To: jeevacation@igmail.com[jeevacation@gmail.com]
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent: Tue 8/14/2012 4:51:09 PM
Subject: August 12 update
12 August, 2012
Article 1.
The Economist
Egypt, Israel and Sinai
Article 2.
The Atlantic
7 Reasons Why Israel Should Not Attack
Iran
Jeffrey Goldberg
Article 3.
Foreign Policy
The Syrian Spillover
Daniel I. Byman, kenneth M. Pollack
Article 4.
BBC News
Why Azerbaijan is closer to Israel than
Iran
James Reynolds
Article 5.
Al-Quds Center (Amman)
The Road to the Great Kurdistan
Oraib Al Rantawi
Article 6.
Los Angeles Times
Can Romney break the Democrats' lock
on the Jewish vote?
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Dan Schnur
Article I.
The Economist
Egypt, Israel and Sinai: The
need for triangular co-operation
Aug 11th 2012 -- THERE was no shortage of warning.
In the 18 months since Egypt's revolution, Bedouin
chiefs in the Sinai peninsula have voiced mounting
concern about the growing boldness of armed jihadist
groups in their midst. In June a bunch of them based
in Gaza launched an attack via Sinai that left one
Israeli dead. In July jihadists released a video and
leaflets promising to turn Sinai into an Islamic emirate
and demanding that Egyptian government forces
should impose sharia law or quit. On August 2nd
Israel's government called on its own citizens to stay
away from Sinai's beach resorts, citing intelligence
warnings of a heightened risk. Three days later the
Israelis fired a rocket, killing a Palestinian
motorcyclist in Gaza, who, they said, was a jihadist.
Retaliation beckoned.
Yet a few hours later, just before sunset, Egyptian
soldiers manning a desert checkpoint near the three-
way junction of Egypt's border with Israel and the
Gaza Strip took no precautions before sitting down to
break their Ramadan fast. Some still had food in their
mouths when their bodies were recovered. The masked
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men who pulled up in several cars showed no mercy,
blasting the checkpoint with rocket-propelled grenades
and automatic gunfire. They left 16 Egyptian
servicemen dead.
Some of the attackers, wearing suicide-belts, then
hijacked two armoured personnel carriers and sped
towards the Israeli border. One vehicle, laden with
explosives, failed to break through the barriers and
caught fire. The other penetrated more than a mile into
Israeli territory before being hit by a rocket fired from
an Israeli helicopter. The Israelis were evidently
readier than their Egyptian counterparts.
As Egyptian forces reinforced the northern part of
Sinai, the risk of a full-scale local revolt grew. Eye-
witnesses in el-Arish, North Sinai's biggest town,
reported half a dozen attacks by jihadists at midnight
on August 7th, with the airport and the road to Rafah,
on the border with Gaza, coming under fire. Egyptian
forces chased the attackers to el-Touma, home of the
Qurn, a clan with links to extreme Islamists. Amid a
partial news blackout in Egypt, initial reports claimed
that ground troops, backed by helicopter gunships, had
killed at least a score of the jihadists, though locals
were sceptical of the claim. A fierce counter-
insurgency campaign is now expected.
In Egypt blame was soon angrily flung around.
Supporters of the "deep state" that still dominates the
security establishment were quick to castigate Egypt's
newly installed, Islamist-tinted civilian government.
President Muhammad Morsi, they said, had foolishly
relaxed controls on Egypt's border with the Gaza
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Strip, cosying up to his fellow Islamists in the
Palestinian Hamas movement that runs the enclave.
They blamed Mr Morsi for letting dangerous foreign
elements infiltrate both Sinai and Gaza. Egypt's new
prime minister, Hisham Kandil, was jeered and pelted
with shoes at a state funeral for the 16 servicemen.
The Muslim Brotherhood, from which both Mr Morsi
and Hamas spring, suggested that Israel's intelligence
service had somehow staged the attack.
Others pointed fingers at Egypt's military rulers. On
August 8th, perhaps deliberately exploiting the army's
discomfiture, Mr Morsi threw down a gauntlet to the
generals by sacking a string of senior officers,
including the head of intelligence and the military
governor of northern Sinai. This may help Mr Morsi
regain some of his prestige, which has plummeted
since he became president.
In the decades since Egypt recovered Sinai from
Israel, following the peace accords of 1979, a
succession of generals appointed as governors has
failed to tackle the desert region's malaise. A vicious
security clampdown in 2004 following terrorist attacks
on tourist resorts in southern Sinai, along with
immigration by Egyptians from the Nile Valley,
alienated Sinai's already disgruntled Bedouin.
After Hamas took over the running of Gaza in 2007,
prompting Israel—unchallenged by Egypt's
government—to besiege it, the Palestinians began
digging hundreds of tunnels under the border with
Egypt. This fostered a bonanza of smuggling that
profited Bedouin tribes, corrupt Egyptian officials and
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the Islamists of Hamas. Arms smuggling in particular
surged last year, as rebels in Libya grabbed huge
stocks of weapons accumulated during the paranoid
reign of Colonel Muammar Qaddafi.
Complaints from Israel and its Western allies over
Sinai's increasing lawlessness have often been met
with protests that the 1979 peace treaty restricted
Egypt's army to a token, lightly armed presence. (An
American-led multinational monitoring force in Sinai
is often attacked.) Last year Israel agreed to let Egypt
deploy an additional 1,500 men and to fly helicopters
near a border strip. But only now, in the wake of the
attack, is Egypt taking serious measures to seal the
smuggling tunnels and hunt down the jihadists in the
region's barren hills.
The Hamas conundrum
Alarmingly for Palestinians in Gaza, who have hoped
for warmer ties with Egypt in the post-Mubarak era,
Egypt has again closed its official border crossing, the
territory's only reliable outlet to the world. Fearful of
an anti-Palestinian backlash, Hamas expressed
fulsome condolences for Egypt's fallen soldiers.
Hamas has struggled to suppress jihadist extremism in
Gaza while at the same time exalting the right of its
own people to fight Israel.
Hamas's prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, led prayers
in the road outside Gaza City's Egyptian consulate,
with half his cabinet and hundreds of others
prostrating themselves in unison. He is said to have
discussed the situation for two hours with Egypt's
(later sacked) intelligence chief, Murad Mowafi, and
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promised to improve co-operation. An Egyptian
newspaper said Hamas had provided the tip-off
enabling an Egyptian helicopter to fire on jihadists on
August 7th near the border town of Sheikh Zwayed,
where masked men in Afghan dress were directing
traffic.
