A reader asks why Egypt insists on tying restrictions on the Iran's nuclear
program with putting restrictions on Israel's program, including demanding
Israel join the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), that the doors to Israel's
Dimona reactor be opened to international inspectors, and that Israel must
declare that it has nuclear weapons.
The reader adds that he knows Israel won't do this so what's the point of
Egypt making a demand which makes it more likely Iran will get nuclear
weapons and thus endanger Egypt and its interests? On one level, then,
Egyptian policy doesn't make sense.
For those who don't know, by joining the NPT Treaty countries (like Iran)
have received certain benefits. In exchange, they have to submit to
inspections and basically promise not to develop nuclear weapons. Iran has
broken these commitments. Israel never made them in the first place so
Israel's actions are quite in accord with international law.
At any rate, I responded by explaining that it was easy to understand the
Egyptian government position: The regime wants everything without making any
concessions itself. That isn't just a goal; that's its negotiating position.
In addition, by putting the emphasis on Israel's arsenal-which doesn't
threaten the current regime-Cairo looks good in Arab and Muslim terms. Will
it actually work? Hey, that isn't important! It works in other ways:
strengthening the regime's credentials at home and in the region. And that's
what's important!
He responded: These despots don't seem cunning to me at all.
But that's flat wrong. They are very cunning and if you understand why and
how then you can understand the Middle East. Conversely, those who don't get
it understand nothing.
Here is the order of priorities and methods that make up what might be
called the Middle East version of pragmatism. It goes like this:
The most important priority is regime survival, which means the current
rulers staying in power. The people's well-being and country's interest is
secondary at best. To stay in power, a dictatorship needs to generate
foreign enemies, reduce freedom, and monopolize economic power. This is in
many ways the opposite of the Western democratic framework that a government
which provides freedom and material benefits is the one most likely to stay
in power.
To ensure regime survival, the dictatorship must protect its Muslim and Arab
credentials. Using these two pillars in various combinations, the rulers
mobilize the people to support them. A key way to do this is anti-Western
and anti-Israel demagoguery: the government portrays itself as a champion of
Islam and Arabism against the West.
What the West thinks or says in response is pretty unimportant to a populace
which already views those countries as enemies or the regime can ensure this
through propaganda. Suppose the United States distances itself from Israel
or Israel makes concessions, for example. How will the Arab populaces know
this? They will be told that nothing has happened, it is all a trick, or it
is far from enough. Rather than prove that they are good guys, these
developments are interpreted as merely proving they are weak and frightened.
In these dictatorships, the main purpose of the army is to support the
regime and not to threaten it with a coup. This is more important than the
military being able to win wars. The main purpose of the educational system
and media is to glorify the regime, not to improve the society and help
correct its mistakes. The main purpose of the economy is to provide the
regime with assets with which to reward friends and punish enemies, not to
create general prosperity or raise living standards.
This approach is not democratic and neither provides rapid progress or
better lives for the people. But if you start with the original
premise-keeping the regime in power comes first-everything makes sense.
Now that you've absorbed this lesson, let's move to a more advanced stage.
Here's a paraphrase of a letter from another reader which parallels the
first one:
"Given that Israel is not the only country in the Middle East that
feels threatened by Iran's nuclear ambitions, and that Israel is likely to
be the only country that has the political will to do anything about the
situation, doesn't this give Israel a considerable strategic advantage?
"It strikes me that a number of demands could be made upon Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and Jordan in exchange for Israeli action against Iran, starting
with:
"--An end to media, trade and academic boycotts against Israel
--"An end to indoctrination and propaganda
--Concrete steps to share the burden of the Palestinian refugee issue"
Now this is a very good question. But the answer is: No. Why? Because there
is very little or no give and take. If the Arab regimes get something from
Israel, they will not give anything in return (I'll qualify that point in a
second). If they don't get anything from Israel, they will not give in order
to get an advantage. They will let events go as they may.
The precise same point, by the way, applies to U.S.-Arab state relations. Of
course, the United States saved Kuwait in 1991 and Kuwait likes having U.S.
military forces around. But there has been no effort to promote pro-American
feeling or to help out much on such issues as the Arab-Israeli conflict or
the efforts to stop Iran from getting nuclear weapons.
Why is this? Are the regimes stupid? No, they are following their interests
as they perceive these things to be. Similarly, they are not irrational.
True, in the end they may pay a high cost for their policy, but up until now
they have survived pretty well. The exception is Saddam Hussein in Iraq who
just kept going too far.
Of course, too, they can expect in this case that Israel or the United
States will attack Iran for their own reasons, or at least the U.S. policy
will contain Tehran without their having to do anything. They certainly have
seen the West often desperately trying to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict
without them having to do much to help. If the West fails, the regimes can
get gifts by complaining how much they are suffering; if the West succeeds,
they don't have to do anything any way. The more you think about it, the
more sense their stance makes.
And they have another reason for acting this way: the West lets them get
away with it. When they have to choose whether to be more afraid of the
United States or their internal rivals, neighbors, and people conditioned to
accept radical ideologies, it is easy for them to pick the second option. It
is often more risky to be moderate, to work with the West, then to defy it.
Thus, being intransigent and defiant, using radical rhetoric, maintaining
hardline positions, is the rational alternative. They are acting logically.
If you tell them that they would be better off if they went to a more
Western-style system, they would reply that this is not their culture. But
there are also additional factors: their masses might not like it; their
rivals at home and abroad would take advantage of it to portray them as
traitors. The Arab elites very carefully watched what happened in the Soviet
bloc in the 1980s. The West cheered a revolution toward freedom; the Arab
regimes shivered at the thought of anarchy and their own downfall.
So, is this system pragmatic? Well yes and no. It is NOT pragmatic in terms
of keeping people happy through freedom and high living standards. It is
pragmatic in judging that demagoguery and control are alternative means of,
if not happiness, passivity or outright support for the regime. It is NOT
pragmatic in terms of maximizing material profit because that isn't the
regimes' goal. It is pragmatic in terms of its own goal: stability and
regime maintenance.
Homework: Apply this model to Palestinian politics. In this framework, why
isn't the Palestinian Authority as eager for a complete peace settlement and
an independent state through compromise as one would expect using a Western
model of politics?