Source: Carnegie
Middle East Instability
By Dmitri Trenin
Originally published in The
Moscow Times on June 10, 2004.
At their summit on Sea Island, Georgia, the G8 leaders are focused on the greater
Middle East, with Iraq clearly dominating that part of the discussion. There
are even more serious problems ahead in the region, and the world leaders need
to take urgent and bold steps to reverse the trend.
The recent hostage-taking in Khobar, Saudi Arabia, and the subsequent shootings
of Western targets there enables one to hear, loud and clear, the ticking of
the deadliest time bomb in the entire Middle East. The immediate objective
of the attackers has been to scare away the scores of thousands of foreign
engineers and technicians who run the Saudi oil industry. The long-term objective
is to destabilize the kingdom and win Saudi Arabia, with its resources, to
the extremist cause.
The Saudi authorities are fighting back, but the ease with which such attacks
can be mounted in their kingdom is extremely worrying. The problem is not that,
for years, members of the royal family have been indirectly aiding the Wahhabi
radicals, but that they now appear to be losing control of the situation. By
blaming the Zionist conspiracy for the real problems they are encountering,
they risk falling prey to the very Wahhabi chickens that are now coming home
to roost.
The second ticking time bomb is Pakistan. No one can doubt President Pervez
Musharraf's personal bravery and his political commitment to modernize the
country. The U.S. administration has recognized this by promoting Pakistan
to a major non-NATO ally. However, Pakistan's military and especially its security
forces cannot be taken for granted. They only reluctantly joined with the United
States against an erstwhile protege, the Taliban. If Afghanistan sees renewed
fighting and the U.S. forces need to cross the border into Pakistan in hot
pursuit, feelings are likely to rise against America.
Should anything happen to Musharraf, his successor may take a very different
attitude toward the West. Religious ferment could rise above the critical level.
The military, which controls Pakistan's nuclear weapons, may no longer be counted
upon as a pro-Western institution holding the nation together and on the right
track. If there is a rift, the issue of Pakistani nuclear weapons will acquire
a most ominous dimension. The effect of a Saudi revolution on the country that
built its nuclear weapons with Saudi money (and, possibly, with some strings
attached to the funder) could be overwhelming.
Thirdly, Egypt, the Arab world's most populous state, appears quiet, but beneath
the surface there is growing religious ferment and political agitation. President
Hosni Mubarak, a stalwart friend of the West, is in his 70s and will not be
around for too much longer. The plan to turn the country over to his son may
not work. In fact, it could spark the wrath of the Islamists and provoke unrest
that will be difficult to contain and impossible to put down.
Thus, in the medium term, major new sources of instability may appear from
Karachi to Cairo. This is, of course, a doomsday scenario, but one that it
would be irresponsible to write off. What can be done regionally to counter
this worrisome trend?
• Speedy restoration of full Iraqi sovereignty. The United States needs
to transfer power to a credible and responsible Iraqi authority. The United
States and the UN would do well to support a new Iraqi nationalism oriented
toward turning the vanquished country into a vanguard of modernity and prosperity
in the Arab world.
• Giving Turkey a date to begin talks to join the EU. The doubters'
hope of using Turkey as a buffer against the Muslim world may backfire. Even
the remote prospect of "losing" Turkey to the anti-Western radicals
should be sobering. Spurning Turkey's long-held aspirations is not a good idea,
all the more so as Muslims in ever greater numbers are settling in the EU area.
• The United States opening up to Iran. Its revolution, a quarter-century
old, has appreciably cooled down. On Afghanistan, Tehran has been a most useful
partner for the United States. It shed no tears for Saddam Hussein. It has
no reason to make common cause with al-Qaida and every reason to oppose it.
Russia's experience with Iran during the 1990s has been generally good, with
Iran acting rationally and reliably. Iran craves to be part of the international
community, and it should be brought on board. For that to happen, Iran's security
interests need to be addressed. Involving the Israelis in the process is both
useful and necessary.
• Creating a secure Uzbekistan, the key country in Central Asia. Rather
than jockeying for power and influence in Tashkent, Russia and the United States
need to enter into serious discussion on ways of preventing a new Islamist
revolt in the Ferghana valley, and of helping the Uzbek authorities to improve
the economic conditions of the population and to broaden the regime's political
support base.
• Moving forward on the Palestinian issue, the toughest point on the
agenda. Creating a viable Palestinian nation is the best available antidote
to regional extremism in the greater Middle East. Before such a nation could
be built, however, a capable Palestinian leadership should emerge. Such a leadership,
as a first prerequisite, should have a monopoly on using force within the Palestinian
community. Even a forward-looking and reasonable leadership, however, cannot
simply accept the terms dictated by Israel. For their part, the Israelis need
to see that the survival of Israel in the 21st century depends far less on
strategic depth than on demographic trends in the areas under Israeli control.
Dmitry Trenin, senior associate of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, contributed this comment to The Moscow Times. He is co-author, with
Alexei Malashenko, of "Russia's Restless Frontier: The Chechnya Factor
in Post-Soviet Russia."