Thursday, October 31, 2013

Obama vs. Putin -- is the Cold War about to return to the Middle East?



by Raymond Stock


Sensing an historic opening, Russian President Vladimir Putin may soon be visiting Cairo in search of closer military ties and access to Egypt's warm water ports—according to an October 27 article in the Sunday Times of London.

Should he make that trip, Putin would likely get a warm, if not rapturous reception, both in government and on the street.

But if President Barack Obama should go there -- or anywhere in the Arab world-- now, the warmth would likely be of another kind entirely.

Obama's October 9 decision to freeze about a third of this year's $1.6 billion aid package to Egypt, and his coldly critical reaction to the popularly-demanded ouster of President Mohammed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood (MB) organization from power on July 3, have predictably angered most Egyptians.

After all, the Obama administration had not only helped Morsi and the MB gain power, but rewarded them with increased assistance even as they created a terror-supporting Islamist dictatorship during its year-long rule.

And now, the revelation in an October 27 analysis by Mark Landler in The New York Times that the Obama administration no longer views Egypt -- "once a central pillar of U.S. foreign policy" -- as very important can only inflame that opinion further.

National Security Adviser Susan Rice told Landler that the president is now fixed mainly on concluding an agreement with Iran over its nuclear program, solving the crisis in Syria and trying to get results from almost invisible ongoing Israeli-Palestinian talks (about holding real talks) quixotically pushed by Secretary of State John Kerry.

This "more modest approach," as Landler called it, which resulted from a White House-only foreign policy review led by Rice last July and August -- puts at grave risk the survival of the 1979 Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty, our vital priority access to the Suez Canal and crucial anti-terrorism cooperation as well.

Egypt's sudden demotion, after the nation served as the poster-child for the administration's disastrous policy of promoting "democracy" by helping Islamists rise through elections in the Arab Spring, probably reflects Obama's frustration that he cannot get his way with the country's immensely popular new leader, General Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi.

In contrast, Putin has been the most-outspoken world leader to defend Morsi's removal.
Indeed, many in Egypt--including al-Sisi--have already spoken of trading the three decades-plus alliance with America for one with Russia, while Egyptian-Russian military ties are said to have increased dramatically.

In an August 3 phone conversation with U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, al-Sisi is quoted as scolding him, "You left the Egyptians. You turned your back on the Egyptians, and they won't forget that."

On October 17, Egypt's Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy told CNN's Christiane Amanpour that his country "will find other sources" for military aid if necessary, presumably meaning Russia and possibly China as well.

Putin's clever seizure of the initiative to prevent an armed (if "unbelievably small," in Kerry's words) U.S. strike on Syria in September over the use of chemical weapons near Damascus on August 21, plus his tough anti-Islamist talk, have turned many heads in the region.

The administration's new Middle East doctrine conveniently justifies Obama's eager acceptance of Putin's proposal to send in U.N. teams to deal with Syria's chemical weapons after he fecklessly flip-flopped over his famous "red line" on their use--which he subsequently denied having drawn in the first place.

Meanwhile, Obama's so far limited, but disturbing efforts to aid Morsi's friends in the Islamist-dominated rebellion against Assad have made him look both wrong-headed and faint-hearted at the same time, in a region where Islamism (happily) may be losing its appeal, and where feebleness is fatally unattractive.

Also in September came the charm offensive of Iran's new president, Hassan Rouhani, which many fear will lead to the U.S. accepting an incomplete plan to cut off Iran's hydra-headed efforts to develop nuclear weapons in its haste just to cut a deal.

In mid-October, the U.S. and five other world powers spoke with the Iranians on the issue for two days in Geneva, to resume November 7--while the latest reports indicate that Iran may be only one month away from having the bomb.

This all echoes the forgotten rivalry of the Cold War, when the former Soviet Union was the main supplier of armaments, training and advisers to the anti-Western bloc of Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Yemen and the then-openly terrorist PLO.

After Egypt switched sides following the 1973 war with Israel, the U.S. was able to impose a sort of Pax Americana, at least as far as that conflict was concerned.

But now, as Egypt possibly breaks toward Moscow, while Iran -- like Syria, a Russian ally -- hoodwinks Washington into letting it develop nuclear weapons in the guise of a bogus "grand bargain" -- the old order may give way to a new, unstable Pax Russiana instead.

And that would be far more than a "modest" debacle—for the U.S., the region and the world.


Raymond Stock, a Shillman-Ginsburg Writing Fellow at the Middle East Forum and a former Assistant Professor of Arabic and Middle East Studies at Drew University, spent twenty years in Egypt, and was deported by the Mubarak regime in 2010.
 
Source: http://www.meforum.org/3654/obama-putin-cold-war

Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

1 comment:

salubrius said...

Is the Cold War About to Return -- Did it Ever Stop?

Since 1950 the Soviet Union has sought domination of the Middle East as a stepping stone to hegemony over Western Europe according to a 1980 paper of the late Eugene Rostow, Dean of the Yale Law School and Professor of International Law. PALESTINIAN SELF-DETERMINATION: POSSIBLE FUTURES FOR THE UNALLOCATED TERRITORIESOF THE PALESTINE MANDATE (1980) "For nearly thirty turbulent years, the Soviet Union has sought control of this geo-political nerve center in order to bring Western Europe into its sphere. Even if Soviet ambitions were confined to Europe, Soviet hegemony in the Middle East would profoundly change the world balance of power. But Soviet control of the Middle East would lead inevitably to further accretions of Soviet power if China, Japan, and many smaller and morevulnerable countries should conclude that the UnitedStates had lost the will or the capacity to defend itsvital interests, . . ." * * *
"The exploitation of Arab hostility to the Balfour Declaration, the Palestine Mandate, and the existence of Israel has been a major weapon in the Soviet campaign to dominate the Middle East." * * ". . .the Soviet Union invited Arafat to Moscow, supported his appearance before the United Nations in November, 1974, and increased its pressure for General Assembly resolutions supporting claims of self-determination for the Palestinian Arabs and denouncing Zionism as "racism'"

This effort has never stopped according to Major-General Ion Pacepa, the highest ranking defector from the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. The Russian "dezinforatsiya" remains the largest segment of the successor to the Soviet KGB and has glorified Gorbychev and Ceausescu as independent of Soviet plans just as much as it demonized Pope Pius XII as "Hitler's Pope" contrary to fact, and demonized President Harry Truman -- claiming he authorized the nuclear bombing of Japan without good reason. See Pacepa's recent book, "Disinformation".

Part of this effort was the invention of the "Palestinian Arab People" as a unique People to fit in with the Conventions on Political Rights it was pushing at the UN to guarantee every people the right to self-determination. But it didn't work as under International Law when there is a tension between the self-determination of a "people" and the territorial integrity of a sovereign state, the priority is always with the territorial integrity of sovereign states that has been the mainstay of world order since the 1648 Peace of Westphalia.

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