Obama
And Rouhani About To Clasp On The Trapeze
Saeed Naqvi
The decision making systems in Washington must be saturated with memos, position papers, backgrounders, by dove-nosed hawks and hawk-nosed doves, both in and outside the administration, on the atmospherics required for the initial moves with Iran after the recent signs of a thaw.
President Hassan Rouhani, meanwhile,
must also be casting a glance on the internal dynamics in Iran. That a casual
meeting with President Obama on the margins of the UN General Assembly did
“not” take place is, by the admission of Iranian diplomats, a “good outcome”
because a “casual” meeting at such a delicate juncture would give out
misleading signals.
The ball is in play and in the
foreseeable future a dour, defensive game should be expected. There are going
to be no electrifying, solo runs through the field.
President George W Bush got the United
States into a jam in Afghanistan and Iraq. President Obama learnt his lesson
the hard way: that was the wrong way to go. His 2009 speech in Cairo was the
route he had charted for himself but it took him a full term to realize that
there is a Presidency, an establishment and the Deep State, circumventing
Obama.
Israeli and Saudis, Washington insiders
much before Obama was conceived, began to play that system, fast and loose.
It is commonly recognized in Jerusalem,
and elsewhere, that the Likud PM nurses an adversarial chemistry with the US
President. He went ahead with Jewish settlements in a most insulting reception
to US Vice President, Joe Biden a year ago. That was precisely what Biden had
come to prevent.
And, remember the body language of Saudi
King Abdullah when he came out of convalescence in February that year. He
screamed, like Lear in the forest: what have you done to reliable allies, Zain
el Abedin bin Ali and Hosni Mubarak? Who was world’s leader, Obama or the King
of Saudi Arabia? He charged back home and rained $135 billion on his people
just in case they were tempted by a touch of the Arab Spring. Monarchies and
Emirates were quaking. They must hang together or be blown away. Qatar,
generally averse to Saudi stance of Gulf hegemon, was also roped in. The Emir
came along with the credibility of his Al Jazeera channel.
To reverse the Spring, Security Council
Resolution 1973 was brazenly misused for NATO strikes over Libya, a misuse
Vladimir Putin has not forgotten to this day.
World’s only super power, the United
States, was pinned down like Gulliver throughout this period. Pinned down by
Israel, Saudi Arabia and Europe.
A cartoon in the International Herald
Tribune shows fire in the distance. Some European grandees, sipping Campari
under a garden umbrella, order Uncle Sam, standing in attendance like a butler:
“Don’t just stand there; go put out the fire.”
That is what the allies had made of the
would-be sole superpower. The US was dragged into a pointless war in Libya
which, mercifully, did not drag over two and a half years as the Syrian
involvement has.
The US occupied Iraq for a decade,
destroyed the Baath structure, the multilayered intelligence apparatus,
Republican guards, killed Saddam Hussain and his key comrades. Only then was it
able to get away leaving Iraq the embarrassing mess it is today. With this
experience, who sold the lemon to Washington that cross border terrorism on a
massive scale, financed by the Saudis and the Qataris, would bring about regime
change in Syria? The Syrian state structure is every bit as solid as Baathist
Iraq was.
When everything else failed, the usual
suspects fell back on the ultimate trick: use of chemical weapons. So ham
handedly was this card played that everybody ranging from Zbigniew Brzezinski
in Washington to Putin in the Kremlin has found holes in Washington’s
narrative. Putin called it a “sly provocation” to invite Western military
action.
Saddam Hussain once lectured an Indian
diplomat on provocation and retaliation. “When provoked, never retaliate with
your crack weapons because the purpose of the provocation may be to confirm
that you possess them.”
The West focused on Syria’s chemical
weapons for one purpose. Brilliant diplomacy by Russia has transformed the
chemical arsenal into a huge bargaining asset. Your allegations that Syria used
chemical weapons is false and we can prove it, says Moscow. But now that you
have raised the issue, Damascus is willing to surrender its arsenal, sign the
chemical weapons convention, and we can jointly proceed towards a Middle East
free of weapons of Mass Destruction.
It is in this evolving gameplan that the
Washington-Teheran rapprochement must be seen.
Will Riyadh and Tel Aviv fall in line?
Riyadh has been allowed an unobstructed run of the Egyptian turf. They hate the
Muslim Brotherhood possibly a little more than they do Iranian Shiaism. This
because Sunni anti monarchism has a powerful subversive potential.
Ideological Muslim Brothers were
anathema to the Israelis too. The Jewish state is comfortable with a brutal
military regime which is held on a tight leash by US financial support.
This leaves Qatar and Turkey suspended
up there, looking for purpose.
At long last, Obama appears to be his
own master in the conduct of foreign policy.
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