http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-power8aug08,0,3460011,full.story?coll=la-home-headlines

U.S. Clout a Missing Ingredient in Mideast
Inexperienced and mistrusted in region, the
administration faces a hard road, analysts say.
By Tyler Marshall and Alissa J. Rubin, Times Staff
Writers
August 8, 2006 

WASHINGTON — As the Bush administration seeks to
negotiate a diplomatic end to the fighting in the
Middle East, it finds it has a strikingly weak hand.
The war in Iraq, a halting U.S. response to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and now the prolonged
fighting in Lebanon and Israel have led to intense
anti-Americanism in the Arab world. Alliances with
longtime Arab friends are strained. And the U.S. lacks
relations with two key regional players: Iran and
Syria.
"The Lebanon crisis is the end of the myth that we can
tell the world what to do and they'll line up to do
it," said Nancy Soderberg, a U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations during the Clinton administration.
"They are going to have to do real diplomacy."
Adding to the challenge is, remarkably, inexperience.
Despite 5 1/2 years in office, President Bush's
foreign policy team has been involved in surprisingly
few high-stakes negotiations in the region.
The draft U.N. resolution painstakingly crafted by the
United States and France over the weekend was a first
effort at negotiating an end to the fighting in
Lebanon and Israel. But it took a long week for
agreement to be reached, despite U.S. officials'
constant assertion that it was just a matter of
details. In that week, many Lebanese civilians died,
leading many in the region to think the U.S. cares
little about their lives.
The landscape looks grim for serious diplomacy.
Since U.S. forces captured Baghdad without a serious
fight in spring 2003, fear of America's military might
has melted away as its soldiers and Marines have been
unable to control the insurgency or stem Iraq's
escalating sectarian violence. The result has reduced
America's aura of complete power and, with it, the
ability to bend others to its will.
Successful diplomacy requires being able to broker
between enemies by having the trust of both parties
and enough force, moral and military, to enforce a
deal. America's recent foreign forays have relied
largely on force, but the military victories have been
short-lived and unable to bring about the democracy
that was promised.
"In the Middle East, historically people always go
with the strong horse, but we don't look like the
strong horse anymore," said Martin Indyk, a former
U.S. ambassador to Israel and now director of the
Brookings Institution's Saban Center for Middle East
Policy. "To Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran, we look like
we're short of breath."
Added Rand Corp. counter-terrorism specialist Bruce
Hoffman, "If they felt threatened then, they are
emboldened now."
The Bush administration faces an unprecedented level
of anti-American feeling in the Arab world, emotions
driven in part by its image as an unquestioning
supporter of Israel and by allegations of U.S. torture
and abuse of Muslim detainees in places such as
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
One survey conducted eight months ago in Egypt, a U.S.
ally, by the polling group Zogby International found
that just more than 3% of those questioned had a "very
favorable" opinion of the United States, whereas 71%
had a "very unfavorable" view.
The result is a serious erosion of political goodwill
and moral authority, both important components of
diplomatic influence historically available to the
United States.
Against this unsettling backdrop, a U.S. diplomatic
offensive involving substantive negotiations to alter
the map of the broader Middle East would be a first
for Bush. Although few American presidents have
initiated greater change to the political landscape of
the Middle East than Bush has, little of it has come
through consensus-building or negotiated agreement.
Political transformation in Iraq, like Afghanistan
before it, followed a military invasion. The end of
Syria's military occupation of Lebanon came mainly
through international pressure triggered by the
assassination of Lebanon's former prime minister. And
gradual expansions of political pluralism in countries
such as Egypt came from high-profile rhetoric and a
firm political nudge. 
"This administration doesn't do diplomacy well," said
Judith Kipper, a Middle East specialist at the Council
on Foreign Relations. "They are like the Arabs: They
say something and think it's been done."
In addressing the long-simmering Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, the White House has not turned to a special
U.S. envoy or bouts of intense diplomacy such as those
employed by previous administrations to achieve
breakthroughs. Instead, Bush chose to support former
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's unilateral steps
toward carving a Palestinian state out of the West
Bank and Gaza Strip, on Israeli terms.
