By Gary Sick, Lobe Log: A series of events, some of which got little attention in the media, suggest that the wheels may be coming off the Trump administration’s Middle East policy. Admittedly, that policy is not very well articulated, and many knowledgeable observers would regard it as dysfunctional. Yet even a random collection of actions constitute a policy, so let me offer my own interpretation of where we are.
The essential core of the Trump Middle East policy is the alliance with Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. The effort to bring the two Arab states into close association with Israel was the most innovative element of this policy, as was the blatantly transactional nature of the relationship with the two wealthy Arab states. President Trump defined it quite simply as “Just take the money.”
My understanding of the importance of this alliance was to promote and sustain the Deal of the Century, which was to resolve the Israel-Palestinian dispute once and for all. Israel was obviously an essential player in this process, but Arab cover and money was required to lend the process legitimacy and agency.
The one common interest that tied these parties together was fear and hatred of Iran. None of the Middle East countries could deal with Iran by itself. But the United States could take the lead in weakening and deterring Iran, and perhaps even fomenting regime change in Tehran.
So together, Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Mohammad bin Salman (MbS, crown prince and effective ruler of Saudi Arabia), and Mohammed bin Zayed (MbZ, crown prince of Abu Dhabi and effective ruler of the UAE) were going to restructure the landscape of the Middle East.
Reality, of course, intruded.
Prime Minister Netanyahu found himself embroiled in a corruption scandal and was required to call early elections while trying to avoid indictment.
Mohammad bin Salman launched a war in Yemen that created the worst humanitarian disaster of modern times. This eventually attracted the attention of the U.S. Congress and other parliaments who began pushing to terminate arms sales to Saudi Arabia. MbS and MbZ, however doubled down on the war and Trump gave them unstinting support.
MbZ and MbS imposed a blockade of their neighbor and fellow Gulf Cooperation Council member, the fabulously wealthy tiny state of Qatar. Although Qatar was not a member of the Trump alliance, it was the home of Al-Udeid, the largest U.S. air base in Southwest Asia and a critical component of all U.S. military activities in the Middle East, including the fight against the Islamic State (IS or ISIS).
Jamal Khashoggi, a journalist and contributor to the Washington Post, was slaughtered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul. The CIA and a United Nations investigation concluded that MbS had been associated with the killing. Although President Trump resisted blaming MbS, congressional opposition to Saudi arms sales grew.
The United States did its part in the economic onslaught against Iran. Trump withdrew from the nuclear arms deal negotiated by his predecessor, restored all sanctions that had been removed, and imposed the most severe sanctions ever levied against a state during peacetime. Iran called it economic warfare.
The objective of this campaign, which was enforced by financial threats against every major country in the world, was never clear. President Trump said he just wanted negotiations; his advisors were on the record as favoring regime change. But whatever the outcome, Trump seemed determined to avoid another war in the Middle East.
Iran didn’t cooperate. As its oil markets were closed down, there were mysterious attacks against tankers in the Persian Gulf. Iran denied responsibility. Washington said it was Iran’s work. An Iranian tanker was impounded at Gibraltar; Iran reportedly took a UAE-based tanker in retaliation. Iran began exceeding the limits of the nuclear deal, and it warned it would depart the Non-Proliferation Treaty entirely unless it got relief from sanctions.
On June 20, an Iranian surface-to-air missile shot down an unmanned U.S. reconnaissance drone near the Strait of Hormuz. The vehicle had taken off from a U.S. base in the UAE. The two sides disagreed about whether or not it was in Iranian territorial waters. President Trump reportedly ordered a retaliatory strike against several Iranian military sites, but then he called off the strike at the last minute, reportedly to avoid casualties. On July 18, less than a month later, the U.S. Navy says it shot down an Iranian drone after it allegedly approached the USS /Boxer/ amphibious assault ship in the Strait of Hormuz.
