Myths of
Mideast Arms Sales
By William D. Hartung
08/11/07 "ICH'
-- - The Bush administration’s proposal to send $20
billion worth of arms and $43 billion in military aid to
U.S. allies in the Middle East has been promoted by
repeating a series of time-worn myths that should have long
since been abandoned. With a shooting war in Iraq and a war
of words with Iran well under way, the last thing the region
needs is a new influx of high tech weaponry.
The suggestions of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates that this flood of
armaments will be “stabilizing” in the short term while
underscoring the U.S. commitment to “moderates” in the
region over the longer term is a prime example of this
historical amnesia.
Take Saudi Arabia, which continues to pursue policies that
are moderate in name only. Not only is Riyadh one of the
most undemocratic regimes in the world, but it has more
often than not used its financial resources to promote
extremism and repression elsewhere. From financing
fundamentalist madrassahs in Pakistan to supporting Sunni
insurgents in Iraq, the regime has a long track record of
opposing the values of democracy and moderation that the
Bush administration claims are the overarching principles of
its foreign policy. It’s hard to see how selling Saudi
Arabia more military equipment will change this pattern, any
more than arming the Shah of Iran in the 1970s and the
Afghan rebels in the 1980s promoted stability in those
countries.
Some elements of the proposed package are particularly
disturbing. Satellite guided bombs are not “defensive
weapons”,” as the administration claims. Using them would be
ill-advised, if not disastrous.
This raises the question of who exactly would Riyadh use
these weapons against. Iran? Iraq? Israel? Internal
opponents?
Iran has no intention of invading Saudi Arabia; if it wants
to undermine Saudi security it is far more likely to work
via proxy, a tactic that the Saudis are well-equipped to
counter in kind.
An attack on Iraq in the context of a civil war would only
exacerbate tensions and help savage any remnants of
stability that remain there.
Attacking Israel would be a suicide mission, given Tel
Aviv’s substantial military superiority. The only plausible
scenarios - and the ones most feared by Israeli officials -
would be if a rogue pilot attempted to strike without
authorization or an even more extremist regime were to
overthrow the current Saudi government.
Last but not least, using satellite guided bombs against
armed extremists within Saudi Arabia would be the wrong tool
for the job, like trying to kill a swarm of mosquitoes with
a sledge hammer. Good intelligence would be a far more
effective tool. What if the Bush administration tried to
foster greater intelligence cooperation instead of casting
its two top cabinet officials in the role of second-rate
arms brokers?
In the short-term, these scenarios may not be high
probability events, but as the U.S. experiences with arming
the Shah of Iran and the Afghan rebels demonstrate, weapons
supplied now can be used against U.S . interests down the
road as political conditions change.
If a symbol of U.S. commitment to Saudi Arabia is needed,
there are plenty of other tools at Washington’s disposal, in
the realms of diplomacy, economic cooperation, and
coordinated law enforcement efforts, among others. Not to
mention the fact that the funds the Saudis expend for this
proposed deal would be far more productive - and stabilizing
- if they were invested in economic and social programs
within the kingdom.
For all of these reasons, the U.S. Congress must take
preemptive action to try to derail or reshape the Middle
East arms package. Since Congress was granted the right to
stop major arms deals via a joint resolution of disapproval
under the Arms Export Control Act of 1976, it has never
successfully done so via a formal vote. But there have been
instances where the threat of Congressional action has led
to the restructuring or delaying of specific deals.
A successful effort to block or reshape the Mideast arms
package must begin with detailed hearings as soon as
Congress starts its fall term. Waiting for a formal
notification from the executive branch, as skeptics like
Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair Joseph Biden and
House Foreign Affairs Committee chair Tom Lantos have
pledged to do, will be too little too late. Given the
inherent problems with this arms package, it is unlikely to
withstand public scrutiny. It is up to Congress to take the
lead in promoting a real debate on this critical issue.
William D. Hartung is the director of the Arms and
Security Project at the
New
America Foundation.
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