Propaganda Based On Partial Truth
Why Middle
Eastern Leaders Are Talking to Putin, Not Obama
By
Dennis Ross
May 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Politico"
-
The United
States has significantly more military capability in
the Middle East today than Russia—America has 35,000
troops and hundreds of aircraft; the Russians
roughly 2,000 troops and, perhaps, 50 aircraft—and
yet Middle Eastern leaders are making pilgrimages to
Moscow to see Vladimir Putin these days, not rushing
to Washington. Two weeks ago, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu traveled to see the Russian
president, his second trip to Russia since last
fall, and King Salman of Saudi Arabia is planning a
trip soon. Egypt’s president and other Middle
Eastern leaders have also made the trek to see
Putin.
Why is this
happening, and why on my trips to the region am I
hearing that Arabs and Israelis have pretty much
given up on President Barack Obama? Because
perceptions matter more than mere power: The
Russians are seen as willing to use power to affect
the balance of power in the region, and we are not.
Putin’s
decision to intervene militarily in Syria has
secured President Bashar Assad’s position and
dramatically reduced the isolation imposed on Russia
after the seizure of Crimea and its continuing
manipulation of the fighting in Ukraine. And Putin’s
worldview is completely at odds with Obama’s. Obama
believes in the use of force only in circumstances
where our security and homeland might be directly
threatened. His mindset justifies pre-emptive action
against terrorists and doing more to fight the
Islamic State. But it frames U.S. interests and the
use of force to support them in very narrow terms.
It reflects the president’s reading of the lessons
of Iraq and Afghanistan, and helps to explain why he
has been so reluctant to do more in Syria at a time
when the war has produced a humanitarian
catastrophe, a refugee crisis that threatens the
underpinnings of the European Union, and helped to
give rise to Islamic State. And, it also explains
why he thinks that Putin cannot gain—and is
losing—as a result of his military intervention in
Syria.
But in the
Middle East it is Putin’s views on the uses of
coercion, including force to achieve political
objectives, that appears to be the norm, not the
exception—and that is true for our friends as well
as adversaries. The Saudis acted in Yemen in no
small part because they feared the United States
would impose no limits on Iranian expansion in the
area, and they felt the need to draw their own
lines. In the aftermath of the nuclear deal, Iran’s
behavior in the region has been more aggressive, not
less so, with regular Iranian forces joining the
Revolutionary Guard now deployed to Syria, wider use
of Shiite militias, arms smuggling into Bahrain and
the eastern province of Saudi Arabia, and ballistic
missile tests.
Russia’s
presence has not helped. The Russian military
intervention turned the tide in Syria and,
contrary to Obama’s view, has put the Russians
in a stronger position without imposing any
meaningful costs on them. Not only are they not
being penalized for their Syrian intervention, but
the president himself is now calling Vladimir Putin
and seeking his help to pressure Assad—effectively
recognizing who has leverage. Middle Eastern leaders
recognize it as well and realize they need to be
talking to the Russians if they are to safeguard
their interests. No doubt, it would be better if the
rest of the world defined the nature of power the
way Obama does. It would be better if,
internationally, Putin were seen to be losing. But
he is not.
This does
not mean that we are weak and Russia is strong.
Objectively, Russia is declining economically and
low oil prices spell increasing financial troubles—a
fact that may explain, at least in part, Putin’s
desire to play up Russia’s role on the world stage
and his exercise of power in the Middle East. But
Obama’s recent trip to Saudi Arabia did not alter
the perception of American weakness and our
reluctance to affect the balance of power in the
region. The Arab Gulf states fear growing Iranian
strength more than they fear the Islamic State—and
they are convinced that the administration is ready
to acquiesce in Iran’s pursuit of regional hegemony.
Immediately after the president’s meeting at the
Gulf Cooperation Council summit, Abdulrahman
al-Rashed, a journalist very well connected to Saudi
leaders, wrote: “Washington cannot open up doors to
Iran allowing it to threaten regional countries …
while asking the afflicted countries to settle
silently.”
As I hear
on my visits to the region, Arabs and Israelis alike
are looking to the next administration. They know
the Russians are not a force for stability; they
count on the United States to play that role.
Ironically, because Obama has conveyed a reluctance
to exercise American power in the region, many of
our traditional partners in the area realize they
may have to do more themselves. That’s not
necessarily a bad thing unless it drives them to act
in ways that might be counterproductive. For
example, had the Saudis been more confident about
our readiness to counter the Iranian-backed threats
in the region, would they have chosen to go to war
in Yemen—a costly war that not surprisingly is very
difficult to win and that has imposed a terrible
price? Obama has been right to believe that the
regional parties must play a larger role in fighting
the Islamic State. He has, unfortunately, been wrong
to believe they would do so if they thought we
failed to see the bigger threat they saw and they
doubted our credibility.
Indeed, so
long as they question American reliability, there
will be limits to how much they will expose
themselves—whether in fighting the Islamic State,
not responding to Russian entreaties, or even
thinking about assuming a role of greater
responsibility for Palestinian compromises on making
peace with Israel. To take advantage of their
recognition that they may need to run more risks and
assume more responsibility in the region, they will
want to know that America’s word is good and there
will be no more “red lines” declared but
unfulfilled; that we see the same threats they do;
and that U.S. leaders understand that power affects
the landscape in the region and will not hesitate to
reassert it.
Several
steps would help convey such an impression:
⧫ Toughen
our declaratory policy toward Iran about the
consequences of cheating on the Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action to include blunt, explicit language
on employing force, not sanctions, should the
Iranians violate their commitment not to pursue or
acquire a nuclear weapon;
⧫ Launch
contingency planning with GCC states and Israel—who
themselves are now talking—to generate specific
options for countering Iran’s growing use of Shiite
militias to undermine regimes in the region. (A
readiness to host quiet three-way discussions with
Arab and Israeli military planners would signal we
recognize the shared threat perceptions, the new
strategic realities, and the potentially new means
to counter both radical Shiite and Sunni threats.)
⧫ Be
prepared to arm the Sunni tribes in Iraq if Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi continues to be blocked
from doing so by the Iranians and the leading
militias;
⧫ In Syria,
make clear that if the Russians continue to back
Assad and do not force him to accept the Vienna
principles (a cease-fire, opening humanitarian
corridors, negotiations and a political transition),
they will leave us no choice but to work with our
partners to develop safe havens with no-fly zones.
Putin and
Middle Eastern leaders understand the logic of
coercion. It is time for us to reapply it.
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