As the international media is mesmerized by the
Islamic State’s advance on Kobani or ‘Ayn al-Arab on the Syrian-Turkish border,
Arab states and the United States would need to look beyond Kobani’s fate and
the Islamic State’s territorial successes and defeats. The crumbling Levant
poses a greater danger than IS and must be addressed — first and foremost by
the states of the region.
The British colonial term Levant encompasses
modern-day Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Palestine, with a total population
of over 70 million people. The population — mostly young, unemployed or
underemployed, poor, and inadequately educated — has lost trust in their
leaders and the governing elites.
The Levant has become a bloody playground for other
states in the greater Middle East, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the
UAE, Iran, and Turkey. While dislocations in the Levant could be contained, the
regional states’ involvement has transformed the area into an international
nightmare. The resulting instability will impact the region for years to come
regardless of IS’s short-term fortunes.
The Levantine state has become marginalized and ineffectual in charting
a hopeful future for its people, who are drifting away from nationalist
ideologies toward more divisive, localized, and often violent, manifestations
of identity politics. National political identity, with which citizens in the
Levant have identified for decades, has devolved mostly into tribal, ethnic,
geographic, and sectarian identities. The crumbling state structure and authority
gave rise to these identities, thereby fueling the current conflicts, which in
turn are undermining the very existence of the Levantine state.
The three key non-state actors — IS, Hezbollah, and Hamas — have been
the beneficiaries of the crumbling states, which were drawn up by colonial
cartographer-politicians a century ago.
Although the so-called deep security state has been able to maintain a
semblance of order around the national capital, the state’s control of
territories beyond the capital is fading and is rapidly being contested by
non-state actors.
This phenomenon is readily apparent in Baghdad, Damascus, Ramallah, and
Gaza, partially so in Beirut, and less so in Amman. Salafi groups, however, are
lurking in the background in Jordan, Lebanon, and Palestine ready to challenge
state authority whenever they sense a power vacuum.
Political systems in the Levant are often propped up by domestic ruling
elites, regional states, and foreign powers for a variety of parochial and
transnational interests. More and more, these ruling structures appear to be
relics of the past. A key analytic question is how long would they survive if
outside economic, military and political support dries up?
Levant regimes comprise a monarchy in Jordan; a perennially dysfunctional
parliamentary/presidential system in Lebanon; a brutal, teetering dictatorship
in Syria; an autocratic presidency in Palestine; and an erratic partisan
democracy in Iraq. They have subsisted on so-called rentier or “rent” economies
— oil in Iraq, with the rest dependent on foreign aid. Providers of such aid
have included GCC countries, Iran, Turkey, the United States, the EU, Russia,
and others.
Corruption is rampant across most state institutions in the Levant,
including the military and the key financial and banking systems. For example,
billions of dollars in US aid to Iraq following the 2003 invasion have not been
accounted for. According to the New York Times, American investigators in the
past decade have traced huge sums of this money to a bunker in Lebanon.
The collapse of the Levant states in the next decade is not unthinkable.
Their borders are already becoming more blurred and porous. The decaying
environment is allowing violent groups to operate more freely within states and
across state boundaries. IS is causing havoc in Iraq and Syria and potentially
could destabilize Jordan and Lebanon precisely because the Levantine state is
on the verge of collapse.
As these states weaken, regional powers — especially Saudi Arabia plus
some of its GCC junior partners, Iran, and Egypt — will find it convenient to
engage in proxy sectarian and ethnic wars through jihadist and other vigilante
mercenaries.
Equally disturbing is that US policy toward a post-IS Levant seems
rudderless without a strategic compass to guide it. It’s as if US policymakers
have no stomach to focus on the “morning after” despite the fact that the
airstrikes are proving ineffective in halting IS’s territorial advances. Kobani
aside, what should the Arab states and the United States do about the future of
the Levant?
1. If the Sunnis and Kurds are to be represented across all state
institutions in Iraq, regional states with Washington’s help should urge Prime
Minister Abadi to complete the formation of his new government on the basis of
equity and fairness. Government and semi-public institutions and agencies must
be made accountable and transparent and subject to scrutiny by domestic and
international regulatory bodies. Otherwise, Iraq would remain a breeding ground
for terrorists and jihadists.
2. If Washington remains committed to Assad’s removal, it should end its
Russian roulette charade toward the Syrian dictator. Ankara’s view that Assad
is more dangerous in the long run than IS is convincing and should be accepted
and acted upon. If removing Assad remains a serious policy objective, is the
coalition contemplating imposing a no-fly zone and a security zone on Syria’s
northern border to facilitate Assad’s downfall?
3. If Hezbollah and other political parties do not play a constructive
role in re-establishing political dialogue and stability in Lebanon, it won’t
be long before the IS wars enter the country. Are there regional and
international pressures being put on Hezbollah to end its support of Assad and
disengage from fighting in Syria? The upcoming presidential election would be a
useful barometer to assess the key Lebanese stakeholders’ commitment to
long-term stability. If no candidate wins a majority, does Washington, in
conjunction with its Arab allies, have a clear plan to get the Lebanese parliament
to vote for a president?
4 . If the Obama administration urges Israel to facilitate a working
environment for the Palestinian national unity government, to end its siege of
Gaza, and dismantle its 47-year occupation, Palestine would no longer be an
incubator of radical ideologies. An occupied population living in poverty,
unemployment, alienation, repression, daily humiliation, and hopelessness and
ruled by a corrupt regime is rarely prone to moderation and peaceful dialogue.
On the contrary, such a population offers fertile recruiting ground for
extremism.
5. It is in the United States’ interest to engage Iran and Saudi Arabia
— the two countries that seem to meddle most in the Levant — in order to stop
their proxy wars in the region. These sectarian wars could easily lead to an
all-out military confrontation, which would surely suck in the United States
and other Western powers. Israel would not be able to escape such a conflict
either. The Saudi government claims that it opposes IS. Yet one would ask why
hasn’t the Saudi clerical establishment denounced — forcefully and publicly —
the IS ideology and rejected so-called Islamic State Caliphate? Why is it that
thousands of IS jihadists are from Saudi Arabia and neighbouring Gulf
countries?
6. Since Levant countries face high unemployment, it’s imperative to
pursue serious job creation initiatives. Arab states, with Washington’s
support, should begin massive technical and vocational education programs and
entrepreneurial initiatives in the Levant countries. Young men and women should
be trained in vocational institutes, much like the two-year college concept in
the United States.
Vocational fields that suffer from shortages in Levant countries include
plumbing, carpentry, home construction, electricity, welding, mechanics,
automotive services, truck driving, computers and electronics, health services,
hotels and tourism, technology management, and TV and computer repairs.
In addition to vocational training, wealthy Arab countries should help
the Levant establish funds for entrepreneurial, job-creation initiatives, and
start-ups. A partnership between government and the private sector, with
support from the US and other developed countries, could be the engine that
drives a new era of job creation and economic growth in the region where the IS
cancer is metastasizing.
Let’s be clear, the United States has significant leverage to help
implement these policies should American leaders decide to do so. One could ask
why should the US make such a commitment? If IS is primarily a threat to
Levantine countries, why can’t they deal with it?
These are fair questions but, as we have discovered with Ebola, what
happens in Liberia doesn’t stay in Liberia. A crumbling Levant will have
ramifications not just for the region but for the United States and the rest of
the world as well.
Emile Nakhleh is a research professor at the University of New Mexico, a
member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and author of “A Necessary
Engagement: Reinventing America’s Relations with the Muslim World.”
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