From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent Thur 7/26/2012 2:06:44 PM
Subject: July 25 update
25 July, 2012
Article 1.
NYT
Syria Is Iraq
Thomas L. Friedman
Article 2. Stratfor
Consequences of the Fall of Syrian Regime
George Friedman
Article 3
TIME
Five Syria Nightmares
Tony Karon
Article 4 Agence Global
The Destruction of Syria
Patrick Seale
Article 5. NYT
The Candidates Talk Foreign Policy
Editorial
Article 6
The Atlantic
Mitt Romney's Trip to Israel: Is the Jewish Vote
up for Grabs?
Beth Reinhard
Article 7.
Project Syndicate
How the West Was Re-Won
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Dominique Moisi
Miele I
NYT
Syria Is Iraq
Thomas L. Friedman
July 24, 2012 -- Lord knows I am rooting for the
opposition forces in Syria to quickly prevail on their
own and turn out to be as democratically inclined as
we hope. But the chances of this best-of-all-possible
outcomes is low. That's because Syria is a lot like
Iraq. Indeed, Syria is Iraq's twin — a multisectarian,
minority-ruled dictatorship that was held together by
an iron fist under Baathist ideology. And, for me, the
lesson of Iraq is quite simple: You can't go from
Saddam to Switzerland without getting stuck in
Hobbes — a war of all against all — unless you have a
well-armed external midwife, whom everyone on the
ground both fears and trusts to manage the transition.
In Iraq, that was America. The kind of low-cost,
remote-control, U.S./NATO midwifery that ousted
Qaddafi and gave birth to a new Libya is not likely to
be repeated in Syria. Syria is harder. Syria is Iraq.
And Iraq was such a bitter experience for America that
we prefer never to speak of it again. But Iraq is
relevant here. The only reason Iraq has any chance for
a decent outcome today is because America was on the
ground with tens of thousands of troops to act as that
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well-armed midwife, reasonably trusted and certainly
feared by all sides, to manage Iraq's transition to more
consensual politics. My gut tells me that Syria will
require the same to have the same chance.
But because I absolutely would not advocate U.S.
intervention on the ground in Syria or anywhere in the
Arab world again — and the U.S. public would not
support it — I find myself hoping my analysis is
wrong and that Syrians will surprise us by finding
their own way, with just arms and diplomatic
assistance, to a better political future. I know
columnists are supposed to pound the table and
declaim what is necessary. But when you believe that
what is necessary, an outside midwife for Syria, is
impossible, you need to say so. I think those who have
been advocating a more activist U.S. intervention in
Syria — and excoriating President Obama for not
leading that — are not being realistic about what it
would take to create a decent outcome.
Why? In the Middle East, the alternative to bad is not
always good. It can be worse. I am awed at the bravery
of those Syrian rebels who started this uprising,
peacefully, without any arms, against a regime that
plays by what I call Hama Rules, which are no rules at
all. The Assad regime deliberately killed
demonstrators to turn this conflict into a sectarian
struggle between the ruling minority Alawite sect, led
by the Assad clan, and the country's majority of Sunni
Muslims. That's why the opposite of the Assad
dictatorship could be the breakup of Syria — as the
Alawites retreat to their coastal redoubt — and a
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permanent civil war.
There are two things that could divert us from that
outcome. One is the Iraq alternative, where America
went in and decapitated the Saddam regime, occupied
the country and forcibly changed it from a minority
Sunni-led dictatorship to a majority Shiite-led
democracy. Because of both U.S. incompetence and
the nature of Iraq, this U.S. intervention triggered a
civil war in which all the parties in Iraq — Sunnis,
Shiites and Kurds — tested the new balance of power,
inflicting enormous casualties on each other and
leading, tragically, to ethnic cleansing that rearranged
the country into more homogeneous blocks of Sunnis,
Shiites and Kurds.
But the U.S. presence in Iraq contained that civil war
and ethnic cleansing from spreading to neighboring
states. And once that civil war burned itself out — and
all sides were exhausted and more separated — the
U.S. successfully brokered a new constitution and
power-sharing deal in Iraq, with the Shiites enjoying
majority rule, the Sunnis out of power but not
powerless, and the Kurds securing semi-autonomy.
The cost of this transition in lives and money was
huge, and even today Iraq is not a stable or healthy
democracy. But it has a chance, and it's now up to
Iraqis.
Since it is highly unlikely that an armed, feared and
trusted midwife will dare enter the fray in Syria, the
rebels on the ground there will have to do it
themselves. Given Syria's fractured society, that will
not be easy — unless there is a surprise. A surprise
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would be the disparate Syrian opposition groups
congealing into a united political front — maybe with
the help of U.S., Turkish and Saudi intelligence
officers on the ground — and this new front reaching
out to moderate Alawites and Christians who
supported the Assads out of fear and agreeing to build
a new order together that protects majority and
minority rights. It would be wonderful to see the
tyrannical Assad- Russia-Iran-Hezbollah axis replaced
by a democratizing Syria, not a chaotic Syria.
But color me dubious. The 20 percent of Syrians who
are pro-Assad Alawites or Christians will be terrified
of the new Sunni Muslim majority, with its Muslim
Brotherhood component, and this Sunni Muslim
majority has suffered such brutality from this regime
that reconciliation will be difficult, especially with
each passing day of bloodshed. Without an external
midwife or a Syrian Mandela, the fires of conflict
could burn for a long time. I hope I am surprised.
Stratior
Consequences of the Fall of Syrian
Regime
George Friedman
July 24, 2012-- We have entered the endgame in
Syria. That doesn't mean that we have reached the end
by any means, but it does mean that the precondition
has been met for the fall of the regime of Syrian
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President Bashar al Assad. We have argued that so
long as the military and security apparatus remain
intact and effective, the regime could endure.
Although they continue to function, neither appears
intact any longer; their control of key areas such as
Damascus and Aleppo is in doubt, and the reliability
of their personnel, given defections, is no longer
certain. We had thought that there was a reasonable
chance of the al Assad regime surviving completely.
