by
Hassan Nafaa
Many in the Arab world are under the impression
that, since 11 September 2001, the US has come to treat Arabs and
Muslims differently from other people. This is not true.
Washington does not base its policies on ethnic, cultural, or
religious grounds, but on its interests and global vision.
Few would argue the point that the United
States has two main interests in the Middle East. One is the
Zionist project related to the establishment of a Jewish state in
Palestine; the other is oil. The interest of the United States in
the Zionist project and its support for Israel dates back to the
Balfour Declaration. As for oil, US companies were scrambling to
obtain exploration and production franchises in the region long
before World War II underlined the strategic importance of oil. US
interest in controlling world oil supplies has never ebbed. So
following the end of World War II, when the US threw itself
headlong into superpower rivalry, it had two key interests in the
region, Israel and oil.
Which poses an obvious dilemma: How can the
US guarantee its oil interests, which are in mainly Arab hands,
while embracing the Zionist project to the letter? Somehow the US
developed a pragmatic foreign policy that contained this dilemma
with a fair degree of success.
Until the mid-1960s the US saw the Soviet
Union as the main threat to its interests in the world and the
Middle East. By stressing this threat it managed to rally the
support of conservative and Islamic-based regimes. Meanwhile the
US maintained ties with the pan-Arab movement, led by Gamal Abdel-Nasser.
Although Arab nationalists had close ties with the Soviet Union
they mostly shied away from Marxist ideas, which was good news for
the US.
When the pan-Arab movement gained sufficient
momentum that it posed a clear threat to US interests in the
region, and as it became more deeply involved with the Soviets,
the US began to rely increasingly on conservative and Islamic
forces in the region, giving them the green light to resist the
mostly secular nationalist movement. Not so publicly the US also
gave Israel a green light to attack Abdel-Nasser, the result was
the 1967 war.
When the Islamic revolution occurred in
Iran, the US did not hesitate to use the nationalist movement, or
part thereof, to wage a counter-attack. Saddam Hussein, in his
eagerness to fill the vacuum created by Abdel-Nasser's death in
1970 and Egypt's disappearance from the military conflict with
Israel in 1978, was the right man for the job. However, when
Saddam went beyond what was expected of him and invaded Kuwait,
the US exploited his mistake.
The Arab world was aware of the schemes
hatched against it, but it kept fulminating, and thus helped to
tighten the noose the US had wrapped around its neck. Arab
attitudes towards the US were as paradoxical as they were
ineffective. The Arabs failed to address the world in one voice,
or as a cohesive regional group with common interests to defend.
The US, through its bilateral ties with individual Arab countries,
became acutely aware of the contradictions in the Arab world; the
disparity between words and deeds, the rivalry among individual
leaders, and the distrust between rich and poor, radicals and
conservatives and nationalists and Islamists, to mention just a
few.
Relations between the US and individual Arab
states were dominated by bilateral, not pan-Arab concerns. Of
course, pan-Arab concerns were an integral part of the domestic
agenda of most individual Arab states. But, being a superpower,
the US was in a position to ignore such concerns.
Every now and then the US would find itself
in a position where it had to take sides, for tactical reasons,
with the Arabs. This happened twice. The first time was during the
1956 Suez war when Egypt, under Abdel- Nasser, was the spearhead
of a vital and promising nationalist movement. The second time was
in 1973, when close cooperation between Egypt, Syria, and Saudi
Arabia produced extraordinary military and economic results. In
both cases the Arab system was able to force the US into making
temporary concessions. Yet, the inability of the Arab system to
maintain its cohesion, through collective or single-state
leadership, gave the US the opportunity to regain the initiative
and turn matters to its own advantage in the long run. Even in a
bipolar international system the US was able to give Israel a
green light to attack Abdel-Nasser's Egypt in 1967 and thus deal a
powerful blow to the nationalist movement. And since 1973
Washington has been intent on separating oil from the Arab-Israeli
conflict and early made contingency plans to occupy oil fields if
necessary.
