Hints
Of New World Order Must Await Tillerson-Lavrov Meeting
Saeed Naqvi
Pundits in Washington are beginning to
hope for continuity in US foreign policy under Donald Trump. For their
optimism, they are falling back on hints from the new administration.
Look, they say, Israel is being warned
to curb settlement construction; Russians must withdraw from Crimea; Iran is on
notice: no more missile tests.
If this, indeed, were true then the
skirmishes between the Intelligence community and the Trump campaign which
continued well into the President’s inauguration, would appear to have been
settled in favour of the agencies, the Deep State, with the media in tow.
If the Washington Pundits are anywhere
near the truth, it may please them to know they are in company. Syrian
President Bashar al Assad declared a week ago that he expected “no change in US
policy towards Middle East”.
What then does one make of the
allegation which Trump repeated atleast since August, 2016: “Obama and Hillary
founded ISIS?” This reporter has written several stories since 2012 about US
ambassador in Damascus, Robert Stephen Ford, a great favourite of Hillary
Clinton’s, playing an overt role in the Syrian insurgency. Some of it was eye
witness account.
More recently, Trump has reiterated that
he hopes for friendlier relations with Putin. He looked forward to greater
cooperation with Moscow in managing the chaos in West Asia.
Is there a contradiction between this
line and the new US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley warning Moscow on Crimea?
These are significant signals but they
will be fitted into coordinated policy only after the new Secretary of State,
Rex Tillerson, finds his feet in the State Department. Until then even National
Security Adviser, Gen. Michael Flynn’s tough statement on Iran must be seen as
premature. It may point to some turf fights that will keep the White House
abuzz for sometime.
Serious games will begin when Russian
Foreign Minister Lavrov, and Tillerson hold their first meeting.
If there is to be anything resembling
goodwill between Washington and Moscow, Lavrov will have to acquaint Tillerson
with a great deal of what Moscow has been doing recently.
Libya, for instance. Moscow has been
coordinating policy with Egypt to control a country with more than one power
centre.
On December 20, Foreign Ministers of
Russia, Turkey and Iran met in Moscow to discuss Syria. The US was managing its
transition during this period. The meeting was followed by a joint air campaign
by Russia and Turkey against the Islamic State. The summit in Moscow was
preceded by the dramatic killing of the Russian ambassador in the Turkish
capital, Ankara.
Maronite Christian leader, Michael
Aoun’s election as President of Lebanon would not have been possible without
Hezbullah’s help. For this development too the credit goes to Syria, Iran and
Russia.
Yemen will be a test for the Trump
administration. Will he continue to support Saudi Arabia’s disastrous war in
the Arab World’s poorest country? Who knows, in the interest of American
prosperity, he may like to encourage Saudis to spend their last penny buying US
arms.
An important meeting, which caught New
Delhi on the wrong foot, was the Russia, China, Pakistan conclave in Moscow
focused on the future of Afghanistan. National Security Adviser, Ajit Doval’s
subsequent visit to Moscow covered this development. He must supervise a new
regional strategy before Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to St. Petersburg
in early June. The Moscow meeting on Afghanistan places a huge question mark on
US expenditure in blood and treasure in that country over the past 12 years.
Taleban, whom the US has been fighting all these years, are now to be enlisted
in the war against the Islamic State and various offshoots of Al Qaeda. Russian
Caucasus and Xinjiang are menaced by this, expanding variants of Islamist
militancy. Taleban are a regional force spread on two sides of the Durand line.
This must be a source of worry for Islamabad. The President of Philippines,
Rodrigo Duterte, has cancelled military exercises with the US. He has held out
a hand to Moscow and Beijing.
This is just some of the agenda
Tillerson has to prepare himself for. To begin with, he will have to digest the
implications of a ban on seven Muslim dominated countries to travel to the US.
Iran being listed among Muslim countries
on whom the ban applies, makes no sense unless Trump or those around him are
keen to pick a fight with Tehran to please Riyadh and Jerusalem. No act of
terrorism in the genre of suicide bombing, has yet been traced to Tehran. Nor
does Hezbullah’s unwavering support to the Palestinian cause make it a militant
menace. In this devilry, it has Iran’s total backing.
During the campaign, and since, Trump
has maintained that he will seek Russian support in “bombing the shit out of
Islamic terrorism”. Moscow and Iran are with him on that page, indelicate
language notwithstanding.
The contradiction with the Deep State
will arise when, in the course of hammering Islamic terrorism, White House does
not make allowance for militants who were trained and harboured as a western
asset. That will require a case by case bargaining.
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