That is no longer the case. At a certain point -- in our
view, after the defection of a Syrian pilot June 21 and
then the defection of the Tlass clan -- key members of
the regime began to recalculate the probability of
survival and their interests. The regime has not
unraveled, but it is unraveling. The speculation over al
Assad's whereabouts and heavy fighting in Damascus
is simply part of the regime's problems. Rumors,
whether true or not, create uncertainty that the regime
cannot afford right now. The outcome is unclear. On
the one hand, a new regime might emerge that could
exercise control. On the other hand, Syria could
collapse into a Lebanon situation in which it
disintegrates into regions held by various factions,
with no effective central government.
The Russian and Chinese Strategy
The geopolitical picture is somewhat clearer than the
internal political picture. Whatever else happens, it is
unlikely that al Assad will be able to return to
unchallenged rule. The United States, France and
other European countries have opposed his regime.
Russia, China and Iran have supported it, each for
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different reasons. The Russians opposed the West's
calls to intervene, which were grounded on human
rights concerns, fearing that the proposed intervention
was simply a subterfuge to extend Western power and
that it would be used against them. The Chinese also
supported the Syrians, in part for these same reasons.
Both Moscow and Beijing hoped to avoid legitimizing
Western pressure based on human rights
considerations -- something they had each faced at one
time or another. In addition, Russia and China wanted
the United States in particular focused on the Middle
East rather than on them. They would not have minded
a military intervention that would have bogged down
the United States, but the United States declined to
give that to them.
But the Russian and Chinese game was subtler than
that. It focused on Iran. As we have argued, if the al
Assad regime were to survive and were to be isolated
from the West, it would be primarily dependent on
Iran, its main patron. Iran had supplied trainers,
special operations troops, supplies and money to
sustain the regime. For Iran, the events in Syria
represented a tremendous opportunity. Iran already
held a powerful position in Iraq, not quite dominating
it but heavily influencing it. If the al Assad regime
survived and had Iranian support to thank for its
survival, Syria would become even more dependent on
Iran than was Iraq. This would shore up the Iranian
position in Iraq, but more important, it would have
created an Iranian sphere of influence stretching from
western Afghanistan to Lebanon, where Hezbollah is
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an Iranian ally.
The Russians and Chinese clearly understood that if
this had happened, the United States would have had
an intense interest in undermining the Iranian sphere
of influence -- and would have had to devote massive
resources to doing so. Russia and China benefitted
greatly in the post-9/11 world, when the United States
was obsessed with the Islamic world and had little
interest or resources to devote to China and Russia.
With the end of the Afghanistan war looming, this
respite seemed likely to end. Underwriting Iranian
hegemony over a region that would inevitably draw
the United States' attention was a low-cost, high-return
strategy.
The Chinese primarily provided political cover,
keeping the Russians from having to operate alone
diplomatically. They devoted no resources to the
Syrian conflict but did continue to oppose sanctions
against Iran and provided trade opportunities for Iran.
The Russians made a much larger commitment,
providing material and political support to the al
Assad regime.
It seems the Russians began calculating the end for the
regime some time ago. Russia continued to deliver
ammunition and other supplies to Syria but pulled
back on a delivery of helicopters. Several attempts to
deliver the helicopters "failed" when British insurers
of the ship pulled coverage. That was the reason the
Russians gave for not delivering the helicopters, but
obviously the Russians could have insured the ship
themselves. They were backing off from supporting al
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Assad, their intelligence indicating trouble in
Damascus. In the last few days the Russians have
moved to the point where they had their ambassador to
France suggest that the time had come for al Assad to
leave -- then, of course, he denied having made the
statement.
A Strategic Blow to Iran
As the Russians withdraw support, Iran is now left
extremely exposed. There had been a sense of
inevitability in Iran's rise in the region, particularly in
the Arabian Peninsula. The decline of al Assad's
regime is a strategic blow to the Iranians in two ways.
First, the wide-reaching sphere of influence they were
creating clearly won't happen now. Second, Iran will
rapidly move from being an ascendant power to a
power on the defensive. The place where this will
become most apparent is in Iraq. For Iran, Iraq
represents a fundamental national security interest.
Having fought a bloody war with Iraq in the 1980s,
the Iranians have an overriding interest in assuring
that Iraq remains at least neutral and preferably pro-
Iranian. While Iran was ascendant, Iraqi politicians
felt that they had to be accommodating. However, in
the same way that Syrian generals had to recalculate
their positions, Iraqi politicians have to do the same.
With sanctions -- whatever their effectiveness -- being
imposed on Iran, and with Iran's position in Syria
unraveling, the psychology in Iraq might change. This
is particularly the case because of intensifying Turkish
interest in Iraq. In recent days the Turks have
announced plans for pipelines in Iraq to oil fields in
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the south and in the north. Turkish economic activity
is intensifying. Turkey is the only regional power that
can challenge Iran militarily. It uses that power against
the Kurds in Iraq. But more to the point, if a country
builds a pipeline, it must ensure access to it, either
politically or militarily. Turkey does not want to
militarily involve itself in Iraq, but it does want
political influence to guarantee its interests. Thus, just
as the Iranians are in retreat, the Turks have an interest
in, if not supplanting them, certainly supplementing
them.
The pressure on Iran is now intense, and it will be
interesting to see the political consequences. There
was consensus on the Syrian strategy, but with failure
of the strategy, that consensus dissolves. This will
have an impact inside of Iran, possibly even more than
the sanctions. Governments have trouble managing
reversals.
Other Consequences
From the American point of view, al Assad's decline
opens two opportunities. First, its policy of no direct
military intervention but unremitting political and, to a
lesser extent, economic pressure appears to be
working in this instance. More precisely, even if it had
no effect, it will appear that it did, which will enhance
the ability of the United States to influence events in
other countries without actually having to intervene.
