The Nexus and the Olive Tree

The White House needs to tune out the dramatic events of Syria and Libya and focus on America's strategic goals in the region.

BY MICHAEL DORAN | AUGUST 22, 2011

Henry Kissinger has frequently observed that two of the key challenges of conducting foreign policy are learning to distinguish between urgent and important matters, and then devising techniques to keep the urgent from driving away all consideration of the important. In other words, the volume of pressing work is so great that officials sometimes fail to answer key strategic questions because they are too busy answering the telephone.

With the constant stream of news coming from the Middle East these days, Kissinger's observation is more important than ever. The world -- including, undoubtedly, no small number of U.S. officials -- is currently captivated by the death throes of Muammar al-Qaddafi's regime in Libya. Just last Thursday, Aug. 18, however, Washington's attention was focused 1,300 miles to the east, on the travails of a completely different dictator, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who was called upon by Washington to step aside. And of course, in the weeks and months before that, the foreign-policy community was focused like a laser on Cairo, Tunis, and Sanaa. 

Today, naturally, the urgent questions U.S. senior leaders are asking include: How can the United States encourage Libya's rebel movement to adopt an inclusive, transparent system of government? How can the international community prevent a bloodletting of revenge killings in Tripoli? And, looking to Damascus, who will work with Washington to oust Assad, and what is the best method to exploit fractures in his regime?

Pressing though these questions may be, they must not be permitted to drive out deep consideration of the most important challenges faced by U.S. foreign-policy leaders. These are: What are America's overarching strategic goals in the Middle East? And what role does its Syria policy play in achieving them?

In other words, we must go back to basics. This highly inconvenient moment is exactly the right time to do so, because the call for Assad's removal represents the final disintegration of the strategic paradigm that had guided Washington for the last two-and-a-half years. Constructing a new model, though not urgent, is of the highest importance.

President Barack Obama's administration came into office guided by a comprehensive critique of George W. Bush's "war on terror." After 9/11, Bush had adopted a very broad view of the strategic threat facing the United States, defining it as "nexus": the convergence of state sponsors of terrorism, terrorist groups, and weapons of mass destruction. This approach, as the Obama administration saw it, led to strategic overreach. Lumping al Qaeda together with states that had no clear connection to Osama bin Laden's organization mired the United States in a pointless and costly war in Iraq, while also fostering a highly adversarial relationship with many other countries, Iran and Syria being the two most notable cases. The nexus doctrine branded these states as pariahs.

For its part, the Obama administration certainly recognized that Tehran and Damascus were hostile and deeply problematic actors, but it also observed that these regimes had good reason to feel threatened by al Qaeda. U.S. policy, therefore, should seek to exploit the potential overlap in interests. In addition, Iran and Syria seemed to be unnatural allies. It was the Manichaean template of the Bush administration, the Obama team believed, that had forced the two powers together. The smarter play was to pry them apart, by wooing Damascus away from Tehran.

Bush had fallen into a trap laid by bin Laden. By taking up a fight with so many Muslim adversaries simultaneously, his administration had inadvertently corroborated the core narrative of al Qaeda, which presented the war on terror as a war on Islam. At the same time, the excessive coziness, as the new administration saw it, between the Bush team and right-wing Israelis only further affirmed the narrative by making the United States appear as the key indirect enabler of the oppression of the Palestinian people

Obama revamped American strategy with this critique in mind. His overarching goal was to construct a new narrative of Muslim-American friendship. This effort began in earnest with the June 2009 Cairo address, titled "A New Beginning." In the speech, the president emphasized that "Islam has always been a part of America's story" and promised to do his best to resolve points of friction in the relationship, most notably the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

While working to redress Muslim grievances, Obama simultaneously sought to demilitarize relations between the United States and Muslim countries. The first step in this effort was replacing the overly broad war on terror with the concept of a limited conflict focused solely on al Qaeda. This narrower definition did lead to a troop surge in Afghanistan. However, as compensation for this intensification of military activity, the new vision simultaneously encouraged a speedy withdrawal from Iraq. What's more, it also opened the door to diplomatic engagement with Iran and Syria. In the heartland of the Middle East, the United States was now telling a story of conciliation.

