Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
From OIC to NAM:
Iran's Peace Offensive
By Eric Walberg
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 27, 2012
The discrepancy between Western media on the Middle East and the
reality is astounding. Egypt's Mubarak is a good guy and reliable ally
until, presto, he is a bad guy, corrupt, a tyrant, yesterday's goods. This
extreme myopia in the interests of empire is the case across the board. So
it should come as no surprise, that 'Axis of Evil' Iran, supposedly just
itching to build atomic bombs and terrorize one and all, has good relations
-- getting better all the time -- not only its neighbours Afghanistan
(reconstruction aid plus a new rail link from Herat to the Persian Gulf) and
Pakistan (the gas Peace Pipeline), but its not-so-friendly rivals Saudi
Arabia and now Egypt.
This month there are two conferences -- OIC and
NAM -- where Iran's increasingly prominence internationally is on display.
The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) meeting last week in Mecca saw
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad sitting next to Saudi King Abdullah
bin Abulaziz, and frank discussion about Syria, with Iran making the
decision to expel Syria look foolish and pointless. Surely the Syrian
leadership should have been invited to make its case first; as it stands,
the expulsion is a violation of the OIC charter. “By suspending Syria’s
membership, this does not mean you are moving towards resolving an issue. By
this, you are erasing the issue,” said Iran’s Foreign Minister Ali Akbar
Salehi. And making things worse, he could have added.
Iran had every
reason to boycott the OIC meeting, or come and denounce its hosts for
supporting the ruthless suppression of the Bahraini uprising. Instead,
Iranian officials came to the OIC to try to mend fences with the pro-US,
anti-Iranian Saudi and Gulf states (and assure their attendance at the NAM
conference this week), and try to bring the bloodshed in Syria to an end.
“Every country, especially OIC countries, must join hands to resolve this
issue in such a way that will help the peace, security and stability in the
region,” said Salehi. What better place or better time for the devout
Ahmedinejad than Mecca as Ramadan comes to a close? The Saudi king even
announced a gift for Iran and the world's Shia with his initiative of a
Sunni-Shia dialogue centre.
Iran's foreign policy demarche
chalked up another plus with Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi's announcement
that he, not his new Vice-President Mahmoud Mekki, will attend the NAM
summit this week in Tehran, the first visit of an Egyptian head of state (or
any senior official for that matter) since the Iranian Revolution in 1979
and diplomatic relations were severed in 1980 following Egypt's peace treaty
with Israel.
Speculation is rife as to just where Egypt is
headed following the Arab Spring, called in Tehran the Islamic Awakening.
The ousters of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia
were hailed in Tehran as echoes of Iran's 1979 ouster of the Shah. Again
Western media dismissed this comparison, though the parallels were
unmistakable -- both leaders were corrupt, secular, pro-US. Instead, media
tried to draw a parallel between the youthful, westernized Facebook
activists in Cairo in 2011 and their Tehran equivalents during presidential
elections in 2009, as if the Islamic character of Egypt and Iran was
something ephemeral, and the Facebook crowd represents the true voice of the
people. Egypt's tumultuous months following the 2011 revolution, resulting
in the Islamists' triumph at the polls, and Iranian resolve today attest to
the true nature and state of their revolutions.
Morsi's first foreign
visit was to Saudi Arabia, to meet Egypt's most important neighbour, where
he performed the Umra. His second major foreign policy photo-op was with
Gaza Prime Minister Ismail Haniya. After ousting his top pro-US generals,
Morsi made his return trip to Mecca last week, and after a trip to Beijing,
he will visit Tehran. No doubt Washington will finally see the new face of
Egypt, but there is no question that this is not the Egypt that the US took
for granted as a loyal sidekick for 40 years.
So it came as no
surprise to neutral observers that the Egyptian position on Syria at the OIC
summit was not one that fits US Middle East policy. Yes, Morsi stated, it
was "time for the Syrian regime to leave", but he pointedly refused foreign
intervention and called for a contact group of Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey
and Egypt to bring about a nonviolent change. Morsi and the Egyptian MB have
all along been calling for a ceasefire and peaceful resolution, in line with
the Russian/ Iranian position, despite the persecution of the Syrian MB for
many years by a largely secular regime, and MB involvement in the armed
insurgency in Syria.
This is in keeping with the long-held
position of the Egyptian MB against the use of violence, a position which
paid off in spades with the Egyptian revolution. Egypt is not Algeria,
Afghanistan -- or Syria, but moving forward as a mature, stable democracy,
where the president takes principled positions reflecting the aspirations of
his people. Qatar's $2 billion offered at the OIC to shore up Egypt’s
foreign reserves did not change Morsi's mind.
