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Russia's Middle East Dilemma
By Eric Walberg
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 12, 2011
As the Arab Spring grinds on into autumn, the Russians are asking
once again whether they should follow the policy “If you can’t beat ‘em,
join ‘em”, says Eric Walberg
Muammar Al-Gaddafi’s demise is all but a
done thing, carried out with a UN blessing, however dubious, and only
belatedly opposed by Russia and China. Russian policy makers are now
wondering if their quasi-principled condemnation of Western-backed regime
change in Libya was not just Quixotic but downright stupid.
Libya's
National Transitional Council denies that Information Minister Mahmoud
Shammam signed a secret agreement with France in March mediated by the
Qatari government, whereby French companies would control more than a third
of Libya’s oil production in return for Paris’s early and staunch support
for the rebels. However, even as Russia recognised the NTC last week,
Abdeljalil Mayouf, information manager of the rebels’ Arabian Gulf Oil
Company, warned, “We don’t have a problem with Western countries like the
Italians, French and UK companies. But we may have some political issues
with Russia, China and Brazil.”
Al-Gaddafi’s impending fate is now
fuelling Western efforts to topple Bashir Al-Assad in Syria, with France
openly arming and organising the rebels, and a European boycott of Syrian
oil in place as of Friday. The latter is potentially more devastating than
hosting dissident conferences in Paris, as almost all of Syria ’s oil ― a
third of its total export revenues ― goes to Europe .
The burning
question now is “Should Russia should accede to Western plans for the Middle
East?” To “learn from its mistake” in Libya and dump Al-Assad immediately,
whatever the internal dynamics of Syria may be? The whole relationship of
Russia to the Arab Spring is now heatedly discussed, with many critical of
Western machinations but just as many worried that Russia will only lose out
if it stays aloof.
The two camps represent the two poles in
post-Soviet Russian thinking: the Eurasianists vs the Atlantists. The former
trying to put Russia at the centre of an independent anti-Western coalition.
The latter are happy to throw in the towel, to accede to the Western
hegemony which characterises the postmodern imperial order unfolding since
the collapse of the Soviet Union.
There are powerful forces in Russia
behind both views. Atlantist enthusiast Russian President Dmitri Medvedev
was responsible for the success of UN Resolution 1973 allowing the NATO
bombing of Libya. In March, he overrode broad Russian opposition including
by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who denounced the Western invasion as a
new Crusade. Medvedev had to fire Russian ambassador to Libya Vladimir
Chamov when the latter sided with Putin. Medvedev now warns Al-Assad of a
“dire fate” if he continues his campaign against the opposition.
Those who want to accede to the Western agenda complain that in Libya
Tatneft and Gazprom Neft will have to abandon their projects. “We won’t have
anything; Libya ’s oil market will shift in favor of Italian ENI. After
them, the American and European companies,” whines Uralsib Capital analyst
Alexei Kokin. The Russian Railways contract to build a 550 km high-speed
rail line from Sirt to Benghazi also appears to be under review by the new
government in Tripoli.
Libya is far away, and was never much of a
Soviet-Russian ally. In Syria, Russian economic and security stakes are much
higher. Not only is Syria one of Russia’s largest arms export customers,
with current and pending deals valued at $10 billion, but Al-Assad’s regime
is also a significant Russian security partner in the Middle East. The
Russian navy is dependent on Syrian ports to sustain its operations in the
Mediterranean Sea and the Persian Gulf. Russia’s NATO Ambassador Dmitri
Rogozin scoffed at the idea that the West had any altruistic motives in
invading Libya. He told the EUobserver on 2 September that the Libya
experience shows NATO will now “expand towards its southern borders”, and
though he was happy NATO had stopped expanding eastward, “we cannot trust
[that] NATO will not exceed the mandate and NATO bombs will not be dropped
on Damascus.” Concerning the proposed UN resolution against Syria,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said, “This is a call for a repeat of
the Libyan scenario. The BRICS nations will not allow this to happen.” There
is no question for the Russians that honest elections are now unavoidable in
Syria in future, but “we strongly believe it is unacceptable to instigate
the Syrian opposition to continue boycotting suggestions to start a
dialogue.” Russia is unwilling to contemplate another Western-incited civil
war and invasion leading to regime change. For the moment, the Eurasianists
have the upper hand.
