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Posted By Amjad Atallah Share

Turkey, Turkey, Turkey...That was the refrain at the Al Jazeera Forum last weekend in Doha, Qatar and a clear indication of who was the new rising star in Middle Eastern politics. In panels and in private conversations, Arab, Turkish, Pakistani, American and Afghani analysts, old-school Arab nationalists, members of resistance groups, and journalists discussed in mostly positive terms how Turkey was trying to act as a corrective to the general vacuum of leadership among Arab states, how it was acting to balance Iran and Israel as regional hegemons, and how it was trying to compensate for the seeming inability of the United States to fundamentally break with the policies of the Bush administration, especially on Israeli-Arab peace and on Iran.

Behind the admiration for Turkey, however, one could detect the first traces of jealousy.  The United States and Israel, however, should not misconstrue jealousy arising from a lack of self-confidence for antipathy. 

I came away with three points on which I believe most participants agreed:

  • The Israeli-Arab conflict was still the defining lens through which most in the region saw the United States. Everyone from former South African President Thabo Mbeki to Iraqiyya leader and potential future Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi all brought it up as a defining injustice that needed to be resolved. In that sense, the ongoing low-intensity conflict in the Occupied Palestinian Territory still resonates at a much higher pitch than the far hotter conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan or those which are still primarily off the radar for the Arab world, such as Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen.
  • Turkey is filling the vacuum left by decades of failed US policies in the region and by the inability of Arab states, with the notable exception of Qatar and Jordan, to even bother anymore with attempts to resolve regional conflicts.  Turkey's zero-problem approach is obviously aspirational, but as Stephen Walt notes, has had a number of early successes. In particular, it was clear that Arab nationalists who had previously seen Baathist Iraq as a counter-weight to Iran were now looking to Turkey to maintain a sort of balance of forces in the region. For those frustrated by US inability to end the siege of the Gaza Strip or to stop settlement activity or move Israel towards de-occupation, Turkey's efforts were also viewed as a healing balm even if they were not expected to transform the conflict.
  • Iran is not viewed as an existential threat to any Arab country and its nuclear ambitions (civilian or military) are not as problematic as is Iran's sheer dynamism in an area of mostly comatose Arab states. Arab states have always looked for a balance of power in the region with Iran-whether Iran was under the US-backed dictator the former Shah-or under the current Islamic Republic model. It was Western-backed Arab states which supported Saddam Hussein in his invasion of Iran in 1980-a remarkably bloody conflict that entailed attacks on Iranian civilian targets and the use of chemical weapons against Iraqi Kurds as well as Iranian military targets. No one seems foolish enough to consider a replay of that policy particularly without a Baathist Iraq to play the role of foot soldiers. (It is an irony of the neocon project that they could have more easily enlisted a totalitarian Saddam to play the role of invader of Iran than a democratic Iraq.) Egypt was noticeable for not being noticeable on any major issue in the region except ensuring the siege on the Gaza Strip. But more to the point, there seems to be a recognition that Iran, even under sanctions and after fighting a decade long war with almost all the Arab states and their western allies, has still developed politically (compare the Green movement to contestations of elections in the Arab world) and materially (as an example, Iran builds its own cars and many of its own arms while Arab states still rely on importations) more than many if not all of those same Arab states.

What was not mentioned in those three points is probably also of great importance to the United States--the lack of expectation that the United States could play a positive role for stability in the region. There was a sense that participants were speaking of the United States in the past tense. Although there was still respect for President Obama as an individual, there was little expectation that the United States would end Israel's occupation of Arab lands. The US is widely perceived (rightly or wrongly) as having lost in Iraq and no one had confidence that the US could do anything but hand over Afghanistan to Pakistan and the Salafists it had originally sent in to rule Afghanistan in 1996--the Taliban. As former head of Pakistani intelligence, Hamid Gul noted, "losers can't be choosers."

In fact, traditional models of deterrence seemed to be in vogue among groups that still advertise themselves as engaged in resistance against Israel. Both Hamas and Hezbollah officials offered no prescription for ending the conflict but suggested that their goal was to deter Israel from further attacks against areas under their control by making it clear that such action would be costly to Israel.

The only bright spot perhaps for supporters of US policy was in the relative diplomatic activism of Qatar and Jordan. Both governments view the instability in the region as a threat, both see a new equilibrium resulting in the region if the United States can actually end Israel's occupation, both support the United States in material ways in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and both have tried to maintain a foothold of support with the Arab and wider Muslim publics by symbolic and material assistance to Gazan civilians. In that sense, Qatar and Jordan are following the Turkish model of diplomacy.

