Commentary
 
Shifting Alliances in the Middle East 
 
 
10.01.14 - | _by Ofir  Haivry_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/pods-author/haivry-ofir)  

 
The old Middle-Eastern order has collapsed. Like a glacier that has been  
undermined gradually by hidden trickles from within and then subjected to a  
final spring thaw, it has come crashing down. The ongoing Arab uprisings 
that  began in late 2010 have unseated or threaten to unseat every Muslim 
government  in the region. Swirling conflicts have replaced former 
arrangements, 
and, from  afar, these conflicts look like a shapeless free-for-all. But 
beneath the chaos,  patterns are forming among regional players who are working 
to come out on top  once things settle down. 
The new Middle East is being built on the rubble of the old dispensation, 
but  it is vastly different from it. For generations, there was an “Arab World
”  stretching from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean. Regardless of its 
internal  rivalries and rifts, it shared a consensus about the identity of the 
region as  Arab (and mostly Sunni Muslim) and tended toward autocratic and 
dynastic  government. Non-Arab countries in the region, such as Turkey, Iran, 
and Israel,  were deemed alien to this identity and for the most part were 
sidelined  politically. 
But in the nearly four years since the Arab uprisings, the non-Arab powers  
have been drawn deeper into regional power politics. The resulting 
realignment  consists of five broad, cross-regional, and loosely ideological 
confederations.  Each has a clear leader and is pursuing a new set of defined 
interests, often at  the expense of the others. For Western observers, formerly 
useful distinctions  are fast losing their analytical value in this remade 
universe. These are not  explicit coalitions, with treaty arrangements and the 
like; they have come  together strategically in pursuit of common interests 
and against common foes.  If Western policymakers hope to engage the new 
Middle East, they must come to  terms with these five coalitions and their 
significance in the region. 
First is the Autocratic Sunni Coalition. Led by Saudi  Arabia, the only 
large and solvent Arab state left standing after the Arab  Spring, this 
coalition is the most important. Awash in oil wealth, it represents  what 
remains 
of the formerly hegemonic Sunni-Arab consensus. Its members,  besides Saudi 
Arabia, are Jordan and most of the Gulf principalities—all the  Arab 
monarchies except Morocco, Qatar, and Oman. 
The goal of this coalition is simple enough: to attain regional  
preeminence and stop the rise of Shiite Iran. Wherever there’s a power struggle 
 in 
the Middle East, the coalition is there fighting it out. Where the struggle  
is mainly political, the coalition bankrolls sympathetic factions. These 
include  the Sunni- and Christian-supported parties within the Lebanese 
government, the  non-Hamas half of the Palestinian Authority run by Fatah, the 
new  
anti–Muslim Brotherhood government in Tunisia, and the tottering Yemeni  
government. The coalition is also warming up to the decrepit Algerian regime.  
And where politics has given way to armed struggle, the coalition pays and 
arms  its affiliates, such as the non-jihadist rebels in Syria, Iraq, and 
Libya. The  coalition is preparing for similar circumstances in Yemen, Lebanon, 
and  elsewhere. 
The interests of this coalition were significantly advanced last year in  
Egypt, where a military coup ousted the antagonistic Muslim Brotherhood  
government and installed the friendly General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi as 
president. 
 The coalition is also looking to strengthen ties with Pakistan, which it  
perceives as having the size and the nuclear arsenal to counter Iran’s rise. 
Second is the Sunni-Populist Coalition. It is led by Turkey  and funded by 
Qatar. It upholds a populist version of Islamism, largely spread  via 
numerous organizations affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood. It has used  
Qatar’
s fantastic fossil-fuel wealth to place a kind of bet that Sunni  
populations will vote for and support political Islam in any given election.  
This bet 
has paid off fairly well. At the dawn of the new Middle East,  
Brotherhood-inspired movements enjoyed majority or plurality support throughout 
 the 
region and became players in the governments of Tunisia, Libya, Egypt,  Yemen, 
and (to a lesser degree) Morocco. In Syria, Brotherhood-inspired militias  
initially led the anti-Assad uprising. 