This new narrative of partnership required Muslim co-authors. However, one of Obama's early efforts to find a partner was rebuffed. Immediately before the Cairo speech, he headed to Saudi Arabia, where he sought King Abdullah's cooperation in revitalizing the Arab-Israeli peace process. Obama was surprised to find King Abdullah preoccupied with another problem: the rise of Iran. Tehran's regional influence was growing, and the regime was on the verge of acquiring a nuclear weapon.

What, King Abdullah asked, was the American strategy? Obama had no good answer and, therefore, missed an early opportunity to establish a strategic accommodation with the most influential Arab ally of the United States.

The president had much better luck recruiting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan as a co-author. Erdogan's résumé was tailor-made for the role. No stooge of the Americans, he had impeccable Islamist credentials. Even better, Turkey was now something of an anti-imperial regional power. It had refused to participate in the Iraq war, and it had embarked on a newly independent policy in the Middle East. The brainchild of Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, this policy celebrated the intention of Turkey to have "zero problems with neighbors" such as Iran and Syria, while still maintaining close relations with the United States. This stance amounted to a kind of nonalignment that aimed to establish Turkey as the Middle East's mediator in chief. Ankara, unlike Riyadh, was actually eager to play a role in the Arab-Israeli peace process and to intercede between the United States and Iran and Syria. This zeal to be an Islamist middleman supported Obama's three key goals: adopting a newly modest American demeanor, reducing tensions with the radical states, and solving the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Despite this promising résumé, Erdogan has failed as the co-author of a compelling new narrative. A Turkish mediation effort between Israel and Syria was already in trouble by the time of the May 2010 Gaza flotilla incident, which left nine Turks dead at the hands of the Israelis. Meanwhile, Turkish initiatives with respect to the Iranian nuclear program have produced no successes. If anything, they have needlessly complicated international efforts to stop the Iranians.

Meanwhile, Iran's behavior throughout the Middle East remains as threatening as ever, providing covert lethal assistance to its Iraqi proxies, to the Taliban, and to Assad's killing machine. U.S. government sources have even pointed to the existence of significant links between Tehran and al Qaeda. Little by little, Obama's view of the strategic threat has grown closer to Bush's concept of nexus.

With the call for Assad's ouster, Obama has almost come full circle. The crowning achievement of the Turkish "zero-problems" policy was supposed to have been the establishment of cooperative relations between Damascus and the West. No power worked harder than Turkey to bring Assad in from the cold. And no power encouraged Turkey in this effort more warmly than the United States. Whatever benefits the zero-problems policy may have provided to the Turks, it has done precious little for the Americans on the issues of deepest concern to them. Therefore, Obama's call for Assad to step down represents a tacit admission that the co-authored narrative of harmony and conciliation will remain forever unwritten.

What went wrong? At the deepest level, the problem was not an overreliance on the Turks. It was, rather, the faulty American assumptions that made Erdogan's zero-problems policy appear attractive in the first place.

At the heart of Obama's grand strategy was a mistaken definition of the strategic challenge. Now that the Arab uprisings have dragged the United States through a crash course on Middle Eastern realities, U.S. policymakers can more easily recognize the deepest drivers of politics in the region -- namely, the vast number of severe conflicts that set Muslims against Muslims. From a practical strategic point of view, there is no such thing as "the Muslim world." Any effort to write a narrative of cooperation with a thing that does not actually exist is bound to encounter severe difficulties.

The United States must therefore dispense entirely with grand strategies that seek to foster a conciliatory image of the United States and to solve the Arab-Israeli conflict. Instead, it should focus on the key challenge posed by the Arab uprisings: managing intra-Muslim conflict.

