Anatoly Karlin
AMERICA, RUSSIA AND IRAN
ARE LOCKED INTO AN UNEASY,
BUT POTENTIALLY SUSTAINABLE STRATEGIC "TRIANGLE"
Though Russia might have a few more
friends than just her Army and Navy, Iran certainly isn’t one of them.
It’s just a lever to be used for extracting concessions from the
US. At this time, supporting sanctions is good for Russia because the
Americans are compromising on many spheres (e. g.
on modernization, START, Georgia). However, a time may come when
Russia performs volte face, e. g. if the US shows signs
of reaching a reconciliation with Iran in order to refocus
its energies on containing Russia, or ceases supporting Russia’s
modernization drive.
Now we publish the interview with Anatoly
Karlin (California, United States). Anatoly Karlin is the editor
of a geopolitical site sublimeoblivion.com.
— What do you think about the situation in the Middle
East?
— The mainstream media likes to make generalizations about this very
diverse region. Most of these are idiotic, simplistic tropes (oil, Islam,
terrorists, etc). I don’t think this is productive, so instead
I’ll highlight two things that get little traction in the Western
mainstream media.
First, water scarcity is the root of many of the region’s
problems. The Middle East is the world’s only major region perennially
incapable of feeding itself, forcing it to import "virtual
water" in the form of food. One of the main causes of the
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict is over the unfair distribution
of water, which is skewed towards Israel and Israeli settlers
in the West Bank. On a bigger scale, water flows are almost
as important to the region’s strategic balance as the
distribution of oil deposits. Control of the headwaters of the
Jordan, Euphrates and Tigris rivers, coupled with the biggest economic base
in the region, gives Turkey immense strategic clout. To the contrary,
Egypt’s food production deficits make it potentially vulnerable,
as seen in the food riots of 2008 when global grain prices
spiked. The urban poor who are hardest hit tend to resent their secular
authoritarian rulers and support Islamists such as the Muslim Brotherhood.
As such, making good with Israel and seeking US protection and
subsidies makes perfect sense for the Egyptian political elites: resources can
be freed up from military spending towards maintaining domestic
stability.
Second, the "Islamic Resurgence" is rather simplistically portrayed
as single-minded opposition to the West. The real situation
is a lot more complex. The movement takes a variety
of guises, from the moderate Islamism of Turkey’s AKP
to Al-Qaeda’s franchise-based terrorist cells
to the internal clan-based conflicts of Shi’ite Iran’s
"Velayat-e faqih" system. It is inaccurate to treat them
as a hostile monolith. And many of their grievances
do sound genuine to ordinary Muslims. For instance, even Osama bin
Laden doesn’t hate the US for its "freedom", but for its support
of Arab elites that he sees as corrupt, anti-democratic and
hostile to Islam — e. g., the House of Saud’s acquiescence
in stationing US troops in the holy lands of Mecca and
Medina to protect the oil exports whose proceeds overwhelmingly benefit
influential cliques. But arguing that this interpretation has some validity
to it is a sure road to a wrecked career
in American mainstream journalism.
— Should we wait for radical change in Afghanistan?
— No. Even Ronald Reagan and
Rambo
were pessimistic, back in the 1980’s! :) Americans don’t want to stay
in Afghanistan for much longer, and their finances won’t allow them
to anyway. In a few years, the Afghan government will have
to sink or swim without US ground forces
to support it.
However, I doubt the Taleban will seize central control again. Afghanistan
has $1 trillion in untapped mineral reserves, and
regional giants China, India, Russia and Iran have no interest
in fundamentalists blocking access to them — especially
in our world of increasingly scarce, harder-to-get resources.
— How real
is the possibility of US or Israeli strikes
on Iran?
It’s one of those things that everyone talks about all the time, but never
happens: until a spark sets of the bonfire, the Big Thing happens,
and acquires the tinge of inevitability as viewed in the
rear-view mirror of our common history. Kind of like World War
One...
I wrote about this in my post
The US Strategic Dilemma and Persian Deadlock. The key
players are the US, Russia and Iran (the "triangle") and Israel (the
"wildcard"). Each have diverging interests that are hard, if not
impossible, to reconcile.
