• United States
    Middle East Matters This Week: Syria’s Negotiations, Egypt’s Violence, and Turkey’s Politics
    Significant Developments Syria. The Assad regime provided documents yesterday about its chemical weapons stockpile in the first day of Damascus meetings with the nineteen member advance team from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). The team called the Syrian government’s move “promising,” and said it hopes to begin onsite inspections and dismantling efforts next week. Initial timetables aim to destroy production equipment by November and eliminate stock piles in mid-2014. While President Assad pledged to comply with last week’s UN Resolution in an interview on Sunday, saying that “we don’t have any reservation,” Syrian foreign minister Walid Moallem addressed the UN General Assembly on Monday, claiming that the Syrian regime forces were “the ones who were targeted by poisonous gases in Khan A1-Assal, near Aleppo.” Meanwhile, six powerful rebel brigades in Syria released a statement late Wednesday calling for a cease-fire. The cease-fire proposal comes amidst an armed standoff between two armed opposition groups: the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS)—an affiliate of al-Qaeda operating in Syria—and the Northern Storm Brigade based near the Bab al-Salameh border crossing with Turkey. ISIS has been advancing on the Northern Storm Brigade’s positions at the border crossing, a valuable arms supply route to rebel groups, after pushing them out of Azaz two weeks ago. According to Reuters, Saudi Arabia helped fifty armed opposition groups around Damascus consolidate on Sunday under a new umbrella coalition called the Army of Islam, a move designed to counter the strength of ISIS. Egypt. Unidentified militants fired on a military vehicle outside the Suez Canal city of Ismailiya today, killing two soldiers and wounding an officer. The attack followed a Tuesday bombing in the Sinai Peninsula that left three soldiers dead and an attack on Monday in el-Arish that killed three soldiers. Increasing violence across the country has killed over one thousand people since August. Meanwhile, an Egyptian court announced on Tuesday that it will hear an appeal on October 22 against its recent ban of the Muslim Brotherhood. A delegation of former Egyptian parliamentarians met with EU officials in Belgium earlier this week in an attempt to resolve the growing political crisis in Egypt. While members of the Egyptian delegation condemned the military’s recent crackdown, EU officials pushed for negotiation and acceptance of the interim military government. Turkey. Prime Minister Erdogan told a Turkish broadcaster last night that if his party asked, he would run for president next year in the country’s first popular presidential election. Under the rules of the AK Party, Erdogan cannot run again for prime minister in 2015. The Turkish parliament voted yesterday to extend legislation to send troops into Syria for another year, one day before their mandate was set to expire. The government proposed the extension citing a “serious and imminent” threat posed by the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons. On Monday, Erdogan announced new initiatives aimed at revitalizing the peace process with Kurdish rebels. Some components of the broad reform package still must be approved by Parliament, but if passed they would lift prohibitions on the use of Kurdish language and lower electoral barriers that limit Kurdish representation. Despite the serious criticism Erdogan has drawn from domestic opponents for being too conciliatory, some Kurdish parties have already rejected the reform package as inadequate. U.S. Foreign Policy Israel-Iran. U.S. secretary of state John Kerry said yesterday that failure to take Iran’s diplomatic overtures seriously would be tantamount to “diplomatic malpractice.” Kerry expressed hope for a deal in as little as six months, but added that “nothing we do is going to be based on trust.” President Obama hosted Israeli prime minister Netanyahu at the White House on Monday, where the two primarily discussed Iran’s nuclear program. In an Oval Office photo spray following their meeting, Obama declared that a military strike was still on the table and that his administration is leaving current sanctions in place. The following day, Netanyahu spoke before the United Nations General Assembly and urged the world not to be fooled by “a wolf in sheep’s clothing.” While We Were Looking Elsewhere Saudi Arabia. Saudi officials cancelled their country’s address scheduled for Tuesday before the United Nations General Assembly. Declining to even issue a written statement, Saudi diplomats gave no explanation for the dramatic move. However, press reports indicated that the Saudis were upset both about the international reaction to the war in Syria as well as the potential warming of relations between Iran and the West. Lebanon. Caretaker interior minister Marwan Charbel met with top security officials on Tuesday to draw up a security plan for Tripoli after Hezbollah ceded control of checkpoints to the national security forces. Charbel declared that “there are no more Hezbollah checkpoints on Lebanese territory.” Hezbollah handed over civilian-manned over security checkpoints in Baalbek and Nabatieh to the Lebanese military following clashes on Saturday that left four dead. The increased security measures come in the wake of several bombings in predominately Hezbollah areas aimed at forcing the group to withdraw its forces from Syria and support for the embattled al-Assad regime. Libya. Russia evacuated its embassy in Tripoli on Thursday following an attack the previous day. While no Russian personnel were injured, two attackers were killed by security forces. According to a statement by the Russian Foreign Ministry, the attack was carried out by friends and family of a Libyan pilot recently murdered by a Russian citizen. In an unrelated attack, gunmen assassinated a Libyan colonel in Benghazi on Wednesday, the second shooting in the eastern city in recent days. Iraq. A wave of bombings left as many as fifty-five people dead in Iraq on Monday in an ever escalating spate of sectarian violence. Recent figures from the United Nations show that 979 people were killed in Iraq last month alone and approximately five thousand since April of this year.  While the semi-autonomous Kurdish north has largely avoided the violence of recent years, bombings on Sunday evening in the capital of Erbil have led to questions about the stability of Iraq and spillover from the crisis in Syria. Bahrain. A Bahraini court sentenced four Shiites to life imprisonment on Thursday for detonating a roadside bomb that targeted a police officer. The move comes amidst an ongoing crackdown against the February 14th Movement in Bahrain. Ninety-one other Shiites have been given jail terms this week of up to fifteen years for crimes including detonating bombs, “terrorist crimes,” and forming a “clandestine opposition group.” The Sunni monarchy has faced increased opposition from its Shiite majority since the beginning of the Arab Spring. Yemen. Alleged al-Qaeda militants disguised as soldiers attacked a military compound in al-Mukalla on Monday, taking control of the facility and an undetermined number of soldiers. This brazen attack comes in the wake of a recent surge in violence in Yemen as the government faces a serious challenge from domestic terrorist and separatist movements. Jordan. A Jordanian official announced on Tuesday that three men were recently arrested after displaying posters voicing their support for the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the recently deposed president, Mohammed Morsi. The three suspects were charged with “acts the government does not approve that would harm Jordan’s relations with a brotherly Arab country,” according to a Jordanian judicial official. This Week In History This week marks the forty-third anniversary of Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser’s funeral in Cairo. Nasser passed away on September 28, 1970,shortly after returning from Jordan where he had helped mediate an end to fighting between Jordanian forces and Palestinian militants. Nasser played a leading role in the Free Officer Movement that deposed King Farouk in 1952. After seizing power two years later, he enacted a broad domestic agenda focused on land redistribution, the nationalization of a large number of industries, as well as the Suez Canal and, the termination of British influence in Egypt. Internationally, Nasser became a lead figure in the non-aligned movement and attempted to unite Egypt and Syria in the ultimately failed United Arab Republic. His funeral was marked by millions of Egyptians pouring into the streets to pay their respects for the first native Egyptian leader in nearly two millennia.
