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Why Washington Clings to a Failed Middle East Strategy
The
death throes of the Mubarak regime in Egypt signal a new level of crisis
for a U.S. Middle East strategy that has shown itself over and over
again in recent years to be based on nothing more than the illusion
of power. The incipient loss of the U.S. client regime in Egypt
is an obvious moment for a fundamental adjustment in that strategy.

But those moments have been coming with increasing regularity in recent years, and the U.S. national security bureaucracy has shown itself to be remarkably resistant to giving it up. The troubled history of that strategy suggests that it is an expression of some powerful political forces at work in this society, as former NSC official Gary Sick hinted in a commentary on the crisis.
Ever since the Islamic Republic of Iran was established in 1979, every U.S. administration has operated on the assumption that the United States, with Israel and Egypt as key client states, occupies a power position in the Middle East that allows it to pursue an aggressive strategy of unrelenting pressure on all those "rogue" regimes and parties in the region which have resisted dominance by the U.S.-Israeli tandem: Iran, Iraq, Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas.
The Bush administration's invasion of Iraq was only the most extreme expression of that broader strategic concept. It assumed that the United States and Israel could establish pro-Western regime in Iraq as the base from which it would press for the elimination of resistance from any of their remaining adversaries in the region.
But since that more aggressive version of the strategy was launched, the illusory nature of the regional dominance strategy has been laid bare in one country after another.
- The U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq merely empowered Shi'a forces to form a regime whose geostrategic interests are far closer to Iran than to the United States;
- The U.S.-encouraged Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 2006 only strengthened the position of Hezbollah as the largest, most popular and most disciplined political-military force in the country, leading ultimately the Hezbollah-backed government now being formed.
- Israeli and U.S. threats to attack Iran, Hezbollah and Syria since 2006 brought an even more massive influx of rockets and missiles into Lebanon and Syria which now appears to deter Israeli aggressiveness toward its adversaries for the first time.
- U.S.-Israeli efforts to create a client Palestinian entity and crush Hamas through the siege of Gaza has backfired, strengthening the Hamas claim to be the only viable Palestinian entity.
- The U.S. insistence on demonstrating the effectiveness of its military power in Afghanistan has only revealed the inability of the U.S. military to master the Afghan insurgency.
And now the Mubarak regime is in its final days. As one talking head after another has pointed out in recent days, it has been the lynchpin of the U.S. strategy. The main function of the U.S. client state relationship with Egypt was to allow Israel to avoid coming to terms with Palestinian demands.
The costs of the illusory quest for dominance in the Middle East have been incalculable. By continuing to support Israeli extremist refusal to seek a peaceful settlement, trying to prop up Arab authoritarian regimes that are friendly with Israel and seeking to project military power in the region through both airbases in the Gulf States and a semi-permanent bases in Iraq and Afghanistan, the strategy has assiduously built up long-term antagonism toward the United States and pushed many throughout the Islamic world to sympathize with Al Qaeda-style jihadism. It has also fed Sunni-Shi'a tensions in the region and created a crisis over Iran's nuclear program.
Although this is clearly the time to scrap that Middle East strategy, the nature of U.S. national security policymaking poses formidable obstacles to such an adjustment Bureaucrats and bureaucracies always want to hold on to policies and programs that have given them power and prestige, even if those policies and programs have been costly failures. Above all, in fact, they want to avoid having to admit the failure and the costs involved. So they go on defending and pursuing strategies long after the costs and failure have become clear.
An historical parallel to the present strategy in the Middle East is the Cold War strategy in East Asia, including the policy of surrounding, isolating and pressuring the Communist Chinese regime. As documented in my own history of the U.S. path to war in Vietnam, Perils of Dominance, the national security bureaucracy was so committed to that strategy that it resisted any alternative to war in South Vietnam in 1964-65, because it believed the loss of South Vietnam would mean the end of Cold War strategy, with its military alliances, client regimes and network of military bases surrounding China. It was only during the Nixon administration that the White House wrested control of national security policy from the bureaucracy sufficiently to scrap that Cold War strategy in East Asia and reach an historic accommodation with China.
The present strategic crisis can only be resolved by a similar political decision to reach another historical accommodation - this time with the "resistance bloc" in the Middle East. Despite the demonization of Iran and the rest of the "resistance bloc", their interests on the primary issue of al Qaeda-like global terrorism have long been more aligned with the objective security interests of the United States than those of some regimes with which the United States has been allied (e.g., Saudi Arabia and Pakistan).
