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WAR AND PEACE IN THE
MIDDLE EAST A Concise History Avi Shlaim Penguin Books, 1995, 151 pp. |
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Shlaim is
an Oxford professor of international relations. He paints a political history of the Middle East since World
War I. In particular he describes how
the various powers inside and outside the region have failed to produce
peace. As opposed to Friedman (Longitudes
& Attitudes), Shlaim particularly blames Israel and America. He sees Reagan’s policy as contradictory,
Bush’s as evenhanded, and Clinton’s as pro-Israel. America’s mistakes arose from playing everything against the
Soviets and putting Israel first. He
plays down the Islamic threat (dismissing Huntington’s projected Clash of
Civilizations) and urges America to take a constructive, problem solving,
regionalist (i.e. evenhanded) approach. Of course
the book was written before the presidency of George W. Bush, the 9/11
Attack, and the 2003 Iraq War.
However it provides a historical background to these events. “External
involvement in Middle East affairs in the twentieth century may be divided
into four phases: the Ottoman, the European, the superpower, and the
American.” (5) “The European phase,
during which Britain and France played the leading roles, lasted roughly from
the end of World War I until the 1956 Suez crisis.” (6) Colonial
rule was followed by the rise to independence of local states, influenced by
the U.S. and the Soviet Union. This
phase lasted until 1991. The end of
the Cold War left America dominant in world politics. (7) After the
Gulf war, “having struggled against Western domination for most of the
twentieth century, the Arab world was thrust back into a position of
weakness, dependence, and subservience.”
“A century that saw the rise and decline of Western rule in the Middle
East ended with its reimposition.”
(9) Ch 1. The Post-Ottoman Syndrome
During
World War I the British made a number of promises, some of which conflicted
after the War. The Balfour
Declaration pledged British support for a national home for the Jewish people
in Palestine. Britain played the
primary role in setting national boundaries and establishing national
leadership. Iraq’s borders were
arbitrary, designed to suit Britain’s political and commercial interests,
combining northern and southern oil fields and three peoples (Kurds, Sunnis,
and Shiites). The
British assumed that Palestinians and Jews could leave peaceably in a single
state, but Britain’s obligation to the Jews could only be met at the expense
of the Arab majority. “Palestine
Arabs were united in their refusal to recognize the legality or authority of
the British mandate and by their fear of Zionist intrusion. Their struggle was about self-preservation
and self-determination.” (15) Britain created states
and nominated persons to govern, but most of the new states were weak and
unstable, the rulers lacked legitimacy, and the frontiers were arbitrary,
illogical, and unjust. The powerful
secular and religious forces rejected both the system and a consensus on the
rules of the political game, and a belt of turmoil and instability has
remained ever since. (17-18) In 1937 a
British Royal Commission recommended partitioning Palestine between
Palestinians and Jews. Of course, the
Palestinian Arabs rejected the idea.
The neighboring Arab states became involved in the conflict and have
remained involved ever since. (21) In
1948, the Jews proclaimed their own state and in the ensuing Arab-Israeli
war, extended their borders beyond the UN recommended lines. Transjordan (Jordan) annexed the West
Bank, and the Palestinians lost their homeland. (22) “It was a year of Jewish triumph and
Palestinian tragedy.” (23) Although
America played a peripheral role in the formation of the state of Israel, the
Arabs see “America as Israel’s co-sponsor, and this perception is the source
of a deep and abiding hostility and mistrust.” (26) “After
the British mandate over Palestine expired and the State of Israel was
established, the international politics of the Middle East could be reduced
to three essential dimensions: the Arab-Israeli conflict, inter-Arab
relations, and great power involvement in the affairs of the region.” The Palestinian problem continues to be
the core issue of international affairs in the region. (26) Ch 2. Succeeding John Bull
Until the
90’s, American Middle East policy was colored by the fierce rivalry of the
Cold War. (Britain’s)
“withdrawal from the Persian Gulf symbolized the end of Pax Britannica, and
for the region, the relatively stable period of British dominance. It also meant the end of a security system
that had operated in Arabia since the first half of the 19th
century.” (36) Ch 3. America Between Arabs and Israelis
“One of
the principal legacies of European domination of the Middle East is borders
arbitrarily imposed and therefore disputed and unstable.” (37) The U.S.
had four basic interests in the Middle East: containing Soviet influence and
expansion, access to oil, curbing Arab radicalism, and commitment to Israel.
(38) The first three are reinforcing, but the commitment to Israel does not
easily fit into the same framework.
(39) American
policy theorists could be categorized as pro-Israel globalists and
more evenhanded regionalists.