  • Jordan
    Middle East Voices from the UN General Assembly
    World leaders converged at the United Nations this week for the sixty-eighth session of the General Assembly. The Middle East was well represented, with numerous heads of states and governments attending from across the region. Middle East Matters has excerpted remarks from Middle Eastern leaders who spoke from the General Assembly’s rostrum this week. The debate concludes next Tuesday. President Abdullah Gul, Turkey: On Syria: “Were it not for the use of chemical weapons, would the international community have continued to turn a blind eye to the deaths of more than a hundred thousand people? For how long can we afford to evade our moral responsibility to the people being killed even as we speak? This conflict neither began with the use of chemical weapons nor will it end with an agreement to eliminate them. We therefore bluntly reject any position that is not troubled by the killing of innocent people in itself, but only by the means of such killing. Such an approach is immoral and totally unacceptable.” On Syria and the United Nations Security Council: “It is a disgrace that the United Nations Security Council has failed to uphold its primary responsibility in this case. It is deeply regrettable that political differences, balance-of-power politics, and geopolitical considerations have prevailed over the imperative to end this tragedy.” King Abdullah II, Jordan: On regional issues: “Our region can be, must be, a House of Peace and Prosperity…But no house can be built when its city is burning.” On Syria: “The Syrian crisis is a global humanitarian and security disaster. Escalating violence threatens to hollow-out the rest of that country’s economic and political future.” “The flow of Syrian refugees in Jordan already equals one-tenth of our own population. It could reach one million, some 20% of our population, by next year. These are not just numbers; they are people, who need food, water, shelter, sanitation, electricity, health care and more. Not even the strongest global economies could absorb this demand on infrastructure and resources, let alone a small economy and the fourth water-poorest country in the world.” Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, Qatar: On Syria: “The Syrian people has not risen up for putting the Syrian chemical weapons under the international supervision but for getting rid of despotism and corruption and to end the injustice it has been facing.” On the United Nations Security Council: “We all know that the responsibility for failure to impose the political settlement we all prefer for Syria is due basically to the inability of the Security Council to take the required decision to stop the bloodshed and continued intransigence of the Syrian regime and its refusal of all regional and international initiatives. From this perspective, the decision-making process at the Security Council has become in need of change since it lacks fairness and objectivity.” On Palestine: “The organizations of the international community have been established on the basis of granting the right of self-determination after the world wars. And it is unreasonable that they could not do anything about the last colonial issue of our world.” President Hassan Rouhani, Iran: On Iran’s nuclear program: “Iran’s nuclear program…must pursue exclusively peaceful purposes. I declare here, openly and unambiguously, that, notwithstanding the positions of others, this has been, and will always be, the objective of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Nuclear weapon and other weapons of mass destruction have no place in Iran’s security and defense doctrine, and contradict our fundamental religious and ethical convictions.” “The Islamic Republic of Iran, insisting on the implementation of its rights and the imperative of international respect and cooperation in this exercise, is prepared to engage immediately in time-bound and result-oriented talks to build mutual confidence and removal of mutual uncertainties with full transparency.” On sanctions and international engagement: “Unjust sanctions…are intrinsically inhumane and against peace. And contrary to the claims of those who pursue and impose them, it is not the states and the political elite that are targeted, but rather, it is the common people who are victimized by these sanctions.” “[T]hose who harp on the so called threat of Iran are either a threat against international peace and security themselves or promote such a threat. Iran poses absolutely no threat to the world or the region.” On Syria: “Pursuit of expansionist strategies and objectives and attempts to change the regional balance through proxies cannot be camouflaged behind humanitarian rhetoric. The common objective of the international community should be a quick end to the killing of the innocent.” President Michel Sleiman, Lebanon: On Syria: “As for the most pressing and biggest burden, which has begun to take an existential dimension, it derives from an unprecedented increase in the numbers of incoming refugees from Syria, way beyond Lebanon’s capacity of assimilation, exceeding one fourth of Lebanon’s population.” “The Lebanese must also revert to their commitment to the ‘Baabda Declaration’ which sets out Lebanon’s disassociation from the negative fallout of the regional crises and the policy of axes...” On Palestine: “As for the main challenge, it still derives from the repercussions of the Arab-Israeli conflict, the persistence of the Israeli occupation and oppressive practices, as well as Israel’s attempt to establish more illegal settlements, and Judaize the city of Jerusalem (Al-Quds), and the failure of the international community to find a just and comprehensive solution for all the aspects of this conflict, especially with the subsequent Refugee problem in the neighboring host countries, in particular Lebanon, the enhanced sense of injustice and tendency for extremism and violence, and the resulting human and material losses that have hindered the projects of economic and social progress throughout the Arab nation.” Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber al-Mubarak al-Hamad al-Sabah, Kuwait: On Iran’s nuclear program: “[T]he state of Kuwait supports the ongoing efforts to peacefully resolve this issue in a manner that will preserve the right of the Islamic Republic of Iran and all the countries in the region, to use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes under the supervision and monitoring of the International Atomic Energy Agency.” On Palestine: “We value in this respect the ongoing efforts of the United States of America to achieve a breakthrough in the peace process, hoping that persistent efforts and pressure on Israel will make it accept the resolutions of international legitimacy.” On relations with Iraq: “Through communications at the highest level between the leaderships of both countries, our bilateral relations have developed positively and tangibly by overcoming past differences between the two countries, and looking forward to strengthen and develop future bilateral relations for the welfare and interest of the peoples of both countries.” Prime Minister Ali Zeidan, Libya: On Libya: “The constituent body election law to draft a permanent constitution issued by the National Congress on July 20, 2013 is another step to accomplish the most important National agenda items, towards the formulation and adoption of a permanent constitution for Libya that would end a difficult transitional period the country is currently experiencing, with some security incidents and breaches occurring from time to time, that the official authorities are addressing with the available potentials.” On Palestine: “The time has now come for the international community to assume its responsibilities to end this tragedy as soon as possible, by taking urgent and decisive actions to ensure the full protection of the Palestinians, and to stop the daily suffering and relieve the injustice through comprehensive solution to the Palestinian issue that would remove the occupation and enable the Palestinian people to restore their territory and establish their own independent Palestinian state with Al-Quds as its capital, and the return of all Palestinian refugees to their homes, according to the relevant international resolutions.” On Syria: “We reiterate our call to the UN Security Council to act in accordance with the concept of the Responsibility to Protect, in order to find a solution to the problem, through consensus among its members, to save the Syrian people from daily massacres and help in achieving their legitimate demands.” President Mahmoud Abbas, Palestine: On Palestine: “I am honored to address you today, and for the first time in the name of the State of Palestine, before the United Nations General Assembly, after your historic decision last 29 November to raise Palestine’s status to that of an observer State.” “The objective of the negotiations is to secure a lasting peace accord that leads immediately to the establishment of the independence of a fully sovereign State of Palestine, with East Jerusalem as its capital, on all of the Palestinian lands occupied in 1967, so that it may live in peace and security alongside the State of Israel, and the resolution of the plight of Palestine refugees in a just agreed upon solution according to United Nations resolution 194, as called for by the Arab Peace Initiative.” “Here we reaffirm that we refuse to enter into a vortex of a new interim agreement that becomes eternalized, or to enter into transitional arrangements that will become a fixed rule rather than an urgent exception. Our objective is to achieve a permanent and comprehensive agreement and a peace treaty between the States of Palestine and Israel that resolves all outstanding issues and answers all questions, which allows us to officially declare and end of conflict and claims.” “History teaches us – and it is the best teacher – that waging war, occupation, settlements and walls may provide temporary quiet and a momentary domination, but they certainly do not ensure real security nor guarantee a sustainable peace.” “Let us work to make the culture of peace reign, to tear down walls, to build bridges instead of walls, to open wide roads for connection and communication. Let us sow the seeds of good neighborliness. Let us envision another future that the children of Palestine and of Israel enjoy with peace and security, and where they can dream and realize their dreams, a future that allows Muslims, Christians and Jews to freely reach places of worship; and a future in which Israel will gain the recognition of fifty-seven Arab and Muslim countries and where the States of Palestine and Israel will coexist in peace, in order to realize each people’s hopes for progress and prosperity.” “The Palestinian people do not want to remain "out of place" in the words of Edward Said. Our people wait for a day when its cause ceases to be a fixed item on the agenda of the United Nations. Our people want to have freedom, God’s gift to humanity, and to enjoy the grace of living an ordinary life.” Vice President Khudheir Mussa Al-Khuzaie, Iraq On Syria: “[W]e in Iraq, whose people suffered tremendously from the horrors of war caused by the recklessness and follies of the defunct Saddam regime, are deeply concerned by the worsening events and tense situation on our borders with Syria, a country with which we have over 600 km long borders. This is why we consider the Syrian conflict a serious threat to our security, stability and the integrity of our land and people.” On regional issues: “[N]o pre or post 2015 sustainable development is attainable with the existence of organized terrorism thriving on the bloodshed of innocent people as it claims their lives. This scourge has adopted extremism as its approach, death as its craft, violence as its means, hatred as its culture and senseless and indiscriminate murder as its hobby.” On relations with Kuwait: “Iraq suffered for more than two decades from international sanctions because of the invasion of the State of Kuwait by the former regime, however the new Iraq has managed, through its cooperation with the international community on the one hand and through the development of its brotherly relations with the neighboring State of Kuwait, to overcome the effects of the sanctions and work together with UN Security Council...” “Today, we look forward together to build the present to be a springboard and a solid foundation for a prosperous future for the generations that will reflect its positive effects on the entire region.”  