Second, the current situation opens the door for a
genuine balance of power in the region that does not
require constant American intervention. One of the
consequences of the events in Syria is that Turkey has
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had to reconsider its policy toward countries on its
periphery. In the case of Iraq, Turkey has an interest in
suppressing the Kurdistan Workers' Party militants
who have taken refuge there and defending oil and
other economic interests. Turkey's strategy is moving
from avoiding all confrontations to avoiding major
military commitments while pursuing its political
interests. In the end, that means that Turkey will begin
moving into a position of balancing Iran for its own
interests in Iraq. This relieves the United States of
the burden of containing Iran. We continue to regard
the Iranian sphere of influence as a greater threat to
American and regional interests than Iran's nuclear
program. The decline of al Assad solves the major
problem. It also increases the sense of vulnerability in
Iran. Depending on how close they are to creating a
deliverable nuclear weapon -- and our view is that
they are not close -- the Iranians may feel it necessary
to moderate their position. A major loser in this is
Israel. Israel had maintained a clear understanding
with the al Assad regime. If the al Assad regime
restrained Hezbollah, Israel would have no objection
to al Assad's dominating Lebanon. That agreement has
frayed since the United States pushed al Assad's
influence out of Lebanon in 2006. Nevertheless, the
Israelis preferred al Assad to the Sunnis -- until it
appeared that the Iranians would dominate Syria. But
the possibility of either an Islamist regime in
Damascus or, more likely, Lebanese-style instability
cannot please the Israelis. They are already
experiencing jihadist threats in Sinai. The idea of
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having similar problems in Syria, where the other side
of the border is the Galilee rather than the Negev,
must make them nervous.
But perhaps the most important losers will be Russia
and China. Russia, like Iran, has suffered a significant
setback in its foreign policy that will have
psychological consequences. The situation in Syria
has halted the foreign-policy momentum the Russians
had built up. But more important, the Russian and
Chinese hope has been that the United States would
continue to treat them as secondary issues while it
focused on the Middle East. The decline of al Assad
and the resulting dynamic in the region increases the
possibility that the United States can disengage from
the region. This is not something the Russians or
Chinese want, but in the end, they did not have the
power to create the outcome in Syria that they had
wanted.
The strategy of the dominant power is to encourage a
balance of power that contains threats without
requiring direct intervention. This was the British
strategy, but it has not been one that the United States
has managed well. After the jihadist wars, there is a
maturation under way in U.S. strategy. That means
allowing the intrinsic dynamic in the region to work,
intervening only as the final recourse. The events in
Syria appear to be simply about the survival of the al
Assad regime. But they have far greater significance in
terms of limiting Iranian power, creating a local
balance of power and freeing the United States to
focus on global issues, including Russia and China.
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George Friedman is an American political scientist
and author. He is thefounder, chief intelligence
officer, financial overseer, and CEO of the private
intelligence corporation Stratfor. He has authored
several books, including The Next 100 Years, The
Next Decade, America's Secret War, The Intelligence
Edge, The Coming War With Japan and The Future of
War.
Article 3.
TIME
Syria: Five Syria Nightmares
Tony Karon
July 24, 2012 --
1. The Sectarian Bloodbath Continues, or
Intensifies
Renewed Arab offers of safe passage for President
Bashar Assad if he agrees to abdicate miss the point:
his isn't simply a personality-cult regime; it survives
because many thousands of Syrians remain willing to
kill for Assad — or at least, to hold the rebellion at
bay. Assad runs a system of minority rule that has
empowered the Alawite minority, supported by
Christians, Druze and other minorities and an elite
from within the Sunni majority. And the reason the
regime's core forces remain intact, able and willing to
fight on despite the defection of many thousands of
Sunni conscripts and even senior officers, is fear of
their fate if the rebellion triumphs. The 18 months of
violence that has killed as many as 19,000 Syrians and
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seen many thousands more wounded, tortured, raped
and displaced may have helped make protracted
violent retribution a self-fulfilling prophecy.
That's why even if Assad were willing to go — and
there's no sign that he is — those who have fought for
his regime and now feel their backs to the wall are
likely to remain armed, organized and willing to
defend their turf at all costs. But a triumphant Sunni
rebellion that has buried many thousands of "martyrs"
would not tolerate armed enclaves of regime
supporters in its midst. It's quite conceivable that a
messy sectarian war will rage long after Assad loses
meaningful control of Syria as a nation-state. The
obvious solution, in the minds of U.S. officials, is for
the opposition to reach out and reassure Alawites,
Christians and other minorities of their place in a post-
Assad future. Far easier said than done. For one thing,
there is no single credible political leadership center
that speaks for the rebellion — and the fact that this
condition persists some 18 months into the uprising is
a disturbing signal of prospects for stability after
Assad goes. Western and Arab powers have spent
more than a year trying to turn the exile-based Syrian
National Council into a legitimate alternative national
leadership, to no avail. It remains divided and
ineffectual, and lacks legitimacy among popular local
opposition organizations on the ground. Nor does the
SNC have any authority over the Free Syrian Army —
itself a catch-all term for a wide array of localized
military structures — or other insurgent groups, many
of them openly sectarian. The absence of a coherent
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political leadership over the rebel militias raises the
specter of chaos after Assad goes — exacerbated by
the likelihood that the pro-regime Shabiha militias,
whose thugs have the most to fear, would fight on,
independent of central political leadership of their
own. And the fact that unemployment among fighting-
age Syrians stands at 58% doesn't bode well for the
prospects of demobilizing the armed formations that
have waged the civil war. Foreign troops may be
needed on the ground not to bring down Assad but to
stop the violence after he is gone. But there are
unlikely to be many takers for such a thankless
mission. U.S. officials claim that progress had been
made in getting exiles to agree broadly on terms of a
transition. Given the status of the exile groups, that
may not be especially reassuring. "The connections
between the opposition and the Free Syrian Army are
still tenuous, but they're getting better," a State
Department official told McClatchy. "If we can get
Assad and his cronies out, that will at least create an
atmosphere to have a dialogue. That can't happen
now." The problem, of course, is that the dialogue
that begins after Assad goes could be conducted with
bombs and bullets.