A sea change occurred in US policy towards
the Arab world as a result of two developments. First, the most
conservative wing of the Republican Party came to power in 2000.
Second, the attacks of 11 September 2001 took place.
The extreme right-wing came to power in
Washington, after eight years of the Clinton administration, fully
convinced that the strategy followed by President Reagan succeeded
in bringing down the Soviet bloc. The neo-conservatives were
incensed that the Clinton administration had wasted a golden
opportunity to reformulate the world order according to their
vision, and were determined not to let the opportunity slip away.
In their new vision of the world the neo- conservatives did not
feel the need to have Arab friends of any persuasion. The Arab
nationalist project had been defeated, and the Soviet Union, which
lent support to this project, was no more.
The neo-conservatives have a vision for
world domination, and this vision entails Israeli domination of
the Arab region. This is why it made sense for the US
administration to blame the Palestinian Authority for the failure
of US efforts to reach a regional political settlement, and to
give Israel the go-ahead to stamp out the Intifada. As part of
this new regional approach the US prioritised the destruction of
the Iraqi regime, finishing the job left undone during the
liberation of Kuwait.
The September 2001 events gave the neo-
conservatives an extraordinary opportunity to formulate a cohesive
ideological vision through which to redraw the map of the Middle
East. The new US administration saw the terror that hit their
shores in September 2001 as the outcome of the conflict between
corrupt Arab leaders and the disgruntled Arab masses. This
conflict, once it struck the heart of the US, became an American
issue. The US began blaming Arab regimes, to varying degrees, for
what the terrorists had done, the argument being that Arab regimes
tolerate political views that malign America, Israel, and the
West. It soon became common practice for US pundits to opine that
Arab youths, having been deprived freedom in their despotic
countries, take out their anger against the US. According to the
US administration there is a massive cultural problem in the Arab
world, one that cannot be radically addressed except through a
major modernisation process imposed by the outside world.
It was in this context that the
neo-conservatives began propagating the idea that an attack on
Iraq would pave the way for a much-needed modernisation of the
Arab world and for reconstituting the region's political,
economic, social, and cultural parameters in a manner that would
accelerate the pace of transformation. Iraq is a major Arab
country with every potential for economic revival, and its ethnic
plurality makes it a candidate for the kind of democratic
transformation that would be hard to achieve in any other Arab
country of comparable stature, went the argument. Once the US had
overthrown Saddam's despotic regime and employed Iraq's immense
resources to create a pluralistic system, the neo- conservatives
claimed, the wheels of change would start turning in the Arab
world, and the bandwagon would race to its final destination,
ridding the region of hotbeds of corruption, tyranny, and terror.
The main thrust of the above analysis is
that the US addresses the Arab world through the prism of its own
interests and global ambitions. For the past half century the US
has acted in a pragmatic manner, realising that the Arab world is
full of contradictions and that these contradictions, if well
used, could facilitate US oil interests without harming its policy
towards Israel. Not all Arabs are the same, the Americans
discovered. The US administration has always maintained Arab
friends, particularly among the ruling elites, and provided them
with due protection. The US has for long played its cards
cautiously. It had to, for the world was bipolar and the Arab
nationalist movement had a few fine moments.
Caution is no longer necessary. The
Socialist Bloc has fallen apart, as has the Arab collective
system, first when Egypt bailed out from the military conflict
with Israel and then when Iraq came under occupation. As it is,
the US no longer needs to protect any Arab regime, or even listen
to it, regardless of its stature or willingness to cooperate. The
US expects everyone in this region to change, to learn how to take
orders. It is also convinced that there are enough Arabs ready to
offer their services with a smile. And it is not far off the mark.
In time, however, Washington will discover that its regional
vision is short-sighted, based on mistaken assumptions, and
formulated by people who are more faithful to Israeli interests
than US ones. The neo- conservative approach is not in America's
long-term interest.
The writer is head of the Political
Science Department at Cairo University's Faculty of Economics and
Political Science.
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