The White House sees the struggle in the region
fundamentally as one between the forces of good and
evil — freedom and terrorism. That, coupled with
Bush's sense of mission to defend Israel and spread
democracy to the region, leaves little room for the
kind of compromise required for effective diplomacy,
experts say.
"The U.S. has to begin to start thinking of gray
resolutions that would end the current conflict and
keep that border quiet for years," said Paul Salem,
director designate of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace Middle East Center.
Those who have been involved in the administration's
decision-making say there is little airing of contrary
views.
Lawrence Wilkerson, who served as former Secretary of
State Colin L. Powell's chief of staff, said Vice
President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld dominated national security issues, and
neither displayed an inclination for the tiresome work
of diplomatic consensus-building.
"Powell tried on a number of occasions to rub [the
president] the other way, but if you have the
president leaning one way and the vice president
leaning the same way, there's not a lot you can do,"
Wilkerson said.
A sense that Bush's strong support of Israel has cost
the United States its image as an honest broker
between Arabs and Israelis has led some of the State
Department's most experienced Arab experts to leave
the government. Others, viewed as overly sympathetic
to Arab arguments, have been transferred.
"Those are the people who would be mounting limited
dissent, dissent that would be in Condi's face,
telling her what the [political] costs of this kind of
policy is in the Arab world," Wilkerson said,
referring to Powell's successor, Condoleezza Rice.
"Those voices aren't there."
Whatever foreign policy team the U.S. fields, exerting
its influence won't be easy.
At first, Iran and Syria were shaken by America's
invasion of Iraq and worried they might be next. They
no longer see such a danger. Similarly, after the
invasion, Islamic militant groups such as Hezbollah
and Hamas reduced militant activities and talked of
joining a political process, but now have resumed the
fight.
The perception of U.S. indifference to Arab suffering
has only hardened during the current conflict as the
administration rejects calls for an immediate,
unconditional cease-fire, insisting that any formal
halt in hostilities include the outlines of a lasting
political settlement.
Although Rice and others have defended the move as
necessary to break the cycle of violence, it has been
widely viewed in the Arab world, and elsewhere, as a
cynical delaying tactic to allow Israel to degrade
Hezbollah's fighting capabilities. 
The backlash has been so intense that Rice's abrupt
departure from the region last week after an Israeli
airstrike killed at least 28 Lebanese civilians was
caused in part because she had few other places she
could go. Even three normally pro-American Arab
governments — Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon — signaled
that public emotions were running too high for Rice to
come. (A State Department official said Rice had not
considered a stop in Amman, the Jordanian capital.)
"The people back home and in all Arab countries are
really outraged about the course of events," said
Egypt's U.N. ambassador, Maged Abdelaziz. "It is as if
the Lebanese people should die to protect Israel."
Such troubled relations with friendly Arab countries
and a lack of substantive ties with Iran, Syria or
Hezbollah — three key players in the crisis — have
left America's diplomatic clout with Muslim nations of
the Middle East diminished, analysts say.
"The U.S. isn't trusted as a broker in that part of
the world today," said a U.N. diplomat in New York,
who requested anonymity because he did not have the
clearance to talk on the subject. "There were days
when there were ambassadors going back and forth and
they were more engaged on the Palestinian issue. But
today they've burnt their bridges. It started with
Iraq, but it's been deepened by the lack of engagement
on Palestine and now Lebanon." 
Developing a relationship with Syria is viewed as
crucial if the U.S. hopes to succeed in achieving
long-term peace in the region, experts say.
"Lebanon is just a pawn in this," Soderberg said.
"Syria and Iran are the main actors there, and the
idea [the administration] can solve the problem
without dealing directly with them is fantasy."
Despite the difficulties facing the administration, it
does have one important trump card: For all its
problems in the region, the U.S. remains the most
powerful country in the world.
"What the U.S. has going for it," Salem said, "is that
there really is nobody else — in making war or making
peace." 
Marshall reported from Washington and Rubin from New
York. Times staff writer Greg Miller in Washington
contributed to this report.

Peter S. Lopez ~aka Peta de Aztlan
Join the Humane-Rights-Agenda Group!
Humane-Rights-Agenda Blog
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