For years llamas has suppressed jihadists groups in
Gaza, especially those espousing puritanical Salafist
ideals that hark back to the time of the Prophet
Muhammad. Hamas sought to prevent them from
attacking hairdressers, internet cafés, Christians and
other supposedly decadent influences. But it has been
less eager to curb their missile attacks on Israel or to
stop them infiltrating Egypt.
More recently, however, Hamas has closed the tunnel
complex to slow infiltration and gun-running. If
llamas really wants to please the Egyptian
government, it would arrest the 200-odd jihadists still
at large in Gaza. Hisham Saidini, a jihadist preacher
whom llamas had freed soon after Ramadan started
last month, defended the killing of Egypt's soldiers on
the grounds that they were protecting Jews.
Israel, too, will have to let both Egypt's security forces
and those of llamas in Gaza control their borders more
effectively. Israel may have to allow Hamas to operate
in a buffer zone along Gaza's eastern border. Egypt's
air attack on the jihadists on August 8th was the first
time that air power had been deployed in anger by
Egypt in Sinai since the war with Israel in 1973, and
was co-ordinated with Israel in advance. The Israelis
say they have had several discreet high-level talks with
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the Egyptians since Mr Morsi was sworn in a month
ago.
The three governments also need to agree on new
economic arrangements. For the past five years, the
joint Israeli-Egyptian blockade of Gaza that fostered
smuggling through the tunnels has hugely benefited
people in Sinai who are beyond the law—of any
country. Opening the borders to legal traffic and trade
should lessen the power of jihadists and smugglers in
Sinai and Gaza, and thus strengthen the arm of the
governments in Cairo and Jerusalem.
Mr Morsi seems well aware of the dilemma. Egypt's
main military academy and senior civil posts have
been opened up to the Bedouin, and plans are afoot to
improve the peninsula's several hundred villages,
many of which have no piped water. He had already
made a point, early in his presidency, of visiting Sinai.
He has also hosted Hamas leaders. Before the Sinai
attack, he received Mr Haniyeh and discussed
definitively lifting Gaza's siege.
Israel may also have to consider co-operating with
Hamas, its avowed enemy. After the attack on August
5th, Israel's leaders were careful to blame global
jihadists rather than Gazans or Hamas. Although
Egypt has yet fully to open the crossing at Rafah,
Israel has already reopened its one nearby at Kerem
Shalom, for trade if not yet for people. With the
influence of Islamists in Syria likely to grow in the
event of Bashar Assad's fall, Israel may have to decide
whether to accommodate itself to the likes of Hamas
lest a still fiercer version of Islamism comes to the
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fore.
Article 2.
The Atlantic
7 Reasons Why Israel Should
Not Attack Iran's Nuclear
Facilities
Jeffrey Goldberg
Aug 11 2012 -- On his Twitter feed, Oren Kessler
reports that news analysts on Israel's Channel 2 are in
agreement that an Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear
facilities seems to be imminent. Ari Shavit, of Haaretz,
is reporting that an unnamed senior Israeli security
official he interviewed who is identified in a headline
as "the decision-maker" (If you guess Ehud Barak, the
defense minister, you would not be wrong) is arguing
that the zero-hour is approaching for an Israeli
decision:
"If Israel forgoes the chance to act and it becomes
clear that it no longer has the power to act, the
likelihood of an American action will decrease. So we
cannot wait a year to find out who was right: the one
who said that the likelihood of an American action is
high or the one who said the likelihood of an
American action is low."
Aluf Benn, the editor of Haaretz, writes that the world
seems to have accepted the idea that Israel will soon
strike Iran: "All the signs show that the 'international
community,' meaning the western powers and the U.S.
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in the lead, seem to have reconciled themselves with
Israel's talk of a military strike - and now they are
pushing Netanyahu to stand by his rhetoric and send
his bombers to their targets in Iran. In general terms,
the market has already accounted for the Israeli strike
in its assessment of the risk of the undertaking, and it
is now waiting for the expectation to be realized." And
then, of course, there is Efraim Halevy, the former
head of the Mossad, who warned earlier this month
that Iran should fear an Israeli strike over the next
twelve weeks.
I'm not going to guess whether Israel will strike Iran
tomorrow, next month, next year, or never. I believe it
is highly plausible that Netanyahu and Barak will do
so at some point over the next twelve months, if
current trends remain the same. (The Atlantic Iran War
Dial, which is set by a panel of 22 experts, currently
puts the chance of an Israeli or American strike over
the next 12 months at 38 percent.) Obviously, the
Obama Administration believes that Netanyahu and
Barak are itching to give the strike order soon.
Otherwise, why would it have sent half the senior
national security team to Israel over the past several
weeks?
Though I have no idea what's going to happen in the
coming weeks, this seems like an opportune moment
to once again list the many reasons why an Israeli
strike on Iran's nuclear facilities is a bad idea. Believe
me, I take seriously the arguments made by Netanyahu
and Barak in favor of action against Iran (read the
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Shavit piece, linked above, for a very good summary
of all the reasons why a nuclear Iran would be a
catastrophe for Israel, and pretty damn bad for the
Arabs and the West as well), but the negatives still
outweigh the positives in my mind: Here are some
potential consequences of an Israeli strike:
1) Innocent people will die. It is quite possible that even a
limited Israeli strike could kill innocent Iranians, and
it is an almost-sure thing that Iranian retaliation will
kill innocent Israels.
2) It very well might not work at all. The Israeli Air Force
is very talented and brave, but it doesn't have the
capacities of the USAF. It would only have one shot at
these facilities, and it might not do much in the way of
significant damage. It could also lose pilots, or see its
pilots shot down and captured.
3) Even if a strike does work, it may only delay the Iranian
program, and it might even speed it up. Any Israeli
preventive strike would justify, in the minds of
Iranians -- even non- or anti-regime Iranians -- that
their country needs nuclear weapons as protection.
Certainly much of the world would agree, and the
sanctions put in place on Iran may crumble. So
acceleration of the nuclear program may be a
consequence of an Israeli strike.
4) An Israeli strike may cause a surge of sympathy for Iran
among Sunni Arabs across the Middle East, who right
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now despise the regime for, among other reasons,
supporting the Assad government in Damascus. Right
now, Arab opinion is hardened against Iran and its
Lebanese proxy, the terror group Hezbollah. An Israeli
strike could reverse this trend, and would be a boon to
Assad and Hezbollah in many other ways as well -- for
one thing, it would take attention away from the
continuing slaughter of innocent Syrians by Assad.
