U.S. Turns to Arab Dictators to Contain Hezbollah
By Emad Mekay
07/25/06 -- WASHINGTON, Jul 24 (IPS)
- The United States is using
authoritarian Arab leaders, who fear that Iran could export its
revolutionary political model to their disgruntled populations and
are concerned about Washington's reprisal against them a la Saddam
Hussein in Iraq, as a buffer between the Iran-backed Hezbollah and
Israel, Washington's protégé in the Middle East, analysts here say.
"Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Jordan fear the momentum behind Iran's
regional ambitions, which largely explains their surprisingly public
criticism of Hezbollah, and by implication Iran," said George
Perkovich, vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace in Washington, referring to how the three
nations sided with their former arch-enemy Israel in its attacks
against Lebanon.
"The anti-Israel declamations of Iranian President Ahmedinejad and
Iran's continued support of actors that refuse to recognise Israel's
existence has paradoxically elevated Iran's standing in the Arab
street and alarmed Sunni Arab rulers who have either recognised
Israel or moved toward it," Perkovich added.
Long-time rulers in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt have all met
their toughest internal opposition from Islamist political groups,
like the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the Islamic Action Front in
Jordan.
Some of these groups have even taken up arms against the ruling
regimes, as is the case with al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia and al-Jihad
in Egypt. The regimes, with U.S. backing, have been fighting these
movements for years and are concerned that such groups could draw
inspiration if Hezbollah comes out stronger from its current
confrontation with Israel.
"Hezbollah is also an Islamist movement with ties to similar
organisations in other Arab countries. Both the Egyptian and
Jordanian governments have grown fearful of the rise of Islamist
movements after the Muslim Brotherhood's electoral gains in Egypt
and Hamas' election victory in Palestine," said Amr Hamzawy of the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
"Their strategic interest in containing Hezbollah, and for that
matter Hamas, feeds on the ongoing domestic conflict with the Muslim
Brotherhood and the Islamic Action Front, respectively."
Those motives coincide perfectly with Washington's aim, and that of
Israel, to disarm Hezbollah and push it north of the Israel-Lebanon
border.
This is the mission for the visit by U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice to Rome on Wednesday, where a core group of
international players that includes Arab states will meet to chart
the future of the region in the wake of the ongoing Israeli attacks
on Lebanon.
Rice's visit has the declared purpose of creating "a new Middle
East" where the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah no longer has potency
in its confrontations with Israel and where the Arab governments
will play a central role.
Analysts here agree that the basic theory that Secretary Rice is
taking to the Middle East, where she arrived Sunday, is to get Arab
regimes that are hugely unpopular with those they rule to work as
guard dogs on the Israeli borders against rocket attacks from deeply
rooted organisations like Hezbollah in Lebanon or the Islamic
Resistance Movement (Hamas) in Palestinian territories.
Rice's job, says Juan Williams, a senior correspondent with National
Public Radio (NPR), "is to get the Arab states to act as a buffer
between Hezbollah and the Lebanese government and Israel and the
United States".
And the Arab regimes are already on it.
The White House received Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal and
Prince Bandar bin Sultan, chief of the Saudi National Security
Council, over the weekend, while Egypt's intelligence chief Omar
Suliman and Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit had met earlier with
Rice and President George W. Bush's national security adviser
Stephen Hadley.
The first target of U.S. instructions to the Arab regime appears to
be Syria.
Explaining the U.S. tactics, Paul Gigot, the conservative editor of
the Wall Street Journal's editorial page, said: "They're working on
Egypt and Saudi Arabia to try to pressure Syria to stop arming
Hezbollah... the most important thing is to give Israel the time it
needs to really make progress against Hezbollah, and I think that is
the opening, and I think they're now taking it."
Washington has ostracised Damascus over the past two years and
withdrawn its ambassador, leaving U.S.-backed Arab rulers like Hosni
Mubarak of Egypt and King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia as
the main channel to take the message to Syrian President Bashar
Assad.
"[The administration] is trying to say to Syria... your interests
are better served in the Sunni Arab camp and the camp that's pretty
much on our side than with the Iranians," Mara Liasson, the national
political correspondent for NPR, told Fox News Sunday.
"I do know that the United States is clearly looking to Syria, not
Iran, as the target of diplomacy here. Syria is the weaker power,
and while they don't provide the hundreds of millions of dollars a
year that Iran does to support Hezbollah, they are the conduit for
all the weapons that come from Iran into Lebanon and to Hezbollah,"
she said.
The second step prescribed for the Arab regimes is to give both
political and military backing for the secularist anti-Syrian and
anti-Hezbollah government of Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora.
Joshua Bolten, White House chief of staff, said on Sunday that
Rice's mission to the region is to "empower the Lebanese government"
and to rally the Lebanon Core Group, which includes the
Washington-backed Arab trio Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, in
helping the Lebanese government "control its own territory" and
stand between Israel and Hezbollah.
The plan is to create an international force that may include Arab
elements to help the Lebanese government and its feeble army replace
Hezbollah as guards for Israel's northern borders.
"I think the strategy for the U.S. is to try to put together, with
our allies, Arab and around the world, an international force that
would go into southern Lebanon, as Israeli combat operations cease,
accompany the Lebanese army into the south and provide, finally, a
strong buffer," said David Ignatius, a columnist with the Washington
Post.
"That's a very, very difficult proposition. But that's what we're
trying to do." (END/2006)