Scrapping the failed strategy in favor of an historic accommodation in the region would:
- reduce the Sunni-Shi'a geopolitical tensions in the region by supporting a new Iran-Egypt relationship;
- force Israel to reconsider its refusal to enter into real negotiations on a Palestinian settlement;
- reduce the level of antagonism toward the United States in the Islamic world and
- create a new opportunity for agreement between the United States and Iran that could resolve the nuclear issue.
It will be far more difficult, however, for the United States to make this strategic adjustment than it was for Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger to secretly set in motion their accommodation with China. Unconditional support for Israel, the search for client states and determination to project military power into the Middle East, which are central to the failed strategy, have long reflected the interests of the two most powerful domestic U.S. political power blocs bearing on national security policy: the pro-Israel bloc and the militarist bloc. Whereas Nixon and Kissinger were not immobilized by fealty to any such power bloc, both the pro-Israel and militarist power blocs now dominate both parties in the White House as well as in Congress.
One looks in vain for a political force in this country that is free to press for fundamental change in Middle East strategy. And without a push for such a change from outside, we face the distinct possibility of a national security bureaucracy and White House continuing to deny the strategy's utter failure and disastrous consequences.Comments
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52 Comments so far
Show AllWhy Washington Clings to a Failed Middle East Strategy?
Short answer: Oil and Israel
And, as pointed out, militarism, which is an American industry with a life of its own.
The longstanding domestic policy of enriching the elite at the expense of everyone else is the primary root of a host of failed Imperial policies (for people and planet, not for the rich)--the Class War remains paramount. The US Empire's policy of expansion remains unchanged since the Empire's inception when it was a key motivating factor for the Revolution. Until the US Empire ceases its policy of expansion, it will continue to generate havoc and terror around the world cause that's how it gets its elite monies.
Like much of the world, I am watching as events unfold in Cairo. Last night a friend brought over a copy of the documentary, The Wobblies. The major difference between the two images of the struggle for justice: One is broadcast in color, the other in black and white.
Failed strategy for whom? For the wealthy individuals who profit from war, oil and chaos in general, they are making record profits while making no personal sacrifices.
Before Americans can hope for change in our foreign policy, we need a similar nation wide protest like those of Tunisia and Egypt so that we can install a democracy here at home!
I like Garth Porter and I feel he understands what's wrong with the system. However he makes it looked like some faulty planning (honest mistakes) is the reason we are in such a mess rather than squarely laying the blame on a calculated and intentional conspiracy in which collateral damage is expected, accepted and sometimes encouraged all in the name of the bottom line.
Until Americans can whole heartedly reject the two corporate parties all together, America will continue to resembles a third world country more and more each day.
Good post!
Great article by Porter, and nice add'l response s.c.
Yes, a democracy here at home would be nice. But don't hold your breath. We are a little closer to a dictatorship and a police state very much like Egypt with every passing day.
While our legal system constantly preserves and protects Second Amendment rights - thanks to the prevailing bozos on the Supreme Court, sadly, First Amendment rights are being constrained everywhere.
Try carrying a placard protesting...well, anything around your home town and you will likely be arrested, perhaps fines and/or hauled in front of a grand jury investigating domestic "terror" activities. Persist and you can be held in custody for the rest of your natural life as an "enemy combatant".
"Something's happening here. what it is ain't exactly clear.
There's a man with a gun over there, telling me I got to beware.
I think it's time to STOP, children. What's that sound?
Everybody look what's going down........"
If Egypt fails, where will we send our "high value detainees" to be tortured and interrogated?
Too many Foggy Heads in Foggy Bottom.
The Tatoos on the arms of the VP Biden is
a sign of his stupidity and immaturity.
How many more like him are in Congress?
Time to reasses our standing with Israel and Sen Joe Lieberman.
Failed foreign policy, failed economy, failed justice department, failed central banking and ultimately a failed administration.
Bad things happen quickly. Good things happen much more slowly in life. The middle eastern balance of power depended on one thing: a strong western support of Israel's right to exist as a nation. That resolve required a knowledge of Truth which is now in very short supply.
Those of you who choose to celebrate openly at the demise of western civilization will pay a price you cannot imagine. This was written long before Professor Porter began filling impressionable young head.
How's that Hope & Change thing working out for you?