This requires returning to the question that Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah first posed to Obama: What is the strategy of the United States toward Iran? At stake in Syria today is nothing less than the future of the Iranian regional security system. It should not escape notice that the Saudis, though hostile to the populist wave in general, have now aligned themselves against Assad. As much as they fear revolution, the Saudis fear the Islamic Republic of Iran even more, and they see the Syrian crisis as an opportunity to deal a severe blow to it. The United States should adopt a similar view.

The contest on the ground in Syria, obviously, has profoundly local causes. Nevertheless, the regional struggle between Iran and its rivals will play a significant role in shaping it. After Assad falls, a proxy war will erupt, with outside powers seeking to cultivate Syrian clients. Iran and Hezbollah will use the covert and brutal methods that they have honed in Lebanon and Iraq. They will preserve what they can from the remnants of Assad's security services, while simultaneously arming and training new proxies. They will kill off and intimidate those Syrians who get in their way.

The United States has a vital interest in thwarting Iran. To do so effectively, however, it must develop a serious and sustained regional containment strategy. The process of writing the new strategy begins, like before, in Riyadh and Ankara. This time, however, Obama should reverse his attitude toward the preferences of King Abdullah and Prime Minister Erdogan. The Syrian crisis offers a new opportunity to reach a strategic accommodation with the Saudis. At the same time, it should also force Washington to re-evaluate the Turks' no-problems policy. To date, this policy has worked to the net benefit of Iran and Syria and to the detriment of the United States. There is no reason to believe that it will produce a different result in the future.

Writing a new grand strategy is important, but not urgent. It can always be put off until tomorrow, "when things calm down." In the meantime, the phone is ringing. The world was treated to images of cheering Libyans retaking their capital on Aug. 21; the United States will surely be called upon to play a role in the messy political transition that will follow. The Aug. 18 terrorist attack in Israel has raised the specter of another Gaza war, while also escalating tensions with Egypt. And next month, the question of Palestinian statehood may well be taken up by the United Nations.

These and many other matters will soon fill up the calendar of U.S. officials. But if Washington is not careful, all these urgent issues will push aside consideration of grand strategy, precisely when it is needed most.

HAZEM BADER/AFP/Getty Images

 

Michael Doran, a former senior director for the Middle East at the U.S. National Security Council, is the Roger Hertog senior fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution.

 

SALEH1

9:57 AM ET

August 23, 2011

The Syrians do not need you, thanks

The writer described that military operation against Israeli soldiers near Eilat as a "terrorist attack" although all those killed were Israeli soldiers occupying Palestinian lands including the West Bank and Gaza.

I can tell you that the greatest majority of Syrians (both opposition and pro-government) will fight against the US and/or NATO if they attempt to repeat the Lybia scenario.

Leave Syria to the Syrians. Thanks, but not thanks. No help is needed from you. We have seen the love you have shown in Iraq and other parts of the Arab world and we see all your military bases around. We have had enough US/NATO love. We do not want any more. Leave Syria to the Syrians and mind your own problems.

 

JACOB BLUES

10:43 AM ET

August 23, 2011

Actually Saleh, it was a terrorist attack

Six of the eight casualties were civilians, including two pairs of husbands and wives. Also, the attack occurred not in the West Bank or Gaza, but in Israel itself and all those targeted were travelling to and from the Israeli city of Eilat.

 

JAYDEE001

10:45 AM ET

August 23, 2011

An interesting perspective...

One of your comments struck me as very perceptive: "Bush had fallen into a trap laid by bin Laden. By taking up a fight with so many Muslim adversaries simultaneously, his administration had inadvertently corroborated the core narrative of al Qaeda, which presented the war on terror as a war on Islam."
Osama may be laughing from his watery grave - he did successfully lure the US into a protracted war in Afghanistan that he had to hope would cost us dearly in terms of manpower and treasure. That Bush threw in the Iraq invasion and lengthy occupation may have been an unexpected gift.

I am also leery of suggestions that the US ought to be wary of alleged ties between Iran and al Qaeda - after all it was similar mis-information that got us involved in Iraq. I believe the Persians have always had a healthy distrust of al Qaeda - although they probably have no second thoughts about using al Qaeda for their own purposes.