  • United States
    Middle East Matters This Week: Retaliatory Talk Against Syria, Egypt’s Crackdown Intensifies
    Significant Developments Syria. White House officials plan to brief members of Congress this evening on the situation in Syria after more than one hundred U.S. representatives signed a letter yesterday calling for President Obama to put the use of force against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government to a vote. Meanwhile, Britain and France called for a delay today in taking military action against the Syrian government until the UN inspectors currently on the ground finish their report. UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon said today that the team of chemical weapons inspectors in Syria will conclude their investigations tomorrow and leave the country on Saturday, one day ahead of schedule. In an interview with PBS’ Newshour yesterday, President Obama said that, “We have not yet made a decision...but we do have to make sure that when countries break international norms on chemical weapons that could threaten us, that they are held accountable.” A meeting of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council ended yesterday without taking action on a British resolution authorizing the use of force, due to Russian and Chinese opposition. The Arab League condemned Assad’s government on Tuesday for using chemical weapons but refused to back military action in retaliation. Egypt. Mohammed el-Beltagy, senior Muslim Brotherhood leader and head of the Freedom and Justice Party, was arrested today as supporters of deposed Egyptian president Mohammed Morsi called for renewed protests Friday. More than sixty people connected to the Muslim Brotherhood were detained yesterday by Egyptian security forces in an increasingly widening crackdown on the group. Mohammed Ali Bishr, a senior Muslim Brotherhood figure, reportedly met with representatives of Al Nour party on Wednesday to draft an initiative to the military with solutions to ending the current political crisis. Interim prime minister Hazem al-Beblawi said in a state media interview Tuesday that Egypt should not ban or exclude the Muslim Brotherhood from politics, seemingly backtracking on his proposal two weeks ago to dissolve the group. Meanwhile, a military court in Suez began the trial on Monday of sixty-four members of the Muslim Brotherhood, Jama’a Islamiya, and other supporters of Morsi. They were charged with inciting attacks against churches and security forces. U.S. Foreign Policy Jordan-Syria. Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman General Martin Dempsey co-hosted a two-day meeting of senior army officials from ten countries with Jordan’s chief of staff Meshaal Mohamed al-Zaban in Amman on Monday and Tuesday. The meeting was focused on the regional impact of the war in Syria. Top generals from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, and Canada were in attendance. Egypt. U.S. ambassador Anne Patterson will leave Egypt tomorrow, ending her roughly two-year term in Cairo. Yesterday, Patterson wrote a public letter to Abdel Nasser Salama, the editor in chief of state-owned Al Ahram newspaper, denouncing as “absurd and dangerous” an article in the newspaper that alleged that she was involved in a conspiracy to destabilize Egypt. Patterson further wrote that the U.S. embassy will bring the allegations against her to the “highest levels of the government to protest its publication and the irresponsible behavior that led to it.” David Satterfield will reportedly serve as temporary charge d’affaires until the next ambassador can be confirmed. Patterson was nominated to be the next Assistant Secretary of State for Near East affairs last month. Iran. The State Department released a statement yesterday “respectfully” asking new Iranian president Hassan Rouhani to help release three U.S. citizens who have been held in Tehran for at least one year. While We Were Looking Elsewhere Tunisia. Interior Minister Lotfi Ben Jeddou told a press conference yesterday that Tunisia’s extremist group Ansar al-Shariah is linked to al Qaeda. Tunisian prime minister Ali Larayedh labeled Ansar al-Sharia a terrorist organization on Tuesday, blaming the group for the assassination of two opposition figures and multiple attacks on Tunisian security forces this year. Jordan. Jordan held nation-wide municipal elections Tuesday producing very low turnouts. While the elections were considered free and fair, only 37.3 percent of registered voters participated. The rate was particularly low in Amman, where only 10.5 percent of eligible voters participated. Israel. The Israeli military mobilized a small number of reservists on Wednesday in preparation for the possibility of retaliation against Israel for a potential Western strike on Syria. While Israelis rushed to collect gas masks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu released a statement urging calm but also stating that, “we are prepared for any scenario.” Libya. Seif al-Islam, the son of former dictator Muammar Qaddafi, and former intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senoussi were charged in a Tripoli court on Tuesday with murder during Libya’s civil war in 2011. Twenty-six former members of Qaddafi’s government were also charged. The trial is set to begin on September 19. Iran. Marzeih Afkham was announced as the first ever female spokesperson for Iran’s foreign ministry today. Previously, Afkham had served as director of the Foreign Ministry’s media and public diplomacy department. Iranian president Rouhani reportedly asked officials to appoint women to high posts in the government. Meanwhile, a new IAEA report released yesterday stated that Iran is slowing its accumulation of uranium refined to 20 percent, while simultaneously expanding its installation of new refining equipment. The report revealed that Iran is set to hold a new round of talks with nuclear inspectors in September. Iraq. More than a dozen coordinated bombs exploded within an hour-long period yesterday in Baghdad. The wave of bombings mostly hit Shiite neighborhoods and killed at least sixty-five people and wounded many more. Meanwhile, Iraq’s Supreme Federal Court overturned a law passed in January that set a two-term limit for the offices of the prime minister, president, and Parliament speaker. Lebanon. President Michael Sleiman appealed to all political forces yesterday to avoid regional conflicts and “reconsider the disassociation policy based on the Baabda Declaration,” after calling for a new government and renewed national dialogue over the weekend. A suspect in the devastating car bombing that struck Tripoli last Friday and killed at least forty-seven reportedly told Lebanese security forces on Tuesday that Syrian intelligence directly planned the attack. West Bank. Protesters and Palestinian security forces clashed on Wednesday in Ramallah as police broke up a small demonstration against the resumption of peace talks with Israel. Ma’an reported on Tuesday that Israeli and Palestinian negotiators met in Jericho on Monday, despite an announcement by Palestinian officials that a planned round of talks had been cancelled after Israeli security personnel killed three Palestinians earlier in the day. The two negotiating teams reportedly met at the home of Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator.
  • United States
    Middle East Matters This Week: Egypt’s Brutal Crackdown, Syrian-Related Diplomacy, and Israelis and Palestinians Negotiate
    Significant Developments Egypt. President Barack Obama today strongly condemned the Egyptian military’s use of force and announced the cancellation of next month’s joint U.S.-Egyptian "Bright Star" military exercise. Obama was reacting to Egypt’s crackdown on supporters of deposed president Mohammad Morsi last night that left over five hundred people dead and thousands injured. The assault on the protest encampments prompted retaliatory attacks against government buildings.  Interim vice president Mohammad ElBaradei resigned last night over the continuing violence. Secretary of State John Kerry last night called the events “deplorable” and “counter to Egyptian aspirations for peace, inclusion, and genuine democracy.” The Morsi supporters had been camped out since the Egyptian military removed President Morsi from power on July 3. Syria. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced today that a team of UN chemical weapons experts will depart for Syria imminently. The team is set to inspect three sites of possible chemical weapons use. Meanwhile, Syrian president Bashar al-Assad exempted thousands of army reservists yesterday from paying debt installments and late fees in a move meant to boost morale. Russian deputy foreign minister Gennady Gatilov said on Tuesday that a Syria peace conference will not be held before October. The New York Times reported on Monday that Sudan is providing the weapons that Qatar is shipping to the Syrian rebels. Israel-Palestine. Israeli and Palestinian negotiators met in Jerusalem yesterday as direct negotiations resumed. The Israeli team is led by Justice Minister Tzipi Livni and Prime Minister Netanyahu’s special advisor Isaac Molcho. Saeb Erekat and Mohammad Shtayyeh lead the Palestinian team. Israel released twenty-six Palestinian prisoners yesterday as part of the deal to resume negotiations, but also announced it would be building over one thousand new apartments in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. U.S. Foreign Policy Jordan. General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a group of American troops on the outskirts of Amman today that the U.S. presence in Jordan would likely last several years.  Dempsey then clarified: “We haven’t actually put an end-date on it for that very reason - because it will depend how the situation evolves in Syria.” He met with Jordanian king Abdullah yesterday and agreed to bring back a request to Washington for manned U.S. surveillance aircraft to monitor the border with Syria. Israel. General Dempsey was in Israel from Monday until Wednesday, where he met Israeli leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon and IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz. At a photo op with Dempsey, Netanyahu said that the threat from Iran dwarfs all other threats in the region. Regarding Iran, Dempsey said, “We have better military options than we did a year ago.” Reopening of Embassies. Eighteen of nineteen closed U.S. embassies reopened on Sunday after being closed for a week. The embassy in Yemen remains closed after the United States intercepted a message from al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri to Nasir al-Wuhayshi, the leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. While We Were Looking Elsewhere Turkey-Lebanon. Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu called the recent kidnapping of two Turkish pilots in Beirut “a clear act of terror” today. Inan Ozyildiz, Turkish ambassador to Lebanon reportedly met with representatives from Hezbollah yesterday to discuss the release of the pilots. A group called “Zuwar Al Rida” claimed responsibility for the kidnappings which occurred last Friday on the road between Beirut and the airport. Zuwar Al Rida demanded that Turkey pressure the Syrian opposition to release nine Lebanese pilgrims who were kidnapped in May 2012. Bahrain. Pro-democracy protestors clashed with Bahraini riot police yesterday, exchanging tear gas and firebombs. The main opposition group, Al Wefaq claimed that sixty demonstrations occurred around Bahrain. Kuwait. Information Minister Salman al-Homood announced the cancellation of prominent Sunni cleric Shafi al-Ajmi’s new television show on Tuesday. Al-Ajmi’s show, “Follow the Path of the Prophet,” had premiered on Monday and only aired one episode before its cancellation. Al-Ajmi writes anti-Shiite rhetoric in online forums and actively fundraises for Syrian rebels, including al-Qaeda-linked Jubhat al-Nusra. “The ministry of information does not approve of airing episodes for any individuals who instigates hatred and promotes such rhetoric,” said al-Homood. Tunisia. Tunisia’s opposition threatened to step up its pressure on the government after Rachid Ghannouchi, the chairman of Tunisia’s ruling Ennahda party, dismissed demands for a technocratic government today. Ghannouchi said that he could accept a national unity government, but felt that technocrats could not “manage the delicate situation in the country.” This Week in History Today marks the sixtieth anniversary of the beginning of the U.S.-backed coup that removed Iranian prime minister Mohammad Mosaddeq. On August 15, 1953, Colonel Nematollah Nassiri attempted to arrest Mosaddeq, bearing royal decrees signed by Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Word was leaked to Mosaddeq about the plot and he was able to arrest Colonel Nassiri instead. The coup was believed to be a failure, and the shah fled to Baghdad. However, the coup succeeded on August 19 and General Fazlollah Zahedi replaced Iran’s first democratically elected prime minister.
