.
" As for the claim that the
"Iranians" are united in patriotic support for the nuclear program,
no such nationality even exists. Out of
Iran's population of 70 million or so, 51 percent are ethnically
Persian, 24 percent are Turks ("Azeris" is the regime's term), with
other minorities comprising the remaining quarter. Many of Iran's 16-17
million Turks are in revolt against Persian
cultural imperialism; its 5-6 million Kurds have started a
serious insurgency; the Arab minority detonates bombs in Ahvaz; and
Baluch tribesmen attack gendarmes and Revolutionary Guards. If some 40
percent of the British population were engaged in separatist struggles
of varying intensity, nobody would claim that it was firmly united
around the London government. On top of this, many of the Persian
majority oppose the theocratic regime, either because they have become
post-Islamic in reaction to its many prohibitions, or because they are
Sufis, whom the regime now persecutes almost as much as the small Bahai
minority. So let us have no more reports from Tehran stressing the
country's national unity. Persian nationalism is a minority position in
a country where half the population is not even Persian. In our times,
multinational states either decentralize or break up more or less
violently; Iran is not decentralizing, so its future seems highly
predictable, while in the present not much cohesion under attack is to
be expected."
Full text:
We devote too much attention to a mostly
stagnant Middle East
By Edward N. Luttwak
Tuesday, May 08, 2007
By Edward N. Luttwak
Tuesday, May 08, 2007
Why are Middle East experts so unfailingly
wrong? The lesson of history is that men never learn from history,
but Middle East experts, like the rest of us, should at least learn
from their past mistakes. Instead, they just keep repeating them.
The first mistake is "five minutes to midnight" catastrophism. The
late King Hussein of Jordan was the undisputed master of this genre.
Wearing his gravest aspect, he would warn us that with patience
finally exhausted the Arab-Israeli conflict was about to explode,
that all past conflicts would be dwarfed by what was about to happen
unless, unless ... And then came the remedy - usually something
rather tame when compared with the immense catastrophe predicted,
such as resuming this or that stalled negotiation, or getting an
American envoy to the scene to make the usual promises to the
Palestinians and apply the usual pressures on Israel. We read
versions of the standard King Hussein speech in countless newspaper
columns, hear identical invocations in the grindingly repetitive
radio and television appearances of the usual Middle East experts,
and are now faced with Hussein's son Abdullah periodically repeating
his father's speech almost verbatim.
What actually happens at each of these
"moments of truth" - and we may be approaching another one - is
nothing much; only the same old cyclical conflict which always
restarts when peace is about to break out, and always dampens down
when the violence becomes intense enough. The ease of filming and
reporting out of safe and comfortable Israeli hotels inflates the
media coverage of every minor affray. But humanitarians should note
that the dead from Jewish-Palestinian fighting since 1921 amount to
fewer than 100,000 - about as many as are killed in a season of
conflict in Darfur.
Strategically, the Arab-Israeli conflict has
been almost irrelevant since the end of the Cold War. And as for the
impact of the conflict on oil prices, it was powerful in 1973 when
the Saudis declared embargoes and cut production, but that was the
first and last time that the "oil weapon" was wielded. For decades
now, the largest Arab oil producers have publicly foresworn any
linkage between politics and pricing, and an embargo would be a
disaster for their oil-revenue dependent economies.
In any case, the relationship between turmoil
in the Middle East and oil prices is far from straightforward. As
Philip Auerswald recently noted in The American Interest magazine,
between 1981 and 1999 - a period when a fundamentalist regime
consolidated power in Iran, Iran and Iraq fought an eight-year war
within view of oil and gas installations, the Gulf war came and went
and the first Palestinian intifada raged - oil prices, adjusted for
inflation, actually fell. And global dependence on Middle Eastern
oil is declining: Today the region produces under 30 percent of the
world's crude oil, compared to almost 40 percent in 1974-75. In
2005, 17 percent of American oil imports came from the Gulf,
compared to 28 percent in 1975, and President George W. Bush used
his 2006 state of the union address to announce his intention of
cutting US oil imports from the Middle East by three quarters by
2025.
Yes, it would be nice if Israelis and
Palestinians could settle their differences, but it would do little
or nothing to calm the other conflicts in the Middle East from
Algeria to Iraq, or to stop Muslim-Hindu violence in Kashmir,
Muslim-Christian violence in Indonesia and the Philippines,
Muslim-Buddhist violence in Thailand, Muslim-animist violence in
Sudan, Muslim-Igbo violence in Nigeria, Muslim-Muscovite violence in
Chechnya, or the different varieties of inter-Muslim violence
between traditionalists and Islamists, and between Sunnis and
Shiites, nor would it assuage the perfectly understandable hostility
of convinced Islamists toward the transgressive West that
relentlessly invades their minds, and sometimes their countries.
Arab-Israeli catastrophism is wrong twice
over, first because the conflict is contained within rather narrow
boundaries, and second because the Levant is just not that important
any more.
