Obama Trapped Behind Wall of Mideast Containment
It's the Iranians, Stupid
Israel didn't heed Obama's demand to stop all settlement expansion in the West Bank. So Obama didn't stick to that demand, settling instead for a temporary freeze after a spate of new building. The Palestinians, buoyed by Obama's initial strong stance on the settlements, refused to negotiate until Israel stopped all construction. Other Arab nations didn't offer Israel nearly as many concessions as the U.S. administration was demanding. Undermined by all that didn't happen, the president had nothing of substance to announce.
What went wrong? The heart of the problem was not Israel's supposed power over U.S. policy. The U.S. still has plenty of leverage over the Israelis and everyone else in the region. Israeli columnist Nahum Barnea is right: "Everyone depends on America, its money, its military aid, and its moves vis-à-vis Iran."
But it is precisely those U.S. moves, meant to contain the power of Iran, that are the main stumbling block on the path to a U.S.-brokered two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Middle East is a textbook example of the perils of containment.
The Ghost Of Cold War Past
If Obama's troubles keep him awake late at night, he may hear the ghostly voices of past presidents echoing down the White House hallways -- Bill Clinton saying, "I tried to get the Israelis and Palestinians together, too. It's a bitch," or Dwight D. Eisenhower recalling (as he once wrote to a friend) that he felt "forced to give constant attention... to problems that defy solution."
The loudest voice of all, though, may come from the ghost of the Cold War, whose spirit of containment still haunts the White House and shapes foreign policy decisions every day.
The drive for containment of "the commies" created problems that defied solution. After all, containment meant maintaining total control over the global chess board, always making exactly the right move at exactly the right time. The task was, quite literally, a mission impossible. Eisenhower revealed why when, resorting to the imagery of his era, he described the American "wall of containment" to his National Security Council as a "free world dike" holding back the rising "red tide." When that dike got "leaky," he said, the U.S. had to "put a finger in" rather than "let the whole structure be washed away."
As any high school physics student knows, plugging that dike with your finger merely increases the pressure, inevitably leading to yet another crack somewhere else. In other words, containment turned the U.S. into Sisyphus, laboring at a task that never ends.
As Obama and his advisors make policy for "the greater Middle East" -- that huge swath of mostly Muslim lands from Somalia to Pakistan -- they are guided by a regional version of containment, with Iran as its object. The longer the Israelis occupy Palestine, the more Iranian leaders profit by riding a wave of anti-Israeli fervor throughout the area. Hence, the big push for a negotiated peace.
Yet the first move in that push -- the demand that Israel freeze settlement expansion -- set off a whole new series of stresses and strains.
After all, the U.S. relies on Israel as a major weapon in its Iranian containment policy. It also relies on that weapon being under U.S. control, so that just the right pressure can be exerted on the Iranian leadership by making just the right threatening gestures to Teheran at just the right moment (without, of course, letting the Israelis actually act upon those threats, which would create chaos and mayhem in the region).
When the administration's freeze demand triggered right-wing outrage in Israel, Netanyahu turned his threats on Washington: If the demand persisted, it could bring down his government, he claimed, leaving no one holding the trigger on the necessary weapon of containment or (even worse) running the risk that some crazy leader might grab the weapon and actually pull the trigger.
So the U.S. backed off a total freeze and, according to one Israeli report, promised to deal with "Iran first... The Palestinians will have to wait their turn and pass the time in empty talks until Iran is restrained."
But the U.S. moves to shore up the Israeli part of its containment wall only created a new crisis elsewhere -- in this case, with the West Bank Palestinian government headed by Mahmoud Abbas. His appointed role is to make his Fatah-led regime strong enough to keep Hamas out of power and out of any negotiations, since Hamas is seen as a proxy for Iran. Whether that perception is accurate hardly matters to policymakers. In the game of containment, perceptions are the realities that matter most.
In the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, perceptions are the most important realities, too. As recent research shows, majorities on both sides are not as concerned about gaining substantive political and economic advantages as they are about inflicting symbolic defeats on the other side. Anything that looks like a victory, especially in intangible matters of prestige and pride, is a victory.