2. Jihadists Fill the Post-Assad Vacuum
The presence of an al-Qaeda-inspired element in the
Syrian rebellion has long been established — U.S.
intelligence concluded that some of the spectacular
suicide bombings early on in Damascus were the work
of such groups. And in response to a question in the
German Parliament last week, it was revealed that
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Germany's intelligence service estimates that about 90
bombings in Syria over the past six months were the
work of "organizations that are close to al-Qaeda or
jihadist groups." Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri
in February called on supporters in Lebanon, Jordan
and Iraq to join the fight against Assad, and a number
seem to have responded, with opportunities expanding
as the Syrian state frays at the edges. Last weekend,
AFP reported that a border crossing near Turkey had
been taken over by some 150 foreign fighters
proclaiming themselves loyal to al-Qaeda. Libya and
Yemen are recent examples of how the collapse of an
authoritarian political order presents opportunities for
jihadists to revive their fortunes, and they'll try to do
the same in Syria. They're unlikely to take control of
the rebellion, if the Iraqi experience is any example.
By a number of accounts from on the ground, Sunni
communities that have rebelled against the regime
have resisted efforts by more ideologically extreme
foreign fighters to impose themselves. Syria has a well-
established national Islamist tradition of its own that is
outside of al-Qaeda and unlikely to be drawn into that
orbit — more akin to the mainstream Sunni
insurgency in neighboring Iraq, with which the Sunni
tribes of southeastern Syria are well integrated. Today
the names, slogans and pronouncements of even many
of the fighting units operating under the rubric of the
Free Syrian Army appear to have an Islamist, and
increasingly sectarian, hue. Even if foreign fighters
fail to gain traction, the mainstream Sunni insurgency
will likely have a strong Islamist component, which
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history suggests will grow rather than ebb as long as
the fighting persists. The U.S. has deployed the CIA
to southern Turkey to vet rebel groups receiving
outside military assistance, hoping to favor those more
palatable to Western preferences. The Administration
insists it is not providing weapons to Syrian rebels,
but it is helping with intelligence and other military-
support functions. The arming and funding of the
rebels is being undertaken primarily by U.S. allies
Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey. But given the
regional cold war that all three are engaged in to
greater or lesser extents against Iranian allies across
the region, those powers may not share the extent of
Washington's concern to avoid empowering sectarian
Islamist groups. The Saudis have backed Sunni
radicals in Lebanon and elsewhere, and Saudi Arabia
and Turkey are the key backers of the Sunni-led
political opposition to Iraq's Iran-backed Shi'ite
government. Moreover, the U.S. experience in
Afghanistan in the 1980s should provide ample
warning of how little influence Washington buys
through the provision of weapons to insurgent
groups. Even in the best-case scenario, the fall of
Assad will likely boost Sunni radicals in neighboring
countries. Indeed, Lebanon's Salafists have already
been spurred into action, and a similar effect may be
seen in Iraq. The wave of bombings in Baghdad and
beyond on Monday may be a portent of some Iraqi
Sunni insurgents, spurred by events in Syria, to try
and reverse their defeat in that country's civil war.
And there's no doubt that Lebanese Sunni groups will
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see Assad's ouster as critically weakening Hizballah
and therefore as an opportunity to reverse their own
defeat at its hands. The instability that follows Assad's
fall will be felt far beyond Syria's borders.
3. Chemical Weapons Let Loose?
The Assad regime's stocks of chemical weapons —
developed decades ago ostensibly as a strategic hedge
against the presumed nuclear capability of its prime
enemy, Israel — have become an urgent focus of
discussion among Western powers and Israel as the
regime has begun to teeter. Fears that Assad would use
such weapons to suppress a domestic rebellion may be
overblown — they don't exactly lend themselves to
urban combat, and Assad's conduct until now has
suggested a keen sense of keeping the level of
violence his regime unleashes below a threshold that
would bring direct foreign intervention. Chemical
weapons would not only cross that threshold but also
almost certainly result in him seeing out his days in a
prison cell at the Hague. President Obama on Monday
warned Assad that he would be "held accountable"
should those weapons be used.
The chemical-weapons problem, however, may be
more acute post-Assad. A senior Israeli official told
Haaretz on Monday that Assad "is handling chemical
weapons responsibly," taking steps to avoid them
falling into rebel hands by moving them to more
remote locations away from the fighting. Syria's
Foreign Minister on Monday vowed that such
weapons would be kept safe and used only in the event
of "foreign aggression." Israel's concern, of course, is
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that should the regime fall, those weapons could find
their way into the hands of Hizballah, Syria's longtime
ally, or else be commandeered by jihadist elements in
the rebel camp. The official told Haaretz that while
there are no signs that Assad intends to move chemical
weapons to Hizballah and is securing them from the
rebels, "Israel is still very concerned because it is hard
to know if these steps will be sufficient on the day
Assad falls." Thus the irony: as long as Assad is in
power, he can probably be relied on to refrain from
using those weapons and keep them out of the hands
of nonstate actors. But should the regime collapse
precipitously, he'd be in no position to do so. And
while the U.S. and Israel are weighing contingency
plans to neutralize the threat posed by those weapons,
any such intervention carries plenty of additional
political risk.
4. Syria Breaks Up
Given the sectarian lines on which Syria's power
struggle is being waged, it's widely assumed that the
regime won't simply shatter into smithereens when the
rebels arrive at the gates of Assad's home. Instead, it's
assumed that those fighting to keep Assad in power
will, when forced by overwhelming odds to do so,
retreat to more defensible lines from which they can
protect themselves and their core communities. It's
been widely noted that Alawites are moving in large
numbers to their coastal heartland and that the pattern
of communal violence in Sunni villages and towns
that abut it suggest a process of ethnic cleansing to
prepare the way. An Alawite coastal ministate that
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folds in the port cities of Latakia and Tartus, home to
the Russian navy's key warmwater port, may not be
viable in the long run, but that doesn't mean the
regime's core won't try for one. Even before that,
though, a scenario could emerge in which rival armed
formations control adjacent territories, as occurred in
Lebanon during its 17-year civil war and during Iraq's
civil war in 2006.
