The West’s Catastrophic Defeat in the Middle East. By Dominique Moisi. Real Clear World, January 17, 2014. Also at Worldcrunch.
Moisi:
Bashar
al-Assad is still in power in Damascus and al-Qaeda’s black flag was recently
waving above Fallujah and Ramadi in Iraq. Not only has the process of
fragmentation in Syria now spilled over to Iraq, but these two realities also
share a common cause that could be summarized into a simple phrase: the failure of the West.
The
capture, even though temporary, of the cities of Fallujah and Ramadi by Sunni
militias claiming links to al-Qaeda, is a strong and even humiliating symbol of
the failure of the policies the United States carried out in Iraq. A little
more than a decade after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein’s regime – and after
hundreds of thousands of deaths on the Iraqi side and more than 5,000 on the
American side – we can only lament a sad conclusion: All that for this!
In
Syria, the same admission of failure is emerging. Assad and his loyal allies –
Russia and Iran – have actually emerged stronger from their confrontation with
the West. Civilian massacres, including with chemical weapons, did not change
anything. The regime is holding tight, despite losing control of important
parts of its territory, thanks to its allies’ support and, most importantly,
the weakness of its opponents and those who support them.
In
reality, from the Middle East to Africa, the entire idea of outside
intervention is being challenged in a widely post-American region. How and when
can one intervene appropriately? At which point does not intervening become, to
quote the French diplomat Talleyrand following the assassination of the Duke of
Enghien in 1804, “worse than a crime, a mistake?”
When is
intervention necessary? “Humanitarian emergency” is a very elastic concept. Is
the fate of Syrian civilians less tragic than that of Libyans? Why intervene in
Somalia in 1992 and not in Sudan? The decision to intervene reveals, in part,
selective emotions that can also correspond to certain sensitivities or, in a
more mundane way, to certain best interests of the moment.
Intervention
becomes more probable when it follows the success of some other action; or, on
the contrary, a decision to abstain that led to massacre and remorse. The
tragedy of the African Great Lakes in 1994 – not to mention the Srebrenica
massacre in Bosnia in 1995 – certainly contributed to the West’s decision to
intervene in Kosovo in 1999. In reality, the intervention of a given country at
a given time is typically driven by multiple factors: the existence of an
interventionist culture, a sense of urgency, a minimum of empathy towards the
country or the cause justifying the intervention, and, of course, the existence
of resources that are considered, rightly or wrongly, sufficient and
well-adapted.
A French example
But
more than “when,” it is a question of “how” – the two being often inextricably
linked. Intervening alone can have many benefits, including the rapidity of
execution, which often leads to efficient operations. The French army was not
unhappy to end up alone in Mali. On the other hand, although it can slow down
the operations schedule, forming a coalition gives the intervention more
legitimacy, and helps share the costs and risks between the various operators.
It is
likely that France, which after the Mali operation has engaged in the Central
African Republic in a much more uncertain conflict, would now prefer having
some support – for reasons related to costs and resources as well as
geopolitics. No one wants to share success, but no one wants to end up alone in
a potential deadlock either.
America's
failure – in Iraq and in Syria – should be considered the West’s failure as a
whole, even though Washington’s share of responsibility is unquestionably the
largest.
Failure
is generally the result of the interaction between three main factors that are
almost always the same: arrogance, ignorance and indifference. Arrogance leads
to overestimating one’s capacities and to underestimating the enemy’s capacity
for resistance. It is all too easy to win the war but lose the peace.
“Democracy
in Baghdad will lead to peace in Jerusalem,” a slogan of the American
neo-conservatives, took a disastrous turn in Iraq.
Arrogance
is almost always the result of ignorance. What do we know about the cultures
and histories of the populations we want to save from chaos and dictators?
Yesterday’s colonial officers, who drew lines in the sand to create the borders
of the new empires and states, turned their nose up at the local religious and
tribal complexities. Today, the situation may be worse still. Sheer ignorance
prevails.
Finally,
there is the sin of indifference. Of course, the ISIL (Islamic State in Iraq
and the Levant) is worrying Washington, thus leading to closer ties between the
U.S. and Iran regarding Iraq. But the starting point was, in Syria, the U.S.’s
refusal to take its responsibilities.
The
result is clear: a double defeat, strategic and ethical, for the West.
Washington has brought a resounding diplomatic victory to Moscow and has
allowed Bashar al-Assad to stay in power.