  • Middle East and North Africa
    For the First Time, American Loan Guarantees for Jordan
    Yesterday the United States announced that it would guarantee up to $1.25 billion in loans to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The announcement from the State Department said this: The United States today re-affirmed its strong commitment to the people of Jordan by signing a sovereign loan guarantee agreement with the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The United States’ guarantee makes it easier for the Government of Jordan to borrow money from international capital markets and provide critical services to its citizens as it enacts economic reforms while also hosting more than half a million refugees fleeing the violence inside Syria. The signing of this loan guarantee agreement fulfills the commitment made by President Obama in Amman, Jordan, March 22, 2013, when he announced his intention to work with Congress to provide loan guarantees to Jordan this year. This will be the first U.S. loan guarantee to the Government of Jordan. Pursuant to the loan guarantee agreement, the United States would guarantee repayment of principal and interest on the issuance of up to a $1.25 billion, seven-year Jordanian sovereign bond. Jordan’s prime minister had this to say: Prime Minster Abdullah Ensour, who signed the agreement on behalf of the Jordanian government, said this guarantee, which aims to support the economic and financial reform effort in Jordan, demonstrates the US’s outstanding support to Jordan by helping the country to fulfill its financing needs from international markets at better terms. In a speech after the signing ceremony, Ensour noted that the US Government, acting through USAID, plans to provide guarantees on Jordanian government bonds for the amount of US $ 1.250 billion for a period of up to 7 years. He pointed out that this loan guarantee agreement will enhance Jordan’s ability to borrow from international markets, while reducing its financing needs from the domestic market, providing room for the private sector to obtain the funds it needs to thrive. Ensour said this agreement will also allow Jordan to obtain external financing with competitive interest rates at par with US Government borrowing, which will reduce the Jordanian government debt service payments.... This is a very smart move by the Obama administration, providing tangible support for Jordan as it faces the problems arising from a region in turmoil--in Jordan’s case, turmoil that has saddled it with over a half million Syrian refugees and huge additional energy costs (because the pipeline from Egypt is not operating). Support for stability and prosperity in Jordan is a clear American interest, as the administration and both parties in Congress recognize.
  • Egypt
    The Politics of Energy: What Morsi’s Fall Means for Jordan
    This post is written by Sarah Craig, a Council on Foreign Relations research intern from Princeton University. Jordan’s king Abdullah was the first foreign head of state to visit Egypt after the military’s July 3 removal of President Mohammad Morsi. Abdullah had spoken publicly against the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan and clearly welcomed its fall in Egypt, congratulating both the army and interim president Adly Mansour on the leadership changes. After their meeting, Mansour agreed to focus more attention on developing bilateral economic and political ties. Closer ties with Egypt are crucial for Jordan, which saw imports of Egyptian natural gas fall precipitously under Morsi’s rule, sparking political unrest at home. However, while warmer political ties between the two countries are sure to follow the fall of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s inability to control the Sinai may continue to have a devastating impact on Jordan’s economy. Energy-starved Jordan imports around ninety-seven percent of its energy needs, with Egypt’s Arab Gas Pipeline (AGP) serving as the Hashemite Kingdom’s principle source of natural gas. The main conduit runs from Arish in Egypt to Aqaba in Jordan through the Sinai Peninsula, a historically restive region of Egypt. Sinai militants have repeatedly attacked the gas pipeline there, leading to disruptions that cost Jordan around 2 billion dollars last year. Following the Egyptian revolution there were frequent disruptions in the flow of gas from Egypt to Jordan, straining their already frosty relationship. The pipeline was bombed fifteen times in 2011 and 2012. Pipeline exports consequently fell from 193 billion cubic feet in 2010 to 64 in 2011, to 19 in 2012. Such disruption has translated directly into greater economic hardship and indirectly into greater political discontent in Jordan. Sabotage has cost the Jordanian government more than one million dollars per day at certain points, forcing it to occasionally lift energy subsidies. Such a move sparked unprecedented nationwide protests in the Kingdom in November 2012 with the first-ever calls for Abdullah’s ouster. While militant activity was a main contributor to the decrease in exported gas, other factors also played a role. Jordanian officials suspected that Morsi’s government, with its ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, cut natural gas exports in November 2012 in order to foment instability and to pressure Jordan into adopting an anti-Assad stance with Syria. Egyptian officials maintained that the decrease was due to increasing domestic demand and widespread fuel shortages. However, the sudden end to fuel shortages in Egypt following the coup suggests that the shortage was indeed partly manufactured in order to destabilize Morsi. In the wake of Morsi’s ouster, Egypt’s new leadership will most likely decrease or stop the manipulation of energy for political gain. The current secular interim government is less likely to use natural gas as political leverage, at least in terms of Syria, since it will have less of a personal stake in the outcome of Syria’s civil war. Nonetheless, Jordan will likely continue to receive lower levels of natural gas as Egypt endures genuine, not just manufactured, fuel shortages. Egypt has experienced rising domestic energy demands and began importing natural gas for the first time in December 2012. Now that Morsi has been removed, militants in Sinai are likely to step up their attacks on the pipeline. They attacked the pipeline on July 6, the first time in almost a year. Unless the Egyptian military can effectively control insurgent activity in Sinai and halt attacks on the natural gas pipeline, Jordan will continue to suffer energy shortages and will have to settle for more expensive options elsewhere. Egypt’s ability to quell the violence in Sinai remains far from certain, especially since the military now faces a much more militarized peninsula. The region became more militarized when North Sinai experienced a security vacuum after President Hosni Mubarak was overthrown two years ago, allowing local Bedouin insurgents and Islamist supporters to take control of the region. Morsi’s neglect of the region offered residents a taste of freedom unknown during the Mubarak era. Since Egypt’s military removed Morsi on July 3, North Sinai militants have launched attacks on the military and police, killing dozens. Bedouin leaders told the Washington Post: “As much as the Sinai insurgency derives from militant anger at Morsi’s ouster, it is also a preemptive backlash rooted in fear.” So far, the Egyptian military seems inclined to take on this insurgency challenge. On July 27, Egypt launched Operation Desert Storm and sent more troops to Sinai to suppress the violence. However, while Israel has made exceptions to the military limitations in its peace treaty with Egypt and allowed several Egyptian battalions to patrol Sinai, the Egyptian military by no means wields overwhelming force in the region. Even with previous unrest Israel did not broaden the agreement to allow full deployment of Egyptian troops. Limitations on Egypt’s military presence seem likely to continue. Jordan has warmly welcomed the military takeover in Egypt since it helped put Islamist parties in Jordan and throughout the region on the defensive. However, decreases in Jordan’s share of Egypt’s plentiful supply of natural gas could also put the Jordanian government on the defensive. Abdullah himself has said that the “the discontinuation of the natural gas supply from Egypt” would deal the “harshest blow” to Jordan’s economy. With demand outpacing supply, Jordan’s government is considering increasing electricity prices by fifteen percent. The result could be public outcry, demonstrations, and renewed instability. If so, and especially if Sinai militants continue to impede natural gas exports, then the economic benefits of political rapprochement between Cairo and Amman will be dramatically overshadowed by the negative ripple effect of fuel shortages.