The second repeated mistake is the Mussolini
syndrome. Contemporary documents prove beyond any doubt what is now
hard to credit: Serious people, including British and French
military chiefs, accepted Mussolini's claims to great power status
because they believed that he had serious armed forces at his
command. His army divisions, battleships and air squadrons were
dutifully counted to assess Italian military power, making some
allowance for their lack of the most modern weapons but not for
their more fundamental refusal to fight in earnest. Having conceded
Ethiopia to win over Mussolini, only to lose him to Hitler as soon
as the fighting started, the British discovered that the Italian
forces quickly crumbled in combat. It could not be otherwise,
because most Italian soldiers were unwilling conscripts from the
one-mule peasantry of the south or the almost equally miserable
sharecropping villages of the north.
Exactly the same mistake keeps being made by
the fraternity of Middle East experts. They persistently attribute
real military strength to backward societies whose populations can
sustain excellent insurgencies but not modern military forces.
In the 1960s, it was Gamal Abdel Nasser's
Egypt that was mistaken for a real military power just because it
had received many aircraft, tanks and guns from the Soviet Union,
and had many army divisions and air squadrons. In May 1967, on the
eve of war, many agreed with the prediction of Field Marshal
Montgomery, then revisiting the El-Alamein battlefield, that the
Egyptians would defeat the Israelis forthwith; even the more
cautious never anticipated that the former would be utterly defeated
by the latter in just a few days. In 1973, with much more drama, it
still took only three weeks to reach the same outcome.
In 1990 it was the turn of Iraq to be hugely
overestimated as a military power. Saddam Hussein had more equipment
than Nasser ever accumulated, and could boast of having defeated
much more populous Iran after eight years of war. In the months
before the Gulf war, there was much anxious speculation about the
size of the Iraqi Army - again, the divisions and regiments were
dutifully counted as if they were German divisions on the eve of
D-Day, with a separate count of the "elite" Republican Guard, not to
mention the "super-elite" Special Republican Guard - and it was
feared that Iraq's bombproof aircraft shelters and deep bunkers
would survive any air attack.
That much of this was believed at some level
we know from the magnitude of the coalition armies that were
laboriously assembled, including 575,000 US troops, 43,000 British,
14,663 French and 4,500 Canadian, and which incidentally constituted
the sacrilegious infidel presence on Arabian soil that set off Osama
bin Laden on his quest for revenge. In the event, two weeks of
precision bombing were enough to paralyze Saddam's entire war
machine, which scarcely tried to resist the ponderous ground
offensive when it came. At no point did the Iraqi Air Force try to
fight, and all those tanks that were painstakingly counted served
mostly for target practice. A real army would have continued to
resist for weeks or months in the dug-in positions in Kuwait, even
without air cover, but Saddam's army was the usual Middle Eastern
facade without fighting substance.
Now the Mussolini syndrome is at work over
Iran. All the symptoms are present, including tabulated lists of
Iran's warships, despite the fact that most are over 30 years old;
of combat aircraft, many of which (F-4s, Mirages, F-5s, F-14s) have
not flown in years for lack of spare parts; and of divisions and
brigades that are so only in name. There are awed descriptions of
the Revolutionary Guards, inevitably described as "elite," who do
indeed strut around as if they have won many a war, but who have
actually fought only one - against Iraq, which they lost. As for
Iran's claim to have defeated Israel by Hizbullah proxy in last
year's affray, the publicity was excellent but the substance went
the other way, with roughly 25 percent of the best-trained men dead,
which explains the tomb-like silence and immobility of the once
rumbustious Hizbullah ever since the cease-fire.
Then there is the new light cavalry of Iranian terrorism that is invoked to frighten us if all else fails. The usual Middle East experts now explain that if we annoy the ayatollahs, they will unleash terrorists who will devastate our lives, even though 30 years of "death to America" invocations and vast sums spent on maintaining a special international terrorism department have produced only one major bombing in Saudi Arabia, in 1996, and two in the most permissive environment of Buenos Aires, in 1992 and 1994, along with some assassinations of exiles in Europe.
Then there is the new light cavalry of Iranian terrorism that is invoked to frighten us if all else fails. The usual Middle East experts now explain that if we annoy the ayatollahs, they will unleash terrorists who will devastate our lives, even though 30 years of "death to America" invocations and vast sums spent on maintaining a special international terrorism department have produced only one major bombing in Saudi Arabia, in 1996, and two in the most permissive environment of Buenos Aires, in 1992 and 1994, along with some assassinations of exiles in Europe.
It is true enough that if Iran's nuclear
installations are bombed in some overnight raid, there is likely to
be some retaliation, but we live in fortunate times in which we have
only the irritant of terrorism instead of world wars to worry about
- and Iran's added contribution is not likely to leave much of an
impression. There may be good reasons for not attacking Iran's
nuclear sites - including the very slow and uncertain progress of
its uranium enrichment effort - but its ability to strike back is
not one of them. Even the seemingly fragile tanker traffic down the
Gulf and through the Straits of Hormuz is not as vulnerable as it
seems - Iran and Iraq have both tried to attack it many times
without much success, and this time the US Navy stands ready to
destroy any airstrip or jetty from which attacks are launched.
