Monday, April 16, 2012

Laying Out a Proper MidEast Policy




What’s The Proper U.S. Middle East Policy? It’s Simple -Barry Rubin

Since there is so much bad policy on the Middle East to critique and since there’s no hope of the Obama Administration listening to alternative strategies, I usually focus on attacking bad policies rather than on suggesting better ones.

There is no great mystery, however, about what a good U.S. Middle East policy would look like.

The United States should take leadership. This is what its allies and dependents want and its enemies fear.

Identify the greatest threat today as revolutionary Islamism. Build a broad alliance with all those opposed to revolutionary Islamism. Of course, this list includes millions of non- and anti-Islamist Muslims:

Canada; European allies; Israel; and the remaining Arab governments that are relatively moderateon international affairs: Morocco; Algeria; Saudi Arabia, Kuwait; Bahrain; Oman; the United Arab Emirates; Iraq, South Sudan, and Jordan. Add to that the oppositions in Lebanon, Iran, and Turkey, and the truly moderate elements in Syria. Work with the real moderates and the army in Egypt (though these two are at loggerheads) and Turkey (whose army is being weakened perhaps the point of no return).

Plug in also with India, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and a number of other governments in Asia and Africa, too that face radical external and internal threats . China’s interests should be appealed to based on its desire for stability, need for secure sources of energy and supply routes, and concerns over its own Muslim minority becoming radicalized.

The goal is to keep revolutionary Islamists out of power wherever possible, as was done with Communists in the Cold War. Revolutionary Islamist states and movements should be subverted and weakened. The U.S. government should comprehend that terrorism is a tactic used sometimes by some revolutionary Islamist groups and not a movement in itself. Thus, the very real danger posed by al-Qaida of carrying out terrorist attacks is strategically less significant than the ability of Muslim Brotherhood and other groups of taking over entire countries and turning them against the United States.

The idea that apology, appeasement, or concessions will moderate Islamists should be abandoned. The idea that the West can somehow produce its own moderate brand of Islam or will be rescued by tiny groups of doctrinally moderate Muslims should be dropped.

The direct use of force should be limited to circumstances where it is unavoidable...

Democracy is a nice idea but ...the enemies of real functional democracy (rule of law; fair treatment of minorities, civil liberties) have caught on to the idea of using democratic forms to impose majority-backed dictatorships.

Have no illusion that there is going to be progress on Arab-Israeli or Israel-Palestinian issues. You can keep up a pretense of diplomatic activity but don’t let that get in the way of real priorities. The Palestinian side’s leadership has rejected a two-state solution repeatedly and has no desire for a final end to the conflict.

Most important of all do not empower America’s enemies. Not only al-Qaida but also the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Hizballah, Iran, and Syria are foes. The Turkish regime is a more subtle and insidious enemy. Pakistan cannot be trusted and there is no sense pumping billions of dollars into that regime.
[PJ Media]
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4 comments:

LHwrites said...

Interesting in that the second half, looking at the reality of the current situation seems level headed, yet the first half, about steps to improve the situation seem based on some simplistic fantasy. Many of those "moderates"don't necessarily get along and many act only on their own behalf. China is not so stupid that they need anyone else to point pout those facts, they simply have a different view of how to get there and also see it in a different context of keeping the USA from retaining world leadership and usurping their growing dominance. This writer seems better at assessing where we are than on how to get to a better place.

Bruce said...

Mr. Rubin, whom i've had the pleasure to meet in person [at an AIPAC gathering] is beyond bright and an insightful observer. But your critique of this article could be on the mark.

The reason i posted this piece is for this seminal sentence:

"The goal is to keep revolutionary Islamists out of power wherever possible, as was done with Communists in the Cold War."

The comparison of radical Islam with Communism [some have extended the comparison to fascism as well] is quite important.

LHwrites said...

I think you are right that the comparison may be apt and important. However, we were not particularly successful at keeping a check on the spread of communism and our military actions on those fronts were stalemates or failures. However, equally apt is that such poorly contrived systems run by self serving regimes ultimately collapsed under their own weight and that is why keeping up constant economic pressure might still prevail.

Bruce said...

Funny you should say that [about regimes collapsing under their own hollow weight]...i just heard Daniel Pipes talk at a Shabbat service locally. He compared Iran today with Soviet Russia in the 1970's...lots of bluster but no substance. Pipes predicted that Iran will fall. May it be so!