http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NH23Ak02.html
 
The South gathers in Tehran

 
By Vijay Prashad
Asian Times:  Aug 23, 2012 

Tomorrow, perhaps, the future.
- W H Auden 

Next week, representatives from 118 of the world's 192 states will gather in
Tehran for the 16th Non-Aligned Movement summit.  (That's this week. -Ed) 

Created in 1961, the NAM was a crucial platform for the Third World Project
(whose history I detail in The Darker Nations). It was formed to purge the
majority of the world from the toxic Cold War and from the maldevelopment
pushed by the World Bank. After two decades of useful institution-building,
the NAM was suffocated by the enforced debt crisis of the 1980s. It has
since gasped along. 

In the corners of the NAM meetings, delegates mutter about the arrogance of
the North, particularly the US, whose track record over the past few decades
has been pretty abysmal. Ronald Reagan's dismissal of the problems of the
South at the 1981 Cancun Summit on the North-South Dialogue still raises
eyebrows, and George W Bush's cowboy sensibility still earns a few chuckles.
But apart from these cheap thrills, little of value comes out of the NAM.
Until the last decade there have been few attempts to create an ideological
and institutional alternative to neoliberalism or to unipolar imperialism. 

With the arrival of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South
Africa) in the past few years, the mood has lifted. The much more assertive
presence of the BRICS inside the NAM and in the United Nations has raised
hopes that US and European intransigence will no longer determine the
destiny of the world. At the 14th NAM summit in Cuba (2006), the world
seemed lighter. Hugo Chavez' jokes went down well; Fidel Castro was greeted
as a titan. This seemed like the old days, or at least Delhi in 1983. 

NAM summits typically go by without fanfare. The Atlantic media rarely
notice the movement's presence. But this year, because the summit is to be
held in Tehran, eyebrows have been raised. 

The US State Department's Victoria Nuland hastened to condemn the location
as "a strange place and an inappropriate place for this meeting ... Our
point is simply that Tehran, given its number of grave violations of
international law and UN obligations, does not seem to be the appropriate
place" for the NAM summit. 

The US government is particularly chafed that UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon is making his pilgrimage to the NAM (he has attended every NAM
summit since 1961, when Dag Hammarskjold left Belgrade to his death over
African skies). Nuland notes that the US has expressed its "concern" to Ban.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was plainer: "Mr Secretary
General, your place is not in Tehran." 

Bombs over Tehran
Israel has been playing a peculiar game these past few months. Netanyahu and
his coterie are the mirror image of the clownish behavior of Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: Both have a fulsome sense of themselves,
preening before cameras with bluster. Sensational bulletins come from their
mouths. 

The fear is that Netanyahu is playing chicken with the US. He wants either
to bait President Barack Obama to ratchet up the sanctions and fire off one
or two missiles, or else to let loose his own hawks, flying twice the
distance that they flew to Osirak in 1982 to bomb Bushehr now. Netanyahu's
pressure startled his own president, Shimon Peres, who hastened to note, "It
is clear that we cannot do this single-handedly and that we must coordinate
with America." All this is a game of Chinese whispers, with so little
clarity about what anyone is actually saying, and a great deal of anxiety
about the exaggerations that have overwhelmed any capacity for mature
discussion. 

The US seems to want time for the new sanctions regime to take effect. In
March, Iranian banks were disconnected from the SWIFT network that enables
electronic financial transactions. Pressure on countries that import Iranian
oil were stepped up, as the US and the Europeans threatened to take action
against those who did not follow their own sanctions regime (which are much
harsher than the various UN resolutions that run from 1696, from 2006, to
1929, from 2010). 

Iran's central bank has pointed to a deep decline in the share of Iranian
exports - and concomitantly, a perilous position for its population. What
seems not to be on the radar of those who create these sanctions regimes is
that they rarely turn the population against its government. In Iran, it
might actually be detrimental to the reform movement. Washington fulminates
about autocracy in Iran and the bomb, but it does not realize that for most
Iranians (44% of whom live in slums), the core problem is of livelihood and
well-being. 

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will be in Tehran. He will meet with
Ahmadinejad, and talk to him about India's attempt to circumvent the
sanctions regime. Between 10% and 12% of India's oil needs are furnished by
Iran. There has been an attempt to switch to the Saudi supply, but this is
much easier to talk about than to do. The problem for India and Iran has
been over payments, since India cannot pay Iran for the oil. Iran has
therefore agreed to accept 45% of its oil receipts in rupees, within India,
and to use this money to buy Indian goods to import into Iran. Delegations
from the business sector have gone back and forth to find things to sell the
Iranians. But problems persist: The sanctions regime has made it nearly
impossible for Indian tankers to get insurance for their journey to Iran.
Nonetheless, the Indian business lobby estimates that bilateral trade
between the two countries will rise from US$13.5 billion to $30 billion by
2015. 

The tete-a-tete between Manmohan Singh and Ahmadinejad will also touch on
the Indian investments at the Chabahar port in southeastern Iran, which has
been used to bring Indian goods into Iran and to bring 100,000 tonnes of
wheat to Afghanistan. India and Iran have invested heavily in Afghanistan,
and both have a common interest in making sure that the Taliban do not
return to power in Kabul. 

Here one would imagine that the US might see eye-to-eye with these old
allies, but Washington's obsessive blinkers make it impossible for its
officials to be proper diplomats. It has been a long-standing US aim to
break the link between India and Iran, two stalwarts in the NAM. 

Next week, New Delhi and Tehran will reinforce their fragile ties. Manmohan
Singh will not make any grand gesture. This is not his temperament.
Nonetheless, economic realities and the accidents of geography make the
relationship necessary. This is unfathomable to Washington. 