None of those scenarios are sustainable outcomes, of
course, but they could map the outlines of a next phase
of warfare after Assad loses control of the Syrian state.
But the Alawites aren't the only breakup threat. The
consensus among Syria's Kurdish political factions,
encouraged by Iraqi Kurd leader Massoud Barzani,
who has hosted talks brokering agreement, is to keep
their distance from the rebellion even as they take
advantage of the regime's declining ability to control
all of Syria by taking control of their own towns and
cities.
They won't necessarily push for independence, but
their alignment with the political leadership in Iraqi
Kurdistan — and reports that their fighters have
already taken control of many key Syrian Kurdish
cities - suggests that they may be staking out an
autonomous zone similar to that of their Iraqi
counterparts. Turkey, which is waging a ferocious war
against its own separatist Kurds, will be particularly
concerned about developments in Syria's Kurdish
region, although Ankara's handling of Iraqi Kurdish
autonomy suggests it may be more inclined to opt for
a strategy of co-option than of intervention.
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Still, if the Alawites, Christians and Kurds all decline
to embrace the rebellion, that would mean as many as
1 in 3 Syrians remain at odds with whatever new order
replaces Assad. And that creates plenty of room for
territorial political contests.
5. What Happens in Syria Doesn't Stay in Syria
Look at the map of the modern Middle East and what
jumps out are the number of ruler-straight lines that
describe the borders defining Syria and its neighbors
Turkey, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon and Israel. These nation-
states were all invented less than a hundred years ago,
on the drawing boards of France and Britain as they
gerrymandered what became a series of minority-ruled
states out of what had been a series of Ottoman
provinces. The Sunni minority came to rule Iraq; the
Alawites came to rule Syria; Lebanon was created to
give Maronite Christians a state of their own, but they
too were reduced to a minority and then lost power;
Jordan's Hashemite monarchy ruled over a state
whose majority today is Palestinian; and in the British
colonial entity of Palestine, Jewish immigrants from
Europe (who comprised about 45% of the population
in 1948) emerged in control.
The U.S. invasion of Iraq ended Sunni minority rule
and sent sectarian political shockwaves across the
region. Shi'ite majority rule may have been the
democratic outcome, but it was never accepted by
Iraq's Sunnis or by their patrons in Saudi Arabia and
elsewhere. Sunni-Shi'ite tensions have simmered
across the region, flaring up in Lebanon and Bahrain
— but Syria could prove to be a game changer.
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There are signs that Lebanon's fragile peace may not
survive the fall of Assad, with Saudi-backed Sunni
groups tempted to take the opportunity of Hizballah
being weakened by the loss of its Syrian patron and
arms supplier to break the Shi'ite movement's
political and military dominance. Similarly, the
defeated Sunnis of Iraq will take courage from the
success of their kin across a border straddled by their
tribal and clan networks to push back against the Iran-
backed government of Prime Minister Nouri al-
Maliki.
Jordan's pro-Western monarchy is politically weak,
and the same bleak economic outlook that drove many
of Syria's rural Sunnis to rebellion prevails in much of
the Jordanian hinterland. The triumph of an armed
Sunni rebellion in Syria is likely to spur Jordan's
Sunni Islamist opposition — both its more moderate
parliamentary arm and its more radical extremist
element — to press their case, possibly fueled by an
influx of refugees from Syria.
Even Israel has little reason to enthuse about Assad's
fall: his regime postured resistance and empowered
Hizballah, but Israel's border with Syria had been
stable for near on four decades under the Assads.
Posturing resistance to Israel, in fact, was in part an
ideological device through which an Alawite-
dominated regime sought to legitimize itself in the
eyes of the Sunni majority. Today, however, residents
of Syria's massive Palestinian refugee camps appear to
have thrown in their lot with the rebellion, and Hamas
broke with Assad and left town last year. Even if
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concerns about chemical weapons or jihadists on the
Golan fail to materialize, Israel could find itself living
alongside a new, Sunni-led Syrian polity that, if
anything, could be even more insistent than Assad had
been on recovering the Golan, occupied by Israel since
the 1967 war — and which Israel has no inclination to
give up.
When Assad falls, those straight lines on the maps
drawn in the foreign offices of France and Britain in
the 1920s will start to look even fuzzier than they
already are. What happens in Syria is unlikely to stay
in Syria.
Article 4.
Agence Global
The Destruction of Syria
Patrick Seale
24 Jul 2012 -- Once one of the most solid states in the
Middle East and a key pivot of the regional power
structure, Syria is now facing wholesale destruction.
The consequences of the unfolding drama are likely to
be disastrous for Syria's territorial integrity, for the
well-being of its population, for regional peace, and
for the interests of external powers deeply involved in
the crisis.
The most immediate danger is that the fighting in Syria,
together with the current severe pressure being put on
Syria's Iranian ally, will provide the spark for a wider
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conflagration from which no one will be immune.
How did it come to this? Every actor in the crisis bears
a share of responsibility. Syria is the victim of the
fears and appetites of its enemies but also of its own
leaders' mistakes.
With hindsight, it can be seen that President Bashar al-
Asad missed the chance to reform the tight security
state he inherited in 2000 from his father. Instead of
recognising -- and urgently addressing -- the thirst for
political freedoms, personal dignity and economic
opportunity which were the message of the `Damascus
Spring' of his first year in power, he screwed the lid
down ever more tightly.
Suffocating controls over every aspect of Syrian society
were reinforced, and made harder to bear by the
blatant corruption and privileges of the few and the
hardships suffered by the many. Physical repression
became routine. Instead of cleaning up his security
apparatus, curbing police brutality and improving
prison conditions, he allowed them to remain as
gruesome and deplorable as ever. Above all, over the
past decade Bashar al-Asad and his close advisers
failed to grasp the revolutionary potential of two key
developments -- Syria's population explosion and the
long-term drought which the country suffered from
2006 to 2010, the worst in several hundred years. The
first produced an army of semi-educated young people
unable to find jobs; the second resulted in the forced
exodus of hundreds of thousands of farmers from their
parched fields to slums around the major cities.
