http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/opinion/2007/February/opinion_February1.xml&section=opinion&col=

Geopolitical nightmares of the Middle East
BY MATEIN KHALID

1 February 2007


THE geopolitics of the Middle East has mutated into a lethal sectarian 
virus, as Shia and Sunni militias slaughter, bomb and maim at random in 
Iraq, Pakistan and now Lebanon.

The ancient wounds of Kerbala and the Ottoman – Safavid sectarian wars 
that engulfed the Middle East for centuries have now reopened in a 
region where war, to borrow Von Clausewitz’ words, is just diplomacy by 
other means. The demagogues, zealots, princes, dictators, warlords, 
terrorists, secessionists and theocrats in the Middle East are now on a 
collision course to Armageddon, towards a Sarajevo style endgame to all 
the interlocking, incidentiary web of alliances, rivalries and ethnic 
hatreds that could well plunge our region into generations of bloodshed.

The axis of evil lies in the heart of the pitiless assassins, who view 
the world through the prism of a pathological fanaticism and an 
existential paranoia lubricated by their Great Power patrons who are 
turning cities from Beirut to Baghdad, Gaza to Kirkuk, Mosul to Karachi 
into slaughterhouses, Francisco Goya’s surreal hells on earth. Iran 
tests its Zelzal and Fajr – five missiles in the Dasht-i-Kavir, the USS 
John Stennis and its carrier strike force sails to join the USS 
Eisenhower and the Fifth Fleet in Bahrain. American combat troops in 
Iraq are given a hunting license to kill Iranians, the US Treasury 
tightens the draconian financial sanctions that bought down the 
Afrikaner apartheid regime in South Africa. Patriot missile batteries 
and killer submarines with nuclear warheads are deployed within the Gulf 
of Hormuz. The countdown to the fourth Gulf war has already begun. As in 
1948, 1956, 1967, 1973, 1988, 1982, 1990 and 2003, history is moving 
fast forward and the Middle East is once again convulsed with the 
prospect of war.

Iraq is the flashpoint for the imminent regional war. Three years after 
Saddam’s statue was toppled in Baghdad’s Firdous Square, Iraq has 
degenerated into yet another failed Middle Eastern state, with Sunni 
jihadi enclaves in Anbar and Diyala provinces matched by Shia statelets 
in Basra and Najaf, a de facto sovereign Kurdistan, a Baghdad gutted by 
multiple civil wars and an unpopular American military occupation that 
barely controls events in the Green Zone. Murderous insurgents, 
jihadists, mercenaries, warlords and terrorists have replaced the 
thuggish Baathist dictatorship the United States overthrew in 2003. 
Iraq’s pain has only been exploited by the cynical spymasters of 
Damascus and Teheran, whose agents have funded militias, smuggled arms, 
financed massacres, instigated sectarian violence, done their best to 
derail George W Bush’s imperial adventure in Mesopotamia, as have 
foreign Sunni jihadists and local Baathists from the Sunni Triangle.

The Turkish Armed Forces, who fought a bitter guerilla war in the 1990’s 
against the Kurdish secessionists of the PKK, are on alert and carrying 
reconnaissance missions into northern Iraq. There is an anti–war 
consensus reminiscent of Vietnam in Washington as the sons and daughters 
of Middle America return home in body bags. Even General David Petraus 
calls the situation in Baghdad “dire”. Lebanon’s elected government is 
on the verge of collapse as Hezbollah, Iran’s proxy in the Levant, 
challenges the power status quo in Beirut. Gaza and Somalia are the new 
failed states of the Arab world, mired in civil wars between Fatah and 
Hamas, the invading Ethiopian Army and the Mogadishu warlords. Sunni and 
Shia terrorists murder each other in mosques and streets in Iraq and 
Pakistan. Egypt’s military regime, with an 85 year old President, faces 
replacement by the virulently anti–Western Muslim Brotherhood. Hashemite 
Jordan, home to an Iraqi refugee tide, has lost all hope for an 
Israeli–Palestine settlement. The Pakistani military junta faces civil 
war in Baluchistan and the prospect of a Pakhtun insurrection against 
General Musharraf’s pro-West regime. The Oslo/Madrid peace process is 
dead, a cruel joke of the past as the IDF is poised to strike Hezbollah 
and Iran’s nuclear assets. Saudi Arabia and Iran have escalated a 
regional arms race, with ballistic missiles and nuclear proliferation 
the new reality in the Gulf. The Armageddon clock has begun its fateful 
tick-tock in the Mideast.

The Pax Americana in the region, whose apogee was Desert Storm, the 
liberation of Kuwait, Clinton’s Camp David peace accords and dual 
containment policy in the Gulf that failed to box both Baathist Iraq and 
the Ayatullah’s Iran, is now history. Bush rolled history’s dice in Iraq 
and has now irrevocably lost the gamble. America will never again 
dominate the politics of the Arab world, the Levant and the Gulf, as it 
did in the 1990’s. Hezbollah, Hamas, the failure of the White House’s 
democracy project, the violent jihadi and sectarian warlord challenge to 
allied Arab regimes, Israel’s Likud–Kadima disengagement from 
peacemaking, the gory images of Arabic satellite TV and the Internet all 
spell doom for Pax Americana. The unmistakable imperial ambition of 
Iran, expressed across the centuries from Cyrus the Great to the 
Sassanid Shapur, Shah Abbas to the Pahlavi Shahs, to be the new gendarme 
of the Gulf, boosted by international black markets in arms, terror and 
uranium centrifuges, coupled with China and India’s quest for oil, is a 
classic template for war.

The twilight of empire has always proved traumatic in the Middle East. 
When the Mongols sacked Abbasid Baghdad in 1258, when the Ottoman Sultan 
succumbed to the Arab Revolt in 1917, when France abandoned Algerie 
Francaise in 1962 and Britain withdrew from its Arabian colonies after 
Suez, Yemen and the 1968 sterling devaluation, rival pawns in the 
geopolitical chessboards in the region escalated the calculus of 
violence at once.

It will be no different this time. When America withdraws from Iraq, the 
Shia–Sunni schism will tear apart virtually every state in the Arab 
east, Pakistan and Iran. Lebanon and Palestine could become mere 
geographic expressions like Somalia and the Republic of Iraq. Terror, 
sabotage of oilfields, palace coups, massacres, ethnic cleansing will 
metastasise into a permanent, cancerous “arc of crisis”. It is 
fashionable to be anti–American, with good reason, in today’s Arab 
milieu. But remember the ancient Persian sage. “Never wish too badly for 
something. You may just get it”.

Matein Khalid is a Dubai based investment banker

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