By Walid Shoebat
We live in strange times. The other day I was contacted by a Syrian political commentator who comes out on Al-Jazeera and other outlets in the Middle East. During the Skype interview I was curious asking him as to what do you have to do with me, that from a Middle Eastern perspective, I have leporsy since “I am pro-Israel” to which he replied “who cares, Israel is the last thing on our minds, the threat is not Israel but the Islamists”. It is rather strange that in Egypt and “Syria many scholars like the name Shoebat”, he tells me.
I feel like Joseph that after years of being thrown into a well, my brethren and I found some reconciliation which I believe in the end they will see why I love the Bible which the Syrian began even quoting Jeremiah and John of Damascus, telling me that many are converting out of Islam to other religions. The Jews in Syria and the Copts under Al-Sisi in Egypt are protected and is why I am pro-Assisi and Bashar.
I keep telling folks that God is in control and He will move the nations to eventually be cornered to love what He loves. The Jews will eventually believe in His Son and the anti-Jew will eventually dance in Jerusalem in obedience to the King of Kings and The Lord of Lords.
What is happening in the Middle East is that anti-Islamists see much in common with the Jews in Israel and that the way to peace and reconciliation is contrary to the policies of the Obama Administration who think that peace comes by removing Arab dictators and reversing Sykes Picot. The Middle East has enjoyed decades of western style civilization which is all being threatened with the rise of Islamism.
And while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu may have looked like he stood alone at the podium as he addressed Congress this week, Arab leaders from Saudi Arabia to Egypt supported Netanyahu since a nuclear deal with Iran would dangerously empower an Iranian regime already in full expansion mode.
Already alarmed at the gains the Shiite government in Tehran is making in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and now apparently in Yemen, Sunni Arab leaders worry that an American accord with Iran on its nuclear program will seal the deal on a decade of expanding Iranian influence.
In the potential terms of the deal, they see the seeds for a nuclear arms race in the region and the signs that America is growing tired of its role in the Middle East and is wanting to shift its focus to Asia.
And I do not stand on this view alone. James Phillips, senior research fellow for Middle Eastern affairs at the Heritage Foundation in Washington said “The focus has been on Netanyahu and his concerns about a nuclear deal, as if he were the only one, but the Arabs are increasingly alarmed at the prospect of a flawed nuclear deal and what that would mean for the region.”
That “alarm” has sharpened in recent months with the growing perception among Arabs that the Obama administration sees Iran as a “useful ally” in the fight against the Islamic State, Mr. Phillips says.
“They’re worried the US will increasingly turn a blind eye to Iran’s subversive activities in the region,” he adds, “and that a deal could lead to a US-Iran rapprochement that would downgrade the Gulf Arabs in general, but especially the Saudis, in Washington’s estimation.”
Secretary of State John Kerry was dispatched to address those worries as he met Thursday with Saudi and other Gulf leaders gathered in Riyadh. Secretary Kerry flew to the Saudi capital from Geneva, where he once again had extensive talks with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on each side’s requirements for reaching a nuclear deal.
The Sunni Arabs may not like the idea of Tehran being left in possession of any nuclear program. But even more worrisome for them, some regional experts say, are the implications of an accord that gradually lifts the harsh economic sanctions that have placed some limits on Iranian ambitions.
President Obama’s quest for a deal is viewed in many Arab capitals as not just a green light to Tehran, but also a symbol of his much-discussed “pivot” to Asia. In their eyes, it would be part of a historic shift away from a United States-Arab front to confront Iranian expansionist ambitions that took hold after the Iranian revolution in 1979.
Sunni Arab leaders have never forgotten that in the early days of the Islamic republic the Ayatollah Khomeini railed against them and said they should all be replaced, notes Richard Murphy, a career Mideast diplomat and former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Syria.
“It may have been a case of tremendous hyperbole when Netanyahu said in his speech that Iran has taken over Baghdad, Damascus, Beirut and Sanaa, but there’s no question it resonates,” Mr. Murphy says. “It rings a familiar bell in Jordan, it speaks to the concerns across the region that [the Iranians] are ‘out to surround us.’ ”
So here is a Jew, and contrary to propaganda and conspiracy theorists, Netanyahu was speaking out for Arabs. Mr. Obama is clearly aware of the regional concerns, and he hastened to address them in comments following Netanyahu’s speech. Speaking at the White House Tuesday during a meeting with Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, Obama said no one is downplaying Iran’s “ambitions when it comes to territory or terrorism.” But he argued that failure to lock Iran in a deal that prevents it from getting a nuclear weapon “would make it far more dangerous and give it scope for even greater action in the region.”
Administration officials also like to point out that it was the previous president who did more to empower Iran by toppling Iraq’s Saddam Hussein and opening the way to Iran’s growing influence in Baghdad.
One further concern for the region – addressed by Netanyahu – is that the deal might allow the Iran nuclear program to continue uranium enrichment (a process that delivers fuel for nuclear energy and medical procedures, but also potentially for nuclear weapons). If this is the case, it might spawn a nuclear race in the region.
It is a “worry of long standing,” says Murphy, the former diplomat.
But a deal that amounted to a de facto recognition of Iran as a “nuclear threshold state” would “encourage other states in the region – from Turkey to Saudi Arabia and Egypt – to launch their own programs.”
Yet as troubling as the prospect of an expansionist Iran with the legitimacy of a nuclear deal would be, there is an even bigger worry for Arab states, some experts say: that America that is gradually disengaging from the region.
“I don’t doubt the Sunni Arabs have deep concerns about seeing Iran with a nuclear capability,” Murphy says, “but I think it’s pretty clear that the overarching worry is about the constancy of the United States and its relationship with the region.”
The Gulf Arabs grew accustomed to a relationship with the US based on oil and security, he says, but now they see the US turning away from the Middle East, setting its sights elsewhere, and developing its own sources of energy so that it is no longer dependent on the region.
“All of this has [the Sunni Arabs] asking the US, ‘How long are you going to stay with us?’ ” Murphy says. With the same anxieties that have riddled the relationship for years now exacerbated by the Iran negotiations, he adds, “I know they are going to be looking for more from the Obama administration that assurances of loving attention and ‘Let’s stay in touch.’ ”
The Obama Administration turned everything upside down in the Middle East. In the good old days, a Jew in Egypt can become a star and the classical west permeated Arab culture. Layla Murad, a Jewess who became famous in Egypt and her songs were even translated to Hebrew:
“In that day shall there be a highway out of Egypt to Assyria, and the Assyrian shall come into Egypt, and the Egyptian into Assyria, and the Egyptians shall serve with the Assyrians. In that day shall Israel be the third with Egypt and Assyria, even a blessing in the midst of the land” Whom the Lord of hosts shall bless, saying, Blessed be Egypt, my people, and Assyria the work of My hands, and Israel mine inheritance.” – Isaiah 19:23-25
SOURCES
Christian Science Monitor