David Brooks: One Great Big War
David Brooks writes in The New York Times:
What’s the biggest threat to world peace right now? Despite the horror, it’s not
chemical weapons in Syria. It’s not even, for the moment, an Iranian nuclear
weapon. Instead, it’s the possibility of a wave of sectarian strife building
across the Middle East.
The Syrian civil conflict is both a proxy war and a
combustion point for spreading waves of violence. This didn’t start out as a
religious war. But both Sunni and Shiite power players are seizing on religious
symbols and sowing sectarian passions that are rippling across the region. The
Saudi and Iranian powers hover in the background fueling each side.
As the death toll in Syria rises to Rwanda-like
proportions, images of mass killings draw holy warriors from countries near and
far. The radical groups are the most effective fighters and control the tempo of
events. The Syrian opposition groups are themselves split violently along
sectarian lines so that the country seems to face a choice between anarchy and
atrocity.
Meanwhile, the strife appears to be spreading.
Sunni-Shiite violence in Iraq is spiking upward. Reports in The Times and
elsewhere have said that many Iraqis fear their country is sliding back to the
worst of the chaos experienced in the last decade. Even Turkey, Pakistan,
Bahrain and Kuwait could be infected. “It could become a regional religious war
similar to that witnessed in Iraq 2006-2008, but far wider and without the
moderating influence of American forces,” wrote Gary Grappo, a retired senior
Foreign Service officer with long experience in the region.
“It has become clear over the last year that the
upheavals in the Islamic and Arab world have become a clash within a
civilization rather than a clash between civilizations,” Anthony Cordesman of
the Center for Strategic and International Studies wrote recently. “The Sunni
versus Alawite civil war in Syria is increasingly interacting with the Sunni
versus Shiite tensions in the Gulf that are edging Iraq back toward civil war.
They also interact with the Sunni-Shiite, Maronite and other confessional
struggles in Lebanon.”
Some experts even say that we are seeing the emergence
of a single big conflict that could be part of a generation-long devolution,
which could end up toppling regimes and redrawing the national borders that were
established after World War I. The forces ripping people into polarized groups
seem stronger than the forces bringing them together.
It is pretty clear that the recent American strategy
of light-footprint withdrawal and nation-building at home has not helped
matters. The United States could have left more troops in Iraq and tamped down
violence there. We could have intervened in Syria back when there was still
something to be done and some reasonable opposition to mold.
At this late hour, one question is whether the
sectarian fire has grown so hot that it is beyond taming. The second question is
whether the United States has any strategy to limit the conflagration.
Right now, President Obama is focused on the imminent
strike against the Assad regime, to establish American credibility when it sets
red lines and reinforce the norm that poison gas is not acceptable.
But the president does have the makings of a broader
antisectarian strategy. He has at least three approaches on the table. The first
is containment: trying to keep each nation’s civil strife contained within its
own borders. The second is reconciliation: looking for diplomatic opportunities
to bring the Sunni axis, led by the Saudis, toward some rapprochement with the
Shiite axis, led by Iran. So far, there have been few diplomatic opportunities
to do this.
Finally, there is neutrality: the nations in the Sunni
axis are continually asking the United States to simply throw in with them, to
use the C.I.A. and other American capacities to help the Sunnis beat back their
rivals. The administration has decided that taking sides so completely is not an
effective long-term option.
Going forward, there probably has to be a global
education effort to reduce anti-Sunni and anti-Shiite passions. Iran could be
asked to pay a higher price not only for its nuclear program, but for its
mischief-making around the region.
But, at this point, it’s not clear whether American
and other outside interference would help squash hatreds or inflame them. The
legendary diplomat Ryan Crocker argues in a recent
essay in YaleGlobal that major outside interventions might only make things
worse. “The hard truth is that the fires in Syria will blaze for some time to
come. Like a major forest fire, the most we can do is hope to contain it.”
Poison gas in Syria is horrendous, but the real
inferno is regional. When you look at all the policy options for dealing with
the Syria situation, they are all terrible or too late. The job now is to try to
wall off the situation to prevent something just as bad but much more sprawling.
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