If Abbas accedes to U.S. demands to negotiate at a moment when Israel is rebuffing the U.S. on the freeze, he will look like a loser. That will make him a loser and so, by default, Hamas will be the obvious winner.
Abbas has already created that impression in some circles simply by agreeing to meet with Obama and Netanyahu, offering the Israeli leader a "tentative handshake" at the U.N. "The whole process has lost [Abbas] a lot of credibility with the Palestinian people," said veteran Palestinian diplomat Hanan Ashrawi. "For Palestinians it's very important that our leadership not constantly be the one to give in." "How will anyone from now on take him seriously?" another Palestinian official asked.
To answer that question Abbas, the designated agent of U.S. interests in Palestine, only has to look at other leaders who have been assigned the same role: Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Afghan President Hamid Karzai. They have both been holding on to power by publicly rebuffing the U.S., thus laying claim to independence and turning anti-American sentiment in their countries to their advantage. Why shouldn't Abbas do the same?
The Obama administration might be tempted to buy further concessions from Abbas by strengthening the hand of General Keith Dayton, who oversees the training of the Palestinian security forces that keep Hamas suppressed on the West Bank. However, what many Palestinians scornfully call "the Dayton government" is already unpopular. Giving it more power could easily boost the political fortunes of Hamas.
So the U.S. has to stand by, watching Abbas stiffen his spine and negotiate with Hamas, while hoping he doesn't emulate al-Maliki's game of cozying up to the Iranians as a counterweight to the Americans.
The Perils Of Perception
Beyond backing off the settlement freeze, the administration also offered another concession to the Israelis. They leaned on Abbas to defer a draft proposal at the U.N. Human Rights Council that would have endorsed the recommendations of the Goldstone report, which found evidence of Israeli war crimes in last winter's attack on Gaza. Israel desperately wants U.S. help in hanging onto its image as an oppressed, blameless victim.
For the same reason, the U.S. also encouraged Arab states to join the proposed peace talks, rather than making it simply a one-on-one Israeli-Palestinian affair. Here's how the Israeli paper Haaretz summed up recent remarks on the subject by Defense Minister Ehud Barak: "In negotiations with the Palestinians, Israel is the 'only one that can give. The Palestinians are the underdog and the talks are asymmetrical.' But in regional talks... it becomes clear that Israel is the isolated party."
To the Obama administration, however, regional talks fall into another category: promoting a regional containment policy against Iran. Containing Iran, in fact, is the one goal the Israelis, the Fatah-led rump Palestinian Authority, and all the major Arab states might have in common. According to Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, the U.S. message is: "If you don't engage in the process of making peace, you give Hamas and Hezbollah and Iran, who are enemies of the peace process, and vocal opponents of it, a veto."
If the U.S. had the kind of total control that containment theory requires, it would, indeed, use such peace talks to strengthen a region-wide anti-Iranian alliance. But the leaders of the major Arab states run up against the same problem that Abbas faces: domestic publics, wary of any pro-American moves, might be swayed into seeing Iran as their champion. So the Arab states have offered few concessions indeed, which the Israelis then point to as yet more "proof" that they are surrounded by enemies on all sides and can't afford to give up one more thing.
When Washington leans on the Arab states, it highlights Iran's purported nuclear weapons program as the number one threat. And Arab leaders might be happy enough to go along, were it not for the obvious image problem: How can they say with straight faces that they are banding together to stop an imagined Iranian nuclear menace, while sitting down to negotiate with an Israel that has at least 100 -- perhaps 200 or more -- very real nuclear weapons? Even the increasingly hawkish Ehud Barak admits that Iran's nuclear program is not an "existential issue" because "Israel is strong."
Every time the U.S. warns about Iran's nuclear program, it merely calls more attention in the region to Israel's ignored and unacknowledged nuclear arsenal. Then Arab leaders feel forced to take a tougher public stand against Israel's nukes because their people want to see Israel firmly contained. And in the game of containment, where image is reality, the first rule is: Always show resolve.
That's the prevailing rule in Washington, too. On the same day that Obama met Netanyahu and Abbas at the U.N., his hometown newspaper, the Washington Post, chastised him editorially for "Wavering on Afghanistan." When containment prevails, firmness is required. No waverers need apply. (Extra fingers are, however, useful.)
