Middle East in the vortex of sectarianism
Asif Haroon Raja
Lysander made an apt comment on the US strategy in Middle East. He
stated: “US imperialism has been the principal instigator of sectarianism in
the region, from its divide-and-conquer strategy in the war and occupation in
Iraq, to the fomenting of sectarian civil war to topple Assad regime in Syria.
Its cynical support for Sunni Islamist insurgents in Syria, while backing a
Shiite sectarian regime across the border in Iraq to suppress these very same
forces, has brought the entire Middle East to what a United Nations panel on
Syria warned Tuesday was the “cusp of a regional war.”
In order to ensure undisturbed supply of
oil from the oil-rich Middle East, the US controlled the strategically
important region by propping up pro-US authoritarian regimes, toppling Mosadak
regime in Iran and installing Reza Shah Pahlavi as its strategic ally. In
addition, Israel created in 1948 was economically and militarily bolstered to
bully the Arab States. Schemes were hatched to keep the Arab world disunited
and dependent upon the west. Arab world was bracketed into two camps of
moderates (pro-western) and radicals (anti-western).
While the US succeeded in neutralizing
Egypt through Camp David Accord in 1979, it lost Iran in March 1979 after Imam
Khomeini took over power. Israel invaded and occupied southern Lebanon in 1982
to break the nexus between Syria and Lebanon, but it gave birth to Hezbollah
and paved the way for Hezbollah-Syria-Iran nexus. Israel however saw Iraq as a
bigger threat to its ambition of becoming an unchallenged regional power. Iraq
was therefore weakened through 8-year war with Iran, First Gulf War in 1991 and
imposition of harsh sanctions.
When these incapacitating acts failed to
bring down Saddam, the US under George W. Bush led neo-cons and Jews decided to
implement the grand plan of 1990s to change the boundaries of the Middle East
and harness Arab oil resources. The plan envisaged piecemeal annexation of Arab
States and dividing them into small quasi States. After George Bush defined
‘axis of evil’, Iraq was invaded and annexed in 2003 on false charges, but was
abandoned in 2011 without achieving any of the stated goals, leaving behind
simmering embers of sectarianism.
With the emergence of Islamic State of
Iraq & Levant (ISIL), which was declared as Islamic State (Caliphate) on
June 29, 2014, Iraq has reached closer to getting fragmented into three States
on ethnic/sectarian lines. The US, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Iran are most
worried over the new threat. Although Iran has been asked by USA to confront
the threat, Iran is more worried about security of holy Shia shrines than
integrity of Iraq.
There is a popular school of thought that
the Arab Spring was fomented by CIA to affect regime changes where necessary
and to create conditions for splitting of listed Arab States. After the ouster
of Zain el Abedine in Tunisia in January 2011, Hosni Mubarak in Egypt was the
next to go in February. However, election results in June 2012 went against the
script. Much to the surprise of the plotters, Muhammad Morsi, leader of Muslim
Brotherhood (MB) decisively won the elections and formed a government. In July
2013, he was booted out by the military under Gen Fatteh al-Sisi. A massive
crackdown was launched against Morsi’s supporters. Well over 1400 activists of
MB died, 15000 were jailed, dozens given death penalty and secularism was re-introduced.
After his retirement from Army, Sisi won a comprehensive victory in the
controversial presidential election held on May 29, 2014. He is the fifth
president from the military starting Col Gamal Abdul Nasser’s takeover in 1952.
The US, EU and Saudi led Gulf States support the military regime both
diplomatically and financially. However, unrest in Egypt continues.
Taking advantage of the Arab Spring,
insurgency was fomented by CIA in Libya in 2011 to bring down Qaddafi regime.
British and French forces led the assault and within months Libya was
destroyed, the regime toppled and Qaddafi brutally murdered. Chaos in Libya was
premeditated because Libya was a stable African society in North Africa and
Qaddafi had made it into a real welfare State. In order to solidify African
Union, Qaddafi wanted to build an African Monetary Fund, an African
Central Bank, and an African common currency. Common currency for Africa would
have been a threat to Western Europe and North America and a real danger to
Euro as well as to the US dollar. To save euro/dollar and to capture Libyan
oil, Qaddafi had to be removed. Although Libyan oil is now being controlled by
the US/western companies, political and security situation is highly unstable.
CIA fomented Syrian crisis in early 2011
by backing Syrian Sunni rebels. EU, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Gulf States also
supported them in order to bring down Bashar al Asad’s Alawite regime. However,
unlike isolated Libya, Russia, Iran and Hezbollah stood behind Asad. Making a
chemical weapons attack on a Syrian town in mid 2013 an excuse, the US ordered
NATO to strike Syrian defence infrastructure with cruise missiles. At the 11th
hour, Obama backtracked in the wake of Putin’s offer to dismantle Syrian
chemical stockpiles by June 30, 2014. Obama’s U turn watered down the warmth in
Saudi-US relations. In protest, Riyadh declined to accept a seat as non-member
in UNSC and derided the UN. This change in attitude of Riyadh was probably one
of the reasons which impelled Obama to veer towards Iran. Saudi-Qatar relations
also cooled down because of latter’s refusal to stop supporting MB in Egypt.
While the western threat against Asad
regime receded, Syria got engulfed in a new crisis in which the Islamic
militias of various hues started fighting among each other. Free Syria Army,
Al-Qaeda, al-Nusra Front and ISIL were the main competitors. Aleppo Province
became the contesting ground between them from 2012 onwards. ISIL, an offshoot
of al-Qaeda emerged as the strongest group which has a strong presence in parts
of Aleppo, Ar-Raqqa, Idlib and Ezzor. ISIL has about 5000 fighters in Syria
including about 3-4000 foreigners, and up to 6000 fighters in Iraq. Bulk of
Jihadists from abroad has come from Europe and Chechnya and most have joined
ISIL. Fires of sectarianism have spilled into Lebanon. Hamas and Hezbollah,
threatening the two flanks of Israel, are not on one page in Syria, the former
supporting Sunnis and the latter aiding Alawite regime.
After its rapid gains in Syria, the ISIL
fighters re-entered Iraq in June 2014 and within weeks captured major parts of
five provinces of Iraq in the northwest and west including the second largest
city of Mosul, Kirkuk and largest oil refinery near Baghdad. These gains have
put ISIL on the centre stage and pushed al-Qaeda under al-Zawahiri and Al-Nusra
Front under Abu M. al-Jawlani in Syria in the background. One of the branches
of Al-Nusra in al-Bukamai town pledged allegiance to ISIL. Pumped up by easy
victories, ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has declared himself as the caliph
and named the Caliphate as Islamic State on June 29, 2014.
Heightening sectarianism and violence in
the Middle East has serious consequences for the entire Muslim world. Ongoing
crisis suit Israel the most since possible disintegration of Iraq and Syria
into several smaller States would help Israel in achieving its age-old dream of
creating Greater Israel. It is, however, ironic that the Organization of
Islamic Co-operation and other Muslim bodies have so far played no role in
removing differences and in extinguishing the embers of sectarianism which is
tearing apart the fabric of Ummah. Saudi Arabia and Iran rather than stoking
fires of sectarianism should jointly devise a strategy how to stem the
ever-deepening sectarian divide in the Muslim world and restore peace and
harmony in the Middle East.
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