Iranian Foreign
Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast supported Morsi's proposal for a
broad-based Muslim resolution of the Syrian stand-off: "Syria has turned
into a point of confrontation between all the arrogant powers and the entire
Islamic resistance movement." If Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iran -- with Egypt
as catalyst -- can present a united front to both the Assad regime and the
many opposition groups, neither will have anywhere to go, and a resolution
will happen. The 57-member OIC, founded in 1969, representing almost two
billion Muslims worldwide, is charged with “promoting solidarity among
members and upholding peace and security”. Egypt and Iran merely held the
OIC to its professed goal.
Egypt's rapprochement with Iran is long
overdue, held in check by the Mubarak regime's toadying to the US and
Israel. One of the first ships to go through the Suez Canal after the
revolution last year, long before the MB came to power through its Freedom
and Justice Party, was an Iranian warship. Even under Mubarak, the pressure
to normalize relations was mounting, with trade increasing and normalization
of relations between EgyptAir and IranAir. Full diplomatic relations are
only a matter of months.
Conferences come and go, but they are always
a bit of a litmus test for the host country. The 16th Non-aligned Movement
(NAM) summit -- dismissed by the Washington Post as a "bacchanal of
nonsense" -- in Tehran from August 26-31 is being attended by virtually all
NAM's 120 member countries, including over 40 heads of state, with current
NAM President Morsi the guest of honour. Egypt hosted the last NAM
conference in 2009, and according to protocol, the Egyptian head of state
presides over NAM activities until the next conference. That meant first
Hosni Mubarak, then Field Marshall Mohamed Tantawi, and as of 1 July Mohamed
Morsi. (Egypt last hosted the NAM conference in 1964, and Gamal Abdel-Nasser
headed the organization from 1964--1970.)
NAM was founded in Belgrade
in 1961 by Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito, Indian prime minister
Jawaharlal Nehru, Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser, Ghana's first
president Kwame Nkrumah, and Indonesian president Sukarno, all legends of
the national liberation movement, with solid anti-imperial credentials, who
advocated a middle course for the developing world between the Western and
Eastern blocs in the Cold War. Its principles, like the OIC's, are
solidarity and peaceful resolution of conflicts, though it was founded as a
counterweight to the superpowers, abjuring big power military alliances and
pacts, while the OIC was founded and originally funded by Saudi Arabia as an
explicitly anti-communist club solidly in the Western camp. Neither
organization has had much influence in world affairs, NAM going into decline
after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the OIC -- as its latest
resolution on Syria attests – never straying far from the US policy fold.
Nonetheless, NAM represents nearly two-thirds of UN members and 55%
of the world's population. At the seventh summit held in New Delhi in 1983,
the movement described itself as "history's biggest peace movement", placing
equal emphasis on disarmament. However, since the end of the Cold War, NAM
has struggled to find relevance, as other blocs such as BRIC (Brazil,
Russia, India and China) formed to act as a counterweight to the sole
remaining superpower, not based so much on ex-colonial status, but on
ability to project influence. Brazil has never been a member of NAM.
During the 1970s and early 1980s, NAM sponsored a campaign for restructuring
commercial relations between developed and developing nations, the New
International Economic Order and its cultural offspring, the New World
Information and Communication Order, which still has relevance today. The
movement is publicly committed to sustainable development and the attainment
of the Millennium Development Goals, making international financial
decision-making more democratic, easing poor countries’ debt burden, making
trade fairer and increasing foreign aid.
By hosting the conference
and taking on the responsibility for NAM leadership, Iran is clearly intent
on injecting new life into the most important anti-imperialist international
organization, given that the UN, the OIC, and the Arab League are all more
or less subservient to the US Middle East agenda.
NAM summits have
traditionally been held every few years. Of the last three, two were hosted
by Muslim countries -- Malaysia (2003) and Egypt (2009). The 2006 conference
was hosted by Cuba. NAM disappeared from sight under Egyptian control, but
the new prominence of Muslim countries in NAM's affairs shows that the
Muslim world has begun to take on the mantle of third world solidarity once
claimed by the socialist world. As China becomes a developed superpower
concerned primarily with its own regional power and economic well-being, and
Russia joins the Euro-club, the Muslim world is redefining itself, with NAM
corresponding to its age-old concerns with equality and social justice.
No doubt the NAM resolution will confirm Morsi's proposal on Syria,
Iran’s right to take advantage of peaceful nuclear energy, condemn Israel's
nuclear weapons and ongoing theft of Palestinian land, and the West’s use of
double standards on terrorism and use of force in foreign relations. This
would be in keeping with its past criticism of the US invasion of Iraq, the
War on Terrorism, attempts to stifle Iran's nuclear energy plans, and other
actions which it denounced as human rights violations and attempts to run
roughshod over the sovereignty of smaller nations. ***
Eric
Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/ and is author of Postmodern Imperialism:
Geopolitics and the Great Games
http://claritypress.com/Walberg.html You can reach him at
http://ericwalberg.com/
|
|
|