The demise of western civilization? What are you talking about? Did civilization end in Russia because its system collapsed? Aren't you a little over the top? All that is happening is that the US and a few others are being cut down to size. The US isn't the embodiment of civilization. You talk as if the US had Renoirs and Micelangelos, it does not. The music was good, but it wasn't Beethoven, and people aren't going to stop making music just because they're poor! Where do blues come from anyway? Western civilization is what caused the poverty in this world, through the exploitation of the less fortunate. So it's losing its dominant position, good. Maybe the next boss will be better, maybe not, but we know this one kills a lot of people and creates a lot of destruction and enslaving dictatorships. I'm ready to try the Chinese. Let them lead the world, as they should since they are the largest group and its leadership much more intelligent than the American one which is made up of politician lawyers who use logic to benefit themselves, their clients, and win regardless of the truth or principles.
There is no such thing as Israel. What we do have is an occupation that will come to an end, sooner or later.
I would add a bit to the erudite rebuttal of Pink.
You state that Israel is a key to stability in that region. Yet every indicator shows plainly that the imperialism and naked aggression of that state leads directly to instability. No one with a ounce of sense calls for the end of the State of Israel, just as no one with that same number of brain cells fails to stand against their treatment of the Palestinian people.
You twisted my point to make a good one of your own. Of course one hopes that the forces of reason and tolerance win out in Israel. That is quite a different thing entirely from my belief that only the bigots and the brainless scream for an end to the state itself.
I have no problem with any item on your list. However, my initial comment stands. No one with an ounce of sense proclaims for an ending of the State of Israel.
Now you are just playing a game. Enjoy yourself, mental masturbation is not my thing. You may excuse the nut jobs that rant and spit and hide their antisemitism behind calls to end the existence of a legally constituted nation all you wish. I really had hoped for more from you, instead I get childish crap, what a time waster.
I would offer, as my final comment in this stupidly off course exchange (by you), that where are the calls to end the existence of the USA for its heinous and uncivilized actions over decades and longer?
I might have known that your ridiculous twisting of logic and my points, while insulting as hell, is also indicative of your life in academia. You folks have no clue whatsoever, enjoy mental masterbation rather than honest dialogue.
In general you may go perform an anatomically impossible task upon yourself. jackass!
"NSC official Gary Sick hinted in a commentary on the crisis"
Mr. Sick was also on the "Project for the New American Century."
How's that 'new Pearl Harbor' thingee going Gary?
If we don't formulate a foreign based on AMERICAN interests and not Apartheid Israel, we're doomed.
Maybe we're already there.
The following was extracted from the archived article Gary Sick & "Gulf 2000". Masquerading in Academia published online by Mid-East Realities (MER)
"Masquerading as an academic (now associated with Columbia Univ.), Gary Sick has always maintained his government, military and CIA ties in one way or another. Sick's involvements go back at least to the James Earl Carter, Jr. Administration when he was one of the major operatives attempting to prevent and then overturn the Iranian revolution."
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Gary_Sick
One has to wonder at the "side-stepping" journalists in the U.S. of Israel.
Except in rare cases we continually see terms such as "failed policy" and "clinging to" etc etc.
The MSM in the U.S. of Israel is owned and operated by the
aforementioned, thus, we get half truths, lies or, they simply look the other way.
The above can also be applied to "our" leaders. Where has objective reasoning gone? Why, (even when the truth bombs our building, kills our citizens, steals our money...), do the people of this country skirt the truth?? This nation has been betrayed by those who should be at the fore front of protecting it and THEY have betrayed the very ones who are lied into defending it! Betrayed to the point that our fellow Americans are attacked and murdered again and again by our "friend", Israel with immunity. it's fairly obvious the majority won't accept this but have you all lost any honor? You have veterans scarred and crippled while serving this country on the USS liberty and to this DAY they have seen not one iota of justice for their slaughter. Why? because our legislators are hanging unashamedly to the "money tree", and neither they nor YOU give a tinkers' damn enough to support them, let alone stand up and demmand blood for blood, for once.
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_3351.shtml
This is why Lincoln forced the South to stay in the Union. This is why he was willing to precipitate the Civil War which was very horrible. He did it so the US would have a chance at playing in the big leagues of the Grand Game. The US obtained what Lincoln hoped for, and used its position of power to enrich itself, in alliance with the rich of many countries, by denying the people, by force, the right to democracy which would allow them to cease being slaves. The US has been on top and shown that it is a merciless and rapacious superpower. The arrogance and delusional sense of self importance embodied by Lincoln is the bane of America. I wouldn't call any US president the worst one yet until this GIANT of American folklore is re-examined.