The president gets the message. Last week, when the Iranians surprised the world with significant concessions at their first meeting with American negotiators in Geneva, the New York Times urged Obama to "push Iran's leaders hard" and "be ready to impose tough sanctions if Iran resists." But he was a step ahead, having already declared: "We are prepared to move towards increased pressure."
Times reporter Helene Cooper saw that as "the exact opposite of what a White House usually does... Instead of painting lukewarm concessions as major breakthroughs… officials were treating a potentially major breakthrough as if it were a suspicious package." But this was, in fact, an exact echo of what a Cold War White House usually did. In those superpower stand-off days, endless negotiations, with each side making offers deflected by the suspicions and stern rebuffs of the other, actually fueled the ritual of containment.
In reality, Obama's troubles are not caused primarily by "the bad guys," nor by Israel's supposed power or that of the domestic "Israeli lobby," nor even, as some critics charge, his own tendency to vacillate. Instead, he's trapped in the conundrum that's built into U.S. containment strategy in the Middle East. No matter what other nations do or don't do, everything that looks like it might be a solution only turns out to create new problems.
The U.S. will keep on pursuing Middle East peace. Obama will keep getting intense pressure from the hawks at home to capitulate to every Israeli demand. He will certainly look for maneuvering room. And the rising influence of the Jewish peace lobby will give him more room than his predecessors had. But even a peace movement strong enough to offset the "pro-Israel" right might not offer room enough as long as the overriding aim of U.S. Middle Eastern policy is to make Iran say uncle; that is, to make its leaders accept the image of a humbled, overawed loser.
If the administration sticks to that approach, no move to cut through the Gordian Knot of Israeli-Palestinian relations will truly work, not with Obama and his team trapped behind a wall of containment. President Obama and his advisors will, instead, live in terror of the image of Iran that the U.S. has had such a hand in creating. Like Eisenhower and all the Cold War presidents after him and all their advisors, they will remain endlessly plagued by problems that defy solution.
The recent Iranian concessions offer the president the beginning of a way out, a chance to make good on his own message to the United Nations: "The future does not belong to fear... All of us must decide whether we are serious about peace."
Now he and his administration, too, must decide if they are serious. They would do well to modify the old mantra of Bill Clinton's 1992 campaign for president and put it everywhere: It's the Iranians, stupid. If they can rid themselves of their Cold War-style Iranian obsession, another path is possible. If they make the two-state solution an end in itself rather than just another means of containment, if they transcend the fear that is the brick and mortar of the wall of containment, if they tear down that wall and exorcise the ghost of the Cold War, then they just might guide the Israelis and Palestinians to the peace that both sides so badly need.
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22 Comments so far
Show Allchernus states: "The U.S. still has plenty of leverage over the Israelis and everyone else in the region." Once again proving that he's better at teaching religious studies in the classroom than he is touting american imperialism. he couldn't be any worse.
mohawk, you should know better than to ask henry/thomasmore a direct question. you'll scare him away, never hearing from him for the rest of the day. but since he can't answer a direct question, i'll answer it for you. no, he NEVER posts anything of substance. it's surprising that he hasn't been banned due to a lack of intelligence, or too much ignorance, or a combination of both.
According to a recent poll, 60% of Israeli settlers would return to their country of birth in the face of Iran acquiring nuclear weaponry, even if it only faintly matched Israel's vast arsenal.
The US has done nothing to truly address the continuing injustices meted out on the Palestinians.
On the basis of the poll, Iran would solve these injustices at a stroke. Approximately 3 million settlers would head for the exit the day after a nuclear armed Iran was declared, thus freeing up all the stolen land and resources.
Now there's a thought..................
Yes - good post Glenn Ford! You've hit the nail on the head - this article is another piece of obfuscation from Ira - Zionism-lite again!
Here's an excellent piece by Juan Cole debunking the mythology being developed by Israel, the US Government, and the MSM about Iran to justify military action.
http://www.juancole.com/2009/10/top-things-you-think-you-know-about.html
Why doesn't Ira mention the emptiness of the allegations about Iran? His aim is to appear to be a voice of moderation while buying into the Zionist message.
