📄 Extracted Text (1,121 words)
The
Economist
Entangled
Why America must stay engaged in the Middle East
lune 6, 2015
IN THE mid-1990s a celebrated Syrian playwright captured the anguish of living under an Arab autocrat
with the lament "We are condemned to hope." Almost 20 years later, even hope has withered.
The Middle Eastern order sustained by the United States has collapsed. Civil wars are devouring Syria, Iraq
and Libya. Black-robed jihadists from Islamic State (IS) have carved out a caliphate. Vying with Iran for
regional influence, Saudi jets are strafing Shia rebels in Yemen. Peace may not return to the Middle East
for a generation.
For most Arabs, including presidents and kings, the lesson is that American power has had its day. For
most Americans, including the man in the White House, the lesson is that outsiders cannot impose order
on chaos. Both claims are exaggerated. The Middle East desperately needs a new, invigorated
engagement from America. That would not only be within America's power, it would also be in America's
interest.
Desperate times
The starting-point is to understand what has gone so disastrously wrong in the Arab world. Democrats in
Washington will tell you that the villain is George W. Bush, who invaded Iraq in 2003, creating a
bloodthirsty Sunni insurgency and, across the region, a hunger for rebellion. Republicans insist that the
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fault lies with Barack Obama for letting Iran dominate Iraq and failing to curb the villainy of Syria's Bashar
Assad.
In fact there is more than enough blame to go round. As that Syrian playwright suggested, the roots of
the Arab malaise run deep. After the Second World War, centuries of infantilizing colonial rule gave way
to woeful self-government. Arab economies were regulated, subsidized and planned so clumsily that they
failed to provide for Arab citizens. Leaders, lacking legitimacy, took refuge in Arab nationalism and came
to depend on coercion instead of consent. Young populations without prospects found comfort in religion,
some in the zealotry peddled by the likes of IS. For years America propped up its client states in this failing
order. But the Arab spring showed that the stability Mr. Bush shattered at such great cost was already
doomed. Mr. Obama's inaction only added momentum to an unfolding catastrophe (see article).
All the more reason to stay out, perhaps. Except that America has interests in the Middle East. Today's
chaos is trashing human rights and torching values that many, including this newspaper, look to America
to defend. Not everyone will agree — some Americans are tired of their country acting as a global
policeman, and others rightly point out that its geopolitical priority is China's growing ambition (see
Banyan). But even allowing that, the Middle East still matters.
Terrorism in places like Libya or Syria sooner or later ends up striking at the West. IS's successes in Ramadi
in Iraq and Palmyra in Syria attract money and fighters. Minimizing the threat means doing more in places
where jihadism flourishes.
Then there is oil. Thanks to fracking, the United States has become the world's swing producer, and within
a decade or so the North American continent stands to produce as much energy as it consumes. But the
oil price is global, and the Middle East still accounts for one in every three barrels of seaborne crude.
Pricing power and self-sufficiency do not make America immune to upheaval in energy markets. If it
cannot keep the oil flowing, its economy will suffer grievously and so will its claim to global leadership.
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An interactive guide to the Middle East's tangled conflicts
Last is nuclear proliferation. America has sponsored a deal to prevent Iran from gaining the bomb for at
least a decade. If the talks succeed, America will need to act as enforcer-in-chief. If they fail, it must be at
the center of efforts to prevent Iran crossing the nuclear threshold. Either way, it must be a brake on other
regional powers who might think of launching weapons programs of their own.
Mr. Obama has identified all these interests. His diplomats were in Paris this week to talk about IS. This
month they will be thrashing out the nuclear deal with Iran. He has personally pledged to ensure oil
supplies flow. And yet his goals are undermined by his determination to stand back from the region. His
aim has been to force the Middle East to take more responsibility for running its own affairs. But the
vacuum he has created has only exacerbated the strife and disorder.
Instead, Mr. Obama needs to set out a strategy of
as. constructive containment. No actor can simply put the
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Middle East together again, but America can help stop
the damage spreading.
The first requirement is better diplomacy. Mr. Obama
has shunned the State Department, preferring a
coterie in the White House. Partly as a result, America
AP was ill-prepared for the coup by Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi in
In the Middle East, Americo risks over-learning from the Egypt. When Mr. Obama withdrew troops from Iraq,
failures of the post he should have emphasized diplomacy and built up
Iraq's institutions. Instead, Iranian influence grew and the Shia-led government alienated Iraq's Sunnis.
More political engagement is needed. America must not give up striving to end the conflict between Israel
and Palestine. But Mr. Obama also needs to work with Turkey to create a moderate force in Syria and with
Saudi Arabia to stop the fighting in Yemen. And he should encourage economic and political reform in the
Gulf and Egypt, which cling to a moribund "stability" for fear that change will run amok. He must be ready
to use force. Mr. Obama's taboo about deploying American soldiers against IS in Iraq has led to a self-
defeating shortage of Special Forces to guide air strikes to their targets.
Desperate measures
This work is dogged and often thankless. America must accept that its relations with Arab countries will
be pragmatic. Fighting alongside Iran in Iraq and opposing it in Syria is a contradiction. Get used to it: the
region has not stopped shifting in unreconcilable ways. The Iraqi Kurds are useful allies even though—
against American policy—they want their own homeland. America may need to deal with Mr. Sisi to calm
Libya.
The idea has taken root that America no longer has what it takes to run the Middle East. That it ever could
was an illusion. But America still has a vital part to play. If it continues to stand back, everyone will be
worse off—including Americans.
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