Conversely, an Israeli strike would be very useful for
those forces around the world trying to delegitimize
and isolate Israel.
5) A strike could trigger an overt war without end (Iran, of
course, has been waging subterranean war on Israel,
and America, for a long time now, and Israel and
America respond, in subterranean fashion), and an all-
out missile war may escalate into something especially
horrific, so in essence, Israel would be trading a
theoretical war later for an actual war now.
6) A strike could be a disaster for the U.S.-Israel
relationship. It might not be -- there is no sympathy
for the Iranian regime among Americans (except on
the left-most, and right-most margins) and there is
plenty of sympathy for Israel. But an attack could
trigger an armed Iranian response against American
targets. (Such a response would not be rational on the
part of Iran, but I don't count on regime rationality.)
Americans are tired of the Middle East, and I'm not
sure how they would feel if they believed that Israeli
action brought harm to Americans. Remember,
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American soldiers have died in the defense of Kuwait,
and Saudi Arabia, but they've never died defending
Israel. I doubt Israel wants to put Americans in harm's
way now. And it certainly isn't healthy for Israel to get
on the wrong side of an American president.
7) The current American president is deeply serious about
preventing Iran from going nuclear. I believe he would
eventually use force (more effectively, obviously, than
Israel) to stop Iran from crossing the nuclear
threshold. His position will be severely compromised
if Israel jumps the gun and attacks now. Again, what I
worry about, at bottom, is that an Israeli attack would
inadvertently create conditions for an acceleration of
the Iranian nuclear program.
Jeffrey Goldberg is a national correspondentfor The
Atlantic and a recipient of the National Magazine
Awardfor Reporting. Author of the book Prisoners: A
Story of Friendship and Terror.
Ankle 3.
Foreign Policy
The Syrian Spillover
Daniel 1. Byman, kenneth M. Pollack
August 10, 2012 -- The Syrian civil war has gone from
bad to worse, with casualties mounting and horrors
multiplying. Civil wars like Syria's are obviously
tragedies for the countries they consume, but they can
also be catastrophes for their neighbors. Long-lasting
and bloody civil wars often overflow their borders,
spreading war and misery. In 2006, as Iraq spiraled
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downward into the depths of intercommunal carnage,
we conducted a study of spillover from recent civil
wars in the Balkans, the Middle East, Africa, and
elsewhere in order to identify patterns in how conflicts
spread across borders. Since then, Iraq itself, along
with Afghanistan, Libya, and Yemen, have furnished
additional examples of how dangerous spillover can
be. For instance, weapons from Libya have
empowered fighters in Mali who have seized large
swathes of that country, while al Qaeda-linked
terrorists exploiting the chaos in Yemen launched
nearly successful terrorist attacks on the United States.
Spillover is once again in the news as the conflict in
Syria evinces the same dangerous patterns. Thousands
of refugees are streaming across the border into
Turkey as Ankara looks warily at Kurdish groups
using Northern Syria for safe haven. Growing refugee
communities are causing strain in Jordan and
Lebanon. Meanwhile, the capture of 48 Iranians, who
may be paramilitary specialists, could_pull Tehran
further into the conflict. Israel eyes developments in
Syria warily, remembering repeated wars and concern
over the country's massive chemical weapons arsenal.
For the United States, these developments are
particularly important because spillover from the civil
war could threaten America's vital interests far more
than a war contained within Syria's borders. Of course,
much will depend on how exactly this spillover plays
out -- and certainly no one yet knows what will
happen in the wildly unpredictable war for control of
Syria. But if past informs present, the intensity of the
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war effect typically correlates strongly to the intensity
of the spillover, often with devastating consequences.
At their worst, civil wars in one country can cause
civil wars in neighboring states or can metastasize into
regional war. And it's the severity of the spillover that
should dictate the appropriate response. There are five
archetypal patterns of spillover from civil wars.
Refugees: Spillover often starts with refugees.
Whenever there is conflict, civilians flee to safety. The
sad truth about civil wars is that often civilians are
targets: Without clear front lines and when "enemy
combatants" can be any young male who can pick up a
gun, the danger is clear. So the goal of the warring
armies is often to kill as many of the other side's
civilians as possible or at least drive them from their
homes. To avoid the rapine and economic devastation
that accompany these kinds of conflicts, whole
communities often flee to a foreign country or become
displaced within their borders, as more than a million
Syrians have. In addition to their own misery, refugees
can create serious -- even devastating -- problems for
the nations hosting them. The plight of Palestinian
refugees and their impact on Egypt, Jordan,
Lebanon, and Syria since 1948 is a case in point,
contributing to instability in their host countries,
international terrorism, and wars between Israel and its
neighbors. Beyond this, refugees can often become
carriers of conflict. Angry and demoralized refugee
populations represent ideal recruitment pools for the
warring armies; the Talibanhave drawn from angry
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young Afghan refugees raised in Pakistan, offering
them a chance for vengeance and power. Indeed,
refugee camps frequently become bases to rest, plan,
and stage combat operations back into the country
from which the refugees fled. For instance, the camps
set up in the Democratic Republic of Congo after
Rwanda's genocide quickly became a base of
operations for fleeing Hutu rebels to regroup.
Terrorism: Many civil wars have become breeding
grounds for particularly noxious terrorist groups,
while others have created hospitable sanctuaries for
existing groups to train, recruit, and mount operations --
at times against foes entirely unconnected to the war
itself. The Palestine Liberation Organization,
Hezbollah, the Tamil Tigers, and al Qaeda, to name
only a few, all trace their origins to intercommunal
wars. Today, after years of punishing U.S. drone
strikes in Pakistan, al Qaeda'a core is weak, but its
offshoots remain strong in countries wracked by
internal conflict such as Yemen and Somalia. The
most recent flare-up is in Mali, where fighters fleeing
Muammar al-Qaddafi's Libya fled with arms looted
from his arsenals, and have seized parts of Mali, in
some areas even imposing a draconian form of Islamic
law. While there had been intermittent rebellions in
Northern Mali for years, the civil war in Libya vastly
increased the capability of the rebels and created a
worse terrorism problem for the region, andpotentially
for the world. These terrorist groups rarely remain
confined by the country's borders. Some will nest
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among refugee populations, launching attacks back
into the country in civil war, and inviting attack
against the refugee populations hosting them. In other
cases, terrorists may decide that neighboring regimes
or a segment of a neighboring society are aiding their
adversaries and attack them to try to scare them into
stopping their assistance. Terrorists often start by
flowing toward civil wars, but later begin flowing
away from them. Jihadists first went to Afghanistan to
fight in that civil war in the 1980s but by the 1990s
began using it as a base to launch attacks against other
countries -- including, of course, the United States on
9/11.