We are not privy to the understandings that may have accompanied the informal U.S.-Israeli-Saudi-UAE alliance, but there is no evidence that any of the states hosting American bases in the Persian Gulf have any voice in Washington’s decision-making. Recent events have made it crystal clear that those host countries, especially the UAE and Qatar, will be regarded by Iran as accessories to U.S. military actions.
The UAE has conspicuously separated itself from Washington and Saudi Arabia. The UAE announced that it does not have sufficient evidence to determine what party was responsible for the tanker bombings. More significantly, the UAE has now announced that it is withdrawing its forces from the civil war in Yemen (though not from its anti-terrorist operations against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula).
The “Saudi-led alliance” in Yemen today consists of the Saudi air force and a rag tag collection of local militias and mercenaries who are there for the money. This is the moment when MbS should declare victory and accept a UN-brokered peace settlement.
Yemen was supposed to yield to overwhelming power. Qatar was supposed to collapse under siege. Iran was supposed to fold when faced with maximum economic pressure. Even the presentation of the economic portion of the Deal of the Century in Bahrain failed to attract the level of investors that had been expected.
There are major shifts in the balance of power underway in the Persian Gulf. They are not what the Trump administration anticipated.
First published in Lobe Log. Cartoon by Emad Hajjaj.
Gary Sick served on the National Security Council staff under Presidents Ford, Carter and Reagan. He was the principal White House aide for Iran during the Iranian Revolution and the hostage crisis and is the author of two books on U.S.-Iran relations, in addition to several other edited books and articles dealing with U.S. Middle East policy.
Tell us please Mr. Gary Sick,
How much does the IRI regime pays you to come out on this site (the nest of the IRI regime spies) and spew nonsense?
Ohhh I am sorry!!!'
Iran was supposed to fold ....yet it has not??? I guess it must be easy to deliberately confuse the people vs the government of a country, in an air-conditioned secure facility. Over 40% unemployment rate, Bankruptcy rates skyhigh, inflation rate is out of control, rate of suicides and major and petty crimes has never been higher... but the regime puppets and losers are wealthy and keeping up the resisrance so good for them and that is a sign Iran has not folded.
Time to get that pretty little head of yours out of the bottom hole my dear professor.
Hojatolesalm baghdadi the only thing coming off is tomboon akhoonds!!! And no lubricant is allowed to be used!!!
Has this website sunk so low that featured blogs are endless copy paste items from other sites?
"Has this website sunk so low that featured blogs are endless copy paste items from other sites?"
Agreed completely and wish I could understand JJ’s rational.
For years he gave a very lopsided access to Fred & Co. and never required them to disclose their affiliation which would have only added credibility to his site. He also seemingly turned a blind eye to the vulgar and abusive attack by the right wingers, Zolfali was well known for his colorful language.
Now, it seems he is doing a 180.
A blog ought to be one’s own work and not other people’s work. If one likes to share articles, they ought to post it in the link section.
Our politicians had resisted pissing on the office of Presidency, tRump fixed that.
tRump is helping to make Russia great again
Embrace BDS movement and Reject occupation, If the bar code starts with 7 29 put it back on the shelf
Buy American, say NO to Chinese madeTrump
“The time is always right to do what is right” – Martin Luther King
Gary Sick, is he not from Carter administration that unleashed islmo fascism virus all over the world? I would think with that credential I would just stay quiet and collect a pay check!
ATTENTION J.J
I agree with user name fozoli and Bavafa. JJ should do something about it. Certain individual posting other people's work in the blog section. Why ? There is Link for those posting. Isn't it ?
If it supposed to do this way (Posting others' work in blog section), so why there is a "Link' ?
one of them should be eliminated. Either Link or blog.
Talking of certain persons.....On the Persian side if this site another certain person unable to write s single sentence of his own , has been busy for years now copy pasting pages of Wikipedia as daily blogs. Is that certain person the same as this certain person or is he another certain person?
if you ask me all the fake news and trash being daily featured on this site can be traced to about three certain persons!