Herders in the north-east lost 85% of their livestock. It
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is estimated that by 2011, some two to three million
Syrians had been driven into extreme poverty. No
doubt climate change was responsible, but government
neglect and incompetence contributed to the disaster.
These two factors -- youth unemployment and rural
disaffection -- were the prime motors of the uprising
which spread like wildfire, once it was triggered by a
brutal incident at Dar`a in March 2011. The foot-
soldiers of the uprising are unemployed urban youth
and impoverished peasants.
Could the regime have done something about it? Yes, it
could. As early as 2006-7, it could have alerted the
world to the situation, devoted all available resources
to urgent job creation, launched a massive relief
programme for its stricken population and mobilised
its citizens for these tasks. No doubt major
international aid agencies and rich Gulf countries
would have helped had the plans been in place.
Instead, the regime's gaze was distracted by external
threats: by the Lebanese crisis of 2005 following the
assassination of Rafic Hariri; by Israel's bid to destroy
Hizballah by its invasion of Lebanon in 2006; by its
attack on Syria's nuclear facility in 2007; and by its
bid to destroy Hamas in its murderous assault on Gaza
in 2008-9.
From the start of Bashar al-Asad's presidency, Syria has
faced relentless efforts by Israel and its complicit
American ally to bring down the so-called `resistance
axis' of Tehran-Damascus-Hizballah, which dared
challenge the regional dominance of Israel and the
United States. Syria had a narrow escape in 2003-4.
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Led by the Pentagon's Paul Wolfowitz, the pro-Israeli
neo-cons embedded in President George W. Bush's
administration were determined to reshape the region
in Israel's and America's interest. Their first target
was Saddam Hussein's Iraq, seen as a potential threat
to Israel. Had the United States been successful in
Iraq, Syria would have been next. Neither Iraq nor the
United States has yet recovered from the catastrophic
Iraqi war, of which Wolfowitz was the chief
`architect'.
Syria and its Iranian ally are once again under imminent
threat. The United States and Israel make no secret of
their goal to bring down both the Damascus and
Tehran regimes. No doubt some Israeli strategists
believe that it would be greatly to their country's
advantage if Syria were dismembered and permanently
weakened by the creation of a small Alawi state
around the port-city of Latakia in the north-west, in
much the same way as Iraq was dismembered and
permanently weakened by the creation of the Kurdish
Regional Government in the north of the country, with
its capital at Irbil. It is not easy to be the neighbour of
an expansionist and aggressive Jewish state, which
believes that its security is best assured, not by making
peace with its neighbours, but by subverting,
destabilising and destroying them with the aid of
American power. The United States and Israel are not
Syria's only enemies. The Syrian Muslim Brothers
have been dreaming of revenge ever since their
attempt 30 years ago to topple Syria's secular Ba`thist
regime by a campaign of terror was crushed by Hafiz
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al-Asad, Syria's President at the time. Today, the
Muslim Brothers are repeating the mistake they made
then by resorting to terror with the aid of foreign
Salafists, including some Al-Qaida fighters flowing
into Syria from Iraq, Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and
other countries further afield. The liberal members of
the Syrian opposition in exile, including several
worthy academics and veteran opponents, are
providing political cover for these more violent
elements. Some Arab Gulf States persist in viewing
the region through a sectarian prism. They are worried
by Iran's alleged hegemonic ambitions. They are
unhappy that Iraq -- once a Sunni power able to hold
Iran in check -- is now under Shia leadership. Talk of
an emerging `Shia Crescent' appears to threaten Sunni
dominance. For these reasons they are funding and
arming the Syrian rebels in the hope that bringing
down the Syrian regime will sever Iran's ties with the
Arab world. But this policy will simply prolong
Syria's agony, claim the lives of some of its finest men
and cause massive material damage.
America, the dominant external power, has made many
grievous policy blunders. Over the past several
decades it failed to persuade its stubborn Israeli ally to
make peace with the Palestinians, leading to peace
with the whole Arab world. It embarked on
catastrophic wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. It failed to
reach a `grand bargain' with Iran which would have
dispelled the spectre of war in the Gulf and stabilised
the volatile region. And it is now quarrelling with
Moscow and reviving the Cold War by sabotaging
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Kofi Annan's peace plan for Syria.
There can be no military solution to the Syrian crisis. The
only way out of the current nightmare is a ceasefire
imposed on both sides, followed by a negotiation and
the formation of a national government to oversee a
transition. Only thus can Syria avoid wholesale
destruction, which could take a generation or two to
repair.
Patrick Seale is a leading British writer on the Middle
East. His latest book is The Strugglefor Arab
Independence: Riad el-Solh and the Makers of the
Modern Middle East (Cambridge University Press).
Article 5.
NYT
The Candidates Talk Foreign
Policy
Editorial
July 24, 2012 -- The presidential candidates took a
break this week from talking about the economy, the
most important issue in the election, and turned to
foreign policy. This was a chance for Mitt Romney to
show that he could be a better international leader than
President Obama, who has already proved himself in
that field. He fell far short.
Mr. Romney spoke about foreign affairs on Tuesday to
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the Veterans of Foreign Wars, which Mr. Obama
addressed on Monday. There was a contrast, but not in
favor of Mr. Romney, who is still struggling to
differentiate himself. Even some of his advisers, when
interviewed, have been unable to explain exactly what
he would do differently on many issues, and, where he
does draw a line, his positions are mostly troubling or
unconvincing.
He has, for example, struggled to play down the
simple fact that Mr. Obama ordered the killing of
Osama bin Laden. He has tried to focus instead on
how details became public, accusing the
administration of politically motivated leaks. "It's a
national security crisis," he told the V.F.W. With
stunning overkill, he called for a special counsel to
investigate an administration that has been more
determined than most to find leakers.
Mr. Romney seemed just as disingenuous when he
tried to blame Mr. Obama for $500 billion in
automatic spending cuts that the Pentagon is facing
over the next 10 years, beginning in January. He
called them "the president's radical cuts." In fact, it
was Congressional Republicans who manufactured a
crisis over the debt ceiling in 2010 and demanded
passage of a budget bill that mandated the cuts to keep
the government from defaulting.