In the past year, however, populist Islamism has been hit hard by a 
backlash  because of its failed record of governance. The Brotherhood has been 
banished  from politics in Egypt and Tunisia. And its strength in Yemen and 
Gaza 
has  become more precarious. Although militias inspired by the Brotherhood 
are  fighting in Libya, Syria, and Iraq, jihadists inspired by al-Qaeda are  
increasingly stealing their Islamist thunder. Next to groups such as the 
Islamic  State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the Brotherhood brand looks dated and 
tame. 
Next comes the Iranian-led Shia-Radical Coalition, which  seeks Shia 
hegemony in the region. Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria is Iran’s  strongest 
ally in the coalition, which has been fitfully extending its power  through 
the political rise of Shia groups in the Middle East. In Lebanon, both  
Hezbollah and Syrian proxies are formidable political and military forces. In  
post-Saddam Iraq, the Shia-majority government has gravitated toward Tehran.  
Rising Iranian influence is also evident in newly emboldened Shia groups in  
Yemen and Bahrain. 
The coalition has a hard road ahead, because the so-called Shia Crescent it 
 worked for decades to create—a swath of Shia power extending from the 
Indian  Ocean through Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon to the Mediterranean—is 
facing new  and profound challenges. The civil wars in Syria and Iraq have 
shrunk areas of  Shia rule in those countries and put Iran’s allies on the 
defensive. The  conflicts, moreover, are radicalizing Sunnis and galvanizing 
the 
most virulently  anti-Shiite among them. Thus in Syria and Iraq, the 
coalition is confronted with  vicious jihadist groups; in Lebanon, Hezbollah is 
now 
on the defensive against  Sunni Islamist militias; and in Yemen, the local 
Shiite militias are  increasingly under fire from Sunni al-Qaeda affiliates. 
Indeed, the persistent  effort by the Iranians to downplay doctrinal 
differences with Sunnis by  concentrating on the United States and Israel as 
common enemies has now  foundered. Most regional conflicts are increasingly 
being 
fought over the  Sunni–Shia divide. 
Next comes the Sunni-Jihadist Coalition. Now led by the  Iraq-based ISIS, 
this coalition encompasses an assortment of jihadist movements  such as 
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, Boko Haram in North Africa, and  Syria’s 
Jabhat al-Nusra. Sometimes these groups cooperate with one another;  frequently 
they clash. This coalition regards all innovations since  approximately 759 
C.E. as essentially blasphemous and thereby considers existing  Sunni regimes 
illegitimate. It seeks to reestablish a Muslim caliphate, which  would 
swallow the region and then the world. 
With approximately 20,000 ISIS fighters and an estimated 20,000 more 
fighters  in other organizations, the Sunni-Jihadists are by far the smallest 
coalition  numerically, and until recently they were devoid of any serious 
political power.  This coalition is, in some sense, a state of mind more than 
an 
alliance. Its  clout rests first and foremost on the fanatical devotion and 
killing-machine  tactics of its militants. Such beliefs and methods can make 
these forces more  effective than bloated Arab armies 10 times their size. 
Since 2011, the  exacerbation of sectarian conflict has given the jihadists 
a massive boost in  popular support. The black hole of Syria and Iraq—
largely the result of American  retrenchment—provided a central operational hub 
for the world’s most violent  jihadists. They soon spilled over into adjacent 
lands, beheading, crucifying,  raping, and enslaving in the name of Islam. 
The Sunni-Jihadists eventually  established a “caliphate” statelet in 
eastern Syria and western Iraq. This  coalition and its grandiloquent claims 
now 
exert a powerful pull on the  imagination of Sunni Arabs, who are turning in 
growing numbers toward the black  banners of jihad. 
Finally, there is the Coalition of the Nation States. Until  recently, this 
was a coalition of one: Israel. The Jewish state was the only  country in 
the Arab region not officially committed to the ideas of Pan-Arabism  and the 
rejection of Western values. It upholds instead an ideal of national  
self-determination. For generations, only Israel’s military superiority and  
perpetual vigilance kept it from being crushed by its neighbors. But for this  
very reason it has become an example and a beacon of hope to others in the  
region who wish for democracy and self-determination. The Coalition of the  
Nation States is in some respects still a coalition in potentia, but  the 
collapse of various powers has freed up some of the region’s oppressed  groups 
to call for either partial autonomy or outright independence. 
