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Bush Middle East trip highlights crisis of US policy
By Alex Lantier
15 May 2008
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President George W. Bush arrived in Israel yesterday for the
first leg of his five-day tour of the Middle East, which will
also take him to Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Bush strove to limit
himself to pleasantries in public statements, but even they took
on a clumsily ominous character in the face of a region increasingly
destabilized by the US occupation of Iraq and Washingtons
overall foreign policy.
Bush arrived in Tel Aviv amid the celebrations of the 60th
anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel, a date that
is known among Palestinians as the catastrophe. For
the two days of Israeli festivities, the government of Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert sealed the borders between Israel and the Palestinian
territories, and Israeli forces on Wednesday attacked Palestinian
protesters at several border checkpoints with tear gas.
After reiterating US support for Israel, Bush praised 60
years of democracy in Israel and concluded, What happened
here is possible everywhere. To millions of people around
the world, watching the ongoing repression of the Palestinians
and the bloody US-led occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan, Bushs
comment doubtless sounded more like a threat than a promise.
At an evening gala with Israeli President Shimon Peres and
Prime Minister Olmert, Bush delivered a longer speech. After predictable
invocations of faith and allusions to the war against terrorism,
he singled out for praise the crucial role of US President Harry
Truman in recognizing and backing Israel in 1948.
Bush will deliver a speech to the Israeli Knesset today and
then depart for Saudi Arabia. He refused to meet with Palestinian
Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas. According to online reports, Arab
Israeli legislators in the Knesset will boycott his speech to
protest Bushs policy of oppression, the occupation,
and Israels aggressiveness.
Bushs invocations of democracy sound completely hollow
in a region populated with numerous US-backed dictatorships, and
which has been plunged into widening bloodshed in the aftermath
of the Bush administrations invasion of Iraq. Traveling
to the Middle East as a widely despised, lame-duck president,
Bush is meeting with a collection of US-aligned politicians and
autocrats presiding over increasingly unstable regimes.
Israeli Prime Minister Olmert faces multiple corruption investigations
that have seen police raids of several government ministries and
Jerusalem City Hall, and is widely viewed as fighting for his
political life. When Olmerts microphone was left on accidentally
and broadcast him telling Bushs National Security Adviser
Stephen Hadley hanging on, hanging on, dont worry,
the press concluded that he was speaking of his own government.
His promise to guarantee Israels security through military
repression of the Palestinian people has failed. At the evening
gala, Olmert was forced to acknowledge a large-scale rocket attack
by Palestinian militants on the town of Ashkelon.
Bushs pronouncements about furthering the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process were deflated when, on May 13, his own
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice described real progress as
improbable.
In Egypt, Bush will visit a deeply unpopular military dictatorship,
which has been profoundly destabilized by a wave of strikes and
protests against massive food inflation in the last several months.
The Egyptian government responded by using massed police to put
down a strike by tens of thousands of textile workers in Mahalla
el-Kobra on April 6, and then banning opposition parties in the
April 2008 municipal elections.
In Saudi Arabia, Bush will rub shoulders with a fundamentalist
royal family notorious for its brutal suppression of the workers
movement and democratic rights. Bush is expected to ask the Saudi
royals to increase crude oil production to reduce oil prices,
and to discuss the US quagmire in Iraq and its campaign to politically
and militarily pressure Iran. However, these requests are not
expected to be crowned with any significant results.
An acid May 14 Wall Street Journal editorial, entitled
Our Friends in Riyadh, hinted at the intense recriminations
building up inside the US ruling elite over US-Saudi relations.
Asserting that US-Saudi ties were visibly fraying,
the Journal noted that Saudi Arabia no longer is
able to exert as much control over oil prices as global demand
rises, the dollar falls, regional uncertainties abound, and speculators
predictions of ever higher prices become self-fulfilling.
Nor is Saudi Arabia in a position to militarily assist the
US. As the Journal noted, in fact the ruling Saud
family needs American political support and American protection,
and the US recent efforts to remove Saddam from Iraq
and institute a democracy have proved an agonizing display of
Americas political-diplomatic, though not necessarily military,
impotence.
Washingtons increasing isolation and weakened position
were highlighted by recent developments. The US-led offensive
against the Shiite militia of anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr
in Baghdads Sadr City was suspended when the Iraqi government,
reflecting tensions between it and its US sponsors, solicited
the intervention of Iran to halt the carnage in the densely populated
and impoverished Shiite slum. The government of Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki backed the mission to Tehran because it feared
the implications of a spreading conflict with the Sadrist forces
for its own survival.
The incident exposed the pretensions of the Bush administration
and the US military of having vastly improved the grip of occupation
forces on Baghdad and the stark contradictions of US policy in
Iraq. It demonstrated once again that the Shiite-dominated regime
installed by the US retains close ties to Tehran, notwithstanding
Washingtons claims that it is the target of a proxy war
being waged by Iran.
The tenuous truce in Sadr City was followed by Hezbollahs
show of strength in Lebanon, when the militia of the popular Shiite
party responded to provocations by the US-backed government of
Prime Minister Fouad Siniora by seizing control of large parts
of Beirut. The events of the past several days demonstrated that
Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran and Syria, is far more powerful
than the Lebanese National Army and Sunni militias which the US
has been arming and financing.
Two years ago Israel, at the urging of the US, attacked southern
Lebanon and launched an air war against large parts of the country
in an attempt to crush Hezbollah. The attack failed, ending in
a humiliation for both Israel and the US.
The latest demonstration of the political and military strength
of Hezbollah has provoked angry recriminations within the US foreign
policy establishment against the Bush administration. New York
Times columnist Thomas Friedman expressed in particularly
hysterical fashion the ire and gloom of these factions in a May
14 column, which complained that US policy has only strengthened
the position of Iran.
Team America is losing on just about every front,
he wrote, adding that the US is not liked, not feared, and
not respected in the Middle East.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack was reduced to
asking those who have influence over Syria and Iran to encourage
those countries to use their influence with Hizbollah. The
Financial Times commented that Washington had acted in
the crisis as a distraught spectator.
Political analyst Rami Khouri told the Christian Science
Monitor: Bush and [Secretary of State Condoleezza] Rice
singled out Lebanon as a poster child of their success. That makes
the loss even bigger.
The Bush administration has responded by offering further financial
and military assistance to the Lebanese army, in a move that threatens
to spark an all-out civil war.
There can be no doubt that powerful forces within the Bush
administration and the US political and military establishment
will press for an escalation of military violence in reaction
to the setbacks for US policy in the region, including an intensification
of the bloodletting in Iraq and the use of military force against
Iran or Syria.
See Also:
Deep unease as Israel celebrates its
60th anniversary
[8 May 2008]
Israel escalates offensive
against Palestinians with Egypts assistance
[23 April 2008]
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