Nuclear
Deal With Iran To Be Concluded In Oman Next Week?
The picturesque Sultanate of Oman was all
set to make history in the next few days. It was to be the venue where the West
would conclude its nuclear deal with Iran. But recent control of both the
Houses of Congress by Republicans has swelled, the ranks of anxious busy bodies
darting around the world’s chanceries to sow doubts about the deal.
That an agreement was round the corner
was known for weeks, even months. But the most recent tell-tale expression of
the West’s intent appeared on the cover of The Economist last week. In the
photograph of Ayatullah Khomeini that the magazine carries on its cover, the
founder of the Islamic revolution’s marble face has cracked with age. From the
crevices in the visage, doves of peace are flying in all directions. The
photograph which represents both, symbolism and hyperbole, is mounted by a
headline: The Revolution is Over.
This is the West’s pre emptive spin. In
the West versus Iran confrontation, who blinked? First, ofcourse, are a host of
very technical nuclear related issue which will set the region at rest about
Iran’s military ambitions. But an agreement that could well be signed will,
most importantly, carry an overriding political message.
The message on The Economist cover is
straightforward. Iran has exhausted its revolutionary fervour and is now a
status quo power. It has been transformed into a clubbable state. There are
fears however that the new Republican dominated Congress will nevertheless
insist on retaining stringent sanctions on Teheran even after an agreement has
been reached. This could be a deal breaker.
If Republican clout in the US Congress
retards progress on the nuclear track with Iran, misgivings about Washington’s
ability to act on a host of issues will multiply. The reliability quotient of
the West in general will further diminish.
Secretary of State, John Kerry was
upbeat in Paris earlier in the week. “I want to get this done”, he told French
Foreign Minister, Laurent Fabius, a consistent friend of Israel. Should the
Congress hardliners retard the deal at this late stage, Fabius will thumb his
nose at Kerry – and the world at Obama.
As it is, there are deep suspicions in
diplomatic circles about the overall American intentions in West Asia.
Americans are in the region, says one Arab diplomat in ringing tones, because
their faith is shaken in the Israeli capacity to control the region after the
recent 50 day Gaza war. This dictates re organizing the West Asian chess board
in which Iran must be brought in as a central player.
President emeritus of the Council on
Foreign Relations, a former New York Times columnist and Senior Defence and
State Department official, Leslie Gelb, wrote last month: “US leadership has
since the Iranian revolution in 1979, singled out Iran as the locus of all
evil”. In a dramatically changed situation, today, both Iran and the US, see
the “Sunni jihadis who threaten the interest of both.”
The common cause that the US can make
with Iran extends to other theatres of conflict – Pakistan and Afghanistan, for
instance. “The only serious conflict is over Israel”. Gelb does not see that as
an insurmountable obstacle.
Traditionally, Iran and Israel have not
been foes. Quite the contrary. “US strategy should be to use cooperation in
other areas to ease Teheran’s hostility towards the Jewish state.”
This line of thinking is gaining
widespread currency. And, it is not good news for Saudi Arabia. But
Riyadh should draw comfort from the fact that powerful factions in Teheran,
like former President Hashemi Rafsanjani, consider the present Saudi regime a
much more acceptable proposition compared to what might follow if the present
regime goes. In the cloak and dagger world of West Asian politics, a theory
given credence to by all non GCC Arabs is precisely this: the regime in Riyadh
is mortally afraid of the ISIS. There are two Sunni streams in the ISIS which
are hostile to monarchies as being anti Islamic. These two schools are the
Muslim Brothers and Al Qaeda.
With what alacrity did the Saudis turn
up in Cairo with $12 billion check for the then General Abdel Fatah el-Sisi for
having ousted President Mohamed Morsi, the emerging Muslim Brotherhood icon.
Equally revealing was the composition of
the initial “coalition of the willing” against the ISIS – Jordan, Qatar, Saudi
Arabia, UAE, Bahrain. In other words the monarchies and the Sheikhdoms.
The ISIS push towards key cities in
Syria and Iraq has been halted because of tacit US-Iran cooperation. Whatever
the level of agitation in the Republican dominated Congress, steps in this direction
are not likely to be reversed in a hurry.
Yes, a redistribution of power in West
Asia is clearly on the cards. The Shia Houthis in Yemen, for instance, now in
control of Sanaa, lean heavily on Iranian support. This ground reality will in
all probability be allowed to prevail in the near future. Then there is the
totally untenable situation in Bahrain where the King stands in opposition to
90 per cent of the population who happen to be Shia. In 2011, US diplomat
Jeffrey Feltman had very nearly brought about a compromise between Bahrain’s
Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad al Khalifa and Shiekh Salman of the Shia Wefaq
party. But Bahrain’s Prime Minister colluded with the hard line Saudi Interior
Minister, the late Prince Nayef bin Abdel Aziz and GCC tanks rolled down the 37
kilometer causeway linking Bahrain to Saudi Eastern province, where the
country’s main reserves of oil coexist with a restive Shia population. It is
getting so complicated for the Saudis, simultaneously facing a fierce
succession struggle, that an honourable adjustment with Iran, possibly under US
auspices, looks like the only sensible way out of the jam.
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Excellent Analysis.
ReplyDeleteI have few question regarding change status quo in West Asia.
How will things turnout for Turkey owing to its covert support to ISIS ?
How much US-SYRIA Relations will change?
Is there any inherent linkages between Iran and Muslim Brotherhood!?
ps: is ikhwanul muslimeen and Muslim Brotherhood same thing!