June 27, 2008

President Bush at the World Economic Forum (AP)

"Iraq, Iran and the Arab-Israeli conflict present challenges that the United States will address most effectively only with others, but that cannot be resolved without U.S. leadership. Small steps may be achieved in isolation but for there to be sustainable progress, a steady, consistent vision and presence and a facilitating leadership role by the United States is required."

The tenuous cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, negotiated by Egypt, that began this morning in Gaza represents a tentative step forward in managing and ultimately resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. If the period of calm is used to make progress on negotiations, implement obligations and improve the lives of both Israelis and Palestinians, then the ceasefire can help lay the foundation for final resolution.

It is just one more step taken in the Middle East without the United States. The troubling U.S. absence, however, should not suggest that the United States is unneeded or incapable; rather it should reinforce the notion that for regional progress and stability, a United States that is partnering with other countries, keeping an eye on the horizon and helping to manage processes is essential.

In the past month, the Middle East has seen varied glimmers of hope on distant horizons like today’s truce. Qatar brokered a deal among Lebanese factions that ended months of political deadlock and filled the vacant office of the country’s president (although it also may have further enhanced Hezbollah’s power). Turkey has hosted discussions between Israelis and Syrians. In each case, Gaza, Lebanon, and indirect Israeli-Syrian talks, the United States has not seemed to play a role, let alone lead. Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey were the pivotal players.

To assume that U.S. engagement is therefore no longer needed would be the worst lesson to take from recent strong regional leadership efforts, or from earlier Saudi promotion of the Arab League Initiative and Jordan’s role in developing the Road Map in 2003.

The United States can be most effective when it pools and leverages resources with the many with whom it shares objectives in the region. There are no shortages of challenges and players, but with smart management strategies this should increase rather than diminish opportunities for solutions. The problem is not U.S. capability, but rather, the need for detailed management of these multiple tracks in the Middle East–and a vision of ultimate destination–which has been sorely lacking. U.S. officials need an organized strategy to work with those on the ground, in the region and more broadly, to develop that common horizon, and then help steer the course toward achieving it.

Taking stock of where the Middle East and U.S. policy for the region currently stand yields a complicated picture. The challenges posed by the war in Iraq dominate. The war unleashed several years of chaos inside of Iraq, impacted regional balances of power and resulted in spillover effects such as the millions of refugees currently residing in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt. Yet in the last eighteen months, security has improved, although the key Iraqi factions seem no closer to resolving their power-sharing disputes. Meanwhile, Iran poses an increasing threat to regional power balances on several fronts. And the prospects for further advances in its nuclear research program could have devastating destabilizing effects on the entire Middle East and more broadly in the world. Lebanon continues to bear the impact of the region’s turmoil. And the Arab-Israeli conflict has suffered from sporadic and fitful interest by multiple global powers; it clearly could benefit from a concerted and coordinated diplomatic push on all of the key tracks.

Much attention has already started shifting to the next U.S. administration and what it might do in the Middle East; the notion that the United States could have a fresh start and a clean slate is attractive after seven difficult years. But the world, the region, and the United States cannot afford seven months of inaction, or the wrong actions, from the United States over the period between now and then. Much work remains for the current administration. Much should still be expected of this team to provide for a responsible transition for the United States and the region.
Iraq, Iran and the Arab-Israeli conflict present challenges that the United States will address most effectively only with others, but that cannot be resolved without U.S. leadership. Small steps may be achieved in isolation but for there to be sustainable progress, a steady, consistent vision and presence and a facilitating leadership role by the United States is required.