'Dealing with "Iran first"' is just doing exactly what the Israelis want as we did in Iraq. Meanwhile there will be more settlements, more houses built in existing settlements, more Palestinians killed or terrorised and what will the MSM say about that or the US do about it - nothing!
But, the issue here is not whether Iran possesses or is planning on building nuclear weapons. Iran's nuclear program is of little concern for the US government. The nuclear issue is just an excuse to break Iran and maintain US/Israeli hegemony in the region.
In other words, even if nuclear weapons or nuclear energy never existed on the face of this planet, the US would find some other excuse to impose sanctions on Iran and push for regime change. It seems to me Ira understands that. Do you remember when Iraq didn't have any WMDs, how the US and Israel and other allies manufactured evidence out of thin air to justify the invasion?
Ira is talking about strategy. The strategy of the United States in the Middle East is similar to the strategies exercised by empires of yesteryear. Empires seek to expand their hegemony and control over vast lands, especially when those lands have a wealth of natural resources. And, in this grant strategy of "containment", the US is using Israel as its proxy in the region, at the same time Israel benefits tremendously from this relationship.
The nuclear 'stand off' - if you will - is just a tactic. The powers that be have a handful of tactics at their disposal. If the nuclear issue doesn't work, they'll just move onto another tactic.
Everything you are saying is correct of course and those of us who are following the hype and where it is coming from know it. Unfortunately a reader of the MSM believes something totally different - that Iran IS indeed developing nuclear weapons, that it IS refusing to play ball with IAEA, that it HAS a leader who has called for the destruction of Israel, and so on. By not addressing those fraudulent claims and suggesting that Iran is a problem to be dealt with in an article of this kind on this topic he is effectively accepting the claims. Iran is not a problem to be dealt with - period! The problem is the perception being promulgated by various sections of the US media, by various sections of the US government - including Obama, by AIPAC and by Israel. Obama is boxing himself into a corner where he will be forced to act and this kind of article reinforces the pressure to do that.
Unfortunately Ira has a track record of playing this "I am a reasonable unbiased observer" game while in essence playing the Zionist agenda and has done so again here.
Well, wouldn't it be smart for Iran to develop a weapon with the US and Iarael constantly threatening them? It's against international law to threaten with military force another sovereign nation.
It would indeed be a good idea! The difference in the way the other two members of the "Axis of Evil" have been treated by the US indicates that the obvious correct strategy for Iran is to acquire nuclear weapons. However, another article by Cole - incidentally the most rational discussion of the Iranian attitude to nuclear weapons I have seen -
http://www.juancole.com/2009/10/iran-and-nuclear-latency.html
indicates that they are probably playing a much cleverer and less aggressive game than others are thinking - and certainly than others are saying.
Thanks, for the praise !
Is Ira Chernus going to make a total career out of his excuse-making for the failures of the Obama administration? This one takes a form familiar to Obama-excusers: emphasizing the incredibile complexity of a situation in which Obama is "trapped": this time the contradictions of the containment policy that was devised largely by his own foreign policy advisor, Z. Brzezinski. This tack is all too familiar to Obama critics, his defenders still saying "give the guy a chance," he's facing a hugely difficult task, whether it be to reform health care, Wall Street corruption, the Middle Eastern peace process,or whatever. Sisyphus is a great metaphor for our times, but not if the myth is misused, as an excuse for inaction, precisely the opposite of what existential philosophies intend. Some of the questions raised above by Glenn Ford are clearly areas in which Obama has much discretionary power, particularly power to rein in Israeli aggression which he could do at the drop of a presidential directive; but THAT isn't a stone that he shows any interest in rolling to the top of the hill.
I pity Abbas. He is the puppet who was supposed be a counter-weight to Hamas on the understanding that PLO stance would lead to settlement with Israel. His masters were willing to overlook the fact that he lost on a fair and free elections. Of course the rest of the world knew that the so called "road to peace" (and whatever its present name) would be a bogus scheme to give Israel space to continue expanding the settlements.
Abbas (and PLO) will finally be labeled terrorist and he will be accused of all kinds of corruption, real and imagined should he listen to his people and speak his mind. He had better ask puppet Kazai.
janam, you're more compassionate than I.
Abbas knew what he was getting into when his masters attached all those strings to his limbs. It turns out that he's not only a puppet, he's a puppet made of putty.