As for Syria, the violence there is tragic, but it is best the US and other western nations stay uninvolved. Let the Saudis, the Turks, and others deal with Assad and his imperiled regime. Any involvement by the US, NATO or other western countries will not be welcomed by the majority of Syrians. Even if they overthrow Assad, it is no guarantee that a democratic solution respectful of human rights (freedom of religion, female equality, etc) will follow. The same applies to other Arab states across North Africa where so-called "democracy movements" have unseated long-entrenched dictators, but where the future of those movements is still unclear.

Obama may have been naive in his initial efforts to forge a new US policy towards Islamic counties, but the fact that he charted a different course than the previous administration was not a failure.

 

RICHARD CARDULLA

1:35 PM ET

August 23, 2011

iSREAL'S POLICY DELIVERED

The articles' main point and that which is being pushed is Isreal's postion ,ie Iran, Iran Iran. All the rest of the article was fill to make it look as if it is an analyis of the new reality in the middle east, but its main prupose is to target Iran.
Mr. Doran, you are either an Isreali firsty or being paid by Isreal to write such an obvious deception. Stating that Iran is making a bomb as a fact and then to casually link Iran with al Quada, just like Iraq was falsy linked is disgusting.
Do you have no regard for the USA that you wish to draw it into another war for a greater Isreal?

 

AARKY

3:48 PM ET

August 23, 2011

More Zionist Propaganda

Richard Cardulla-You said it right! This is more Israeli propaganda and lies masquerading as a learned discussion. The Sky is Falling, The Sky is Falling! Iran has nukes, let's bomb now! Better yet, let's sucker the US into doing it for us. The US and the top Israelis know that Iran doesn't have Nukes, so what is the end game for the Likkudniks? Is this just a test to see how fast the Israeli tail can wag the US dog? It's really a national disgrace that the political side of the US Government; the WH, State Department and Zionists members of Congress can parrot the lines from IAPAC, WINEP, and other Israeli lobbying groups. At the same time, our intelligence organizations say there is no evidence to show that Iran is building Nukes. We have a greater chance that the Japanese will convert their 20,000 lbs of plutonium into over 1000 Hiroshima type bombs.

 

HAWAII_WEB_DESIGNER

5:16 PM ET

August 23, 2011

I dont get it

Why does the US needs to put their nose in this metter? why dont let the Lebyans deal with it themself? its ike all this is design to give the US more power some how...

 

RICHARD CARDULLA

3:10 AM ET

August 24, 2011

other example of Isreal's hand

Doran says in this article
1. "U.S. must dispense entirely with grand strategies .....to solve the Arab-Isreali conflict"

Really, the U.S. governments total support for Isreal is not the cause for the hatred of the U.S. in the Arab world? Our generals are wrong this total support is costing U.S. soldiers lives? This statement is not the central theme in every Isreali arguement?

2. "U.S. should reach a new strategic accomodation with the Saudis"

Your advice (sorry Isreals') is to strategicly join one of the last Arab dictatorships? This after Saudi reaction in Baharian? In light of the Arab spring? Brillant!!!

3. ""At the same time, it should also force Washington to re-evaluate the Turks' no-problem policy."

Funny that you should say this just when the Isreali-Turkish relationship has gone south. Don't look now, but your Star of David is showing under your America flag label.

 

RICHARD CARDULLA

8:57 AM ET

August 24, 2011

more on Doran's truths

Doran says in his article "Iran and Hezbollah will use the covert and brutal methods that they have honed in Lebanon and Iraq."

Speaking of "brutal methods", I would ask Mr. Doran what he thinks of Isreal's Operation Caste Lead in Gaza.

In 1952(?) former terorrist and Isreali PM Begin wrote his autobiagraph "The Revolt" which is remarkable similar to Hitler's in that it states, like Hitler's, where Germany and Isreal will invade next. Hitler wanted Poland and Russian land and said so in his book; and then promptly did when he came to power. Begin said that Isreal owns up to the Latani River in Lebanon, and that anyone who says otherwise is an enemy of Isreal. (Don't believe me, read the book.)

