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Date: Jan 6, 2014
Source: The Daily Star
What the Middle East holds for 2014
By Rami G. Khouri

A New Year’s reflection on the past and coming 12 months is a useful exercise if it avoids predominantly egotistical ventures such as single-handedly anointing the best books, articles, tweets, documentaries or photos of the past year. More useful is to identify trends or developments to watch that may be genuinely new and perhaps also of continuing significance for the Middle East and the world.

The longevity and lasting impact of current changes and turbulence across the region are hard to define today. This is because some developments are dramatic and very consequential in the short run – such as Islamists winning free elections or Salafist-Takfiris controlling areas in Syria – but may not have lasting impact in a year or two. Others – such as Arab Gulf countries experiencing budget squeezes amid changing global oil import patterns – are less dramatic now, but could be game-changers in the years ahead.

Let me first mention what I do not think are lasting developments, but only short-term issues that are exaggerated, often through the lens of interpretation by local tyrants or global media. We are not heading into a Sunni-Shiite regional war, because most ordinary Sunni and Shiite Muslims get along perfectly well if they are not whipped into a frenzy by some of their hysterical leaders.

Salafist-Takfiris will not control more land or play a long-term role in the region, because they enjoy no significant popular support or viable political anchorage.

The armed forces will not retain power in Egypt for years to come, because military rule has been the single most destructive force for Arab national development and dignity in the past six decades, and citizens will not tolerate it except for short transitional moments.

I look forward to learning in the years ahead if my analysis is correct or wildly off base. In either case, I offer it with deep humility, along with these four recent developments that strike me as most significant for our region.

The activism of Saudi Arabia is striking and novel, and deserves to be watched. In the past few years, the Saudi government has sent troops, money, military supplies and increasingly vituperative rhetoric flying around the region and the world – especially in Bahrain, Syria, Yemen, Lebanon, Iraq and Libya, as well as in the Arab League, on Western op-ed pages and at the United Nations Security Council. This is unprecedented behavior for a country that has always conducted foreign policy discreetly, hesitantly and indirectly through middlemen and messengers.

Saudi Arabia is behaving in an unusual way, because it is behaving like a real country, and not the fantasyland of old when it talked openly only of Islam, Arabism, peace, love and respect, which could contrast with its policies. Its sentiments and foreign policy tools now are deployed out in the open. Regardless of one’s views of Saudi aims, its open conduct strikes me as a good thing, because countries that are honest and forthright in their policies can engage others more productively when it comes time to negotiate a new regional security order and act responsibly.

The assertion of the power of ordinary Arab citizens to change the history, configuration and policies of their countries in the past three years has been impressive, but also inconclusive to date. The years ahead will determine how the dust settles from the current uprisings, transformations and chaos. I remain positively inclined to expect that the will of free citizens, expressed through democratic and accountable mechanisms of governance, will always bring about better policies and conditions than the last half-century’s prevailing situation of Arab countries ruled by to the arbitrary decisions of old soldiers with guns or extended families with militias.

The third meaningful development is the simultaneous shift in public sentiment and foreign policy by Iran and the United States, focused on resolving the dispute over Iran’s nuclear industry and the American-Israeli-led sanctions on Iran. If the current negotiations succeed in resolving these two linked issues, Iran will experience a burst of domestic economic, social and political change that will have enormous positive consequences for Iranians and the entire region. If the talks fail, brace for catastrophic confrontations across the region.

The fourth key change taking place is in the balance of political strength between, on the one hand, pro-Israel lobby groups in Washington, D.C., that have long deeply influenced and often shaped America’s Mideast policies; and, on the other hand, the power of the American presidency and public opinion to pursue foreign policies seen to be in the national interest of the U.S., while also offering Israel ironclad American support and responding to the rights of Arabs, Turks and Iranians. This changing dynamic comes in the midst of the most significant test of wills since the 1950s between pro- Israel groups and an administration. Its resolution will impact important issues across the entire region.

Rami G. Khouri is published twice weekly byTHE DAILY STAR. He can be followed on Twitter @RamiKhouri.

 
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on January 03, 2014, on page 7.


The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Arab Network for the Study of Democracy
 
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