  • United States
    Secretary Kerry’s Creative Ambiguity and Israeli-Palestinian Peace Talks
    At the conclusion of his sixth arduous Middle East shuttle Friday night, Secretary of State John Kerry announced the imminent resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in Washington. Kerry’s circuitous announcement, that the parties had “reached an agreement that establishes a basis for resuming direct final status negotiations,” was short on details and ambiguous, even by diplomatic standards. Such imprecision at first blush suggests that the parties still have a ways to go before the United States’ chief diplomat can declare negotiations fully back on track. But it also reflects a highly creative use of diplomatic ambiguity as a means towards allowing each side to find a way back to the negotiating table. Recall, ever since formal negotiations fell apart in September 2010, Prime Minister Netanyahu has adhered to the position that negotiations should resume without preconditions. Meanwhile, PLO President Mahmoud Abbas has said he will not return to the table without certain assurances: a West Bank settlement freeze and the release of prisoners, for starters. By saying that the parties have not agreed yet to negotiations, but have agreed to face-to-face talks in the U.S. capital, Kerry has found a way for both sides to declare their needs met for an eventual return to negotiations. Netanyahu can say that he succeeded in producing negotiations without preconditions. Indeed, he did just that, issuing a statement twenty-four hours after Kerry’s, welcoming “the resumption of the diplomatic process as this time.” In the wake of Kerry’s announcement, Palestinian officials have insisted that they have not yet agreed to negotiations, only to efforts to secure their demands. That formula allowed Israeli and Palestinian “face-to-face talks” over the course of 2011 and 2012 without calling them negotiations. On Saturday, Israel’s Minister of International Relations announced Israel would release “heavyweight” Palestinian prisoners who have been incarcerated for over twenty years. Such releases are unlikely to occur before talks begin. Thus, Israel will maintain that the release of “pre-Oslo” prisoners, as they are frequently called, is not a payment for negotiations, and the Palestinians will claim just the opposite. Producing such diplomatic sleights of hand is what has made Kerry’s efforts to restart negotiations so challenging.  Yet they are precisely what have been necessary. Perhaps the biggest challenge for American mediators has been producing a formula for the basis of talks. The Palestinian have long held that talks must begin on the basis of the line that demarcated the West Bank from Israel prior to the June 1967 Six Day War. Israel, in turn, has insisted that any terms of reference must include a Palestinian acceptance of Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state as part of any terms for talks. The New York Times reported that Secretary Kerry will issue a statement that negotiations will be based on the 1967 land with land swaps AND recognition of Israel as a Jewish state. The U.S. has reportedly reached understandings that neither side will be forced to publicly endorse these principles. Both Abbas and Netanyahu will be able to claim that they did not cross their red-lines for entering negotiations—an assertion their domestic critics will call legalistic diplomatese. While neither man faces a public clamoring for an active peace process, neither party wants to be accused of foiling an activist secretary of state who has early on staked this issue out as a legacy agenda item. Diplomatic ambiguity of the sort produced by Secretary Kerry will likely allow Israeli-Palestinian negotiations to resume in the immediate period ahead, despite their clear procedural and substantive differences. Yet getting the parties to this point entailed a tremendous investment of political personal prestige and energy. Getting the two sides to agree to an enduring peace agreement will require clarity and transparency—two elements lacking to date. Substantive progress will require Secretary Kerry’s constant engagement and a tremendous expenditure of diplomatic capital. That alone, however, is unlikely to be sufficient.
  • United States
    Middle East Matters This Week: Lebanon’s Sectarian Violence, Qatar’s New Emir, and Egypt’s President Ruminates
    Significant Developments Lebanon. The Lebanese army defeated the militant followers of radical Sunni cleric Sheik Ahmad al-Assir in Sidon on Tuesday after a violent two-day battle. The clashes ended with military forces storming al-Assir’s mosque complex, where they found a large stockpile of weapons, but were unable to apprehend al-Assir. The violence began when al-Assir’s supporters fired on an army checkpoint on Sunday, killing over a dozen soldiers. The army said that it was targeted in “cold-blood,” but al-Assir claimed that the soldiers had beaten two of his supporters first. At least sixteen soldiers were killed and fifty others wounded in the fighting, with more than twenty of al-Assir’s supporters killed. Qatar. Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani announced on Tuesday that he would transfer power to his fourth son, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani. Hamad, who is stepping down after eighteen years of rule, said that this decision marks the “beginning of a new era in which a young leadership will hold the banner.” Tamim said yesterday that he would follow in the path of his father, supporting the Palestinian cause against Israel and seeking to diversify the economy. Tamim unveiled a new cabinet later in the day, with Abdallah Bin Nasser Bin Khalifa Al Thani replacing Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani as prime minister and also filling the post of interior minister; Hamad Atieh becoming defense minister; Khalid al-Atiyah becoming foreign minister; Ali Sherif al-Emadi becoming finance minister; and Mohammed Saleh al-Sada keeping his post as energy and industry minister. Tamim, who is thirty-three, is now the youngest ruler of any of the Arab Gulf states. Egypt. President Mohammad Morsi delivered a nearly three-hour speech yesterday, acknowledging some “mistakes” and blaming opponents for the majority of Egypt’s problems. “I was right in some cases, and wrong in other cases,” he said. “I have discovered after a year in charge that for the revolution to achieve its goals, it needs radical measures.” Clashes broke out in the town of Mansoura between Morsi’s supporters and opponents yesterday, leaving two people dead and hundreds injured. Large anti-government protests are scheduled for Sunday, marking Morsi’s first year in office. Meanwhile, police arrested eight suspects on Tuesday in connection with the Sunday killing of four Shia worshippers, including prominent Shia cleric Sheikh Hassan Shehata. The worshippers had gathered in Shehata’s home in Giza to commemorate a Shia religious festival when the house was attacked by a hostile crowd. President Morsi and Prime Minister Hesham Qandil denounced the killings and called for an expedited investigation on Monday. Syria. Swedish chemical weapons expert Ake Sellstrom met today with Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu in Ankara to discuss Syria’s alleged use of chemical weapons. Sellstrom is the head of a UN investigation team in Turkey this week to conduct interviews and take blood samples from witnesses and victims of the alleged chemical weapon attacks; the UN team has been denied entry to Syria to conduct soil samples. More than one hundred thousand people have been killed during the last twenty-seven months of the Syrian conflict, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights announced yesterday. Meanwhile, the Russian defense ministry confirmed yesterday that all of its military personnel have been evacuated from the country, including its base at Tartus. U.S. Foreign Policy Israel-Palestine. Secretary of State John Kerry landed in Amman earlier today to begin a series of meetings with Israeli, Palestinian, and Jordanian leaders in an attempt to restart peace talks. Kerry said yesterday that, “Time is the enemy of a peace process,” and that progress needs to be made before the UN General Assembly meets in September. Kerry met King Abdullah of Jordan this afternoon before meeting this evening in Jerusalem with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He is slated to return to Amman for talks Friday with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas. It is Kerry’s fifth trip to the region since assuming office in February. Gulf-Syria. Secretary Kerry also visited the Gulf this week. He met with senior Kuwaiti officials in Kuwait City to discuss bilateral and regional issues yesterday, met with senior Saudi officials in Jeddah on Tuesday, and traveled to Doha to discuss regional issues and the situation in Syria on Saturday. Kerry has also added a stop in the UAE this coming Saturday to meet with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahayan. While We Were Looking Elsewhere Palestine. President Mahmoud Abbas accepted the resignation of Palestinian Authority prime minister Rami Hamdallah on Sunday. Abbas initially asked Hamdallah to reconsider but ultimately accepted the resignation, requesting that he remain in a caretaker role until a replacement could be found. Hamdallah was in office just over two weeks before he resigned. Turkey. Turkish riot police fired tear gas and water cannons yesterday to disperse two thousand demonstrators in Ankara while arresting sixteen people. The protestors gathered to express their anger over the release of a police officer accused of fatally wounding a protestor during earlier demonstrations to save Gezi Park. Turkish police arrested an additional twenty people on Tuesday for links to “terror” groups and involvement in attacks on security forces during the recent unrest. Libya. Prime Minister Ali Zeidan announced today that Defense Minister Mohammed al- Barghathi will be replaced. The announcement comes a day after deadly clashes in Tripoli between rival militia groups left ten people dead and more than one hundred wounded. This Week in History This week marks the twentieth anniversary of U.S. retaliatory bombing against Baghdad for an alleged Iraqi plot to kill former President George H.W. Bush. On June 26, 1993, President Bill Clinton ordered U.S. warships to fire cruise missiles at Iraqi intelligence headquarters in downtown Baghdad. Clinton cited “compelling evidence” of the direct involvement of Iraqi intelligence in a plot to assassinate President Bush on his April 1993 trip to Kuwait. “What we’re doing is sending a message against the people who were responsible for planning this operation,” then Defense Secretary Les Aspin said. “[If] anybody asks the same people to do it again, they will remember this message.”
