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It's Not About Iran
By Shibley Telhami
Washington Post
January
14, 2008
As President Bush travels through the Middle East,
the prevailing assumption is that Arab states are
primarily focused on the rising Iranian threat and that
their attendance at the Annapolis conference with Israel
in November was motivated by this threat. This
assumption, reflected in the president's speech in the
United Arab Emirates yesterday, could be a costly
mistake.
Israel and the Bush administration place great
emphasis on confronting Iran's nuclear potential and are
prepared to engage in a peace process partly to build an
anti-Iran coalition. Arabs see it differently. They use
the Iran issue to lure Israel and the United States into
serious Palestinian-Israeli peacemaking, having
concluded that the perceived Iranian threats sell better
in Washington and Tel Aviv than the pursuit of peace
itself.
Many Arab governments are of course concerned about
Iran and its role in Iraq, but not for the same reasons
as Israel and the United States. Israel sees Iran's
nuclear potential as a direct threat to its security,
and its support for Hezbollah and Hamas as a military
challenge.
Arab governments are less worried about the military
power of Hamas and Hezbollah than they are about support
for them among their publics. They are less worried
about a military confrontation with Iran than about
Iran's growing influence in the Arab world. In other
words, what Arab governments truly fear is militancy and
the public support for it that undermines their own
popularity and stability.
In all this, they see Iran as a detrimental force but
not as the primary cause of militant sentiment. Most
Arab governments believe instead that the militancy is
driven primarily by the absence of Arab-Israeli peace.
This argument has been a loser in Washington,
rejected by many and not taken seriously by others. The
issue of Iran gets more traction inside the Beltway.
Last year, King Abdullah II of Jordan delivered an
address to a joint session of Congress. His focus was
not on Iran or Iraq -- or even the hundreds of thousands
of Iraqi refugees his small country is painfully
hosting. In urging American diplomacy, his message was
clear: "The wellspring of regional division, the source
of resentment and frustration far beyond, is the denial
of justice and peace in Palestine." This address was
hardly noticed in our press. In contrast, when the king
highlights the Iranian threat to his American visitors,
everyone listens.
One does not have to accept the view that Palestine
explains all regional ills to acknowledge the king's
central concern. Either he genuinely meant what he said
or he believed it was so central a matter to his public
that he needed to use this chance to address Congress to
appease his constituents. (Three-quarters of Jordanians
and other Arabs have ranked Palestine as their "top
issue" or "among the top three" in their priorities for
five years in a row.)
President Bush needs to listen. The war in Iraq has
increased Saudi influence in the region, while America's
Iraq troubles and its confrontation with Iran have
weakened the U.S. position. America now needs Saudi
Arabia more than the Saudis need Washington.
To be sure, there are many common economic and
security interests. But in the end, the American
presence in the Persian Gulf, which helps provide
security for Arab governments, cannot be used as a
lever. U.S. forces are there to protect American
interests, not the local governments; a threat of
withdrawal is not credible. If one adds the increased
economic power that comes with the substantial cash flow
generated by $100-a-barrel oil, Saudi Arabia and the
other Gulf Cooperation Council states have the potential
influence that comes with being one of the top creditors
of the United States.
And even though Gulf Arab governments need the U.S.
military umbrella for their security, their publics view
the United States as a far greater threat than Iran. It
is a challenge for these governments to have to
continually depend on an America whose foreign policy is
rejected by their own publics and whose record in recent
years has been more of failure than of success.
Confronting Iran does not solve their dilemma.
Arab-Israeli peacemaking does. Most Arabs identify
successful American peace diplomacy as the single most
important factor in improving their views of the United
States.
When Saudi and other Arab representatives decided to
attend the Annapolis conference, they hoped it would
help Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert deliver the kind
of visible concessions that would empower Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas and dissuade Palestinians from
supporting Hamas. President Bush sounded optimistic in
Jerusalem. But Arab trust of speeches is low, and
tangible benefits, particularly removal of Israeli
roadblocks and checkpoints in the West Bank and a freeze
on Israeli settlements, have not materialized.
Increasing Arab skepticism about peace prospects is one
reason they are hedging their bets by defusing tensions
with Iran.
In making his case for confronting Iran, Bush is
likely to get polite nods from Arab leaders. Don't
mistake that for an embrace of American policy. What
they need above all is for the United States to succeed
in mediating Palestinian-Israeli peace -- not dismiss
their peace calls as a fig leaf for some deeper desire
for confrontation with Iran. |