in
Damascus, the Shiite regime in Iraq and the Houthis in Yemen. It
also sees Iran as a subversive threat in Bahrain and the heavily
Shiite oil fields of Saudi Arabia itself.
Indeed, Riyadh, with the Sunni challenge of ISIS
rising, and the Shiite challenge of Iran growing, and its border
states already on fire, does indeed face an existential threat. And,
so, too, do the Gulf Arabs.
Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown in the
Middle East today.
The Israelis, too, see Iran as their great enemy
and indispensable pillar of Hezbollah. For Bibi, any U.S.-Iran
rapprochement is a diplomatic disaster.
Which brings us to a fundamental question of the
Middle East.
Is the U.S.-Iran nuclear deal and our de facto
alliance against ISIS a temporary collaboration? Or is it the
beginning of a detente between these ideological enemies of 35
years?
Is an historic "reversal of alliances" in the
Mideast at hand?
Clearly the United States and Iran have
overlapping interests.
Neither wants all-out war with the other. For the
Americans, such a war would set the Gulf ablaze, halt the flow of
oil, and cause a recession in the West. For Iran, war with the USA
could see their country smashed and splintered like Saddam’s Iraq,
and the loss of an historic opportunity to achieve hegemony in the
Gulf.
Also, both Iran and the United States would like
to see ISIS not only degraded and defeated, but annihilated. Both
thus have a vested interest in preventing a collapse of either the
Shiite regime in Baghdad or Assad’s regime in Syria.
And, thus, Syria is probably where the next
collision is going to come between the United States and its old
allies.
For Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Israel all want the
Assad regime brought down to break up Iran’s Shiite Crescent and
inflict a strategic defeat on Tehran. But the United States believes
the fall of Assad means the rise of ISIS and al-Qaida, a massacre of
Christians, and the coming to power of a Sunni terrorist state
implacably hostile to us.
Look for the Saudis and Israelis, their agents and
lobbies, their think tanks and op-ed writers, to begin beating the
drums for the United States to bring down Assad, who has been
"killing his own people."
The case will be made that this is the way for
America to rejoin its old allies, removing the principal obstacle to
our getting together and going after ISIS. Once Assad is gone, the
line is already being moved, then we can all go after ISIS. But,
first, Assad.
What is wrong with this scenario?
A U.S. no-fly zone, for example, to stop Assad’s
barrel bombs, would entail attacks on Syrian airfields and
antiaircraft missiles and guns. These would be acts of war, which
would put us into a de facto alliance with the al-Qaida Nusra Front
and ISIS, and invite retaliations against Americans by Hezbollah in
Beirut, and the Shiite militia in Baghdad.
Any U.S.-Iran rapprochement would be dead, and we
will have been sucked into a war to achieve the strategic goals of
allies that are in conflict with the national interests of the
United States. And our interests come first.
Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of
Churchill, Hitler, and “The Unnecessary War”: How Britain Lost Its
Empire and the West Lost the World. To find out more about
Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators writers and
cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at
www.creators.com.
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