Isreali PM Begin learned from Hitler about fighting a two front war so he (sold) the Siani Desert back to Egypt, with America paying the bill for Egypt, on the condition that it be de-militarized. (He first pumped dry all the oil wells there first). With his southern border secure, and before the ink was dry on the Egyption treaty, Isreal's PM Begin invaded Lebanon and ,surprise, surprise, occupied southern Lebanon up to the Latani River with its water.
All went well until those pesky Hezballah fighters formed because of Isreali presence on Lebanon's soil, and started taking a toll on Isreal.

Isreal tried again in 2006 and found the price a little high and had to settle with distroying Lebanese property and killing a few thousand civilians and a few UN peacekeepers.

Isreal will return however under a new plan. As long as there is a civilian population in southern Lebanon, Isreal will not be happy. That is why on the last days of the 2006 war Isreal seed the whole area with un-exploded custer bombs to prevent the return of the native people. The next step will come when Isreal has it's war with Iran. Isreal will send a few bombers to Iran, Iran stupidly attacks American's assests in the Gulf, and America finishes the dirty work. While this is playing out Isreal attacks Lebanon (Hezbollah), by carpet bombing southern Lebanon with small bunkerbuster bombs. Hezbballah, like most armies are prepared to fight the last war (2006) in which they had some success, ie. fighting from hidden bunkers.

Isreal will have southern Lebanon cleared of militants and civilians alike, at least live ones, and can therefore settle in for good, without fear of attack. America, now involved in a third war, and with the American population feeling that they were attacked first by Iran, will ralley around poor Isreal who will be claiming that they gave up southern Lebanon once and what did they get , another war forced on them. Never again!!!

It will happen, the question is when.

Mr. Doran, I am sure you are a professor now thanks to you having served in the Defence Department and on the Security Council. Based on this I am sure that your University will be interested in hiring Sarah Palin, after all she ran for Vice President of the whole US. Maybe a professorship in International relations on economics would be in line at the university that hired you.

 

IMANT

2:22 AM ET

August 26, 2011

The constant USA's

The constant USA's involvement in the foreign issues will not bring any luck. This constant pursue for power and desire to conquer all the world in the light of the billions of debt and the rotten medical care system is pathetic. The America should think about its own citizens, but it desperately needs the oil and money, so it cannot lose the relationship with the East, but it sends American soldiers there who are being killed for something that nobody has the idea about.
onlinedatingtips

 

GARRYBARRY

12:25 AM ET

September 18, 2011

More examples

An interesting topic and articleto debate. Splendid points made aboveabout
The White House needs to tune out the dramatic events of Syria and Libya and focus on America's strategic goals in the region. I agree with some of them. I appreciate you taking time to write this article. It's really good reading and learning new things on sudjects I wouldn't normally read about and seeing other peoples views on these critical matters. I recommend everyone in thebooking agency & entertainers association read them too. Best, Garry.

 

POLITICALLY CORRECT

9:01 AM ET

September 20, 2011

Summed up in a sentence

The first sentence basically sums it up, though the above comments are probably a better summary of the crisis and the cost of lives lost. It's quite heart wrenching to see families lost. One can pray any children to the couples lost are looked after and loved.

 

TAYFA34

6:25 AM ET

September 22, 2011

No Comment

And Palestinian land will shrink, suicide bombers will respond, rockets will be launched and Israelis killed. Now Hezbollah and Sunnis have started up again in Lebanon. And Iran is powering up its nuclear capacity. Israel may feel impelled to react at some point if it calculates either Lebanon or Iran needs to be nipped in the bud. Add Syria to the toxic mix in Lebanon; and if things boil over there then Palestine will be left to sit and stew on the perennial international back burner. Hope, at this point, is not even a diamond in the rough. porno porno porno porno sikiş web tasarım