Secessionism: As the Balkan countries demonstrated
in the 1990s, seemingly triumphant secessionist bids
can set off a domino effect. Slovenia's declaration of
independence inspired Croatia, which prompted
Bosnia to do the same, which encouraged Macedonia,
and then Kosovo. Strife and conflict followed all of
these declarations. Sometimes it is the desire of one
subgroup within a state to break away that triggers the
civil war in the first place. In other cases, different
groups vie for control of the state, but as the fighting
drags on, one or more groups may decide that their
only recourse is to secede. At times, a minority
comfortable under the old regime may fear
discrimination from a new government. The South
Ossetians, for example, accepted Russian rule but
rebelled when Georgia broke off from the Soviet
Union, as they feared they would face discrimination
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in the new Georgian state. After Russia helped South
Ossetia defeat the Georgian forces that tried to re-
conquer the area in 1991-1992, the next domino fell
when ethnic Abkhaz also rebelled and created their
own independent area in 1991-1992. The frozen
conflict that resulted from this civil war finally burst
into an international shooting war between Georgia
and Russia in August 2008.
Radicalization: One of the most ineffable but also one
of the most potent manifestations of spillover is the
tendency for a civil war in one country to galvanize
and radicalize neighboring populations. They
regularly radicalize neighboring populations when a
group in a neighboring state identifies with a related
group caught up in the civil war across the border.
These tribal, ethnic, and sectarian feelings always
predate the conflict, but the outbreak of war among the
same groups just across the border makes them
tangible and immediate -- giving them a reason to hate
neighbors and resent their own government. They may
demand that their government or community leaders
act to support one side or another. Alternatively, they
may agitate for harsh actions in their own countries
against groups they see as sympathizing with the
enemy side over the border. Thus, the Iraqi civil war
of 2005-2007 galvanized Sunnis in Egypt, Jordan, the
Maghreb, and the Persian Gulf states both to demand
that their own governments do more to support the
Iraqi Sunni groups and (at least in the Gulf) to demand
harsher treatment of their own Shiite populations. At
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its most dangerous, this aspect of spillover can
contribute to civil wars next door. The Lebanese civil
war that began in 1975 prompted the Syrian Sunnis to
launch their own civil war against Bashar al-Assad's
father in 1976, a conflict that only ended with the
horrific massacre of 20,000-40,000 people at Hama in
1982.
Intervention: But perhaps the most dangerous form of
spillover is when neighboring states intervene in a
civil war, transforming a local conflict into a regional
one. Perversely, the goal is often to diminish the risks
of spillover such as terrorism and radicalization. But it
can take many forms: intervening in a limited fashion
either to shut down the civil war, to help one side win,
or just to eliminate the source of the spillover.
Occasionally, a neighboring state will see a civil war
as an opportunity to grab some long coveted resource
or territory. Typically, even limited intervention by a
regional power only makes the problem worse.
Countries get tied to "clients" within the civil war and
end up doubling down on their support for them. They
assume that "just a little more" will turn the tide in
their favor. Worse still, they can see neighborhood
rivals intervening in the civil war and feel compelled
to do the same to prevent their enemy from making
gains. So when Rwanda and Uganda intervened in
Congo in the mid-1990s to drive the genocidaires out
of the refugee camps and topple the hostile regime in
Kinshasa that supported them, so too did Angola,
which sought to block them. As the conflict wore on,
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several powers tried to carve out buffer zones where
their preferred proxies would rule -- and where they
could grab some of Congo's abundant natural
resources. Seven of Congo's neighbors ended up
intervening, turning the Congolese civil war into what
became known as "Africa's World War." At its worst,
this pattern can produce direct conflict between the
intervening states over the carcass of the country in
civil war. Syria first intervened in Lebanon in 1975 to
end the radicalization of its own Sunni population.
But the Syrians soon found that diplomacy, covert
action, and support to various proxy groups were
inadequate and reluctantly launched a full-scale
invasion the following year. For its part, Israel
suffered from terrorism emanating from the Lebanese
civil war and covertly supported its own proxies,
launched targeted counterterrorism operations, and
even limited military incursions, before deciding in
1982 to invade to try to impose a single (friendly)
government in Beirut. The result was a conventional
war between Israel and Syria fought in Lebanon. But
even winning did little for Israel. Thirty years later --
18 in painful occupation of southern Lebanon -- Israel
still faces a terrorism problem from Lebanon, and the
Jewish state's nemesis, Hezbollah, born of the Israeli
invasion, dominates Lebanese politics.
Bad Signs in Syria -- Our 2006 study also examined
the factors that lead to the worst forms of spillover.
They include ethnic, religious, and other "identity"
groups that are in both the country caught in civil war
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and its neighbors; neighboring states that share the
same ethno-religious divides being fought over by the
country in civil war; fragile regimes in the neighboring
states; porous borders; and a history of violence
between the neighbors. Unfortunately, Syria and its
neighbors exhibit precisely these traits, explaining
why we are already seeing the typical patterns of
spillover from the Syrian civil war, and why spillover
from the conflict could get much worse. The Syrian
conflict has produced more than 120,000 officially
registered refugees, but the real figure is closer to
300,000. Turkey has 43,000 registered refugees from
Syria and probably more than 25,000 that have not
registered. The Turks believe that the Kurdistan
Worker's Party (PKK), a separatist Kurdish terrorist
group, is using this population to infiltrate Turkey to
launch a new violent bid for independence. Ankara is
convinced that PKK fighters allied with the Alawite
regime have taken control of parts of Syria,
particularly in ethnically Kurdish areas of the country.
In response, Turkey is aggressively enforcing the
sanctity of its border even as it assists Syrian refugees
who are taking the fight back home. Public opinion in
Turkey is strongly anti-Assad, and popular frustration
grows as Ankara seems unable to stem the violence.