He deserves the consequences.
· Yr Obd't Servant
The road to another peace of Palestine !
Iran wants to dominate the region. That is why Iran is a threat. Its been made plain many times by past and current leaders.
Obama is making a fool of himself with his attempts at "talking" with these folks. He is far out of his depth. They are very practiced.
Hey Henry, do you ever post anything of substance or do you just dabble in politics on the weekend?
Iran wants to dominate the region? How many times has Iran attacked any of its neighbors in the past few hundred years? (None.) (In case you don't know, the Iraq/Iran war began when Iraq attacked Iran.) What land is Iran occupying and confiscating, in violation of international law? (None.)
How many times has Israel attacked its neighbors in the past 60 years? (Many.) What land is Israel occupying and confiscating in violation of international law? (Israel's ongoing theft of Palestinian land over the past 60 years is well documented.) How many nuclear weapons does Israel have? (200-400.) Does Israel allow international inspections? (No.) Has Israel signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty? (No.)
To whom is Iran a threat? To the U.S.? (No.) To Israel, through opposing Israel's human rights abuses against the Palestinians? (Maybe.) Did Iran sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, and allow international inspections? (Yes.) Is it possible that Iran is realistic to want nuclear weapons, considering Israel's aggression in the area, and considering what happens to countries who don't have a nuclear deterrent (contrast Iraq and Afganistan with N. Korea).
Interesting story today from the West Bank:
Palestine, October 7, 2009, (Pal Telegraph) - Jewish settlers on Tuesday cut off 250 Palestinian fruitful olive trees in Deir Ammar village, west of Ramallah city, local sources reported.
One of the owners of those trees Abdullah Odeh, 27, said that the Jewish settlers cut off the remaining olive trees he and his family owned east of village lands.
He said that more than 250 trees were cut at night with electric saws.
Odeh charged settlers of a nearby settlement of perpetrating the act, adding that he and his relatives did not head to their lands fearing that those settlers, who are fully armed, might harm them.
Meanwhile, Jewish fanatic settlers in Al-Khalil beat up a 13-year-old Palestinian child, locals reported.
They added that Musab Al-Rajabi was suffering severe pains in his hand as a result of the assault on Monday evening.
Jews in the Old City of Al-Khalil routinely attack Palestinian civilians in the city without any justification.
http://www.paltelegraph.com/palestine/west-bank/2540
-israeli-qmaniacsq-settlers-cut-olive-trees-beat-palestinian-child
"Obama is making a fool of himself with his attempts at "talking" with these folks. He is far out of his depth. They are very practiced."
It's better that he take the time to talk to and reason with these folks. So what if Iran wants to dominate the region? Better that they do instead of Saudi Arabia or Israel or the US. What is wrong with Iran to you?
Article could conceivable have been written by AIPAC to deflect blame for lack of peace process from Israel to Iran.
Iran is not the main stumbling block because it is not a threat to anyone because if it did, Western powers could blow the country to pieces. It is, like Iraq was, a target for US control and is only the "excuse du jour" for Israel to avoid negotiations with Palestinians and continue with its illegal ethnic cleansing and expansion of the occupation.
Glenn Ford: You are bang-on with your observations. And one could add to the list... Apparently the good professor of religious studies has not embraced the simple notion that all have to play by the same rules. His biases are evident.
Author failed to mention that Arabs are expected to make concessions in order to have the chance that israel might consider ceasing it many blantantly criminal activities.
Also failed to mention that only the USA and israel are occupying other nations territories not Iran.
Also failed to mention that if the USA is so free from zionist control why does it not simply impose economic sanctions in order to get israel to abide by UN resolutions?
Author fails to propose that any conditions imposed on Iran, the country with no known weapons program, should also be imposed on Israel the country threatening Iran with two nuclear armed vessels off the Iranian coast..
You are answering a high context analysis to a high context situation with a low context analysis. It seems Israel's toughest critics just love to forget who is pledging to eliminate who, and always has.
And who's that? Who is seeking to attack whom?
Give us some facts? And I mean facts -
not the MSM/AIPAC/Zionist view of the world. Go and read
the analyses by Cole that I've referenced above
before you answer though!
Glenn Ford--Excellent post!