Iran wants nuclear weapons to secure its mountain base, acquire the
capability to project influence through its proxies (e. g. Hezbollah)
with impunity and become the hegemon over the oil riches of the Gulf.
Russia wants to keep the US occupied in the Middle East
as it rebuilds its Eurasian sphere of influence, but all things
considered, it would rather Iran not get the Bomb. The
US is firmly against both Iranian hegemony in the Gulf and
Russian hegemony in Eurasia: however, the tools at its disposal are
insufficient to prevent both (it doesn’t have the hard power
to contain Russian influence within its current borders, while
a strike against Iran will have severe repercussions —
up to and including a blockade of the Strait
of Hormuz, through which pass 40% of the world’s oil exports, the
commodity underpinning America’s own global hegemony). As such, the US,
Russia, and Iran are locked into an uneasy, but potentially sustainable,
strategic "triangle".
However, this "triangle" is broken by the "wildcard", Israel. While
the Israelis couldn’t care less what Russia gets up to, it sees
an Iran armed with nuclear weapons as an existential threat: not
exclusively in a military sense — Israel has 200 nukes
of its own (though Ahmadinejad’s apocalyptic rantings aren’t
reassuring) — but in a political and cultural one. If Iran
gets the Bomb, a nuclear race will break out in the Middle East.
A sense of doubt and uncertainty will seep into Israel. Hezbollah
will grow bolder; the possible entrenchment of political Islam
in Turkey or Egypt will create a strategic nightmare for Israel.
Educated Jews will start leaving the Jewish homeland, undermining the tax base
needed for increased military expenditures (e. g. on anti-ballistic
missile systems), as well as the Jewish nature of the Israeli
state itself. In short, a nuclearized Middle East will make Israel’s
foothold in the Levant vulnerable, even untenable.
If Israel feels that the US is wavering in its commitment
to prevent the emergence of a nuclear Iran, then it will
go it alone — perhaps with the covert agreement of states
like Saudi Arabia, which aren’t much interested in seeing a hostile,
nuclear-armed Shi’ite state on the other side of the Gulf either. The
US will almost certainly be drawn into the fight in the
aftermath — e. g. by an Iranian attempt to block the
Strait of Hormuz, Iranian missile attacks on US bases in Iraq,
or even false flag Israeli attacks on the US.
In my opinion, the dates of likely Israeli action are from
early-2011 (when the US acquires its
Massive Ordnance Penetrator bomb capable of busting
concrete bunkers 60m deep) to end-2012 (the date by which Iran
is likely to have developed workable nuclear weapons). Otherwise, the
stage is set for the eventual nuclearization of the Middle
East.
— Should we expect a further strengthening of sanctions
against Iran?
— President Medvedev said on 23 September, 2009, "sanctions
rarely lead to productive results, but in some cases, sanctions are
inevitable." What he means by this Aesopian language is that
it is Russia that will be able to decide whether the
results of strengthened sanctions are going to be "productive"
(however you define that). Russia’s position is crucial because
it is the only country with the spare refining capacity and secure
trans-Caspian transport routes to successfully break any gasoline
sanctions against Iran.
But even Russia’s participation will not dissuade Iran from working on the
Bomb. To the contrary, it can even increase Iranian resolve
if it creates the conditions for a "siege mentality" within the
Islamic Republic. Furthermore, sanctions are in the interests of both
the US (it would prefer accommodating with Iran
to fighting it, if possible) and even Russia (to appease
the US in exchange for concessions on other policy fronts).
As such, sanctions are a very convenient pretext for delaying
military action. But for understandable reasons, Israel is unlikely
to be as patient.
— What do you think are the real Russian, Indian and Chinese
positions on Iran?
— Though Russia might have a few more friends than just her Army and
Navy, Iran certainly isn’t one of them. It’s just a lever
to be used for extracting concessions from the US. At this time,
supporting sanctions is good for Russia because the Americans are
compromising on many spheres (e. g. on modernization, START,
Georgia). However, a time may come when Russia performs volte face,
e. g. if the US shows signs of reaching
a reconciliation with Iran in order to refocus its energies
on containing Russia, or ceases supporting Russia’s modernization
drive.