On Iraq, the United States needs follow through on commitments made by Iraq’s neighbors at recent conferences including ensuring border security, sending diplomatic representatives to Baghdad, supporting Iraq’s reconciliation process and providing debt forgiveness and financial support for Iraq’s government. On Iran, as the United States is working with other major powers to increase the package of carrots and sticks to shape Iran’s calculations, it must move forward in close consultation with other countries in the region to ensure that the next steps are closely coordinated with regional allies like Turkey and Saudi Arabia. On the Arab-Israeli front, U.S. leadership in achieving tangible gains on movement and access, economic development, strengthening reform while bolstering pragmatic Palestinian and Lebanese leaders, and ensuring Israel’s security concerns are addressed, is critical. Though the United States should continue to strive for achieving President Bush’s stated goal of a deal on the Israeli-Palestinian track before he leaves office, it also must work to see that leaders in the region and here at home can anticipate a smooth transition to a new administration in the event a complete deal is not reached.

Finally, as the United States works to invigorate its diplomacy throughout the Middle East, it needs a better managed approach at home. To address the Middle East’s numerous challenges, we should and must expect the U.S. government to pay attention to the details and have an integrated approach – ensuring coordination between different departments, accountability for actions and proper follow-up mechanisms. For instance, the secretary of state should know and care about getting a Fulbright student out of Gaza, and if we have three military officials working on movement and access issues, one of them should have coordination with the Israelis on this matter as part of his portfolio. Permits, programs, and processes all contribute to making the grand policy.

The United States leads best when we are working with the best, at home and around the world, toward a common vision, and thinking about the small details and the big picture in order to achieve it.



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In-Depth Coverage

Original Commentaries

08/20/10
Center for American Progress Welcomes Resumption of Direct Talks  —
08/10/10
A View from the Ground  —Darbaz Kosrat Rasul, chair, Rebaz Foundation. Interview with Middle East Bulletin.
08/03/10
U.S.-Turkish Relations  —Ambassador Francis J. Ricciardone, Jr., recently returned deputy ambassador in Afghanistan; former ambassador to Egypt (2005-2008); and deputy chief of mission and charge d'affaires in U.S. embassy in Turkey (1995-1999). Congressional Testimony.

Setting the Record Straight

Eye Still on the Ball

“Adverse developments in Iraq will be (and will look to be) increasingly a function of the Obama Team taking their eye off of the ball and rushing to declare mission accomplished. Yes, in such a scenario the Iraqis should bear most of the blame, but the part that is due to U.S. action or inaction will be Obama's responsibility. And it will matter. Iraq is at the center of a region that every president since Jimmy Carter has identified as vital to our national security. Iraq is next door to, and the playground for mischief from, the most thorny national security challenge the United States faces: a nuclear-weapons-seeking Iranian regime. These inconvenient facts mean that if the Iraqi situation demands more focused and costly U.S. attention, it will likely get it. At that point, what sort of domestic coalition will be available for President Obama's Iraq policy?”
—Peter Feaver, director, Triangle Institute for Security Studies; former director for defense policy and arms control, National Security Council, “Obama’s Iraq Speech: Another Missed Opportunity,” Foreign Policy, August 3, 2010versus
  • “Iraq is a strategically important place in the Middle East, just by its geographic location, by its population, by the influence it's had in the Middle East for a long time. So neighboring countries from around the Middle East have an interest inside of Iraq.

    “But I will tell you that I think Iraqis themselves are nationalistic in nature, and that's why it's important. A strong Iraq will defend itself against interference from outside countries, and I think as we build a strong Iraq and as we continue to build a strong security mechanism and as we continue to help them economically and diplomatically, that will make it less likely of others from the outside being able to interfere.

    “Now, for the vacuum as we see today, again, I remind everyone is that we still have a significant presence here, and we are not going to—we will not allow undue maligned influence on the Iraqi government as they attempt to form their government. What we're trying to do is provide them the space and time for them to do that, and we will continue to do that post 1 September. We'll still have a significant civilian presence, and again, we'll still have 50,000 troops on the ground here to ensure that this government can be formed by the Iraqis. And that all the other nations respect their sovereignty as they go about forming their government.”
    —General Ray Odierno, commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, interview, “This Week” with Christiane Amanpour, August 8, 2010
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