I wonder how many would join me in saying they wished the South had achieved its greatly sought-after succession...
The states united never needed to become a centrally controlled federalist empire.
Perhaps the balkanization of the US is not such a bad thing to hope for?
certainly not any african-americans, or anyone else with a brain
The civil war was not the sole catalyst for the ending of slavery, something I unquestionably support.
My statement was in no way meant to reflect, or even evoke a Trent Lott-like sentiment regretting the failure of white supremacy to have gained, or maintained a foothold of power.
Thank you. It is amazing to watch progressives go after Lincoln and parrot pro-Confederacy revisionist talking points.
Pro confederacy, my ass. The reason I wish they got their wretched confederacy is because I dont want to have any more to do with their racist, theocratic dixiecrat insanity. Southern politics have been ruing this nation ever since the original colonies were established.
There are many, many good and decent Southerners. I find your position a bit too prejudicial. Ironic ain't it?
Southerners? Sure. Southern politicians, i aint buyin it, hoss. ; )
There might be a few unaffected by the rot, but when I see a a batch this compromised, my general inclination is to toss the whole offending crate into the compost heap.
ps, any chance you read my late response to you in last weeks Hedge's thread? (Where Liberals Go to Feel Good).
If not, pls do.
It is not a matter of 'balkinization'---that implies that all the smaller states fight with each other endlessly. We could return to the Articles of Confederation where the independent states agree on some issues but keep their sovereignty. I think our nation is too large for democracy to be possible. The USSR, when facing the same mess we are in now, broke into the separate states.
Sounds good to me. I'd like California to return to its earlier position as the Republic of California. As an independent republic we could get out of the wars, keep our tax funds to take care of things in the Republic and form our own bank and create a fair tax system, deny corporations the rights of living people, have the right to a trial if accused of a crime, our President would not have the power to make up a hit list, we could fund good education, health care, public transportation and protect our environment. We could keep the CIA and Homeland Security out of California and we don't need the Federal Police here either.
Your state could do the same thing. The nation of Sudan has just allowed the people to vote to divide into two nations. It passed by 99% of the people approving the idea. Maybe we could do that too. Is that such a bad thing to hope for?
Nonsense. Lincoln was not the architect or cause of the Civil War.
Strange that the most radical president - a real anomaly and an unlikely person to be in power - keeps getting torn down.
If people want to go after the foundations of the American mythology, why do the "founding fathers" always get a pass? People work so hard to demolish the best president the working class people ever had, but authoritarian and anti-democratic people such as Franklin, Jefferson, Hancock, Adams and their cohorts are still up on some pedestal.
My statement, btw was not intended in the least to malign Lincoln, or his character. My point was simply that the sacrosanct conception of America as an inextricably centralized federation deserves, imho, some reconsideration. I still contend it's a valid argument to bring up. How many times have the concepts of local and sustainable been undermined due to false considerations of federal jurisdiction and 'benefit to the nation as a whole' (quotes added, because this is so often a fallacious contention).
Given a choice between the United States of America, and The American States United, I think there's more that a strong argument for pursuing the latter — considering the flagrant failures of the former in protecting our rights as citizens, individuals and natural persons.
"and the U.S. national security bureaucracy has shown itself to be remarkably resistant"
He means the US imperial juggernaut has shown itself to be remarkably stubborn/ambitious.
Choice of words matter in "1984".
Mr. Porter wrote: "Scrapping the failed strategy in favor of an historic accommodation in the region would create a new opportunity for agreement between the United States and Iran that could resolve the nuclear issue. "
______________________*
Don't be silly, professor! The only way Iran will survive peak oil is for them to have plenty of nuclear weapons, and very effective means of delivering them... adequate deterrent. They know that. The idea of "resolving the nuclear issue" is some nonsense that US and Zionist pundits have been flopping lips about which makes no sense at all. To the Iranians, it would be cool to be our friends. But what's really important is that they protect themselves from us.