China and India are both interested in cooperating with Iran
to develop its hydrocarbons sector and lock in its oil and LNG
exports. Both countries espouse non-Western values of "national
sovereignty" and non-interference. Furthermore, India is interested
in recruiting Iran as a western counterweight against its rival
Pakistan. As a result, neither country has any interest whatsoever
in stringently enforcing sanctions against Iran out of pure
altruism.
— What do you think are the positions of Georgia and
Azerbaijan on military action against Iran and its aftermath?
— Since Iran is in a "cold war" with Azerbaijan and
supports its prime enemy Armenia, the Azeri elites would probably secretly
welcome military action against Iran. Furthermore, there are twice as many
Azeris in Iran than in Azerbaijan, and though they enjoy equal rights
with Persians, it is Islam — or the system
of Guardianship of the Islamic Jury — that really keeps Iran
united (with help from the security apparatus). If Iran were
to suffer military defeat, the regime may be discredited, and
a liberal democratic one may even take its place. In that case,
centrifugal tendencies may become predominant — as in the last
years of the Soviet Union — and maybe even a Greater Azerbaijan
will emerge on both sides of the Caspian Sea in alliance with
Turkey to the west. On the other hand, Azerbaijan can’t be too
openly enthusiastic about undermining Iran because it borders Russia
to the north, which is friendlier with Iran. That is why the
Azeris categorically refuse to let Israeli planes fly over its airspace
in a strike on Iran.
Georgia’s position is much harder to decipher,
as it maintains fairly good relations with everyone except
Russia — against which it is irrevocable opposed because
of its liberation / occupation (cross out as you wish)
of S. Ossetia and Abkhazia. Though in previous years they’d have
supported Israel, their current interests aren’t clear, since the Israelis
stopped delivering arms to Georgia in exchange for Russia
not delivering the S-300 air defense system to Iran.
I don’t think a strike against Iran by either Israel
or the US will cardinally change Georgia’s situation.
— What do you think about the situation in the Russian North
Caucasus and the Caucasus region in general?
— Russia’s North Caucasus remains bloody and unstable, but secure under
Russian control. Kadyrov is the Kremlin’s vassal in Chechnya: should
he turn renegade, they’ll find another baron to replace him easily
enough.
I doubt there’ll be another Georgia-Russia war. Its clear that the
Ossetians and Abkhazians prefer implicit Russian control to explicit
Georgian rule, and Saakashvili has no chance of changing this reality
by military force. On the other hand, he remains genuinely
popular amongst Georgians and secure in his rule. The cold war between
Russia and Georgia will continue, but it’s unlikely to turn hot again; not
unless Saakashvili is a total loon and tries to replay
08/08/08.
Another war between Armenia and Azerbaijan is also unlikely. Though Azeri
military spending, bolstered by its oil wealth, now exceeds the entire
Armenian state budget, the latter has had fifteen years to reinforce its
positions in Nagorno-Karabakh. (Furthermore, direct Azeri attacks
on Armenia proper will probably provoke a Russian military response
through the mutual defense provisions of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization). Aliyev is a rational, calculating leader and would
much rather enjoy Azerbaijan’s oil bounty than run the risk of military
defeat and popular uprisings against his regime.
— How would you interpret the recent Brazil-Turkey-Iran deal
in the context of multipolarity?
— It’s an ideological statement: the voices of formerly
peripheral countries rejecting the Western consensus on nuclear rights and
proposing an alternative project amongst members of the "Rest".
As such, it is a very strong endorsement of the
multi-polar ideal. But in real life, the actors playing the key roles are
the countries with both interests in the issue and power projection
capabilities in the region: Israel, the US, Iran, and Russia. West
or Rest, it doesn’t matter: only power and the will
to power.
I’d like to thank Marat Kunaev for this interview. I tried
to make my answers as thought-provoking as his questions,
and though I might have failed in that endevour, I hope the gap
is not unbridgeable for my readers.
Interviewed Marat Kunaev
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