For months, Mr. Romney has criticized Mr. Obama
for failing to halt Iran's nuclear program, disparaged
negotiations between Tehran and the major powers
and offered the hollow pledge that Iran will not have a
nuclear weapon if he is president. In his speech, Mr.
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Romney seemed less hostile, saying "negotiations
must secure full and unhindered access for
inspections." He said Iran must halt all uranium
enrichment but did not say how he would enforce a
demand often made by the United Nations Security
Council.
No one can predict if Mr. Obama's approach will yield
a deal. He has had more success at rallying
international support behind tougher sanctions —
including financial controls and an oil embargo —
than his predecessor ever had. He has also helped
Israel and Persian Gulf states boost their defenses and
made clear that the option of using force is on the
table. He has been much more willing to pursue
engagement than Mr. Romney, who on Tuesday
pledged to "use every means necessary to protect
ourselves and the region and to prevent the worst from
happening while there is still time."
After suggesting for months that he might keep
American forces in Afghanistan indefinitely, Mr.
Romney said he would transition security to Afghan
troops by the end of 2014, which Mr. Obama and
NATO have already promised to do. He said he would
rely on the advice of military commanders, as if Mr.
Obama has not been doing just that. Given all the
American lives and treasure expended over the past 12
years, it was a serious failure that he did not say more,
including whether he would leave residual forces
behind or how he would handle Afghanistan more
broadly.
Mr. Romney, who plans to visit Israel this week as
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well as Britain and Poland, is fighting hard for support
from Jewish voters. He attacked Mr. Obama for
"shabby treatment" of Israel. Relations between Mr.
Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are
obviously tense. But the administration has backed
Israel in almost every way, and Israeli leaders have
publicly acknowledged that.
Mr. Romney took some potshots at Russia (but
dropped his absurd reference to Russia as the No. 1
geopolitical foe) and China. He ignored Pakistan,
Syria and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He tried to
sound stern toward Egypt, where the Muslim
Brotherhood now runs the government, and said tough
things like "I am not ashamed of American power."
But, at this point, what he is offering voters on
American security is neither impressive nor
convincing.
Article 6.
The Atlantic
Mitt Romney's Trip to Israel: Is
the Jewish Vote up for Grabs?
Beth Reinhard
Jul 24 2012 -- Why is this election year different from
all other election years? The answer to this twist on
the age-old Passover seder question is, probably not
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much, at least when it comes to the Jewish vote.
Every four years, the Republican presidential nominee
makes a play for Jewish voters, and every four years,
the ticket falls woefully short. Since 1992, the GOP
nominee has received between 15 percent and 23
percent of the Jewish vote, according to a new analysis
from the nonpartisan Solomon Project.
Recent history is not deterring Mitt Romney, however,
who will make the biggest overture possible to the
American Jewish community when he arrives in Israel
on Sunday.
For Romney, it could be worth it.
Tight races like the 2012 campaign are won and lost at
the margins -- picking up a percentage here, another
there -- and strategists in both parties say that the
Jewish community is one place where Romney could
find an edge. A Gallup poll in June showed Obama
receiving 64 percent of the Jewish vote. That's a 10-
point drop from his level of support shortly before the
2008 election and five points worse than his overall
decline among registered voters.
"He's in what I would call the danger zone for a
Democrat," said Tevi Troy, a senior fellow at the
Hudson Institute and a Romney adviser. "The question
is not whether the Republican nominee is going to get
the majority of the Jewish vote. It's whether the party
will make important inroads in the community, and
I'm optimistic that we will."
Romney also will visit London and Poland in his first
overseas trip as the presumed GOP nominee.
In a sign that Obama's team is eyeing Romney's
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itinerary closely, top campaign surrogates gave a
sweeping defense of the administration's commitment
to Israel nearly a week in advance of the Republican's
trip in a telephone call with reporters. Robert Gibbs, a
senior adviser to the Obama campaign, said on
Monday that Obama had "substantive meetings" with
Israeli and Palestinian leaders as a candidate in 2008
and questioned whether Romney's overseas trip will
be "one long photo-op." Gibbs also downplayed the
tension between the Obama administration and Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Colin Kahl,
former deputy assistant Defense secretary for the
Middle East, said that Obama has offered "record
high" security funding, helped build an iron-dome
system to protect Israelis from rockets coming from
the Gaza strip, and acted aggressively to thwart Iran's
nuclear threat.
Kahl also went so far as to say that Jewish voters
could expect Obama to make a trip to Israel during his
second term. He noted that Ronald Reagan never
visited Israel during his administration and that
George W. Bush did not go until the last year of his
second term.
"Being a friend to Israel, at least in our view, shouldn't
be judged purely by a travel itinerary," Kahl said. "The
administration's support and cooperation for Israel has
been unprecedented."
Obama himself affirmed his commitment to Israel just
last week while campaigning in a heavily Jewish
retirement community in West Palm Beach, Florida,
where candidates often warm up the crowd with free
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bagels and cream cheese. "I want everyone here to
know, in my administration, we haven't just preserved
the unbreakable bond with Israel -- we have
strengthened it," Obama told hundreds of residents.
Republicans are energetically circulating the opposite
message, particularly in toss-up states with large
Jewish populations, such as Florida, Pennsylvania,
Ohio, and Virginia. Hours after the Obama campaign's
call on Romney's trip, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-
Fla., and Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell both issued
broadsides against Obama's relationship with Israel.
Ros-Lehtinen called the hint right before Romney's
trip that Obama would visit in his second term
"politically inspired."
"U.S.-Israeli relations have been strained by the failure
of the Obama administration to stress unequivocal
support for our long-standing ally," McDonnell said in
a statement. "Thus, it's no surprise that President
Obama is struggling to shore up support in the Jewish
community."
Exit polls in 2008 suggested that Obama received 78
percent of the Jewish vote, roughly the same level of
support that Bill Clinton got in 1996, Al Gore got in
2000, and John Kerry received in 2004. But the
analysis of the Jewish vote by the Solomon Project,
which combined national and state data, pegged
Obama's Jewish support in 2008 slightly lower, at 74
percent. That's still a high benchmark, but a lower
baseline than widely reported.
