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Some Observations on the Middle East
Geoffrey
Kemp
In
the days preceding the Iraq
war,
both supporters and opponents of the war concurred that the United States
would
defeat
the Iraqi armed forces, and that the most difficult
problems were likely to arise in the days and months following
victory. It
is now clear that this prediction was right on target.
The short-term glory of victory has been replaced
by a more sober realization of America's long-term strategic
commitments to the region.
This
past week has provided the inevitable wake-up call.
First, the new round of terrorism in
Saudi Arabia
and Morocco
suggests very
strongly that Al-Qaeda is back in business.
The security situation in Afghanistan
is far from stable,
and there are disturbing reports that Pakistan
once more is
interfering in a heavy-handed way in Afghan politics.
Second,
the much-vaunted "roadmap" for
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and an eventual peace
settlement has been derailed--thanks to the
determination of Palestinian rejectionists to use
terrorism to upset Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas's hopes
for progress in a new round of talks.
The Bush Administration is putting a brave face
on the situation, but it remains unclear how committed
the President is to the roadmap.
Will he put greater pressure on Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon to explicitly curtail further
settlement activity in the
West Bank
and Gaza Strip, or
will he limit his intervention to condemnation of
Palestinian failures to curb the violence? If
the White House is to be taken seriously, both Israel
and the Palestinians
must be persuaded to take painful actions in the hope of
rebuilding trust.
Looming
on the intermediate horizon is the question of Iran's nuclear
capabilities and more specifically activity at its
uranium enrichment facility at Natanz. In
June, the governors' meeting of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) will have to decide whether or not
Iran is in material breach of its commitments under the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)—and if so, what
to do about it.
All
of these developments suggest that the United States
has a full agenda in
the Middle East, and that there will
be no early military exit either from Afghanistan
or Iraq.
It also means that we must be prepared for future
acts of Al-Qaeda and Palestinian terrorism.
The most dangerous scenario, apart from another attack
in the continental United States, would be successful
terrorist operations against U.S.
forces in Iraq.
This would require us to take a tougher line and
deploy additional military forces.
This, in turn, would undermine hopes for a
democratic Iraqi regime and the drawing down of U.S.
occupation forces.
The
United States
cannot be an
"offshore" presence in the
Middle East
if it wishes to
protect
our
vital interests. It will require patience and a long term
presence in several Islamic countries. If handled poorly,
the Middle East could prove to be a political nightmare
for yet another American president.
Geoffrey
Kemp is the director for Regional Strategic Programs at
the Nixon
Center.
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