
The Road  to Jerusalem Does Not Lead Through Tehran
     
    Leon Hadar
    May 15,  2009
     
    Summary  -- Israel is pushing  the Obama administration to tackle Iran's nuclear program before the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Washington  shouldn't listen.
     
    LEON  HADAR is a Research Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies at the Cato Institute.
     
    As  Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu comes to Washington  for a meeting with President Barack Obama, U.S.  policymakers are being urged to place the Palestinian-Israeli conflict on the  back burner and spend their time and energy addressing the true menace  supposedly confronting Arabs and Jews in the Middle East -- Iran. Deal with  that threat, the sirens sing, and the other pieces of peace in the Holy Land will fall into place.
     
    Netanyahu  framed the issue in a speech he made in Washington  earlier this month. "There is something happening today in the Middle  East, and I can say that for the first time in my lifetime I believe that Arabs  and Jews see the common danger," he told supporters of the American Israel  Public Affairs Committee. "This wasn't always the case," he added.
     
    Or was  it? In fact, there have been many times when key players in Jerusalem  and Washington  have convinced themselves that focusing on some third party would make  Israeli-Palestinian peace possible. But it has not worked in the past, and it  won't work now.
     
    During  the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, the Soviet Union  provided diplomatic and military support for the new Jewish state. Many  Israelis, echoing Soviet propaganda, promoted the idea that the defeat of the  imperialist powers in the Middle East and the collapse of their corrupt lackeys  in the Arab world -- including in Palestine -- would help usher in a new age of  cooperation between progressive Israelis and Palestinians. It didn't happen.
     
    Throughout  the Cold War, a mirror-image fantasy popular in Jerusalem  and Washington  blamed Soviet support for Arab radicals as the driver of the Arab-Israeli  conflict. According to this argument, Palestinian nationalism was simply  another radical Marxist-oriented movement controlled by Moscow. Seeing the Arab-Israeli confrontation  as a minor sideshow to the larger U.S.-Soviet struggle, Washington  treated Israel's creeping  annexation of the West Bank with benign neglect and gave Israel a yellow light to invade Lebanon in 1982  -- leading to disastrous consequences in both cases.
     
    The  George W. Bush administration saw its foray into Iraq as a substitute for a  diplomatic strategy to bring about Israeli-Palestinian peace. But the notion  that the road to Jerusalem led through Baghdad -- that transforming Iraq  into a pro-American liberal democracy and promoting a "freedom  agenda" in the Middle East would empower regional forces supporting peace  with Israel  -- proved to be an illusion. Instead of strengthening the pro-American bloc in  the Middle East, weakening the power of radical political Islam, and  accelerating the peace process, the Bush administration's policies helped tilt  the regional balance of power toward Iran  and its satellites, empowering anti-American and anti-Israeli forces in Lebanon and Palestine  and generating mistrust and violence in the Holy Land.
     
    Now the  message emanating from Israel  and some of its supporters in the United States  is that the road to Jerusalem leads through Iran. Netanyahu  contends that since Iran is  permanently hostile to Israel's  existence and supports Hezbollah in southern Lebanon  and Hamas in Gaza, the only way to make  Israeli-Palestinian peace possible is to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear  capability and throw it back on its heels. Since leading Arab states such as Egypt, Jordan,  and Saudi Arabia are also  worried about Iran's rising  power, the argument continues, Washington  might be able to put together a regional consensus aimed at containing Iran -- and  possibly even persuade its partners to become more forthcoming in resolving the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
     
    As  Elliott Abrams, a deputy national security adviser in the Bush administration,  wrote recently in The Wall Street Journal, "There is a critical  struggle under way right now in the Middle East, but it is not between Israelis  and Palestinians; it is the people aligned with us -- including Egypt, Saudi  Arabia, the Palestinian Authority, Israel and the United Arab Emirates --  against Iran, Qatar, Syria, Hezbollah and the Palestinian rejectionist groups.  Mr. Netanyahu will tell the president this, but no one knows if the president  will buy it -- at least until he consults with those Arab leaders and hears the  same thing."
     
    It is  true that some Sunni Arab governments worry about the rising influence of Iran and its Shiite partners in the region and  are concerned about the prospects for a diplomatic détente between Washington and Tehran that  could erode their current leverage over U.S. policy. But the fact that they  share certain U.S.  or Israeli strategic concerns will not create the foundation for long-term  strategic alliances (as opposed to ad-hoc tactical arrangements). In the Middle East, as elsewhere, one-night stands do not  necessarily lead to marriage.
     
    And any  notion that Amman, Cairo, or Riyadh might go so far as to approve and perhaps  even applaud an American or Israeli strike against Iran's nuclear military  installations is based on wishful thinking. Sunni Arab leaders are concerned  about the potential for backlash by angry publics against their regimes after  any such attack. 
     
    They  also realize that Iran would  be in a good position to unleash its regional proxies against Israel and the United States, rather than vice  versa. So Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi  Arabia would probably hedge their bets as Iran responds to an outside attack while Israel would be  exposed to massive Iranian retaliation. That could force the United States into a costly, direct military  intervention on Israel's  side and throw the region into chaos. At the end of the day, Washington  would discover that the chief alternative to invading Iran and toppling its regime was engaging Tehran diplomatically --  an option available to it today, without all the messy preliminaries.
     
    The  Obama administration seems to understand this, and is welcoming Tehran's cooperation in establishing stability in Afghanistan, Iraq,  and Lebanon while continuing  talks with Iran  on its nuclear program through the so-called P5-plus-1 setting. This is the  most sensible course to take, but at best it is likely only to slow down Iran's drive to build a nuclear bomb, as opposed  to stopping Iran's  nuclear program entirely. So Israel  and the United States should  also start preparing for an eventual "day after" by developing an effective  nuclear deterrence strategy against Tehran and  working with allies across Europe and the Middle East  to contain the Iranian challenge.
     
    As for  Israel, Obama must recognize that the main threat to Israel's existence as a  Jewish and democratic state is not Iran but its conflict with the Palestinians  -- a conflict that will continue to serve as a catalyst for growing anti-Israel  and anti-American radicalization in the region at large unless and until it is  resolved. Resolving the conflict, in turn, will require the relevant local  parties to deal directly with the core problems: the occupation of the West  Bank and Gaza, settlements, refugees, violence,  and Jerusalem.
     
    Washington cannot make a deal for the  Israelis and the Palestinians, but it can and should help them do so  themselves. At the very least, it should not make matters worse by allowing  itself to be distracted yet again from the main task at hand. If anything,  successful U.S.  efforts to achieve a peace agreement between the Israelis and the Palestinians  would make it more difficult for Iranian radicals to win support across the  region. It is more likely that the road to Tehran  leads through Jerusalem than that the road to Jerusalem leads through Tehran.
     
    Source: http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/65095/leon-hadar/misreading-the-map
     
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