< 
How to Think About the New Middle East
What the Obama administration gets wrong  about the world’s most volatile 
region. 
By DENNIS ROSS 
July 30, 2014


http://www.politico.com
 
Secretary of State John Kerry’s efforts to produce a cease-fire may not  
have succeeded in bringing the current conflict in Gaza to an end, but they 
have  generated plenty of commentary. Kerry has been lacerated in the Israeli 
press,  even in ostensibly sympathic outlets like the left-wing Haaretz, 
which  headlined a scathing article on his diplomatic endeavors “What was he 
thinking?”  For understandable reasons, the secretary sought to bring the 
killing to an end,  reflecting not only a humanitarian impulse but also 
President Obama’s  instructions, which required him “to push for an immediate 
cessation of  hostilities based on a return to the November 2012 cease-fire 
agreement between  Israel and Hamas.”

While perhaps logical, the president’s guidance failed  to take account of 
several new realities. First, the 2012 agreement had done  nothing to 
prevent Hamas from building up an elaborate network of tunnels to  launch 
rockets 
and infiltrate Israel—and Israel is not about to live with  tunnels that 
penetrate the country and constitute, in the words of one Israeli,  “a loaded 
gun at our heads.” Second, this is a different Egypt today, under  President 
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, and it views Hamas as a threat rather than a  
potential ally. It has no interest in saving Hamas or allowing it to gain from  
the 
current conflict. Third, the Saudis, Emiratis and Jordanians see the Muslim  
Brotherhood, the Islamist group from which Hamas sprang, as just as 
threatening  as Iran. Like Egypt, these moderate Arab states want to see Hamas 
lose 
and not  win.
These new realities also help to explain why Hamas launched this round of  
fighting: It was isolated and in desperate shape financially. Egypt had cut 
off  the smuggling tunnels from Sinai into Gaza, which accounted for most of 
Hamas’  revenues. Hamas’ other main source of funding, the Iranians, has 
dried up given  differences over the Syrian conflict and Iran’s other 
priorities. Hamas expected  that its reconciliation agreement with the 
Palestinian 
Authority would lead to  the PA picking up Hamas’ financial obligations. But 
the PA would not do so, and  Hamas could not pay salaries. With little to 
lose, Hamas launched this round of  fighting, hoping that by being the focal 
point of resistance, winning sympathy  because of large Palestinian civilian 
casualties, and imposing at least some  losses on Israel, it could 
re-emerge as a player that must be dealt with and  satisfied. 

That cynical strategy, at a minimum, requires that Hamas gain something out 
 of the conflict, and its only advocates are Turkey and Qatar. But this is 
a  different Middle East than it was in 2012, when Egypt was ruled by the 
Muslim  Brotherhood and Islamists seemed to be marching across the region. 
Today,  Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the Emirates and Jordan share the common 
goal of  weakening Hamas. The Palestinian Authority shares this objective, 
but as  Palestinian casualties increase in Gaza, its leader, Mahmoud Abbas, 
finds  himself in an impossible position: He, too, is desperate to have the 
fighting  stop but can ill afford for Hamas to emerge as the symbolic victor. 
No doubt, the Obama administration recognized what was happening to Abbas 
and  saw the rising tensions on the West Bank and the terrible civilian toll 
in Gaza,  and hoped it could bring the conflict to an end. Once Hamas 
rejected Egypt’s  first cease-fire proposal, and Egypt was largely passive, the 
Obama team seems  to have believed that Turkey and Qatar might be able to use 
their respective  influence with Hamas to produce a cease-fire 

 
But here again, we see the new realities confounding such an approach. 
Turkey  and Qatar share Hamas’ goal of having it gain—meaning that the fighting 
ends,  the siege of Gaza is lifted and no safeguards are adopted on 
materials going  into the Strip that would inhibit Hamas’ ability to 
reconstitute 
its military  infrastructure of rockets and tunnels. It is not just Israel 
that cannot accept  that outcome. Neither can the Egyptians, Saudis or their 
regional allies. And,  truth be told, it is still Egypt that matters. Egypt 
controls the crossing point  at Rafah, the southern entrance to Gaza, and it 
is closed. Today, ironically,  the only crossing points into Gaza that 
function at all are the Israeli ones. So  when this conflict ends, Egypt can 
have 
a huge impact on what and who can move  in and out of Gaza.

That gives Egypt leverage. Its relationship with  Israel matters, and 
Israeli confidence that Egypt shares its interest in not  allowing Hamas to 
reconstitute its military capabilities means that Egypt can  influence Israel’s 
position. Ultimately, Egypt can also influence Hamas because,  at a minimum, 
Hamas needs Rafah to be open at the end of the conflict—even if  Egypt, as 
is likely, will insist that the Palestinian Authority is positioned in  the 
Rafah crossing point. To be sure, it is possible that to end the conflict,  
Egypt may also acquiesce in allowing Qatar to pay the Hamas salaries and to  
allow that money to pass through Rafah. But Egypt’s approach toward Hamas, 
which  it sees as contributing to the threats it faces in Sinai, is to keep 
it  contained and, the Egyptians will have that as a goal in any cease-fire 
they  broker.
 
 
 
The point is that the conflict is going to end. It can end through a  
negotiated outcome in which we focus on Egypt and not Turkey or Qatar. Or it  
will end when Israel has destroyed the tunnels and Hamas sees that its arsenal  
of rockets is running too low and that the price within Gaza has become too 
 high. Kerry, to his credit, envisioned the cease-fire he was trying to 
arrange  as one in which fighting would stop but Israel could finish destroying 
the  tunnels. It has not worked yet, but if the United States works 
exclusively  through the Egyptians, it may yet happen. 

There is a larger point for the Obama administration to consider, too. It  
needs to read the new strategic landscape in the region and act accordingly. 
 That landscape should shape our calculus as we approach the larger 
questions of  Israeli-Palestinian peace, Syria, Iraq and Iran. In its remaining 
two 
and half  years, the administration needs to approach the Middle East with 
a broader goal  and judge how its day-to-day policies support or detract 
from that goal: How can  it ensure that U.S. friends in the region are stronger 
in January 2017, and  their adversaries (and ours) are weaker? Ultimately, 
President Obama and  Secretary Kerry would be wise to approach the current 
conflict, and its end,  with that objective in mind.



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