If Muslims don't want to die by the tens of millions come peak oil, they'd better get together and have a coherent strategy that will protect them through a robust nuclear deterrent.
i'm a foreign policy neophyte... who's been sucking up every line of print and radio since the attacks of 9/11...
but as i was reading the comments...
isn't ONE thing the necons did after vietnam and nixon was ending the draft...? it's hard to have a military buy in against disasterous foreign policy... when it puts food on the table... and when half your body parts or brain isn't blown away... provides good bennies and pensions... not to mention the military "consultant"... after service...
heard on bbc is that the turkish army is required service and many of the troops are amongst the protestors...
and my other thought... re: "The Bush administration's invasion of Iraq was only the most extreme expression of that broader strategic concept."... is... how many decades to walk back dubbya's war... just last night c-span aired another defense of himself to a welcoming (of course) southern methodist university audience...
NOW... there's one frat boy who really fucked up... he just has to hope the war crimes tribunals (and they will come)... come after his demise from this planet...
ashcroft had two shining moments... on his hospital bed... where he (i forget the details - something with the patriot act)... told the neocons... something like over my dead body...
and...
ashcroft said after a torture briefing one day at the bush white house... history will not look kindly on this... [day]... [decision]... [path we've started down]...
TOO BAD... because here IS an obama strength... talking to the world community... not the fat white rich greedy over-the-hill but insanely rich men... community... who drool over a night in sarah palin's pants...
"TOO BAD... because here IS an obama strength... talking to the world community... not the fat white rich greedy over-the-hill but insanely rich men... community... who drool over a night in sarah palin's pants..."
Oh, really??!!? Since when?
Mark Levine states it very succinctly
"The focus on reform is also a highly coded reference, as across the developing world when Western leaders have urged "reform" it has usually signified the liberalization of economies to allow for greater penetration by Western corporations, control of local resources, and concentration of wealth, rather than the kind of political democratization and redistribution of wealth that are key demands of protesters across the region."
This is the main reason we won't see any change not forced.
PINK-
"The arrogance and delusional sense of self importance embodied by Lincoln is the bane of America.'
About that chance at playing in the big leagues of the Grand Game:
"I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. . . . corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed."
U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, Nov. 21, 1864
(letter to Col. William F. Elkins) Ref: The Lincoln Encyclopedia, Archer H. Shaw (Macmillan, 1950, NY)
Indeed,a little examination of the GIANT of American folk lore may be in order for you also.
That quote from Lincoln is a fake, by the way. Funny how it won't die - it doesn't even vaguely sound like Lincoln's writing style.
If it is a fake then more than a few are fooled:
http://en.thinkexist.com/
Type in the first few words of that quote and find it attributed to Lincoln.
"One looks in vain for a political force in this country that is free to press for fundamental change in Middle East strategy. And without a push for such a change from outside, we face the distinct possibility of a national security bureaucracy and White House continuing to deny the strategy's utter failure and disastrous consequences."
You don't think that someone went through all the trouble of 9/11 to abandon such policies and strategies so easily now do you?
Really.
and M$M provides political cover for our politicians who carry out the policies.
the socio-economic reality:
http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/01/former-managing-director-of-goldman.html
Interesting....but Porter fails to put U.S. policy in perspective in terms of corporate hegemony over hydrocarbon resources sustained by the American military. Even the militarization of Israel has been part of this long term plan. Israel is primarily an American military base in the middle of oil country and of course adjacent to the Suez Canal which is critical to the regional oil business.
"the national security bureaucracy"...to use his words....wow....he does not explain that this concept of national security has little to do with legitimate national security but corporate imperialism....etc.
This policy of supporting oil corporations operating in the Middle East with our military began nearly a century ago...and now they are expanding this policy to Central Asia via Afghanistan to nail down Asian markets.
But with a little domestic conservation and clean energy development, we would not need a drop of Middle East oil. There is more than enough oil in this hemisphere to meet our domestic requirements...and if we did need to import Middle East oil, it would by much cheaper to just buy it rather than spend $Trillions subsidizing corporate profits.
And at this point the cost of this policy (many $Trillions) has bankrupted our government and is draining our economy.
U.S. foreign policy has been abysmal for years. The Middle is unique for its oil and Israel, but its repressive regimes supported by the U.S. are part of a long term global failing of U.S. "diplomacy".
http://texshelters.wordpress.com/2011/02/01/security-threats-u-s-foreign-policy/
Peace,
Tex Shelters
It's amazing that Mubarak has lasted as long as he did. Don't US strategists understand that building foreign policy on dictatorships is really short sighted? Obviously not.