As of yet, however, there has been little effort on the US side to capitalize either on Turkey's diplomatic dynamism or Qatar and Jordan's. The recent rejection by the US of the Turkish-Brazilian-Iranian deal, despite an April letter by President Obama to Brazil outlining the terms he would accept, and the lack of attention to Qatar's and Jordan's attempts to alleviate the suffering of Gazan civilians or to support efforts by the former to help Palestinians achieve reconciliation, will only reinforce a trend in the region to think of the United States either as a problem to be solved or in the past tense.   

Amjad Atallah directs the Middle East Task Force at the New America Foundation and is editor of the Middle East Channel.

AFP/Getty Images

 

GRANT

4:56 PM ET

May 29, 2010

If these people think that

If these people think that Turkey is going to provide some kind of diplomatic leadership to the Middle East that will fix every problem then they should probably open up a history book. There are reasons why the Middle East is the way it is.

 

GUYVER

3:43 AM ET

May 30, 2010

Agree except

that no one in the region sees Jordan (or King Playstation as the Angry Arab says) as helping the people of Gaza, or having any credibility the matter.

 

GRANT

1:18 AM ET

May 31, 2010

Of course, because Jordan's

Of course, because Jordan's only measure of support is to allow almost 2 million Palestinians to live in Jordan and has granted almost all of them Jordanian citizenship, along with subsidizing costs. How dare Jordan not go farther to support the Palestinians by writing into its constitution 'The Palestinians are great'. Surely Jordan is an enemy of the Palestinian people because the Jordanian leadership took offense to the idea of militants challenging their power.

 

SURESH SHETH

2:31 PM ET

May 30, 2010

US opened up Pandora's box

It is not a case of ‘crisis of self-confidence’ in the Arab world that fails to unite it as Amjad Atallah claims. It is the generational centuries-old conflict between Sunnis and Shiites. And Turkey can NOT stop that conflict anymore than Egypt or Saudi Arabia.

While US does NOT acknowledge it, US has opened up a Pandora’s box by installing a Shiite-majority government in Iraq. Until now Iran was the only Shiite-ruled country. Now Iran has an ally in Iraq. Two of them can confront remaining Sunni Arab states far better. So in a way, US has paved the way for Sunni-Shiite civil war in the middle east.

 

SANTANA

10:41 PM ET

May 30, 2010

The arabs are way too tribal

The arabs are way too tribal and most of them are influenced by religion.the other problem which to my knowledge is a huge one is the lack of freedom and liberty in arab countries.the reactionary monarchs,sheiks and amirs and religious zealots need to go away and be replaced by visionary and progressive leaders who will have the courage to seperate the mosque and state and enforce the rule of law.something else that is very important is the isssu of women,s rights which is in countries like saudi arabia is non existent.

 

GRANT

1:22 AM ET

May 31, 2010

The sad part is that you

The sad part is that you sound incredibly close to more than a few op-eds I've read (albeit they had better spending).

 

MDAMIN76

5:03 AM ET

May 31, 2010

Hate War

If everyone hates war, world would be in peace forever. War should not exist.

 

WHATNOW

4:09 PM ET

May 31, 2010

Control Freaks

Most of the Arab leadership are just control freaks. Anyone that does not beat the drum to wipe out Israel is spit on. If the President of France had not interfered in the war with Lebanon that nation may had found some peace but all the do gooders saved the bullies from from defeat and now Iran has armed them to the teeth.
What is going to happen if Israel is defeated and overran. If the Arab can't blame Israel for all their failure of leadership they will go after each other.
All the Arabs need to do is leave Israel alone and rebuild their on society but they would rather fight with someone over an insult from 500 hundred or more years ago.
How many sides can God be on. The West got their act together when they realized religion was a personal thing not something to fight over. Let God deal with the individual when they meet him. Judge other humans by how they treat others here on earth not how they worship a higher being.

 

QPZMGR

9:12 PM ET

June 21, 2010

The American

The American "bright spots" of Qatar and Jordan are laughable. One postage-size state with a lot of money and the Arab Quisling state of the Mideast. Reminds me of the stiffening the US got from hapless Polish and Hungarian troops sent to Iraq.

And the contrast between Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt which quietly applauded the israeli replica omega attack on Lebanon in 2006 and iran and Syria, which bitterly complained, has put the mark of the collaborator on both nations' leaders.

 

MARKUS64

9:35 AM ET

June 26, 2010

re

Arab leaders lack the will power and for the most part lack the leadership quality that are needed to give the people confidence. With heroes like Saddam or Hafiz Assad or Al-Bahsir or Nasser or Arafat there are some serious problem. Egypt lost any credibility to lead and there is a need for Saudi Arabia to step forward and take charge.Bet365 Yes, there is so much potential. Intellectuals never contributed to the future… what is needed now more than ever is an Arab Renaissance that takes the nation forward. However this will never come from within… what is needed are some institutions like the New Arab Foundation, similar to the New America Foundation with an agenda for the future, a blue print for an Arab Renaissance and the participation of a selected group of intellectuals and experts from around the world to take the lead.

 

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