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           |  | 
 Russia in the Middle East:
 Return of a 
	Superpower?
 
 By Eric Walberg
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 14, 2012 
 The US "withdrawal" from Iraq last year and the planned 
	"withdrawal" from Afghanistan in 2014 cannot help but change the face of 
	Central Asia and the Middle East. But how does Russia fit in, asks Eric 
	Walberg
 The world is living through a veritable slow-motion earthquake. 
	If things go according to plan, the US obsession with Afghanistan and Iraq 
	will soon be one of those ugly historical disfigurements that -- at least 
	for most Americans -- will disappear into the memory hole.
 
 Like 
	Nixon and Vietnam, US President Barack Obama will be remembered as the 
	president who "brought the troops home". But one cannot help but notice the 
	careful calibration of these moves to fit the US domestic political machine 
	-- the Iraqi move to show Americans that things on the international front 
	are improving (just don't mention Guantanamo), the Afghan move put off 
	conveniently till President Barack Obama's second term, when he doesn't need 
	to worry about the fallout electorally if things unravel (which they surely 
	will).
 
 Of course, Russia lost big time geopolitically when the US 
	invaded Afghanistan, and thus gains as regional geopolitical hegemon by the 
	withdrawal of US troops from Central Asia. Just look at any map. But 
	American tentacles will remain: Central Asia has no real alternative 
	economically or politically anymore to the neoliberal global economy, as 
	Russia no longer claims to represent a socialist alternative to imperialism. 
	The departure of US troops and planes from remote Kyrgyzstan will not be 
	missed -- except for the hole it leaves in the already penurious Kyrgyz 
	government's budget and foreign currency reserves. Russia is a far weaker 
	entity than the Soviet Union, both economically and politically. Thus, 
	Russia's gain from US weakness is not great.
 
 Besides, both Russia 
	and the US support the current Afghan government against the Taliban -- as 
	does Iran. In fact, in case US state department and pentagon officials 
	haven't noticed the obvious, the main beneficiary of the US invasions of 
	Afghanistan and Iraq has been Iran, again by definition. The invasion 
	brought to power the ethnic Persian Tajiks in Afghanistan, and the invasion 
	of Iraq set up a Shia-dominated government there.
 
 Similarly, when 
	the US invaded Iraq, Russia lost politically and economically. The US 
	cancelled Sadam Hussein's state debts, which hurt the Russians and Europeans 
	but not the US. The US just happened to be boycotting Iraq for the previous 
	decade and took pleasure from shafting its sometime allies for ignoring US 
	wishes. However, once Iraqi politicians begin to reassert some control over 
	their foreign policy, Russia will be seen as a much more sympathetic partner 
	internationally.
 
 Ironically, on many fronts, Iran now holds the key 
	to readjusting the political playing field and establishing rules that can 
	lead away from the deadly game being played by the US, including in 
	Afghanistan, Iraq, with broader implications for broader nuclear 
	disarmament, EU-US relations, but above all, for the continued role of the 
	dollar as world reserve currency. This encourages Russia to maintain its 
	alliance with Iran over vague (and empty) promises of US-Russian world 
	hegemony as envisioned by the now-discredited Medvedev Atlantists in Moscow.
 
 Russia’s relations with both Central Asia and the Middle East since the 
	collapse of the Soviet Union have been low key. In the Middle East, it 
	maintains relations with Palestine's Hamas, and, as a member of the 
	so-called quartet of Middle East negotiators (along with the EU, the US and 
	the UN), insists that Israel freeze expansion of settlements in the Occupied 
	Territories as a condition of further talks. It appears to be trying to 
	regain some of the goodwill that existed between the Soviet Union and Arab 
	states, supporting the UN Goldstone Report which accused Israel of war 
	crimes in its 2008 invasion of Gaza.
 
 It embarked on a diplomatic 
	offensive with Arab states in 2008, offering Syria and Egypt nuclear power 
	stations, and is re-establishing a military presence in the Mediterranean at 
	the Syrian port, Tartus, though Syria's current civil war, with Russia and 
	Iran lined up against the West and the Arab states could leave Russia on the 
	losing side. Western attempts to portray Russia as the power-hungry bad guy 
	in Syria do not hold water. Russia is concerned about heightened civil war 
	in an evenly divided population, with rebel groups openly armed by Syrian 
	President Bashar Al-Assad's Arab and Western foes. The hypocrisy in the Arab 
	world is appalling: Gulf monarchies and Saudi Arabia loudly demand that 
	Egypt's new government swear off any attempt to "interfere" in their 
	internal politics, but brazenly arm Syrian rebels.
 