Underlying the Atlantist-Eurasianist debate is
the fate of the entire Western project to transform the Middle East, which
has been in the works since the 1980s with the rise of the neocons. This
plan was to bring about a controlled chaos in the region, creating a series
of weak statelets that would benefit a strong Israel. Oded Yinon’s “A
Strategy for Israel in the 1980s” proposed the policy of divide-and-conquer.
Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah described the Israeli policy in 2007 as
intended to create “a region that has been partitioned into ethnic and
confessional states that are in agreement with each other. This is the new
Middle East.”
But given the horrors of this policy in action since
2000, the burning question for Russian politicians is not just “Should we
accede to Western plans for the Middle East?” but rather “Are Western plans
in the Middle East going to succeed, and is Russia helpless to influence
them?”
The neocon wars of the 2000s were the steel fist approach to
subduing Islam: kill millions and terrorise the survivors. But they have
been a disaster, made the US and Israel pariahs, and left a trail of
terrorism in their wake.
In Libya and Syria today, Afghanistan and
Iraq loom large. Russian Profile analyst Alexandre Strokanov fears that “the
real war and even more horrifying suffering still lay ahead for the Libyan
people” and warns that weapons from Al-Gaddafi’s arsenal could well end up
in terrorist hands. Neither the US nor the EU are in any position to get
involved in another “nation-building project”. In any case, the new Libyan
government will have to show its fiercely proud people that it is
independent from all foreign powers.
It is clear now the whole Arab
Spring is not as spontaneous as appeared at first glance. While the regimes
across the region were indeed corrupt and dictatorial, they were all
supported by the West. But so was the opposition. The moment came
when they were perceived as passed their due date, and with the neocons in
office by 2000 and PNAC’s “new Pearl Harbour ” on the horizon, it was
possible to proceed with Yinon’s plan to create dynamic chaos in the Middle
East. The Arab Spring is, in an eerie way, a natural conclusion to the wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq. A sort of “If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em”,
American style.
It has taken various forms so far, with a breezy boot
for Zine Al-Abidine Bin Ali in Tunisia, a pair of handcuffs for Hosni
Mubarak in Egypt, a burnt face for Ali Abdullah Saleh in Yemen, impending
assassination for Al-Gaddafi, and who-knows-what for Al-Assad. The only ones
to escape unharmed are the Gulf sheikhs and the kings of Morocco and Jordan,
who are so compliant that they need only a tap on the shoulder to do
Washington’s bidding. Oh yes, Algeria’s President Abdelaziz Bouteflika is
still hanging on, but not even the neocons dare to overthrow him and reopen
civil war wounds from the 1990s.
That is not to denigrate the
revolutionaries across the region, nor to dismiss their heroic (but very
much uphill) struggles to achieve independence in the face of the Western
intriguers. Among the prominent new leaders are Muslim Brotherhood leaders
such as Tunisia ’s Rachid Ghannouchi and Egypt’s Essam El-Erian. Their
popular Renaissance and Freedom and Justice parties are projected to win the
plurality of seats in upcoming elections, and they have no use for the
imperialists. Then there is Libyan rebel military leader Abdullah Hakim
Belhaj who plans to take the US to court for torturing him and then
rendering him to Al-Gaddafi. There are few secular heroes in the region that
can vie with the long-suffering Islamists.
While Italy and Britain
were cruel colonial taskmasters in Libya before independence, Russia has no
such imperial baggage. Russian officials met with both sides throughout the
stand-off to try to negotiate a ceasefire, emphasising the importance of
international law, and have nothing to be ashamed of. If it’s any comfort to
Atlantists like Kokin, even enthusiastic support by Russia of the bald
imperial venture to unseat Al-Gaddafi would hardly have done Tatneft or
Russian Railways much good.
Russia inherits fond memories across
the region as the anti-Zionist Soviet Union’s successor. It now has the
chance to gain long term credibility as a principled partner not only in the
Middle East but to nonaligned countries everywhere, and should stick to
international law and stare down the imperialists. *** Eric Walberg
can be reached at http://ericwalberg.com/
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