  • United States
    Middle East Matters This Week: Iran’s President, Turkey’s Protests, Syria’s Opponents, and Palestine’s Prime Minister
    Significant Developments Iran. President Obama reacted cautiously to the election of former nuclear negotiator Hassan Rohani to become Iran’s new president. In an interview with Charlie Rose broadcast Monday night, Obama said, “Clearly, you have a hunger within Iran to engage with the international community in a more positive way...And so we’re going to have to continue to see how this develops and how this evolves over the next several weeks, months, years.” Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed concern, however, cautioning Israel’s Western allies that the election of Rohani did not signal a change in Iran’s nuclear policy. Netanyahu dismissed the role and authority of the president in determining Iran’s nuclear policy, saying, “He doesn’t count. He doesn’t call the shots.” Turkey. Protesters turned to silent demonstrations and passive resistance in Turkish streets and squares yesterday, following the violent clearing of Istanbul’s Gezi Park last weekend. Turkish deputy prime minister Bulent Arinc said on Monday that police would “use all their powers” to end anti-government protests and threatened the use of military force, though he acknowledged the peaceful nature of yesterday’s protests, saying, “We cannot condemn it.” Human rights groups say more than three thousand people were detained since anti-government demonstrations began May 31 with dozens currently remaining in custody. Meanwhile, Germany has blocked the start of new EU talks with Turkey following Ankara’s violent crackdown. German chancellor Angela Merkel said she was “shocked” by the Turkish government’s reaction to the demonstrations. Syria. Free Syrian Army spokesperson Louay Meqdad appealed to Western and Arab leaders today to provide heavy weapons and impose a no-fly zone ahead of Saturday’s “Friends of Syria” meeting. G-8 leaders met in Northern Ireland earlier this week and called for a “political solution” to Syria’s conflict in a final communique issued on Tuesday. The G-8 leaders endorsed holding a Geneva peace conference “as soon as possible” and condemned chemical weapons use in Syria without identifying perpetrators. The G-8 leaders did not call for Syrian president Bashar al-Assad’s departure, due to pressure from Russia. Meanwhile, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said in a report yesterday that the number of refugees and internally displaced persons worldwide has reached an eighteen-year high of 45.2 million people. The report notes that the Syrian conflict has contributed to the highest numbers of refugees since the brutal wars in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia. Most of today’s refugees come from Afghanistan, Somalia, Iraq, Syria, and Sudan. Palestine. Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah submitted his resignation today after only two weeks since entering office. Hamdallah reportedly resigned over a dispute with his two new deputies. President Abbas has neither accepted nor rejected the resignation. Abbas aides met with Hamdallah for three hours this evening in an effort to convince Hamdallah to reconsider his move. The meeting ended with both sides declining to comment. U.S. Foreign Policy Syria. Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that Secretary of State John Kerry and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey argued over the wisdom of strikes against regime controlled airfields in Syria during a senior White House meeting last week. According to the report, Kerry advocated immediate U.S. strikes against airfields used to launch chemical weapons attacks against the Syrian opposition. Dempsey reportedly pushed back, explaining that such a course of action would likely require the air force to conduct seven hundred or more sorties to take out Syria’s air-defense systems. The meeting reportedly formalized President Obama’s decision to supply small arms to the Syrian rebels after U.S. intelligence agencies concluded that Bashar al-Assad’s forces had used chemical weapons against the opposition forces. Jordan. The U.S. military exercise in Jordan dubbed “Eager Lion” concluded today after twelve days of drills focused on potential spillover scenarios from the Syrian conflict. An estimated eight thousand personnel from nineteen countries, including the United States, Jordan, Britain, France, Italy, Qatar, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia, participated. The United States announced on Saturday that a Patriot antimissile battery and F-16 warplanes that were deployed to Jordan to take place in the war games will remain in the kingdom. While We Were Looking Elsewhere Egypt. Tourism Minister Hesham Zazou resigned Wednesday in protest over the appointment of Adel al-Khayat, a member of the Islamist group Gamaa al-Islamiyya, to become governor of Luxor. Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi appointed al-Khayat to the post on Sunday. Members of Gamaa Islamiya killed sixty-two people, mostly tourists, in a terrorist attack in Luxor in 1997. Meanwhile, Egyptian foreign minister Kamel Amr and Ethiopian foreign minister Tedros Adhanom met on Tuesday to discuss the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam and agreed on further dialogue to resolve the dispute. The two ministers agreed that further studies should be conducted, and Adhanom said consultations would take place without halting dam construction. Iraq. Voting began today in elections for provincial councils in Anbar and Nineveh. The elections were delayed two months after the other twelve provinces voted due to security concerns. Despite heavy security, mortar attacks on polling stations left two policemen dead, and a suicide bombing killed a Sunni Muslim political leader and some family members yesterday. Kuwait. Kuwait’s cabinet announced today that parliamentary elections will be held July 25 following the Constitutional Court’s dissolution of parliament on Sunday. The voting will take place under a new system of one person, one vote. Kuwait’s opposition has rejected the new system, preferring the old system that had allowed voters to cast ballots for up to four candidates, thereby making possible alliances in a country that bans political parties. This Week in History This week marks the twelfth anniversary of the withdrawal of Syrian troops from Beirut and their redeployment to the Bekaa valley. On June 20, 2001, Lebanese officials announced that Syria had completed its six-day withdrawal of an estimated six to ten thousand troops from primarily Christian suburbs of Beirut. The withdrawal from sensitive neighborhoods followed a campaign against the presence of Syrian troops led by Nasrallah Sfeir, the Maronite Christian patriarch. Syria sent military forces to Lebanon during the Lebanese civil war in the mid-1970s and did not fully withdraw from the country until April 2005. The redeployment of Syrian forces by 1992 had been required by the 1989 Taif Accord, the agreement reached to broker the end of the Lebanese civil war.
  • United States
    Middle East Matters This Week: Turkey Broils, Egypt Prosecutes, and Syria Deteriorates
    Significant Developments Turkey. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was welcomed home today from a four-day trip to Africa by thousands of supporters at the airport— the first major show of support by pro-government demonstrators in Turkey since unrest erupted last week. Erdogan defiantly told supporters that the “protests that are bordering on illegality must come to an end as of now.” Even as he spoke, thousands of people were massing in Istanbul’s Taksim Square for the eighth straight night after police used tear gas and water cannons last Friday against a peaceful demonstration against government plans to turn a park into a shopping mall. The confrontation sparked broad protests against Erdogan’s government across Turkey. Two protestors and a police officer have reportedly been killed in the ensuing clashes, with nearly five thousand people wounded. Syria. George Sabra, acting leader of Syria’s main opposition group, said today that peace negotiations are not possible with Hezbollah and Iran fighting for the government of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad. Sabra said that Hezbollah’s involvement in Syria is turning the conflict into a sectarian battle between Sunnis and Shiites. Regime troops, aided by Hezbollah fighters, scored a major victory earlier this week by capturing the strategically valuable town of Qusair on Wednesday, quickly followed by two nearby villages in a new offensive against the rebels. Meanwhile, French foreign minister Laurent Fabius said on Tuesday that there is “no doubt” that the Syrian government used sarin gas. Britain’s UN ambassador Mark Lyall-Grant also said on Tuesday that the British government has evidence that sarin gas has been used in Syria. The United Nations’ independent commission reported that it has “reasonable grounds” to believe chemical weapons have been used in Syria. The Obama administration struggled to react to these new reports. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said that the U.S. did not intend to “evaluate or litigate in public” the information it has received from Paris. For my take on the worst-case scenario for Syria and its impact on the Middle East, read this. Egypt. An Egyptian court convicted forty-three NGO workers on Tuesday in a case against foreign-funded democracy promotion groups. The judge gave five year sentences to twenty-seven defendants tried in absentia, including a group of fifteen American defendants and the son of U.S. secretary of transportation Ray Lahood. The verdict also ordered the closure of the offices and seizure of assets belonging to the U.S. and German nonprofit organizations: the International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute, Freedom House, and the Konrad Adenauer Foundation. Secretary of State John Kerry said that the United States is “deeply concerned” and said the ordered closure of offices and seizure of assets “contradicts the government of Egypt’s commitments to support the role of civil society…especially at this critical stage in the Egyptian people’s democratic transition.” Meanwhile Egypt’s supreme constitutional court ruled on Sunday that laws governing the election of members to the upper house, or Shura Council, and to the constitutional panel were illegal. It is unlikely that the court’s ruling will have any immediate effects because the Shura Council is immune from dissolution until a new house of representatives is elected. U.S. Foreign Policy Israel-Palestine. Secretary Kerry is set to return to Israel and Palestinian next week for the fifth time since becoming secretary of state in an attempt to restart direct peace talks. He will also visit Jordan. Kerry addressed the American Jewish Committee (AJC) in Washington on Monday to stress the urgency of a two-state solution. Kerry warned the AJC that “Israel will be left to choose between being a Jewish state or a democratic state, but it will not be able to fulfill the founders’ visions of being both at once,” if a peace deal with the Palestinian is not struck soon. While We Were Looking Elsewhere Palestine. President Mahmoud Abbas swore in a new government yesterday headed by Rami Hamdallah, until now president of the West Bank university An-Najah. Prime Minster Hamdallah replaces Salam Fayyad, who had resigned in April but had stayed on as a caretaker since. Today, Abbas called for national reconciliation and blamed “Hamas’ refusal to hold elections” for the lack of progress towards a national unity government. Iran. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei addressed a crowd of thousands on Tuesday and denounced making concessions to the West. The televised speech comes on the eve of upcoming presidential elections scheduled for June 14. Meanwhile, Yukiya Amano, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said Monday that UN investigators may no longer be able to find anything even if granted access to Iran’s Parchin site, due to suspected Iranian efforts to cleanse the site of any illicit activity. Amano described the IAEA’s talks with Iran as “going around in circles.” Jordan. The Jordanian government ordered nearly three hundred news websites shut down on Sunday under a law passed last September. The law requires a variety of restrictive steps including the registration of news sites with the government and licensing fees costing more than one thousand dollars. The law also makes editors legally responsible for the often anonymous comments posted by readers, in addition to actual articles published. Lebanon. Citing political deadlock and the civil war in neighboring Syria, Lebanon’s Parliament voted last Friday to delay upcoming parliamentary elections by seventeen months until November 2014. The elections had been scheduled for June 16, but the Lebanese Parliament failed to agree on a new electoral law. It is the first such delay since the end of Lebanon’s civil war in 1990 Libya. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen announced on Tuesday plans to send a team of experts to Libya to provide security assistance. The assistance will mostly consist of training with the primary aim of preventing Libya from turning into a safe haven for militants fleeing Mali. This Week in History This week marks the twenty-fourth anniversary of the death of Iran’s founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. On June 3, 1989, Khomeini died at the age of eighty-six, twelve days after undergoing surgery for bleeding in his digestive system. Khomeini led the revolution that overthrew the Shah of Iran, returning to Tehran in 1979 after fifteen years in exile and helping to transform Iran into an Islamic republic.  