Iraq is already struggling to avoid sliding back into its
own civil war. It doesn't need any pushing from Syria,
but that is just what it is getting. Iraqi Sunnis identify
wholeheartedly with their Syrian brethren whom they
see as fighting against a Shiite-dominated government
backed by Iran -- which they see as an exact parallel
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with their own circumstances. External support to the
Syrian opposition from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and other
Sunni Arab governments is_reportedly flowing through
the Sunni tribes of Western Iraq, many of which span
the Syrian border. This support appears to be an
important cause of the resurgence of al Qaeda in Iraq
and the worsening sectarian violence there. The Iraqi
regime (rightly) claims that it is fighting the same
terrorists that the Alawite Syrian regime is struggling
with on the other side of the border. As the Alawites
are a splinter of Shiism, the growing cooperation
between Damascus and Shiite-dominated Baghdad is_
feeding Sunni fears of a grand Shiite alliance led by
Iran. All of this conjures a self-fulfilling prophecy
about sectarian war. Meanwhile, Iraqi Kurds are now
contemplating a bid for independence in a way that
they haven't for many years. Key Kurdish leaders,
including Kurdistan Regional Government President
Massoud Barzani, have concluded that they cannot
work with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki -- whom
they_routinely brand as a "Shiite Saddam." And they
increasingly believe that Turkey might eventually be
persuaded to support such a bid. This makes whatever
happens with Syria's Kurds of particular importance.
Indeed, Barzani and the Turks are wrestling against
the PKK and the Syrian regime for the loyalty of
Syria's Kurds, who might well attempt to declare
independence, putting pressure on Iraq's Kurds to do
the same. Lebanon may be suffering the worst so far.
It is inundated with Syrian refugees -- 30,000 have
registered with the United Nations High
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Commissioner for Refugees, but the latest spike in
violence probably added at least another 10,000 -- a
number the tiny country simply cannot handle. The
Syrian conflict is tearing at the seams of Lebanon's
already fragmented politics. Its Sunnis champion the
Syrian opposition while Shiite Hezbollah backs the
Syrian regime, provoking gunfights in the streets of
Beirut and Tripoli. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is_
reportedly funneling arms to the Syrian opposition
through Sunni groups in Lebanon and opposition
groups are building bases in Lebanon, triggering
reprisal attacks by Syrian regime forces and their
Hezbollah allies. So far, Jordan has escaped relatively
unscathed, but that may not last. Amman already faces
huge challenges from its Palestinian and Iraqi refugee
populations, and now refugees from Syria have_begun
to flow in (almost 40,000 officially at last count, but
other sources put the number closer to 140,000).
Syrian army and Jordanian border patrol forces have
clashed as the Jordanians have tried to help Syrian
refugees. Moreover, many Jordanians, including not
only those of Palestinian descent but also the
monarchy's more traditional supporters, have lost
patience with King Abdullah II's endless unfulfilled
promises of reform triggering rioting and terrorism
there unrelated to Syria's troubles. More refugees,
terrorism, and a further radicalized population could
be more than the Hashemite Kingdom can take.
Remarkably, Israel has gotten off scot-free, so far.
While we can all hope that will last, it would be
foolish to insist blindly that it will. The longer the
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civil war in Syria lasts, the more likely it is that the
spillover will get worse. And it's possible this war
could drag on for months, even years. The United
States and other powerful countries have shown no
inclination to intervene to snuff out the conflict.
Within Syria, both the regime and the opposition have
shown themselves too powerful to be defeated but too
weak to triumph. The war has also left the country
awash in arms, so any new government will face a
daunting task unifying and rebuilding the country.
Most ominously, the opposition is badly divided, so
victory against Assad might simply mean a shift to
new rounds of combat among the various opposition
groups, just as Afghanistan's mujahideen fell to
slaughtering one another even before they finished off
the Soviet-backed regime there in 1992. In the best
case, the current problems will deepen but not
explode. Refugee flows will increase and impose an
ever greater burden on their host countries, but the
stress won't cause any to collapse. Terrorism will
continue and more innocent people will die, but it
won't tear apart any of the neighboring states. And,
from the narrow perspective of U.S. interests, the
violence would remain focused within Syria rather
than becoming regional, let alone global. Various
groups -- starting with the Iraqi Kurds -- will continue
to flirt with secession and other tensions will simmer,
but none of these factors will boil over. The neighbors
will provide some forms of support to various groups
within Syria without crossing any Rubicons. Overall,
the Middle East will get worse but won't immolate.
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This best case is not very good, and unfortunately it's
also not the most likely. Worse scenarios seem more
plausible. The fragility of Lebanon and Iraq in
particular leaves them vulnerable to new civil wars of
their own. It might be hard, but it is not impossible to
envision a regional war growing from the Syrian
morass. Turkey seems like the primary candidate to up
its involvement in Syria. Fears that Kurdish
secessionism may spread, mounting criticism that the
regime is ignoring atrocities next door, or a risky
belief that Ankara could tip the balance in favor of one
faction over another might eventually lead the Turks
to intervene militarily -- grudgingly and in a limited
fashion at first, of course. If the plight of the Assad
regime worsens, and if the Turks are heavily engaged,
Iran might press Baghdad to increase its direct support
of the Alawites and step up its own aid. Baghdad will
be reluctant, but it might feel more inclined to do so if
the Turks continue to support the Iraqi Kurds in their
fight with the central government and if worsening
internal divisions in Iraq -- doubtless exacerbated by
spillover from Syria -- leave the Maliki government
even more dependent on Iranian support. An
embattled Alawite regime -- especially one facing ever
greater Turkish intervention -- might opt to employ its
chemical warfare arsenal or, alternatively, amp up
terrorist attacks on Israel to try to turn its civil war into
an Arab-Israeli conflict, a development that could turn
public and regional opinion in favor of the regime and
discredit Assad's opponents. Under those
circumstances, Israel might mount limited military
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operations into Syria to take out its chemical weapons
caches or terrorist bases, which no doubt would have
repercussions among Syria's neighbors and Arab states
in general. So far, the humanitarian nightmares of
Syria have evinced little more than pity from the
American people and only modest aid from their
government. After a decade-plus of war in
Afghanistan and Iraq, there is justifiably deep
ambivalence about new military commitments in the
Middle East. Stories of the humanitarian nightmares
of Syria have evinced little more than pity from the
American people. This creates a dilemma for the
Obama administration and concerned Americans as
they watch Syria burn: They have no interest in getting
involved, but standing idly by is risky. If spillover
from Syria worsens, squaring this circle could prove a
major challenge. At the very least, Washington should
place a premium on keeping the Syrian civil war from
dragging on indefinitely. Stepping up our efforts to
arm, train, and unify the Syrian opposition factions
that matter most -- those fighting the regime within
Syria rather than those squabbling outside it -- would
be a good place to start. Progress is likely to be
limited, but Washington carries a bigger stick than the
regional allies already backing Assad's opponents and
U.S. leadership can help prevent them from working at
cross purposes. Supporting the efforts of our regional
allies to feed, shelter, and police their refugee
communities would be another option. Some
neighbors could also use help dealing with their own
political and economic problems, which could help
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them better weather the spillover from Syria. And
some medicine might be needed along with the sugar:
Pressing our regional friends to begin overdue reforms
will help mitigate the discrimination and misery
among their own populations that can act as kindling
when sparks from Syria come flying their way. The
Syrian civil war is undoubtedly a tragedy for the
people of that country. The longer it burns, though,
the more likely it will ignite something much worse.
