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Remaking the Middle East: How the US Grew Tired
and Less Irrelevant
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 20, 2015
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Neo-Conservative
Zionist planners of the unprovoked 2003 US invasion, occupation,
and destruction of Iraq (Pearle, Feith, and Wolfowitz) called
their initial wanton attacks on Baghdad "Shock and Awe." |
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US Secretary of State, John Kerry, is often perceived as one of the
‘good ones’ - the less hawkish of top American officials, who does not
simply promote and defend his country’s military adventurism but reaches
out to others, beyond polarizing rhetoric. His unremitting
efforts culminated partly in the Iran nuclear framework agreement in
April, followed
by a final deal, a few months later. Now, he is reportedly hard at
work again to find some sort of consensus on a way out of the Syria war, a
multi-party conflict that has killed over 300,000 people. His admirers see
him as the diplomatic executor of a malleable and friendly US foreign
policy agenda under President Obama. In reality, this perception
is misleading; not that Kerry is the warmonger as were George W. Bush’s
top staff, such as Vice-President Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defense,
Donald Rumsfeld. The two were the very antithesis of any rational foreign
policy such that even the elder George H. W. Bush described
them with demeaning terminology, according to his biographer, quoted
in the New York Times. Cheney was an “Iron-ass”, who “had his
own empire ... and marched to his own drummer,” H.W. Bush said, while
calling Rumsfeld “an arrogant fellow” who lacked empathy. Yet,
considering that the elder Bush was rarely a peacemaker himself, one is
left to ponder if the US foreign policy ailment is centered on failure to
elect proper representatives and to enlist anyone other than psychopaths?
If one is to fairly examine US foreign policies in the Middle
East, for example, comparing the conduct of the last three
administrations, that of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama,
one would find that striking similarities are abundant. In principle, all
three administrations’ foreign policy agendas were predicated on strong
militaries and military interventions, although they applied soft power
differently. In essence, Obama
carried on with much of what W. Bush had started in the Middle East,
although he supplanted his country’s less active role in Iraq with new
interventions in Libya and Syria. In fact, his Iraq policies were guided
by Bush’s final act in that shattered country, where he ordered a surge in
troops to pacify the resistance, thus paving the way for an eventual
withdrawal. Of course, none of that plotting worked in their favor, with
the rise of ISIS among others, but that is for another discussion.
Obama has even gone a step further when he
recently decided to keep thousands of US troops in Afghanistan well
into 2017, thus breaking US commitment to withdraw next year. 2017 is
Obama’s last year in office, and the decision is partly motivated by his
administration’s concern that future turmoil in that country could cost
his Democratic Party heavily in the upcoming presidential elections.
In other words, US foreign policy continues unabated, often guided by
the preponderant norm that ‘might makes right’, and by ill-advised
personal ambitions and ideological illusions like those championed by
neo-conservatives during W. Bush’s era. Nevertheless, much has
changed as well, simply because American ambitions to police the world,
politics and the excess of $600 billion a year US defense budget are not
the only variables that control events in the Middle East and everywhere
else. There are other undercurrents that cannot be wished away,
and they too can dictate US foreign policy outlooks and behavior.
Indeed, an American
decline has been noted for many years, and Middle Eastern nations have
been more aware of this decline than others. One could even argue that the
W. Bush administration’s rush for war in Iraq in 2003 in an attempt at
controlling the region’s resources, was a belated effort at staving off
that unmistakable decay – whether in US ability to regulate rising global
contenders or in its overall share of global economy. The folly
of W. Bush, Cheney and company is that they assumed that the Pentagon’s
over $1.5 billion-a-day budget was enough to acquire the US the needed
leverage to control every aspect of global affairs, including a burgeoning
share of world economy. That misconception carries on to this day, where
military spending is already
accounting for about 54 percent of all federal discretionary spending,
itself nearly a third of the country’s overall budget. However,
those who are blaming Obama for failing to leverage US military strength
for political currency refuse to accept that Obama’s behavior hardly
reflects a lack of appetite for war, but a pragmatic response to a
situation that has largely spun out of US control. The so-called
‘Arab Spring’, for example, was a major defining factor in the changes of
US fortunes. And it all came at a particularly interesting time.
First, the Iraq war has destroyed whatever little credibility the US had
in the region, a sentiment that also reverberated around the world.
Second, it was becoming clear that the US foreign policy in Central and
South America - an obstinate continuation of the Monroe
Doctrine of 1823, which laid the groundwork for US domination of that
region – has also been challenged by more assertive leaders, armed with
democratic initiatives, not military coups. Third, China’s
more forceful politics, at least around its immediate regional
surroundings, signaled that the US traditional hegemony over most of East
and South East Asia are also facing fierce competition. Not only many
Asian and other countries have flocked to China, lured by its constantly
growing and seemingly more solid economic performance, if compared to the
US, but others are also flocking
to Russia, which is filling a political and, as of late, military
vacuum left open. The Russian military campaign in Syria, which
was half-heartedly welcomed by the US. has signaled a historic shift
in the Middle East. Even if Russia fails to turn its war into a major
shift of political and economic clout, the mere fact that other contenders
are now throwing their proverbial hats into the Middle East ring, is
simply unprecedented since the British-French-Israeli Tripartite
Aggression on Egypt in 1956. The region’s historians must fully
understand the repercussions of all of these factors, and that simply analyzing
the US decline based on the performance of individuals – Condoleezza
Rice’s hawkishness vs. John Kerry’s supposed sane diplomacy – is a trivial
approach to understanding current shifts in global powers. It
will take years before a new power paradigm fully emerges, during which
time US clients are likely to seek the protection of more dependable
powers. In fact, the shopping for a new power is already under way, which
also means that new
alliances will be formed while others fold. For now, the
Middle East will continue to pass through this incredibly difficult and
violent transition, for which the US is partly responsible.
*** – Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for
over 20 years. He is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the founder of
PalestineChronicle.com. His books include ‘Searching Jenin’, ‘The Second
Palestinian Intifada’ and his latest ‘My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza’s Untold Story’. His website is: www.ramzybaroud.net.
***
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