  • Israel
    Middle East Matters This Week: Syrian Pre-Negotiations and Iranian Elections
    Significant Developments Syria. Moaz al-Khatib, the outgoing leader of the Syrian National Coalition, announced an initiative on Facebook today, proposing a safe exit for Syrian president Bashar al-Assad. Khatib’s proposal would give Assad twenty days to accept a “peaceful transition of authority,” after which he would have a month to hand over power to either Prime Minister Wael al-Halqi or Vice President Faruq al-Shara’a to then rule Syria for a transitional period of one hundred days. The Syrian National Coalition met for the first of three days of scheduled talks in Istanbul today to debate whether or not to negotiate with the Assad regime and to select a new president. Read this for an update on the rising death toll and numbers of refugees from the Syrian conflict. Iran. Former Iranian president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani reacted publicly today to his disqualification from running in Iran’s upcoming presidential election, saying that “the next government will face a lot of problems and difficulties as a result of mismanagement and unfair sanctions.” Zahra Khomeini, the daughter of Ayatollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, posted a letter to the Khomeini family website yesterday, decrying Rafsanjani’s disqualification. She wrote that “this action has no meaning other than creating a rift between the two friends of the Imam.” The remaining candidates officially launched their campaigns yesterday. In addition to Rafsanjani, Ahmadinejad’s protégé Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei was also disqualified on Tuesday. Syria-Jordan. Jordan reportedly turned away thousands of Syrian refugees this week for the first time since the beginning of the Syrian conflict. Jordan already hosts some half million Syrian refugees fleeing the conflict. All four unofficial border crossings have been closed for the past six days; according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees’ Andrew Harper, only thirty refugees crossed into Jordan in the past three days, compared to the average one thousand to two thousand a day previously. U.S. Foreign Policy Syria. Secretary of State John Kerry attended a Friends of Syria meeting in Jordan yesterday and expressed concern over the spill-over of the Syrian conflict into Lebanon. Kerry promised that the United States would discuss increased support for the opposition in the event that diplomacy fails to end the civil war. Israel-Palestine. Secretary of State John Kerry visited Israel and the West Bank today and met separately with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Shimon Peres, and President Mahmoud Abbas as part of his effort to restart peace talks. This trip is Kerry’s fourth visit to Israel and Palestine since becoming secretary of state in February. While We Were Looking Elsewhere Lebanon. Violent clashes between supporters and opponents of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad left five people dead and over fifty wounded in Tripoli last night. It was the fifth day of violence that began in Tripoli on Sunday after Assad’s forces assaulted the Syrian border town of Qusayr. The clashes have left over eighteen people dead and over one hundred and ninety wounded. Algeria. Abderrazzak Mukri, leader of the Islamist Movement of Society for Peace party, demanded that President Abdelaziz Bouteflika appear on television to dispel rumors over his poor health. Bouteflika suffered a mini-stroke on April 27 and was immediately rushed to a French military hospital. He is now recovering in France. Two Algerian newspapers were blocked from publication on Saturday evening after the editor of the papers refused to remove an article claiming that Bouteflika was in a coma. Libya. The European Union approved a mission yesterday to help improve Libyan border security. The mission consists of a 110-member team of civilians that will deploy next month to advise and train Libyan officials. The move is in response to concerns about the flow of Islamist militants and weapons across Libya’s borders. On Monday, militants attacked a gas complex in western Libya, injuring two guards and reportedly stealing weapons and military vehicles. Tunisia. Prime Minister Ali Larayedh told reporters today that Tunisia is making progress in dismantling terrorist networks. Lareydh declined to label the Islamist group Ansar al-Sharia as a terrorist organization, but did call it an “illegal organization” and said that some of its leaders are “involved in terrorism.” Ansar al-Sharia had called for a demonstration on Friday outside of Ennahda’s offices in the city of Qayrawan in protest of the arrest of its spokesman Seifeddine Rais, but called it off after he was released. Clashes between supporters of Ansar al-Sharia and Tunisian security forces broke out on Sunday in Qayrawan and Tunis, leaving one young man dead. Egypt. Seven Egyptian security officers who had been abducted in Sinai last week were released yesterday. President Mohammed Morsi announced the release in a brief speech and vowed that the criminals responsible “must be held accountable,” but gave no information on who was responsible for the kidnapping. Iraq. Gunmen killed seven soldiers today in the town of Taji in the most recent episode of an extremely violent month. Attacks killed at least twenty people and wounded over one hundred yesterday, and a wave of bombings on Sunday and Monday killed more than seventy-six people and wounded at least two hundred and fifty.      
  • Jordan
    Political Instability in Jordan
    In March 2016, the authors wrote an update to this memo to reflect recent developments in Jordan. Read the update. Introduction Jordan has so far weathered the political storm that has engulfed much of the Middle East since late 2010. However, several emerging challenges have the potential to develop into serious threats to the stability of the Hashemite Kingdom. While Jordan's moderate, nonideological, and revolution-adverse political culture is a strong mitigating factor, the risk of domestic instability is greater today than at any time since the country's bloody 1970–71 period. For the United States, systemic political change that is the product of instability—which, for example, would result in the abdication or removal of King Abdullah, a dramatically altered monarchical system, or the demise of the monarchy, replaced by an anti-Western form of government—could lead to Jordanian policies inimical to U.S. interests. Given Jordan's pro-West strategic orientation, commitment to peace with Israel, and cooperation on counterterrorism and security matters, the United States has a strong interest in helping Amman manage potentially destabilizing change. Instability in Jordan is by no means inevitable, and prudent steps taken now can prevent undesirable developments. The Contingencies Jordan's King Abdullah faces a combination of rising external and internal challenges. The main external sources of instability are the spillover effects of Syria's civil war, including possible military entanglement in the border zone, the spread of Salafist radicalization, the heavy cost of sustaining a large refugee population, and the potential interference inside Jordan of Islamist movements from other regional countries. Internal sources of instability include rising public anger resulting from economic austerity, insufficient political reform, and perceived government tolerance of corruption, as well as growing confidence in the country's Muslim Brotherhood and burgeoning Salafist movement. While external threats pose significant challenges, the most serious danger to the regime is when these threats catalyze or exacerbate domestic instability. Here, the three most plausible contingencies are the following: a "Tahrir Square"–like uprising in Amman, an Islamist squeeze play against the monarchy, and the defection of the regime's core base of support in the East Bank. "Tahrir Square" in Amman Frustration with slow, inadequate political reform snowballs into mass demonstrations that the regime cannot contain without resorting to unprecedented levels of force against a largely unarmed citizenry. Potential triggers include popular outrage at a glacially paced reform process, dissatisfaction with a government filled with corrupt ruling elites, or a particularly egregious public spectacle of royal corruption that goes unpunished. This scenario envisions growing demonstrations driven by a gradual but steady erosion of support for the king and possibly the monarchical system itself. Participants run the gamut of Jordan's activist population (itself a small segment of the overall population): underrepresented Palestinians, long-suffering Islamists, and potentially, East Banker Jordanians with tribal origins who have lost confidence in the king's ability to improve the economy, govern transparently, or deliver patronage at traditional levels. Under pressure not to use force, and sharing many similar grievances, the king's security apparatus breaks down. The result could be the king's acceptance of fundamental political change (e.g., a European-style constitutional monarchy), Abdullah's abdication, or the demise of the monarchy and establishment of a republic. The likelihood of this scenario is low because the lack of political reform is neither the leading grievance in Jordan nor one that unifies the opposition. Not only is popular discontent focused more on the weak economy and perception of widespread corruption, but political reform highlights deep antagonism between East Bankers and Palestinians. After all, real reform—in the sense of a fairer demographic representation in national voting—would dilute the privileged role of East Bankers, including the status of Jordan's tribal-heavy security services and the political empowerment of Jordanians of Palestinian origin. The absence of political reform alone is unlikely to trigger mass opposition to the regime. An Islamist Squeeze Play Against the Monarchy In a moderately likely scenario, after decades of an ambivalent relationship with the regime, Jordan's Islamist movement capitalizes on Islamist successes in Jordan's neighbors to directly