For some, such as the Berbers of North Africa, this is still a distant 
dream.  But for at least one other people, the 30-million-strong Kurds, the 
realization  of independence may be close at hand. Iraqi Kurdistan is already a 
functioning,  semi-autonomous democracy, and in Syria similarly autonomous 
Kurdish regions are  being established. The shared affinities and interests 
of the Israelis and the  Kurds are rapidly shaping into an alliance. As early 
as 2006, Kurdish leader  Massoud Barzani announced that the Kurds, unlike 
the Arabs, hold no grievances  toward the Jewish state. In March 2014, 
Zubeyir Aydar, the representative of the  Kurdistan National Congress to 
Europe, 
stated that Israel “has the right to live  on its own soil.” In June, 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared  support for outright 
Kurdish 
independence. But the most significant development  of this alliance went 
largely unreported, when, in the same month, a Kurdish oil  tanker began 
unloading its cargo at the Israeli port of Ashkelon. The Kurds had  long tried 
to 
sell oil and gas to raise funds independently of the Iraqi  government. 
Baghdad had consistently threatened prospective buyers with  prosecution and a 
ban on purchasing Iraqi oil. But Israel finally decided that  relations with 
a disintegrating Iraq were not worth prohibiting private  companies in 
Israel from purchasing Kurdish oil. 
The Druze, a monotheistic ethno-religious community in southern Lebanon and 
 Syria, are also contemplating statehood. Traditionally loyal citizens of 
the  states in which they reside, the Druze realize that if Syria and Lebanon 
 are torn apart by sectarian conflict, they will have to fend for 
themselves.  Syrian Druze leaders, including their most prominent religious 
figure, 
Sheikh  al-Aql Hamoud al-Hinawi, have been distancing themselves from both 
pro- and  anti-Assad camps for some time while preparing for a rainy day by 
building up a  self-defense militia, the Jaysh al-Muwahhideen; some have even 
been considering  the resurrection of the Druze Mountain State, which 
existed from 1921 to 1936.  The Druze have covertly sent out feelers to the 
natural ally for such a  self-governed Druze region, its non-Muslim neighbor to 
the south: Israel. 
The relationships among these five coalitions are intricate. The parties 
are  not neatly divided into geographically distinct areas but scattered 
broadly  across the region. The picture is further complicated by ad hoc 
tactical 
 alliances among coalitions. For example, Israel and Saudi Arabia are 
jointly  opposed to a nuclear Iran. The Assad regime had shared an interest 
with 
the  jihadists in stopping Brotherhood-led rebels, but it is now 
contemplating an  alliance with the Saudis or the Turks in order to face down 
ISIS’s 
ferocity.  Finally, peripheral powers play a growing role. Ethiopia, for 
example, is  perpetually entangled with Sudan and increasingly with Egypt, 
while 
Azerbaijan  is managing tensions with Iran. Instead of a Cold War–style 
framework  delineating two distinct camps with neutrals at the sidelines, the 
new Middle  East looks more like 17th- and 18th-century Europe: a complex 
patchwork of  rivalries, alliances, and conflicts amid ambiguously defined 
borders and  sovereignties. 
For Western countries, this means that policymakers must recognize several  
new realities. First, it is no longer useful to think of the Muslim Middle 
East  in the immediate post-9/11 framework of “moderate” and “extremist.” 
Indeed, to  use the term moderate coherently one must acknowledge that it 
applies  only to the democratic nation states. The interests and goals of the 
other four  coalitions are shaped by some shade of Islamism: The Shia 
Radicals seek the  regional dominance of an extremist, nuclear-armed Iran while 
making use of mass  murderers such as Bashar al-Assad and terrorist groups 
such as Hezbollah; the  Sunni Populists support Islamist regimes that would 
impose extremist rule on  their societies, from Hamas in Gaza to the 
Brotherhood-inspired armies fighting  in Syria; the Sunni Autocrats harbor a 
deeply 
anti-democratic vision of society,  where political opposition is crushed, 
women are subjugated, and Salafist Islam  rules; and the Sunni Jihadists are 
bloodthirsty barbarians. 
