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[Dehai-WN] Eurasiareview.com: The Power Geometry Of The Middle East - Analysis

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2012 01:02:14 +0100

The Power Geometry Of The Middle East - Analysis


By: <http://www.eurasiareview.com/author/the-journal-of-turkish-weekly/>
JTW

December 12, 2012

Israel's attack on Gaza signals that power geometry are defining and giving
shape to the Middle East as regards power and hegemony. Israel, Iran, Egypt,
Syria, and the kingdoms of the southern Arabian Peninsula are the countries
which make up the regional equation. The geometry of power is exposing
different conflict and power-struggles networks between them.

By E. Fuat Keyman

Israel has once again attacked Gaza. Civilians, innocent people, are dying
once more. The State of Israel's unacceptable mode of behavior has once
again put Gaza firmly back on the agenda as the scene of a tragedy.

Hamas lit the fuse of this attack first with the rockets it fired. Israel
declared that it is protecting itself. Perhaps so: the range of the rockets
which Hamas is launching is growing steadily and their impact is increasing.
But is this really the reason for Israel's very violent attack? That's very
doubtful.


Two messages to two countries: Egypt and Iran


Israel's assault came immediately after the hand-over in Egypt.
Reconstruction is taking place in Egypt. The new administration is trying to
make progress despite a delicate and very fragile political balance.
President Morsi is preparing himself for a difficult task.

Although on the surface Egypt presents a picture of change, behind this lies
a political and administrative structure that operates inside a delicate
balance and is both sensitive and easily drawn into instability. Egypt was
the most important country in the Arab Spring and it is currently developing
in ways not in conformity with Israel's general policy towards the Middle
East. We should treat this assault by Israel as a signal to the new Egypt
and President Morsi.

In this attack Israel selected Hamas as its target. It slew Ahmed Jebari,
one of Hamas's most senior officials. But one must trace the dispute back
one stage and concede that it was Hamas which made the first attack. One of
the first questions to come to mind on this point is why Hamas launched a
rocket at Israel which would signal that the cease-fire was at an end.

What connection is there between this puzzling action by Hamas and the
deadlock which the Arab Spring has run into in Syria and the fact that
Israel supports this deadlock? Iran supports the Al-Assad regime. Right up
until now it has behaved in a way which implies that it will never permit
the regime to fall. At the same time Iran also supports the Hamas regime in
Palestine. So what view should we take of Iranian-Hamas relations? By
attacking Gaza, Israel sends a message to Israel. Amid the shifting
political balances of the Middle East during the Arab spring, the clash
between Iran and Israel has grown into a significant rift over a struggle
for security and power.


Obama stuck in a corner


Barack Hussein Obama won the presidential elections on 6 November, becoming
President of America for the second time. I followed the elections in
Washington and during them foreign policy was hardly discussed. On the
contrary the presidential campaign focused on the problems of the economy
and unemployment. President Obama displaced a tendency to give priority in
his policies towards the Middle East, Iran, and Russia not to hard power but
to diplomacy and soft power. This irritated the Republicans in the USA and
Israel in the Middle East.

Israel is lobbying for the USA to act tough in its foreign policy towards
Iran. It would like to see a USA following tough policies against every
occurrence contrary to its interests, Iran most of all. The conditions that
Israel prefers for the Middle East are hard power war, conflict, and power.
In this connection so the fact that Israel has launched an attack on Gaza
immediately after the re-election of President Obama amounts to a coup which
forces him into a corner.

The Pacific basin is the foreign policy area which Obama has selected to be
key for America between now and 2030. Because of that, President Obama is
making his first foreign visits of his second presidential term to countries
in the Pacific. At the start of his first term in office the key region was
still the Middle East and the countries he selected were Turkey and Egypt.
This suggests that during his second term as president, Obama will pursue a
foreign policy which increasingly transfers from the Middle East to the
Pacific. This will leave Israel on its own in the Middle East and
consequently is a development which it wholly dislikes. The attack on Gaza
is a signal to Obama that the shift to the Pacific is something which it
will not be easy to put into action.


Turkey and sensitive power balances


In Egypt, the Turkish Prime Minister, Mr. Erdošan, recently made a fine and
very significant speech at Cairo University to a crowded audience. In it one
hand he articulated the desire for peace in the Middle East and in the
other, he strongly criticised criticized the State of Israel on humanitarian
grounds. In the Middle East Turkey is an important regional power and a key
country.

Turkey wants to see a Middle East in which states are strong because of the
mutual interdependence of their economies, cultures, groups, organisations,
and peoples, one in which there are no visas, in which economic relations
and which are made strong

This policy is the right one and will perhaps grow stronger in the medium
term. But today the attack by Israel on Gaza, during the Arab Spring,
signals that power geometry are defining and giving shape to the Middle East
as regards power and hegemony. Israel, Iran, Egypt, Syria, and the Kingdoms
of the southern Arabian Peninsula are the countries which make up the
region's power equation. The geometry of power is exposing different
conflict and power-struggles networks.

In short, an uncertain and risky process awaits the Middle East.

 




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