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Indian Express: 'Mayhem without a Mastermind'

Jueves, 17 Diciembre 2015 Image Credit: Reuters

Iman Foundation Advisory Board Member Chinmaya Gharekhan has written an article for 'The Indian Express' entitled "Mayhem without a Mastermind', which looks at the connection between Saudi-Iranian rivalry and Sunni-Shia conflict in West Asia.

Ambassador Gharekhan has had a long and distinguished career in the Indian Foreign Service as well as in the United Nations as Under Secretary General and Senior Advisor to the Secretary General.

He was Chairman of International Commission for Supervision and Control in Laos and India’s Ambassador in Vietnam from 1973-76. He served as India’s Permanent Representative to the U.N. Offices in Geneva from 1977-1980. He was foreign affairs advisor to Prime Ministers Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi between 1981-1986. Thereafter, he served as India’s Ambassador to the U.N. in New York from 1986-1992. During that period he represented India in the Security Council where he served twice as President. He was appointed Under Secretary General and Senior Advisor to the Secretary General in January 1993 and served as his personal representative to the Security Council. He lived in Gaza city for 2 ½ years from 1997-1999 as UN Special Coordinator for Occupied Territories.

He served as Special Envoy of India for West Asia from 2005-2009. At present, he is President of the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts, New Delhi, a pre-eminent institute devoted to research and publication of India’s cultural heritage.

Ambassador Gharekhan is the author of the widely acclaimed book “The Horseshoe Table: An inside view of the UN Security Council”. He comments regularly on foreign policy issues in Indian and international media.

THE INDIAN EXPRESS

'Mayhem without a Mastermind'

Tony Blair, former prime minister of Britain and former envoy of the Quartet on the Middle East, recently made an extraordinary statement. He said that even so many years after the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq in 2003, he believed Iraq was better off today than it was in Saddam Hussein’s time. Blair seems to think that the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians in the aftermath of the intervention, the 4,000 American and many British casualties, and reigniting of the somewhat dormant sectarian tensions between the Shias and Sunnis in West Asia is a preferable situation to the state of affairs during Saddam’s time. And what about the quarter-million Syrians who have lost their lives in the Syrian civil war that is the direct consequence of the emergence of the Islamic State (IS), and the Shia-Sunni conflict, which in turn was the direct consequence of the invasion?

It is essential to recall these facts at present because of the turmoil that has enveloped the region, and that is now threatening peace and harmony in countries beyond West Asia. All this is the direct consequence of the events of the spring of 2003. The world sympathises and stands in solidarity with the people of France, who have been traumatised by the murderous attacks in Paris on November 13. The Parisians are bouncing back, as did the people of Mumbai after 26/11. The French — and Belgian — security agencies are looking for the “masterminds” behind the attacks, and have succeeded in eliminating at least one of them.

The phenomenon of the mastermind needs a closer look. There is always a mastermind behind a mastermind. Thus, for example, there is a mastermind behind Abdelhamid Abaaoud. But who is the mastermind behind that mastermind? Who was the original mastermind? For an answer to this question, one has to go back to the 2003 intervention in Iraq.

The executors of the 2003 plan were then US President George W. Bush and Blair, but they were not the masterminds. There was not one single mastermind or a secret group. The people who masterminded the invasion were collectively known as “neocons”, or neoconservatives in the US who, in turn, were motivated or goaded by the Jewish lobby, working at the behest of Israel. Saddam had launched missiles against Tel Aviv and other areas in Israel during the first Gulf War of 1991, creating a wave of panic among the people of Israel, forcing many of them to wear gas masks as a precaution against a possible chemical attack. Israel had every justification to want to get rid of Saddam; it managed to do so in 2003 with the help of the neocons.

The Syrian civil war similarly does not have one single mastermind responsible for it. It is the sectarian factor that has pushed the country into this carnage and bloodletting. The existence of a Shia-minority regime in Damascus, which has refused to be respectful to the leading Sunni power, has been anathema to the Sunni states in the region. The Arab Spring of 2010-11 provided an excellent opportunity for them to try to overthrow the regime. However genuine the initial protests in Syria calling for reform,

the movement was hijacked by the Brotherhood and other, even more radical elements. Israel and Saudi Arabia became close allies, each with its own agenda; Israel wanting to get rid of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for security reasons, and the Saudis for sectarian reasons. In Syria, it is the regional powers that have pulled in external players. A Sunni coalition is fighting a Shia coalition, each coalition being supported by powerful non-regional powers.

The US, having displeased its two closest allies in the region on the Iran nuclear deal, had to respond to the calls for a more assertive stance on Assad. Having made the huge mistake of making Assad’s removal the sole objective, the policy only further fuelled the civil war and empowered the extremists. The entry of Russia on Assad’s side seems to be helping the US to correct the balance in its approach and has concentrated minds on finding a political solution that will keep Assad in power for an indeterminate period. There is a difference in Russia’s and Iran’s attitude towards Assad. Russia might not be averse to Assad being replaced by someone else in due course, but Iran would not like to see Assad toppled because of sectarian considerations. Iran will go much further than Russia to protect Assad.

US Secretary of State John Kerry is engaged in persuading his Gulf allies to agree to the interim steps that have been agreed to in Vienna. Saudi Arabia will find it hard to swallow the bitter pill of acquiescing to Assad’s survival for at least a few more months, which could extend to years. The objective of destroying the IS, which has gained tremendous support following the Paris attacks, has had the unintended result of bringing rival coalitions together, the clear beneficiary of which is Assad. Whether or not the IS can be destroyed forever is debatable; certainly its ideology will survive any military setbacks that it might suffer. The Shia-Sunni tension, which is at the root of it all, can only be contained if there is a grand reconciliation between the leaders of the respective coalitions, Iran and Saudi Arabia. As of now, that seems highly unlikely.

The writer, a former diplomat, was special envoy to the Middle East.

- See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/mayhem-without-a-mastermind/#sthash.ZZkdk0pw.dpuf

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