The former tended to see the Arab world as “so backward, so seething
with hostility, and so endemically volatile that it precluded a durable
peace.” (40) “The special relationship
between America and Israel rests on a foundation of cultural affinity and
common values” as well as the power of the Jewish lobby. (41) “The
military prowess Israel demonstrated in the Six-Day War helped transform the
unequal U.S.-Israel relationship into a strategic partnership.” (45) Following
Sadat’s rise to power in Egypt, there was opportunity for a negotiated
settlement. “The chance was missed
not because of the Soviet stand but as a result of Israeli intransigence
backed by global strategists in the White House.” (47). The wording
of the Camp David Accords left some issues vague. “(President) Carter saw the Camp David accords as the first
step in a process that would lead to a comprehensive peace between Israel and
all its neighbors.” “(But) Begin was
convinced that in return for relinquishing Sinai he had secured Israel’s
right to retain the West Bank and Gaza.” (52) “America
seriously underestimated the risks of military intervention in Lebanon (in
1982) and the violent opposition it was bound to provoke from different groups….” Reagan’s decision to withdraw from
Lebanon, “dealt a terrible blow to America’s prestige in the Arab world…”
(56) Ch 4. Realpolitik in the Gulf
In the
Persian Gulf, America had two interests: the independence and security of the
oil-producing states (ensuring access to oil) and to contain the
Soviets. (60) Iran
became the key pillar of support for American interests in the Gulf. The Saudi’s became the secondary pillar.
(62) America countered Soviet arms
supplied to Iraq by supplying arms to Iran, as much as half of total arms
sales abroad. American companies
scrambled for lucrative contracts, contributing to Iranian domestic
problems. Iran’s overspending on arms
led to inflation and corruption. “The
increased exposure to Western ideas also disturbed Islamic
fundamentalists.” These factors
alienated the Iranian people from their ruler and eventually led to the
internal revolt and takeover by the Muslim radical Khomeni. The Arab
Gulf states made an effective contribution to the 1973 Yom Kippur War by
restricting oil exports to America and supporters of Israel. The oil shock resulted in a massive
transfer of resources from the industrialized countries to the oil producers. The Gulf became heavily militarized
without any perceptible gain in either regional security or internal
stability. (65-6) With the
collapse of the shah’s regime in Iran, America lost prestige and credibility,
a close ally, links with the Iranian military, its monitoring stations near
the Soviet border, and a lucrative export market. Further, the increase in oil prices from $13 to $34 a barrel
had serious impact on the world economy. (68) “A
fundamental tenet of the revolution was that Iran had a God-given mission to
export the Islamic system of government to the corrupt pro-Western and
anti-Islamic countries of the Persian Gulf.” (69) “Ayatollah
Khomeini’s ‘neither East nor West’ was not a mere slogan but a central
principle in revolutionary Iran’s foreign policy. It implied the creation of
an Islamic bloc….” (69) Ch 5. Tilting Toward Iraq
The
author hints that Reagan may have made a secret deal with Tehran to release
the hostages after the election. (73) The Gulf became a strategic chessboard
for the superpowers. Reagan’s policy
was erratic and contradictory because of competing objectives: combating the
Soviets, supporting Israel, and maintaining access to oil. (76) During
the Iran-Iraq war, Washington tilted toward Iraq because of the fear that
Islamic fundamentalism would spread if should Iran win. (79)
“America’s policy toward Iran left a bitter legacy of suspicion and
hostility. Its policy toward Iraq,
although inconsistent, ended up by accepting Saddam Hussein as a junior
partner in preserving the status quo in the ‘gulf, another remarkable
irony….” (87) Ch 6. Desert Shield and Desert Storm
“During
the Iran-Iraq War the oil-rich Gulf states and the Western powers, including
America, helped create a monster in the shape of Saddam Hussein.” “Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait can be
seen as the last chapter in the Iran-Iraq War.” (88-9) “Instead
of using Iraq’s oil revenues to repay $70 billion in war debts, he increased
his military capability, developing weapons of mass destruction. Western companies did brisk business with
Saddam, and Western governments did little to discourage them.” (91) “Since
most Iraqis had been brought up to think that Kuwait was part of their
country, Saddam could pose as the liberator of usurped Iraqi land.” “Saddam probably hoped to solve his
financial problems with one stroke.” (94-5) During
the War Bush repeatedly stated that he would not allow Saddam’s government to
survive and called on the Iraq people to revolt. When the Shiites rose up in the south and the Kurds in the
north, Bush backed off. There seemed
to be a lack of confidence that democracy could succeed and Sunni minority
rule through force was the only way to keep the country in one piece. “The chief villain…managed to cling to
power.” (101-2) Ch 7. Madrid and After
“The
collapse of the Soviet Union as a superpower orphaned Moscow’s military
clients—Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Libya, and the radical Palestinian
factions…” “Without Soviet arms and
diplomatic backing, Arab radicals could do little except sulk in their
tents.” “America became the dominant
power, nearly reducing the Soviet Union to the level of an assistant.”
(104-5) Ch 8. Pax Americana
Desert
Storm enabled America to “kick the Vietnam syndrome.” But it did nothing to enable the Arabs to
“kick the post-Ottoman syndrome.” (132)
Since the Ottoman Empire, the boundaries drawn by outsiders have been
considered illegitimate by the inhabitants, creating a belt of instability
from the Mediterranean to the Gulf.
Restless Iraq is one of the least homogeneous nation-states. (133) The Gulf
War marked the beginning of America’s moment in the Middle East. (134) President
Bush’s “New World Order,” was not a campaign to created a democratic
revolution. “Oppressed minorities
like the Kurds and irredentist groups like the Shiites received no support
from America in their struggle for political reform.” (135) “The Third World also saw the war as a
Western crusade against the Arabs.” (136)
“Instability is endemic in the Middle East, and nothing will eradicate it.” (143) |
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