 Russia is still 
	struggling to leave its own tragic civil war in Chechnya behind, and to make 
	sure there's a place at the table for its Muslims. With its 16 million 
	Muslims (about 12 per cent of the population), it has expressed interest in 
	joining the Organization of Islamic Conference. Its unwillingness to let 
	Syria slide into civil war does not gain it any brownie points among its own 
	separatist Muslims in the Caucasus and elsewhere, but it is not willing to 
	carve up either Syria or the Russian federation in the interests of some 
	fleeting peace.
 
 The importance of Jewish financial and economic 
	interests in post-Soviet Russia -- both the banking and industrial oligarchs 
	and the Kosher Nostra mafia -- ensures that Israel gets a sympathetic 
	hearing from Russian leaders. Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman is 
	a Russian Jew who emigrated from the Soviet Union in 1978.
 
 Israel 
	is also able to take advantage of the persistence of Muslim unrest and 
	dreams of independence in the Caucasus within Russia to prevent Moscow from 
	taking any strong position to pressure Israel. Russia's prickly neighbor 
	Georgia harbors Chechen rebels and Georgia’s president, Mikheil Saakashvili, 
	uses Israeli and US military advisers. Of course, the US benefits from 
	Israeli pressures on Russia. This is a key feature of the current Great 
	Game, where the US and Israel act as the new imperial "centre".
 
 It 
	is popular to call this era a new Cold War. However, history never repeats 
	itself. There certainly is a new tension in world politics following 9/11, 
	and the failure of the newly aggressive US to successfully assert its 
	hegemony around the world, including Russia, keeps the fires of chauvinism 
	hot in the US. On the US right, Russia is seen merely as the Soviet Union 
	reborn, a ruse to hide the KGB's agenda of world communist control. For the 
	saner Obamites, it is a more diffused Cold War, dominated by a new 
	US-Israeli imperial centre, the "empire-and-a-half", with shifting alliances 
	of convenience, though with a strong, new opposition player on the horizon 
	-- a savvier, more articulate Islamic world, with Iran, Turkey and Egypt in 
	the first rank.
 
 The desire by both the US and Israel to overthrow 
	the Iranian government is now the only common goal left in this 
	“empire-and-a-half”, but it is a common goal only because Israel is in the 
	driver’s seat. Israel resents Iran as an existential threat not to Israel 
	itself, but to Greater Israel and regional domination. Iran serves as a 
	powerful example, a third way for Muslim countries, and is most definitely a 
	rival to Israel as Middle East hegemon.
 
 Among the new Arab Spring 
	governments, it is only Egypt's that worries Israel. Just imagine if Egypt 
	and Iran start to cooperate. Add in Shia-dominated Iraq, Turkey and Russia, 
	as Russia has good relations with all four, and common objects on the 
	international scene. Suddenly the Middle East playing field takes on a 
	totally different appearance.
 
 A rational US policy to join with 
	Russia and China to accommodate Iran could save the teetering dollar, or at 
	least give the US a chance to prepare for an orderly transition to a new 
	international currency. If Russia, China and Iran defuse the current nuclear 
	crisis between the US and Iran peacefully, with a nod to Turkey and a 
	resolve to make Israel join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, this could 
	pave the way for a new Eurasian playing field. If and when the US withdraws 
	from Afghanistan, Pakistan and India will be drawn in as well.
 
 This 
	would set off a chain of events that could change the whole nature of the 
	current Great Game leading to a Russia-India-Iran-China axis 
	(Russia-India-China summits have already been held yearly since 2001), 
	leaving Pakistan, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Israel to sort out their regional 
	conflicts outside of a new, very different great game. US interests would be 
	considered but without US diktat, forcing, or rather allowing the US to put 
	its own house in order. Iran would finally be accepted as the legitimate 
	regional player that it is. If the US cannot bring itself to make a graceful 
	exit from its self-imposed crisis in the region, this will only accelerate 
	its decline.
 
 Russia inherits fond memories across the Middle East 
	region as the anti-Zionist Soviet Union’s successor. It now has the chance 
	to gain long-term credibility as a principled partner not only in the Middle 
	East but to non-aligned countries everywhere, and should hold the fort, the 
	anti-imperial one, against what's left of (only remaining American) Empire.
 Eric Walberg is the author of Postmodern 
	Imperialism: Geopolitics and the Great Games  http://claritypress.com/Walberg.html. 
	He can be reached at 
	http://ericwalberg.com/.
 
 
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