NY Post
 
_The Arab collapse_ 
(http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/the_arab_collapse_tfjo7W92EreoUHdxdQq1DN)
 
Middle East a vulture’s feast
    *   By RALPH PETERS 
    *   Last Updated: 11:32 PM, May 19,  2013

 
The Arab Spring has unleashed the Arab Collapse. Everybody still standing 
in  the region is picking the flesh of the helpless. The Islamist cancer 
proved more  virulent than Arabs themselves expected, while dying regimes 
behave 
with  unrestrained ruthlessness.  
And our diplomats still think everyone can be cajoled into  harmony. 
We’re witnessing a titanic event, the crack-up of a long-tottering  
civilization. Arab societies grew so corrupt and stagnant that violent upheaval 
 
became inevitable. That’s what we’re seeing in Syria and Iraq — two names, 
one  struggle — and will find elsewhere tomorrow.
 
We can’t stop it, we can’t fix it, and we don’t understand it. But we  can 
stay out of it. 
When the US is in the Middle East, the Arabs want us out. When we’re out,  
they want us in. But our purported Arab (and Turkish) allies consistently 
agree  that Uncle Sam should pay the party bill, while they take home all the  
presents.
 
Yes, Syria’s humanitarian crisis is appalling. And no, I don’t like to see 
 innocents dying or suffering. But the calls from the region for American 
action  are nakedly cynical. 
Turkey has the largest military in NATO after our own, but cries “helpless”
  crocodile tears over Syrian refugees — while dreaming of rebuilding the 
Ottoman  Empire upon their ruined lives. Our Saudi “friends” spent decades 
building the  most-sophisticated military arsenal in the Middle East, apart 
from Israel. Now  the Saudis wring their hands over Syria’s misery — but won’
t intervene directly  to stop the killing. 
The Saudi position is always “You and him fight!” As long ago as  Desert 
Storm, Saudis joked about renting the American army and our bumpkin  
gullibility. (Try to find one US officer who’s worked with the Saudis and  
doesn’t 
hate their guts. . .) Now they want Washington to spend our blood and  
treasure to open the mosques of Damascus to their Wahhabi cult.
 
Well, the Assad regime is horrible, but not al Qaeda horrible. Better 
poison  gas than poisoned religion, as far as our own security’s concerned. 
This 
is an  Arab struggle (with Turkish and Iranian vultures overhead). This 
time, we  need to let them fight it out. 
The region’s outdated order is disintegrating. But Washington’s still  
mesmerized by the artificial boundaries on the map.  
Nine decades ago, the diplomats at Versailles ignored the region’s natural  
fault lines as they carved up the Middle East, forcing enemies together and 
 driving kin apart (while Woodrow Wilson turned his back on the Kurds). 
Only  brute force and dictators kept up the fiction that these were countries. 
Now the  grim charade has reached its end. 
Iraq was carved out for British interests, while Syria was France’s  
consolation prize. Now Syria’s collapsing in a too-many-factions-to-count civil 
 
war. And Iraq’s in the early stages of its own dissolution; even a would-be  
dictator — another of our one-time “friends,” Nouri al-Maliki — can’t keep 
the  “country” together. 
We don’t even know how many new states will emerge from the old order’s  
wreckage. But the Scramble for the Sand is on, with Iran, Turkey, treacherous 
 Arab 
oil sheikdoms and terrorists Sunni and Shia alike all determined to dictate 
 the future, no matter the cost in other people’s blood.  
We had our chance to extend the peace and keep both Iran and Wahhabi 
crazies  at bay after we defeated Iraq’s insurgencies. But a new American 
president,  elevating politics over strategy, walked away from Baghdad, handing 
Iraq 
to  Iran. Now it’s too late. If George W. Bush helped trigger the Arab 
Spring,  Barack Obama made this Arab Winter inevitable. 
We must not be lured into the current fighting — centered, for now, on 
Syria  — by cries of humanitarian necessity. The local powers could step in to 
stop the  killing. But they won’t. Once again, they want us to pay the bill. 
(It’s time  for the Saudis, especially, to give their own blood.) 
We’ve paid enough. Rhetoric and red lines notwithstanding, we need to back  
off from Syria, if for no other reason than a strategist’s golden rule: If 
you  don’t understand what a fight’s about, stay out.

-- 
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