The
Natural Map of the Middle East
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Is
Mitt Being Neoconned Into War?
"Apart from
political maps of mankind, there are natural maps of mankind. ...
One of the first laws of political stability is to draw your political
boundaries along the lines of the natural map of mankind."
So wrote H.G.
Wells in What
Is Coming: A Forecast of Things to Come After the War in
the year of Verdun and the Somme Offensive.
In redrawing
the map of Europe, however, the statesmen of Versailles ignored
Wells and parceled out Austrians, Hungarians, Germans and other
nationalities to alien lands to divide, punish and weaken the defeated
peoples.
So doing they
set the table for a second world war.
The Middle
East was sliced up along lines set down in the secret Sykes-Picot
agreement. But with the Islamic awakening and Arab Spring toppling
regimes, the natural map of the Middle East seems now to be asserting
itself.
Sunni and Shia
align with Sunni and Shia, as Protestants and Catholics did in 17th-century
Europe. Ethiopia and Sudan split. Mali and Nigeria may be next.
While world attention is focused on Aleppo and when Bashar Assad
might fall, Syria itself may be about to disintegrate p.
In Syria's
northeast, a Kurdish minority of 2 to 3 million with ethnic ties
to Iraqi Kurdistan and 15 million Kurds in Turkey seems to be dissolving
its ties to Damascus. A Kurdish nation carved out of Syria, Iraq,
Turkey and Iran would appear to be a casus belli for all four nations.
Yet in any natural map of the world, there would be a Kurdistan.
The Sunni four-fifths
of the Syrian population seems fated to rise and the Muslim Brotherhood
to rule, as happened in Egypt. The fall of Assad and his Shia Alawite
minority would be celebrated by the Sunni across the border in Iraq's
Anbar province, who would then have a powerful new ally in any campaign
to recapture Sunni lands lost to Iraqi Shia.
With its recent
murderous attacks inside Iraq, al-Qaida seems to be instigating
a new Sunni-Shia war to tear Iraq apart.
The fall of
the Alawites in Damascus would end the dream of a Shia crescent
– Iran, Iraq, Syria and Hezbollah – leave Hezbollah isolated, and
conceivably lead to a renewal of Lebanon's sectarian and civil war.
The losers
in all this? Certainly Iran, which seems fated to lose its only
Arab ally, Syria, and its land link to Hezbollah.
That would
make Israel a winner. But Israel's situation appears more perilous
than it was a decade ago.
In Egypt, the
Muslim Brotherhood has replaced Hosni Mubarak, who kept the peace
in Sinai and the lid on Hamas. Recently, new Egyptian President
Mohamed Mursi met with Hamas' Khaled Meshaal at the presidential
palace in Cairo. The Sinai is becoming a no man's land where terrorists
plot and Africans cross to Israel.
To Israel's
east, there is no true peace with the Palestinians, and the Jordanian
throne has rarely been shakier. On the Golan Heights, quiet for
decades, the future may see Syrian troops loyal to a militant Sunni
regime in Damascus. Hezbollah sits on Israel's northern border.
Beyond is a Turkey no longer friendly.
Israel is blaming
the atrocity in Bulgaria, in which Israeli tourists were massacred,
on Iran. But neither the Bulgarians nor the Americans appear to
know who did it. And why would the Iranians, who, following the
slaughter, publicly denounced such atrocities against civilians,
do it?
Were an Iranian
hand to be found in this act of barbarism, it would give Israel
justification for an attack, igniting a war in which America could
be dragged in.
Why would
Iran want a war with the United States when that would mean destruction
of its air force, navy, missile force and nuclear program, a crippling
blockade and perhaps destruction of its vital oil facilities on
Kharg Island?
Whoever was
behind the attack on the Israeli tourists seems to want a war between
the Jewish state of Israel and the Shia state of Iran.
Who would
benefit from such a war?
Answer: Al-Qaida,
which, during the Iraq War, urged the United States to bomb Iran
back to the Stone Age. An al-Qaida affiliate has also attacked Israeli
vacationers before, at Egyptian resorts on the Gulf of Aqaba.
"There
is an international plot against Gulf states in particular and Arab
countries in general ... to take over our fortunes," says Dubai's
chief of police. "I had no idea that there is this large number
of Muslim Brotherhood in the Gulf states."
What is al-Qaida's
goal? Ignite Sunni-Shia wars and Muslim-Christian clashes in Arab
states. Draw in the Americans to smash Iran. And when the Sunni
are ascendant, expel the Americans and Christians, isolate Israel
and set about creating the caliphate of Osama bin Laden's dream.
If a U.S.
war on Iran is good for al-Qaida, how can it be good or us?
August
7, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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