[lit-ideas] NYT Select-Koppel on ME region

  • From: Carol Kirschenbaum <carolkir@xxxxxxxx>
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 21 Jul 2006 08:05:41 -0700

Look What Democratic Reform Dragged In
By TED KOPPEL
Published: July 21, 2006
The United States is already at war with Iran; but for the time being the 
battle is being fought through surrogates.

That message was conveyed to me recently by a senior Jordanian intelligence 
official at his office in Amman. He spoke on the condition of anonymity, 
reflecting gloomily on the failure of the Bush administration's various 
policies in the region.
He reserved his greatest contempt for the policy of encouraging democratic 
reform. "For the Islamic fundamentalists, democratic reform is like toilet 
paper," he said. "You use it once and then you throw it away."

Lest the point elude me, the official conducted a brief tour of recent 
democratic highlights in the region. Gaza and the West Bank, where Hamas, 
spurned by the State Department as a terrorist organization, was voted into 
power last spring and now represents the Palestinian government; Lebanon, 
where Hezbollah, similarly rejected by the United States, has become the 
most influential political entity in the country; and, of course, Iraq, 
where the Shiite majority has now, through elections, gained political power 
commensurate with its numbers.

In each case, the intelligence officer reminded me, the beneficiary of those 
electoral victories is allied with and, to some degree, dependent upon Iran. 
Over the past couple of months alone, he told me, Hamas has received more 
than $300 million in cash, provided by Iran and funneled through Syria. He 
told me what has now become self-evident to the residents of Haifa: namely, 
that Iran has made longer-range and more powerful rockets and missiles 
available to Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. We'll come back to the subject 
of Iraq.

Only a couple of days after my meeting in Amman, I visited a 
then-superficially peaceful Lebanon, where I was introduced to Sheik Nabil 
Qaouk, the commander of Hezbollah forces in the southern part of the 
country. Sheik Qaouk, who also holds the title of general, wears the robes 
and turban of a Shiite religious leader. Indeed, he studied religion for 
more than 10 years in the Iranian holy city of Qom. He received his military 
training in Iran and his wife and six children still live there.

Sheik Qaouk portrayed Hezbollah as being a purely defensive, Lebanese 
entity. But the more than 12,000 missiles and rockets that the sheik said 
were in Hezbollah's arsenal were largely provided by Iran.

I asked about those newer, longer-range rockets mentioned by my Jordanian 
intelligence source. The sheik implicitly acknowledged their existence, but 
refused to talk about their capacities, with which the world has since 
become familiar. "Let our enemies worry," he said.

When Sheik Qaouk talked about Israel and Hezbollah, his organization's 
ambitions were not framed in purely defensive terms. There is only harmony 
between Hezbollah's endgame and the more provocative statements made over 
the past year by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran's president. Both foresee the 
elimination of the Jewish state.

Are the Israelis over-reacting in Lebanon? Perhaps they simply perceive 
their enemies' intentions with greater clarity than most. It is not the 
Lebanese who make the Israelis nervous, nor even Hezbollah. It is the 
puppet-masters in Tehran capitalizing on every opportunity that democratic 
reform presents. In the Palestinian territories, in Lebanon, in Egypt, 
should President Hosni Mubarak be so incautious as to hold a free election, 
it is the Islamists who benefit the most.

But Washington's greatest gift to the Iranians lies next door in Iraq. By 
removing Saddam Hussein, the United States endowed the majority Shiites with 
real power, while simultaneously tearing down the wall that had kept Iran in 
check.

According to the Jordanian intelligence officer, Iran is reminding America's 
traditional allies in the region that the United States has a track record 
of leaving its friends in the lurch - in Vietnam in the 70's, in Lebanon in 
the 80's, in Somalia in the 90's.

In his analysis, the implication that this decade may witness a precipitous 
American withdrawal from Iraq has begun to produce an inclination in the 
region toward appeasing Iran.

It is in Iraq, he told me, "where the United States and the coalition forces 
must confront the Iranians.'' He added, "You must build up your forces in 
Iraq and you must announce your intention to stay."

Sitting in his Amman office, he appeared to be a man of few illusions; so he 
did not make the recommendation with any great hope that his advice would be 
followed. But neither did he leave any doubts as to which country would 
benefit if that advice happened to be ignored.

Ted Koppel is a contributing columnist for The Times and the managing editor 
of the Discovery Channel.




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