However difficult it is to end the fighting today, it will
be even harder as the violence snowballs and spillover
grows. Less can be more when it is soon.
Daniel L. Byman and Kenneth M. Pollack are,
respectively, the director of research and a senior
fellow at the Saban Centerfor Middle East Policy at
the Brookings Institution.
Arlicle 4.
BBC News
Why Azerbaijan is closer to
Israel than Iran
James Reynolds
12 August 2012 — Baku -- First of all, you need to ask
for an appointment well in advance. Security agents
call your head office to make sure you are who you
say you are.
If your credentials check out, an appointment is made,
and a guard escorts you to the top floor of the
building. Another guard calls you in, tests your
equipment and ask you to leave behind your mobile
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phone. You are taken through further checks and
invited to sit in a corridor and admire works of art on
the wall as you wait.
Then, just a few minutes behind schedule, one of the
most fortified men in the Caucasus region arrives for
his interview.
Michael Lotem is Israel's Ambassador to Azerbaijan.
His embassy is the closest that Israel physically gets to
its principal enemy, Iran. From the embassy it is only
a four-hour drive south to the Iranian border.
The Israeli embassy in Baku is an important, and
occasionally a dangerous, outpost. In January 2012,
Azerbaijan's government said it broke up an Iranian
plot to kill the ambassador.
"I can tell you that the Iranians don't sit still for a
second," says Mr Lotem slowly, as he fiddles with his
shirt sleeve. "But I'm not worried about my security. I
have full confidence in the Azeri security services."
'More Tel Aviv than Tehran'
Israel and Azerbaijan have had diplomatic relations
since April 1992, six months after the republic
declared its independence from the Soviet Union.
Israel and the secular government of Azerbaijan share
the same goal: to check the spread of political Islam in
general and Iran in particular.
Theirs is an alliance reinforced by hardware. In
February 2012, Israel sold Azerbaijan $1.6bn (1.3bn
euros) of sophisticated weapons systems.
"We share the same view of the world, I guess," says
Michael Lotem. "We share quite a few common
problems. For us Israelis to find a Muslim country
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which is so open, so friendly, so progressive, is not
something the Israelis take for granted."
Earlier this year, America's Foreign Policy magazine
suggested the alliance between Israel and Azerbaijan
went deeper than many had previously thought.
The magazine reported that Israel had secured an
agreement to use Azerbaijan's airfields in case it went
ahead with a military strike against Iran's nuclear
facilities.
If true, this would give Israel a significant tactical
advantage. But Israel denies the claim.
"That's sheer science fiction", says the ambassador, "or
maybe we should drop the science out of it. The aim is
having very solid relations with Azerbaijan."
Azerbaijan's population is mostly Shia Muslim. But its
government is intensely secular.
A lone shop in the centre of Baku, called simply The
Muslim Shop, shows how rare the public expression
of Islam is in the capital.
In the evenings, restaurants serve Turkish-made beer
to customers in Fountains Square. Most women do not
wear headscarves. The centre of town has a
McDonalds, a Mothercare and a Versace shop. Baku
feels more like Tel Aviv than Tehran. The government
is determined to stop its Islamic neighbour from
encroaching.
"Azerbaijan naturally rejects the Iranian Islamic
influence because it is perceived as a threat to the very
nation state," says Leila Alieva, the Director of the
independent Centre for National and International
Studies in Baku.
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"On the other hand, Azerbaijan has always enjoyed a
very good relationship with the Jewish community."
Strike 'disastrous'
But there are those in Azerbaijan who disagree with
their government's embrace of Israel.
Ilgar Ibrahimoglu is an Islamic cleric who campaigns
for a greater role for Islam in Azerbaijan.
He works from a small office and prayer room in
Baku. Guests are invited to take off their shoes when
they enter in order to respect Islamic custom.
Mr Ibrahimglu enters the room, sits behind a desk and
warns that previous journalists have made him look
stupid. So he says that he will speak in short
sentences, perhaps conscious that Azerbaijan's
government will keep a close eye on his words.
"Iran is a Muslim country and a close neighbour of
Azerbaijan", he says, "but I won't say more. Even if
this was a live interview I'd say the same thing for five
hours straight."
But when the staccato conversation turns to Israel, the
cleric decides to loosen his rules and speak slightly
more expansively.
"Azerbaijan shouldn't be friendly with a country that
carries out state terror against another people, the
Palestinians. Israel can't beat Iran. It couldn't win in
Gaza or Lebanon, and it won't win in Iran."
The cleric's words won't make Azerbaijan switch
alliances. In May 2012, two Azerbaijani poets were
detained in Iran on charges of espionage. Azerbaijan's
government has since advised its citizens not to travel
to the Islamic Republic.
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Elman Abdullayev, a Foreign Ministry spokesman,
deals with Iran every day. He studied in California,
and bounces from foot-to-foot as he talks.
He apologises for the renovations being made to the
Ministry's Soviet era building (the apology is
prompted when we pass a man who accidentally pulls
a door off its hinges.)
"Azerbaijan has always been famous for its
modernistic approach - for its secularism." Mr
Abdullayev says. "You know we have been first
secular state in the Muslim East. So we develop our
relations with different countries based on our national
interest - be it Israel, be it Muslim countries."
Mr Abdullayev rejects the reports that Azerbaijan
might lease its airbases to Israel. But what would his
government do if its ally, Israel, strikes its neighbour,
Iran?
"This a hypothetical question which would be difficult
to answer," he says. "We think that the Iranian issue
has to be resolved diplomatically, peacefully,
politically, because anything like that [a military
strike] would be disastrous for the whole region, for
all of us."
Iranian suspicions
Relations between Azerbaijan and Iran are made more
difficult because they share not just a border, but a
common heritage.
The Azeri people once lived under the Persian Empire.
In 1813, the Treaty of Gulistan after the first Russo-
Persian war split the ethnic Azeri people into two.
Those in the north lived under Russian, then Soviet
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rule - and are now in independent Azerbaijan. Those
in the south lived under the Persian Empire - and are
now in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Today, around nine million ethnic Azeris live in
Azerbaijan. But even more ethnic Azeris live across
the border in Iran. Figures show that there are around
10-20 million Azeris in Iran - around a fifth of the
country's population. Millions more Iranians have
Azeri ancestry, including Iran's Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Among many Azeris there is a desire for reunification.