As for the claim that the "Iranians" are
united in patriotic support for the nuclear program, no such
nationality even exists. Out of Iran's population of 70 million or
so, 51 percent are ethnically Persian, 24 percent are Turks
("Azeris" is the regime's term), with other minorities comprising
the remaining quarter. Many of Iran's 16-17 million Turks are in
revolt against Persian cultural imperialism; its 5-6 million Kurds
have started a serious insurgency; the Arab minority detonates bombs
in Ahvaz; and Baluch tribesmen attack gendarmes and Revolutionary
Guards. If some 40 percent of the British population were engaged in
separatist struggles of varying intensity, nobody would claim that
it was firmly united around the London government. On top of this,
many of the Persian majority oppose the theocratic regime, either
because they have become post-Islamic in reaction to its many
prohibitions, or because they are Sufis, whom the regime now
persecutes almost as much as the small Bahai minority. So let us
have no more reports from Tehran stressing the country's national
unity. Persian nationalism is a minority position in a country where
half the population is not even Persian. In our times, multinational
states either decentralize or break up more or less violently; Iran
is not decentralizing, so its future seems highly predictable, while
in the present not much cohesion under attack is to be expected.
The third and greatest error repeated by
Middle East experts of all persuasions, by Arabophiles and
Arabophobes alike, by Turcologists and by Iranists, is also the
simplest to define. It is the very odd belief that these ancient
nations are highly malleable. Hard-liners keep suggesting that with
a bit of well-aimed violence ("the Arabs only understand force")
compliance will be obtained. But what happens every time is an
increase in hostility; defeat is followed not by collaboration, but
by sullen non-cooperation and active resistance too. It is not hard
to defeat Arab countries, but it is mostly useless. Violence can
work to destroy dangerous weapons but not to induce desired changes
in behavior.
Soft-liners make exactly the same mistake in
reverse. They keep arguing that if only this or that concession were
made, if only their policies were followed through to the end and
respect shown, or simulated, hostility would cease and a warm
Mediterranean amity would emerge. Yet even the most thinly qualified
of Middle East experts must know that Islam, as with any other
civilization, comprehends the sum total of human life, and that
unlike some others it promises superiority in all things for its
believers, so that the scientific and technological and cultural
backwardness of the lands of Islam generates a constantly renewed
sense of humiliation and of civilizational defeat. That fully
explains the ubiquity of Muslim violence, and reveals the futility
of the palliatives urged by the soft-liners.
The operational mistake that Middle East
experts keep making is the failure to recognize that backward
societies must be left alone, as the French now wisely leave Corsica
to its own devices, as the Italians quietly learned to do in Sicily,
once they recognized that maxi-trials merely handed over control to
a newer and smarter mafia of doctors and lawyers. With neither
invasions nor friendly engagements, the peoples of the Middle East
should finally be allowed to have their own history - the one thing
that Middle East experts of all stripes seem determined to deny
them.
That brings us to the mistake that the rest of
us make. We devote far too much attention to the Middle East, a
mostly stagnant region where almost nothing is created in science or
the arts - excluding Israel, per capita patent production of
countries in the Middle East is one fifth that of sub-Saharan
Africa. The people of the Middle East (only about 5 percent of the
world's population) are remarkably unproductive, with a high
proportion not in the labor force at all. Not many of us would care
to work if we were citizens of Abu Dhabi, with lots of oil money for
very few citizens. But Saudi Arabia's 27 million inhabitants also
live largely off the oil revenues that trickle down to them, leaving
most of the work to foreign technicians and laborers: Even with high
oil prices, Saudi Arabia's annual per capita income, at $14,000, is
only about half that of oil-free Israel.
Saudi Arabia has a good excuse, for it was a
land of oasis hand-farmers and bedouin pastoralists who cannot be
expected to become captains of industry in a mere 50 years. Much
more striking is the oil parasitism of once much more accomplished
Iran. It exports only 2.5 million barrels a day as compared to Saudi
Arabia's 8 million, yet oil still accounts for 80 percent of Iran's
exports because its agriculture and industry have become so
unproductive.
The Middle East was once the world's most
advanced region, but these days its biggest industries are
extravagant consumption and the venting of resentment. According to
the United Nations' 2004 Arab Human Development Report, the region
boasts the second lowest adult literacy rate in the world (after
sub-Saharan Africa) at just 63 percent. Its dependence on oil means
that manufactured goods account for just 17 percent of exports,
compared to a global average of 78 percent. Moreover, despite its
oil wealth, the entire Middle East generated under 4 percent of
global GDP in 2006 - less than Germany.
Unless compelled by immediate danger, we
should therefore focus on the old and new lands of creation in
Europe and America, in India and East Asia - places where
hard-working populations are looking ahead instead of dreaming of
the past.
Edward Luttwak is senior adviser at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington. This article first appeared in
the British magazine Prospect (www.prospect-
magazine.co.uk) and is published by
permission.
Tags: American, Conflict, Gulf, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Middle East, Muslim, Palestinian, War