Blood of Syria
The last time the NAM suffered a major political split was when the Soviets
invaded Afghanistan in 1979. The bulk of the members wanted to condemn the
invasion, while a few of the more influential (Algeria, India, Iraq) refused
to go along. It damaged the NAM's credibility. This year, it is Syria that
poses the dilemma. 

In May, at Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, within sight of Hosni Mubarak's hospital
incarceration, the NAM coordinating bureau's ministerial meeting tried to
put together a resolution on Syria. The Saudis and Qataris wanted a strong
condemnation of the regime, but the Syrians, who remain NAM members, took
exception to the draft. The final document was anodyne, calling for the
success of former UN secretary general Kofi Annan's Six Point Plan. 

Annan has quit. In his place has come the seasoned Algerian diplomat and UN
bureaucrat Lakhdar Brahimi, who is no stranger to the NAM circuit. Brahimi
knows a lot about conflict, having recently been the UN's man in Afghanistan
and Iraq, and having been the broker to the Taif Agreement (1989) that
suspended the Lebanese Civil War. 

Brahimi's role will be difficult. Cynicism tears at Syria's future. Most
discussion on Syria comes at it from its geopolitics: What will be the
impact of the fall of Bashar al-Assad's regime for US power or Gulf Arab
power in the region? Will this have a detrimental impact on Hezbollah, on
the Palestinians, on the Iranians? These are valuable questions, but they
obscure the much more basic class question posed by the uprising in Syria:
What is best for the Syrian people? 

There is little argument that Assad's regime governs with one hand clothed
in the military's iron and the other morphed into a credit card for the
kleptocratic neoliberal elite. There is also little argument that the Assad
regime's brutality toward its population has a long history, most notably
during the first 11 months of the 2011 uprising when the people in their
coordination committees chanted silmiyyeh, silmiyyeh (peaceful, peaceful) as
Assad's tanks roared into their midst. 

The correct handling of the contradictions should lead one to full support
for the freedom of the Syrian people, which has come to mean two things: the
end of the Assad regime and the retraction of the hand of the US, the Gulf
Arabs and the Russians. But Brahimi will not be able to move an agenda as
long as the Syrian people's needs are not at the center of things. 

It is also why the NAM will not be able to act effectively vis-a-vis Syria.
One NAM delegation to Moscow and another to Riyadh-Doha asking for a
suspension of weaponry and a cooling down of the rhetoric would have a
marked impact on Assad and his beleaguered circle. This is not in the cards.


Leadership has now fallen on Egypt's new president, Mohamed Morsi. At the
Organization of Islamic Cooperation meeting in Mecca this month, its 57
states expelled Syria. This followed a resolution put forward by Saudi
Arabia and Qatar. Only Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi cautioned
the group not to act in haste. He tried to take shelter in Assad's
pronouncements about elections and reforms, none of this meaningful any
longer. Salehi and the Iranians are plainly worried about the dynamic of
history shifting to the advantage of the Gulf Arabs. This has colored their
view of the Syrian conflict. 

Egypt built a small bridge to Tehran at the OIC meeting. Morsi proposed the
creation of a Contact Group, which would include Egypt, Iran, Saudi Arabia
and Turkey. This was welcomed by all sides. A few days later at a
ministerial meeting in Jeddah, Salehi met with Egyptian Foreign Minister
Mohammed Amr to draw out the implications of this Contact Group. Iran's
Foreign Ministry spokesman Rahim Mehmanparast said the Contact Group would
be a mechanism to "review and follow up on [regional] issues so that peace
would be established in the region". Nothing concrete has been achieved so
far, but all indications are that Egypt will use the NAM process to find a
way between the hard lines on both sides. 

Egypt and Iran broke their ties after the 1979 Islamic Republic was formed.
But after the ouster of Mubarak, small gestures brought the countries into
communication. The Egyptians allowed an Iranian frigate to go through the
Suez Canal (the first since 1978). Iran welcomed the Arab Spring in North
Africa as an "Islamic Awakening", and hoped for a rapprochement with the new
Muslim Brotherhood politicians of the region. 

The Qataris and Saudis also had such hopes, and these are antagonistic to
Iran. Emir Hamad bin Khalifa of Qatar met with Morsi for dinner last week,
where the Qataris pledged $2 billion in assistance to Egypt (a rumor floated
around that the Qataris wanted to lease the Suez Canal, perhaps to prevent
passage to those Iranian frigates). 

Morsi had welcomed Iranian Vice-President Hamed Baqai a few weeks before the
Qatari visit, accepting the invitation to come to Tehran for the NAM meeting
and hand over the chair from Egypt to Iran in person. At the OIC meeting,
Morsi and Ahmadinejad were seen to speak for a considerable period. It is
likely that Morsi would like to fashion himself as the non-aligned voice
between Iran and the Gulf Arabs, and to provide Brahimi with the kind of
policy space he will require. 

Morsi has a complex itinerary. He will go to Tehran via Beijing. Between a
conclave with Hu Jintao and then later with Manmohan Singh, between
discussions with the Gulf Arabs and the Iranians, Morsi's gestures suggest
an affinity with the kind of multipolar foreign policy developed by the
BRICS countries. 

The tea leaves are hard to read. The top issues on the NAM agenda are Iran
and Syria. One is about a war that Israel itches to start, and the other is
about a war that the Assad regime is conducting against the Syrian people.
The very fact that the NAM summit is taking place in Tehran shows that there
remains support for Iran against any precipitous action. If Morsi's Contact
Group can be pressured within the NAM to take a strong class position on
Syria and not hide behind the cynicism of geopolitics, then this will be
seen as a historic summit. 

Vijay Prashad's new book, Arab Spring, Libyan Winter, is published by AK
Press. 


  _____  

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