Simon Aruz is an ethnic Azeri from Iran. He worked
as a writer and political activist and campaigned for
better rights for the Azeri people in the Persian State.
In 2009, he fled the country for Azerbaijan.
"We used to live under pressure in Iran," he says. "We
are always thinking about our brothers, our sisters, our
family. I hope they can be free soon. "
Such words make Iran suspicious. The government of
the Islamic Republic is concerned that Azerbaijan
wants to steal both land and people - a charge denied
by Azerbaijan's government. The tensions of a shared,
divided heritage are now magnified by the different
ways in which each government sees the world.
Border tension
The overnight train from Baku to the southern border
town of Astara leaves at 1 1pm and makes its way
slowly south, along the coast of the Caspian Sea.
Some travellers fall asleep immediately. Others drink
and listen to the chorus of frogs outside.
"Ask me anything about the Iranians," says one man
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who says he is travelling to Astara simply to drop off a
music CD with friends. "I know them better than they
know themselves."
Early in the morning, the train arrives in Astara. My
colleagues and I take a taxi to see the Iranian border.
We stop at a gap in the trees half way up a hill.
A group of Polish tourists is already standing by the
fence. They are in Azerbaijan to watch a Europa
League football match - and happily pose for photos
with Iran as their backdrop.
The Islamic republic is just on the other side of the
fence. Houses with white walls and red roofs are
clearly visible across the valley. Cars in northern Iran
head towards the border crossing with Azerbaijan.
The Polish tourists head off to watch their match.
After a few minutes the security forces arrive and
order my colleagues and me to accompany them to
their base.
They inspect the TV pictures we have filmed which
show little more than the fields of northern Iran and
order us to delete the footage.
They explain that broadcasting the pictures would get
them into trouble - they say that they do not want to
do anything to increase tension with their Islamic
neighbour. The commander, a vocal Wayne Rooney
fan, finally drops us off at a hotel in Astara.
At the border crossing itself, crowds of Azeris load up
their cars with boxes of food and sweets. Day-to-day
goods cost less across the border in Iran. One woman
has brought back soap, bananas, biscuits for her
grandchildren.
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"We are going to Baku," says Ali Mani, a carpet
merchant from Iran. "Our friends invited us. There are
some restrictions in Iran that we don't see here. It's
interesting here.
"We haven't any problem with Azerbaijan and I know
Azerbaijan language," adds his friend in English.
Our interpreter asks them in Azeri if they would like
to talk about Iran and Israel. They say no, and also
decline to have their picture taken.
Next to the border gate, a driver called Ismail stands
next to his car. His 23-year-old son is slumped in the
front seat, trying to hide from the sun, barely able to
move. The two are returning from a trip to hospital in
Tehran.
"My son was having treatment here in Azerbaijan but
it wasn't doing anything," Ismail says. "The doctors
didn't say what his problem was. That's why some
people advised me to go to Tehran.
"We went there, they carried out a stomach operation
and it was successful. My attitude [towards Iran] is
very positive. I went there with big hopes - for my son
to be cured there. It was successful. So I'm happy."
Ismail says that his son's operation cost $6,000. He
has paid a first instalment to the Iranian hospital and
has promised them he will pay the remainder.
Azerbaijan and Iran share both history and mistrust.
Their network of competition draws in both the
Caucasus and the Middle East.
But for those Azeris on the border Iran is more simple
and more immediate. It is a cheaper place to shop, and
the only hope to save a son's life.
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Ankle S.
Al-Quds Center (Amman)
The Road to the Great
Kurdistan
Oraib Al Rantawi
11/8/12 -- Iraqi Kurdistan can only be described as a
`semi-independent state', since its autonomy has never
been officially announced. It has its own government,
security forces, heavy weapons, independent defensive
policy and independent foreign relations. It also
agreed oil deals without consulting its central
government, is involved in regional and international
alliances and stands against the government's political
stance in Baghdad, particularly in the case of the
Syrian crisis.
If any of the world's autonomous regions enjoys the same
privileges of Iraq's Kurdistan, such a region is closer
to being considered an independent state rather than
being an autonomous region within the Iraq state.
The Syrian Kurds seem to be Walking the same way of
their fellow Iraqis. While the ferocity of the conflict
between the regime and the opposition is reaching its
highest level, Syria's Kurds repeated the same attitude
of Iraq's Kurds by distancing themselves from the
nationwide issues and focusing on the Kurds' rights
and demands only. They don't keep a firm
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commitment, neither to the regime nor the opposition,
except their commitment to grab as many benefits as
possible from whoever grants them what they want.
There are Syrian Kurds who decided to side with the
regime as they believed this would be for the favour of
the Kurds' position in Syria. While other Kurds are
serving as members in the Syrian National Council
(SNC) and even chairing it hoping that their efforts
will guarantee a favourable position to the Kurds in
"Syria post-Assad". The Kurds always looked to the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) as a model for their
aimed independent entity, and we can see that similar
organisations to the PKK are being established in
Kameshli, Afrin and other towns and villages in
Syria's north-east.
There are reports coming from Syria about autonomous
governance held by the Kurds in towns where they
pose a majority, in addition to the formation of
Kurdish militias which are provided help and training
programmes by the neighbouring autonomous Kurdish
region in Iraq. Other reports talked about early
election for choosing the members of the so-called
"Parliament of Western Kurdistan". The Syrian Kurds
have also been making international and regional
communications to avoid hostile reactions from the
powers which are likely to be worried about the
possibility of establishing an independent Kurdish
state in Syria, especially Turkey. The Kurdish efforts
in Syria are being intensified on all fronts in order to
replicate the Kurdish achievement in northern Iraq.
The Sunni-Shia conflict in Iraq put the Iraqi Kurds in a
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position where they found in themselves a power that
can decide the country's future, as everybody was
seeking their support, in addition to the fact that they
were the only party who retained a reasonable voice
amid the deadly disputes between the Sunni and the
Shias. The same scenario could be repeated in Syria,
as the Sunni-Alawite conflict there is developing on
the same track. We saw how the "nationalist" ruling
regime in Syria which used to undermine the rights of
the Kurdish minority has given Syrian nationality to
more than 250,000 Kurds who were not registered as
Syrian citizens before. What is more significant is that
the Syrian regime has withdrawn its military forces
and even its administrative institutions from the
Kurdish regions. They were then turned by the Kurds
into semi-independent regions, in preparation to
announce an autonomous Kurdish region in Syria.
