Office For Global Concerns: Middle East
Middle East: Arms sale risks democratic reform
Congressional briefing expected in September
The proposed sale of billions of dollars worth of U.S. arms to Egypt, Israel and Saudi Arabia flies in the face of diplomatic initiatives in the Middle East. The proposal, announced in July, would require Congressional approval, and the House has called for a detailed briefing in September. The full version of Matthew Duss’ analysis “Gasoline for the Fire,” excerpted below, can be found at
Foreign Policy in Focus. This article was also printed in the September/October 2007 issue of
NewsNotes, published by the
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns.Like a gambling addict who has to keep betting more to cover his previous losses, the Bush administration’s recently announced plan to provide some $65 billion worth of advanced weapons to Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Israel over the next 10 years represents a reckless, poorly considered attempt to mitigate the consequences of its ill considered invasion of Iraq. The deal also represents an admission of failure of several of the key elements of U.S. security policy in the Middle East, and, perhaps most significantly, it represents a clear abandonment of President Bush’s democratic reform agenda in the region.
Bush’s plan to increase arms to the region is an admission of failure on several fronts. The first, and most obvious, is the failure of the invasion of Iraq and removal of Saddam Hussein to have any positive effect in the region. … It was always a fantasy that a democratic, Shia-dominated, Iraq would tilt toward the Sunni Arab world and Israel, rather than Shia Iran. Yet this was the imagined outcome for the neoconservative planners of Bush’s Iraq policy. Reality has proved otherwise.
The militarization of the region through the proposed sales represents, to some extent, a repudiation of the principle of nuclear deterrence, specifically in regard to Israel. Though it has never officially admitted having nuclear weapons, it is understood that Israel does, in fact, have nuclear capability. …. It’s unclear how providing $30 billion of sophisticated new weaponry would enhance Israel’s security in a way that a nuclear arsenal could not. As Zbigniew Brzezinski asked at a security conference this June, “If the Israeli nuclear arsenal – some 200 weapons capable of destroying Iran if Iran were to attack Israel – is not a sufficient and credible deterrent, than what is it for?” …
Having upset the balance of power in the region by removing Saddam Hussein, empowering Iran by removing the most significant check on their regional hegemony, and having transformed Iraq into a terrorist training ground, the United States now proposes to supply new weapons to its allies in the region to help them deal with the new security environment which it created.
In Iraq, the U.S. is arming Sunni forces against Iranian-backed Shia militias, and Shia forces against Sunni insurgents and al-Qaeda elements, based upon dubious assurances that our Iraqi allies will not turn their weapons against each other. Whatever the strategic justifications and short-term advantages of arming the various factions within Iraq … it’s hard to imagine a better way to cultivate hatred of the U.S. than announcing that we intend to essentially reproduce this strategy throughout the region. …
Finally, and most significantly, the arms deal represents a repudiation of the democracy agenda that President Bush insisted would be central to his Middle East policy after 9/11. In response to questions about the deal, Secretary of State
Rice said that the U.S. is “working with these states to give a chance to the forces of moderation and reform.” One might ask, as is surely being asked by those who suffer under these regimes: Where? In Saudi Arabia, a kleptocratic monarchy that supports its own illegitimate rule by buying off its extremist religious establishment, a religious establishment which exports a violent anti-Western ideology? In Egypt, where democratic activists and critics of the regime such as Ayman Nour and blogger Abdel Kareem Soliman sit in prison, and authoritarian president Hosni Mubarak, after more than two decades of “emergency” dictatorial powers, is finally preparing to leave the presidency — to his son, as an inheritance? In Israel, where a brutal 40 years-long military occupation, the construction of illegal settlements, and the destruction of Palestinian homes and lives by American-made bombs and bulldozers, continues? …
A responsible new policy would promote the measured opening of political systems in the Middle East. Rather than simply strengthening regimes that were themselves responsible for the radicalization of many of the Islamic militants we are now fighting, we should strengthen political freedom, and encourage the participation of groups from across the political spectrum, even groups hostile to the United States. Most importantly, we must show ourselves willing to support a results-oriented process through which Arabs can develop their unique cultural and political identities. It will be difficult, and it will take years. But it's surely a better plan than adding gasoline to an already raging fire.