Tackling Iran: Trump fuels the fire
Source: IBTimes
By James M. Dorsey
The Trump administration risks fuelling sectarianism across
the Muslim world and exacerbating multiple conflicts that are ripping the Middle
East and North Africa apart by singling out Iran rather than tackling root
causes.
Iran moved into President Donald J. Trump’s firing line when
his national security advisor, Michael Flynn, an anti-Iran hawk, put the
Islamic republic “on notice” for testing a ballistic missile. The test was
likely a provocative probing of US policy towards Iran, one of seven countries
whose nationals are temporarily banned from travel to the United States. Mr.
Trump has repeatedly denounced the nuclear agreement concluded by the United
States and other world powers with Iran as a bad deal.
It remains unclear what Mr. Flynn’s notification entails. A resolution
circulated in the House of Representatives before Mr. Trump’s inauguration
would authorize US military action against Iran if the president believes it is
necessary to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
Most analysts, including supporters of Mr. Trump, believe
that Iran has largely honoured the international agreement curbing the Islamic
republic’s nuclear program, making an immediate military response to the
missile test unlikely.
Gulf states alongside Israel have moreover urged Mr. Trump
to adopt a tough approach towards what they see as belligerent Iranian
interference in the internal affairs of Arab countries and support for
terrorism, but to stop short of annulling the agreement. Mr. Trump is expected to move away from his
campaign pledges to tear up the agreement, but with Mr. Flynn’s warning appears
to be adopting the advice of US allies.
A Saudi read out of a phone conversation last weekend between King
Salman and Mr. Trump said the two leaders agreed to counter "those who
seek to undermine security and stability in the region and interfere in the
affairs of other states." The White House said the they also had a meeting
of the minds on the “importance of rigorously enforcing" the nuclear
deal.
The consensus notwithstanding, Mr. Trump’s
travel ban, despite including Iran, puts King Salman in a bind, as he balances the
kingdom's foreign policy objectives with its self-proclaimed leadership of the
Muslim world. Saudi Arabia has so far refrained from commenting on the ban
despite pressure from some of its allies to do so.
Saudi Arabia's predicament and it's welcoming of
the rise of Mr. Trump in the expectation that he will fight some of the
kingdom's battles creates the opportunity for the new president to put
disruption to constructive use.
It could allow Mr. Trump to tackle not only Iran but also
Saudi Arabia on a fundamental issue that drives volatility, sectarianism and
political violence in the Muslim world in general and Iranian and Saudi
policies specifically: the rise of supremacist, intolerant, anti-pluralistic
ultra-conservatism.
Supporters of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani have already
hinted at the opportunity. “Iran has every interest in reducing tension with
Saudi Arabia at a time when the Trump presidency in the United States is
creating new uncertainties,” said an editorial in the pro-Rouhani Entekhab
daily.
The opportunity that arises is not limited to Iran and Saudi
Arabia. Leaving aside the ethics of banning travel on the basis of religion or
nationality, Mr. Trump’s ban as well as his
intention to focus
US counter-terrorism exclusively on Islam rather than on all forms of
political extremism, including far-right supremacism, would also allow him to
pressure other countries where divisive ultra-conservatism has been allowed to
fester.
That is evident in efforts
by the governments of Malaysia and Indonesia to stay out of Mr. Trump’s
firing line by refraining from criticizing the ban. Both Malaysia and
Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, have witnessed the rise of
ultra-conservative intolerance towards non-Muslim and Muslim minorities such as
Shiites and Ahmadis, a sect widely viewed by conservative followers of the
faith as heretics, that are informed by Saudi-backed puritan interpretations of
Islam
There is little to suggest that Mr. Trump recognizes the
opportunity. A failure to exploit the opportunity and exclusively target Iran
is however likely to backfire, embolden Saudi policies that create problems
rather than offer solutions, and fuel sectarian and other cycles of violence.
While Iran has refrained from promoting a supremacist world
view of its own, there is little doubt that it implements its ultra-conservatism
with the application of medieval, punitive measures of Islamic law, including
amputation and stoning. It has also reshaped the politics as well as the very
integrity of Arab countries like Lebanon where it supports Shiite militia
Hezbollah, Syria that has been torn apart by a vicious civil war, the creation
of Shiite militias in Iraq, and Yemen where Iran has come to the aid of the
Houthis. The problem is that so have Saudi Arabia and its allies or in other
words: there are no nice guys in this fight.
A four-decade long, $100 billion global Saudi effort to box
in, if not undermine, a post-1979 revolution Iranian system of government that
it sees as an existential threat to the autocratic rule of the Al Saud family by
funding ultra-conservative political and religious groups has contributed to the
rise of supremacism, intolerance and anti-pluralism across the Muslim world and
created potential breeding grounds of extremism.
The rise of ultra-conservatism has fuelled sectarianism and violence
against Shiites and Ahmadis; hardened attitudes towards women and alternative
lifestyles; and curbed fundamental freedoms under the guise of blasphemy.
Iranian interference in the affairs of other countries stems
as much from long-fading revolutionary zeal in the wake of the 1979 revolution
as it constitutes a response to the Saudi-led Sunni campaign that involved not
only support for non-violent, ultra-conservative groups, but also the funding
of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein’s devastating eight-year long war against Iran
in the 1980s as well as virulently anti-Shiite and anti-Ahmadi forces in
Pakistan that are responsible for the deaths of thousands, and militant groups
in Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa.
At the bottom line, Iran and Saudi Arabia have long been
locked into a struggle for dominance in the Muslim world that has fuelled
violence, created breeding grounds for extremism, and brought the Middle East
and North Africa to the edge of an abyss. Tackling symptoms or only specific
players rather than root causes threatens to fuel the fire rather than
extinguish it.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of
Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent
World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book
with the same title, Comparative Political Transitions
between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr.
Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and a forthcoming book, Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
Comments
Post a Comment