Second, Pan-Arabism is out and Islamist sectarianism is in. The four Muslim 
 coalitions are defined far more by their differences than by their 
similarities.  Conflicting Islamist visions are animating intra-Arab wars 
across 
the  region. 
Third, there is no way back to the old Middle East. None of the five  
coalitions really wants to restore the previous status quo: The Sunni Autocrats 
 
want a Sunni-dominated Syria, the Sunni Populists want a 
Brotherhood-dominated  Egypt, the Shia Radicals want a Shia-dominated Iraq, the 
Israelis want a 
free  Kurdistan, and the Sunni Jihadists want to rule them all. 
Fourth, and last, stability has been replaced by fluidity. The traditional  
diplomatic goal of ensuring “stability” is a dead end when most of the 
region’s  societies are in a state of actual or potential civil war. The path 
toward any  future and beneficial stability, therefore, lies in identifying 
and supporting  those who are potential long-term Western allies and in 
working to redraw the  regional map in their favor. 
Approaching the new Middle East without illusions doesn’t mean 
relinquishing  constructive policy options. In fact, the current fluidity has 
opened up 
new  possibilities. All coalitions are willing to cut at least temporary 
deals with  those they consider secondary threats in order to defeat their 
immediate  enemies. The Assad regime and ISIS have refrained from directly 
confronting each  other while both have fought the non-jihadist rebel forces. 
And 
Turkey has  tamped down its absolute opposition to Kurdish 
self-determination because it  needs Kurdish support in facing more troublesome 
threats. 
For Israel, the fratricidal hatred among the Muslim coalitions has dimmed 
the  prospect of unified action against the Jewish state. This is seen most 
clearly  in the example of Operation Protective Edge, Israel’s recent 
military campaign  in Gaza. Sunni-Autocratic Cairo proposed cease-fire terms 
far 
more favorable to  Israel than to Sunni-Populist-supported Hamas. The other 
members of the  Autocratic Sunni Coalition, including the Saudis and even the 
Palestinian  Authority, essentially adopted the Egyptian position. The 
Shia-Radical Coalition  offered vocal support for Hamas, but its encouragement 
rang especially hollow  considering that the coalition was fighting 
Brotherhood-led militias—some  including Hamas volunteers—inside Syria. The 
Sunni 
Jihadists barely bothered  with verbal support for Hamas, as they consider 
rival Islamists their prime  enemy. And the Sunni-Populist Coalition backed 
Hamas in the media and in  diplomatic spheres, but the coalition’s weakness and 
lack of leverage over  Israel rendered its efforts ineffective. 
There is no question that dealing with the new Middle East will be arduous, 
 but savvy policymakers can find pliability in places where before there 
was only  intransigence. 
Perhaps our biggest challenge is not a new Middle East in flux, but a new  
United States in paralysis. Under the Obama administration, America’s 
historic  aspiration to shape events in the region has given way to confusion 
and 
drift.  The United States’s willful retraction of influence has left its 
long-term  allies baffled and exasperated. Not only is America’s special 
relationship with  Israel in a state of public crisis, but its strategic 
partnership with Riyadh is  fraying as well. In other words, Washington is 
jeopardizing both its sole  values-based alliance and its chief pragmatic 
relationship 
in the Middle  East. 
It remains to be seen whether current American retrenchment is an 
expression  of cyclical foreign-policy attitudes or the beginning of a longer 
phase 
of  disengagement. If growing security threats draw the United States back 
into the  Middle East—as seems to be the case regarding ISIS—policymakers 
will find  strategic opportunities to advance American interests. Foremost 
among them will  be strengthening the critical alliance with Israel, supporting 
the Kurds, and  exploiting the weaknesses of the four other coalitions. But 
what has taken place  in the absence of American influence is anything but 
stable, and negotiating the  current terrain will require a brand-new  map.

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