Meanwhile, the "hypocritical" Syrian opposition has done
nothing except facilitate the Kurdish efforts aimed at
seceding from Syria. I call the Syrian opposition a
"hypocritical" one because it speaks a double language
in order to achieve its goals. Sometimes it seeks the
Kurds' satisfaction, other times it tries to reassure the
Turks who are worried about the Kurds. The core
concept of the Syrian opposition is to keep all the
regional and international powers satisfied. That
includes the supportive powers, the donors and the
sponsors.
Turkey, which has always been worried about the "Kurdish
threat", now finds itself facing its worst nightmares.
Being in a rush to eliminate Bashar al-Assad's regime
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forced it to endorse the "legitimisation" of the
autonomous Kurdish region in north Iraq. It was a
paradox to see Turkey supplying the Kurdish
autonomous region with arms and helping it to work
separately of the Shia-controlled Iraqi government,
despite the fact that Turkey was the fiercest enemy of
the prospect of establishing an independent Kurdish
state. Turkey made this to guarantee that the Iraqi
Kurds will be able to contribute to the efforts aimed at
removing the Syrian regime, but the Turks have to
remember that they will not be able to stop the
Kurdish moves for full independence in the future.
Sooner or later, Turkey will also find itself facing another
independent Kurdish entity in Syria, and the Turks
will not be able to do anything to stop this from
happening. The Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu admitted recently that the Syrian crisis has
gone out of control, and it is supposed that one of the
"uncontrolled" results of this crisis will be the
emergence of an independent Kurdish entity.
The Arabs are required to reconsider their stances towards
the "Kurdish cause", they had previously avoided to
tackle this issue as they feared the possibility of a
separation to take place within their states. However,
and after the recent developments, the Arabs have to
fear the possibility of the emergence of the "Great
Kurdistan". The Kurds have permanently stepped
aside from the Arab World, and that is the price the
Arabs had to pay for their weakness and their
violations of the Kurds' rights. But the Arabs will not
be the only side to pay, as the Turks and Iranians have
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scores to settle with the Kurds too.
The region is now witnessing the birth of a nation which
has finally found its opportunity to establish its
independent and unified state. This state will not be
established at the expense of only the Arabs, but the
Turks and Iranians as well as each of the three nations
has its share in the compensation the Kurds should get
for their previous sufferings.
Oraib Rantawi is thefounder and director general of
the Amman-based Al Quds Centerfor Political
Studies and an established writer and columnist. He is
a frequent commentator and analyst on television and
has produced his own show "Qadaya wa Ahdath"
(Issues and Events.)
Article 6.
Los Angeles Times
Can Romney break the
Democrats' lock on the Jewish
vote?
Dan Schnur
August 12, 2012 -- Have you heard the one about the
Westside Jewish Republican Club? Its members take
turns hosting the gatherings, and they meet each
month in the host's car.
The Democrats' advantage among Jewish voters might
not be quite that extreme, but there's no question that
the Jewish community in this country has always
leaned strongly toward the Democratic Party and its
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candidates. Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush
achieved a high-water mark for the GOP by winning
more than 30% of the Jewish vote during their
elections in the 1980s. But in the last 20 years, no
Republican presidential nominee has won even a
quarter of the Jewish vote. Four years ago, Barack
Obama won among Jewish voters over John McCain
by a margin of 78% to 22% (a bigger margin, by 10
points, than his advantage among Latinos).
But even in the face of this vast historical imbalance,
Republicans see an opportunity this year to make
inroads for Jewish votes. They believe that President
Obama's record on issues relating to Israel and the
Middle East has created an opportunity. Recent
polling by the Public Religion Research Institute
shows that Jewish voters still lean strongly leftward,
favoring abortion rights and same-sex marriage at
almost unanimous levels, and strongly supporting
Obama on most economic issues as well. But the
Jewish community is much more equivocal on
questions regarding the Middle East conflict, with
barely one-third supporting Obama's approach on this
front.
Many U.S. Jews were troubled by Obama's early
insistence on a settlement freeze. They also took
umbrage at his use of the emotionally charged term
"occupation" in reference to the Israeli military
presence in Palestinian territory in a seminal speech in
Cairo during his first months in office. The ongoing
coolness between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has not helped matters, nor has
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the administration's emphasis on diplomacy over
military engagement when it comes to Iran's nuclear
facilities. It was these issues that Mitt Romney felt
opened a small but important window of opportunity
that made it worth his going to Israel at the end of
July.
Though the media coverage of Romney's trip was
dominated by his ill-chosen observations about the
London Olympic Games, his stop in Jerusalem
allowed him to reinforce the contrast he hopes to draw
between Obama's approach to the Middle East and his
own. Even Romney's comments about the link
between the Palestinians' economic and cultural
challenges, which drew widespread criticism from
international quarters, probably did him more good
than harm with Jewish voters who are dissatisfied with
Obama's approach to the Middle East.
The challenges for Romney are steep, as Jewish voters
remain deeply supportive of Obama's reelection. Most
have decided that the president's goals on economic,
environmental and social policy outweigh their
reservations on Middle Eastern matters. Some also
doubt that the full-throated support that Republican
leaders have demonstrated for Netanyahu's Likud
government represents the best path to peace. But a
statistically relevant segment of the Jewish community
— between 10% and 15% — has indicated a
willingness to consider shifting from the Democratic
to the GOP candidate this year. Even such a sizable
shift would not allow Romney to win anything close
to a majority of Jewish voters, but it could provide his
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campaign with opportunities in key swing states such
as Florida, Nevada and Pennsylvania.
Take Florida. Although the state's Jewish community
represents only about 4% the population, Jewish
voters make up more than 8% of the electorate. In a
state still known for hanging chads and butterfly
ballots, and where most polls show this year's race
within the margin of error, an increase in Romney's
support to the levels that Reagan attracted could
determine the outcome there.
Romney's campaign team also understands that Israel
is a matter of critical importance to evangelical voters,
many of whom are still lukewarm in their support for a
Mormon candidate. Romney also hopes he'll be helped
by the rapid growth in this country's Orthodox Jewish
community, whose members tend to place a higher
priority on the Middle East than on domestic policy.
Still, the vast majority of Jewish voters will not give
Romney even a moment's consideration before casting
their ballots this fall. The question is whether enough
of them are sufficiently concerned by the incumbent's
relationship with Israel for the challenger's trip there
to make a difference.
Dan Schnur is the director of the Jesse M. Unruh
Institute of Politics at USC.
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