"I don't expect he will do quite as well in 2012," said
Democratic pollster Mark Mellman, one of three
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authors of the report. "He's going to do less well in the
country as a whole, so you'd expect him to do less well
in the Jewish community."
Jewish voters remain much more Democratic than the
rest of the electorate, the Solomon Project found. The
analysis takes the long view, noting that between 1972
and 1988, Republican nominees attracted between 31
percent and 37 percent of the Jewish vote. Since 1992,
the GOP nominee hasn't broken 23 percent, a trend
Mellman described in part as a reaction to the rise of
the Religious Right's influence in the GOP.
But Romney sees an opening in the administration's
failure to broker peace between the Israelis and
Palestinians. He has delivered critical speeches to pro-
Israel advocacy groups such as the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee and the Republican Jewish
Coalition, and he's deployed high-profile surrogates in
the Jewish community, such as John Bolton, the
former U.S ambassador to the United Nations, and
Dan Senor, an adviser to the Bush administration.
"Republicans say every four years that Jews are
moving away from the Democratic Party, but, if
anything, the trend is in the other direction," Mellman
said. "I don't expect that to change significantly."
Obama's success among Jewish voters in 2008 defied
a whisper campaign that called him a Muslim with
terrorist leanings -- falsehoods that the campaign
sought to dispel with truth-squading websites that
emphasized Obama's Christian background.
Obama's reelection campaign has not launched any
similar platforms this year, suggesting that it does not
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see the persistent rumors about his religion as a
problem for now. However, the campaign website
does include a section titled "President Obama's
Stance on Israel: Myths vs. Facts."
Beth Reinhard is a political correspondentfor
National Journal.
Ankle 7.
Project Syndicate
How the West Was Re-Won
Dominique Moisi
24 July 2012-- In 2005, at the Royal Academy of Arts
in London, a prestigious exhibit sponsored by the
Chinese Government, "The Three Emperors,"
celebrated the greatness of Chinese art. The show's
central piece was a giant painting in the European
(Jesuit) style depicting the envoys of the Western
world lining up to pay respect to the Chinese emperor.
The message could not have been more explicit:
"China is back." The West would have to pay tribute
to China in the future the way it had kowtowed to it in
the past.
In 2012, China is on the verge of becoming the
world's largest economy and is by far the leading
emerging power. Yet two simultaneous phenomena
suggest that the West may have been buried
prematurely by its own Cassandras and by Asian
pundits who sometimes behave like "arrogant
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Westerners."
First, the West, particularly Europe, is slowly taking
the measure of the Asian challenge. Second, it is doing
so at the very moment that the emerging countries are
starting to feel the consequences of a world economic
crisis that has Europe as its epicenter. In other words,
a new balance of strengths and weaknesses is
emerging beneath the surface of events — and runs
contrary to current mantras. Europe has awakened to
the Asian challenge just as its own crisis exposes and
intensifies the emerging countries' economic,
political, and social weaknesses.
A few years ago, in my book The Geopolitics of
Emotion, I stressed the differences that existed
between a Western world dominated by fear and an
Asia animated by hope. While the West accumulated
debts, Asia had startled the world with its long
economic boom. This continues to be the case, but
nuances are appearing. There is more fear today in the
West, but also a little less hope in Asia.
Indeed, global investors are starting to hedge their
bets, as if preparing themselves for a more genuinely
balanced world spanning different continents and
cultures. Asia may have caught up with the West;
Latin America may be on track to do so; and Africa
may be slowly positioning itself to grow. The Arab
world, too, with its ongoing revolution, may also be
joining the game, overcoming the humiliation that had
been its peoples' animating emotional force.
The West, meanwhile, may be slowly adapting to the
new realities of a world that it no longer dominates,
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but in which it still occupies an essential role, owing
to values whose universalism is now formulated in a
more restrained and coherent way. Indeed, to fear,
hope, and humiliation, I would now add a fourth and
decisive cultural mood: modesty.
Today's West is very different from the historical
West. It is a reduced entity, increasingly aware that it
can no longer be the center of the world, if only
because of its shrinking demographic weight. Europe
accounted for 20% of the world's population at the
beginning of the eighteenth century; the population of
the West as a whole will constitute slightly more than
10% in 2050.
The West is also fragmented: the American West is
growing increasingly apart from the European West.
The question is no longer one of shared interests or
common security goals, but of culture, as the United
States, in particular, increasingly looks to Asia and
Latin America and attracts immigrants from those
regions. As for the Asian West, Japan will continue to
remain alone and unique.
Given this, it might seem premature, to say the least,
to announce the "return of the West," especially at a
time when the US economy remains fragile, Europe's
financial crisis is fueling an existential funk, and
Japan's deep structural malaise continues. Still, across
Europe, particularly in the south, one is witnessing a
willingness to learn from others. There is a growing
awareness, even in France — not known for its humility
— that benchmarking is necessary, and that tough
sacrifices will have to be made.
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In other words, Europeans are beginning to
understand that they have lived well beyond their
means materially, and well below their means
intellectually, spiritually, and ethically — a process that
might be described as the beginning of Europe's
"Montization," to pay tribute to Italian Prime Minister
Mario Monti's embodiment of responsibility and
courage. Just imagine: a more virtuous Europe
encountering a more "decadent" China, whose venal
elites are starting to turn on each other?
What we may be witnessing is the consolidation of a
truly multipolar world, in which the West no longer
dominates, but is not about to be replaced by Asia or
the emerging world in general. The West is not
"striking back." But a more modest West may stabilize
its position with respect to China, particularly at a
time when China has become both more arrogant and
less confident in its own political and social system.
Dominique Moisi is thefounder of the French Institute
of International Affairs (IFRI) and a professor at
Institute d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po) in Paris.
He is the author of The Geopolitics of Emotion: How
Cultures of Fear, Humiliation, and Hope are
Reshaping the World.
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