challenge the Hashemite monarchy, with the goal of transforming Jordan into an Islamic state. Mass protests break out in Amman, Zarqa, Irbid, and other areas where there are significant concentrations of Palestinians, the primary support base of Jordan's Islamist movement. Clashes with security forces are difficult to suppress without substantial loss of life and attract foreign fighters into Jordan from Syria, Egypt and Iraq, leading to a contest over the survival of the regime. Islamists' ambitions in Jordan will largely be determined by events outside the country, particularly the extent to which they, and particularly the jihadists among them, assume prominent roles in post-Assad Syria; the potential for Hamas to overtake Fatah as the dominant player in Palestinian politics; and whether Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood leadership, with Qatari financing, looks to Jordan as an avenue for expanding its regional influence. It is unlikely that any one of these developments would trigger an Islamist contingency in Jordan, but two may be enough to convince local Islamists to flex their muscles and three—a "perfect storm"—could trigger an Islamist version of the Nasserist/Ba'athist effort to subvert Jordan in the 1950s and 1960s. If this were to happen, King Abdullah would likely respond by trying to burnish his Islamic credentials, especially the Hashemites' hereditary claim to the Prophet Mohammed. Ultimately, however, he would rely on his security apparatus while stoking fears of Jordan's takeover by Palestinians to secure the support of East Bankers. A concerted effort to undermine the king by Islamists in Cairo, Damascus, and Ramallah working with the local Muslim Brotherhood and more radical Salafists would pose a substantial threat; factors that militate against its success are the ideological divisions and ethnic splits (i.e., Palestinian versus Transjordanian) within the Brotherhood and the fact that Jordan's tribal-based security apparatus is likely up to the challenge, assuming it is confident of the political will of the king and his regime. The East Bank Core Defects For decades, analysts have focused on Jordan's large Palestinian population as the most likely source of regime instability. At least since the Jordanian army quashed a Syrian-supported Palestinian rebellion in 1970–71, Jordan's Palestinian population has generally been quiescent. Far more dangerous for the regime would be the development of a critical mass of disaffection among its traditional East Bank supporters—those who live in and near the spine of Transjordanian cities (e.g., Ma'an, Karak, Tafilah) and who supply the manpower for Jordan's armed forces and security services. Recently, such opposition has begun to emerge due to poor economic circumstances, alienation from Amman's nouveau riche, anger at the regime's apparent indifference to tribal grievances, and disgust at what is perceived as royally sanctioned corruption. Given the isolationist streak among many East Bankers, Jordan's deepening involvement in Syria—including reports that it is permitting Israeli drone flights over its territory and welcoming deployments of U.S. troops—could feed protests, too. The tribal-based opposition has coalesced around a political organization called Hirak ("Movement"), which has staged persistent street protests in East Bank cities as well as in the capital. In this scenario, East Bank disaffection metastasizes into full-blown opposition to the regime as a result of an event that both offends tribal sensibilities and feeds the idea that the regime has broken its covenant with its East Bank supporters. This could include the killing of Hirak members during street protests or their deaths while in detention, fueling a blood feud against the palace that attracts broader tribal support; a "man-made tragedy," such as the collapse of a bridge or tunnel that kills members of an East Bank family, attributed to shoddy construction linked to corruption; or the shuttering of public institutions, such as clinics, schools, or hospitals, that is viewed as unfair and disproportionate belt-tightening affecting poor East Bankers without similar sacrifices from the political leadership and better-off Ammanites. In each of these cases, demonstrations would spread quickly based on public sympathy and elements of the security services—themselves mostly East Bankers—would be supportive. Of the three scenarios for instability, disaffection among the regime's East Bank core is the most threatening and, since the emergence of the persistent and vocal Hirak in 2011, the most plausible as well. While its numbers are not yet huge, the organization has spread throughout the kingdom, and the regime might not be able to rely for long on East Bank security personnel suppressing East Bankers, whose concerns they may share. So far, the Hirak has no defined and unifying political agenda, but that could quickly change in the context of a wildfire-like spread of riots and demonstrations. Warning Indicators Warning signs of a "Tahrir Square"-in-Amman scenario include bold and direct criticism of the monarchy and the state in Jordan's growing online media, the appearance of leaflets and banners calling for national unity to combat a corrupt government, and a rise in the frequency and size of labor protests, university demonstrations, and sit-ins at government offices. This would all presage the emergence of mass protests. Likewise, increased participation by Palestinians—who have generally stayed out of recent demonstrations—might be another portent of instability. In the Islamist squeeze–play scenario, warning indicators would be less dramatic. One signal would be Islamist regimes or leaders in Egypt and Syria encouraging Jordan's Islamists to take bolder positions or use violent resistance. Increased activity in Jordan by foreign Islamist groups would complicate efforts by the regime to manage the challenge posed by local Islamists. Further growth of Jordan's indigenous Salafist movement, a regional trend already taking place in Jordan, would constitute another warning sign. For the last and most likely contingency, the East Bank core–defects scenario, warning signs might include increasing frequency, size, and coordination of Hirak protests; greater cooperation between the Hirak and Islamists, possibly to condemn the monarchy for "selling out" to foreign interests; increasingly heavy-handed suppression of the protests; defection to the Hirak by some of the "king's men" (i.e., older East Bankers of formerly unquestioned loyalty to the monarchy), and the explosion of "bread riots" in tribal areas, which attack the king and his family. It is important not to view these contingencies as discrete possibilities; rather, they have the potential to affect and even trigger one another. For example, a spread of Hirak protests that neutralizes the regime's security apparatus would make Jordan more vulnerable to subversion from radical Islamists, It is critical to keep a watchful eye on the potential contagion effects of any particular set of events. Implications for U.S. Interests Radical anti-Western change in Jordan coerced by popular opposition—for example, royal abdication or constitutional reforms compelled by street protests—would almost certainly trigger profound change in Jordan's strategic posture that would harm U.S. interests. The monarchy plays a critical role in maintaining Jordan's pro-West, pro-peace orientation; any coerced diminution of royal prerogative would harm Jordanian-American and Jordanian-Israeli relations. Radical change at home is sure to bring about radical change in Jordan's foreign policy. Potential setbacks for the United States include, but are not limited to, the severance of the Jordan-Israel peace treaty, Jordan's refusal to participate in U.S.-led counterterrorism and regional security efforts, and, by implication, heightened instability in Gulf monarchies, which view Jordan as a critical line of defense. At the same time, the United States has humanitarian and other political interests in Jordan: avoiding major bloodshed brought by popular unrest and furthering stable, if incremental, democratic change in line with its larger regional goals. Given these stakes, preventing radical and/or violent change in Jordan is a high U.S. priority. Preventive Options Most analysts emphasize political reform as the best way to insulate Jordan's monarchy from local Islamist and secular challenges alike. This is a mistake. First, as commonly understood in the West, reform is a divisive issue in Jordan; due to the population's demographic divide, its very definition is contested. Second, the most serious potential source of instability, East Bank disaffection, exists apart from reform or the lack thereof. Rather, the two most significant contributing factors to potential East Bank disaffection are perceptions of widespread corruption and insufficient and misallocated government spending. This is somewhat ironic, of course—many East Bankers are not angry about corruption per se, but rather, that they no longer receive what they consider to be an appropriate and equitable share of government largesse at a time when they see "business as usual" among the well-connected elites in Amman. The most effective way for the government to defuse the potential for a critical mass of disaffection is through a somewhat contradictory mixture of taking some high-profile measures against official—and, perhaps, royal—corruption while spending more money on local needs in crucial East Bank communities, thereby dividing the opposition. Unlike Islamists, a significant portion of East Bank opposition is not ideologically alienated from the regime; placating East Bankers should be a top priority. To be sure, the task of preventing instability in Jordan lies principally with the king. Nevertheless, Washington could take the following steps now to help avert a crisis. Provide Additional Financial Support Since its inception, Jordan has been a debtor state, dependent on foreign donors for critical recurrent and discretionary funding. Lately, however, the kingdom's financial struggles have been exacerbated by the cutoff of cheap natural gas from Egypt and the violence in neighboring Syria. Meanwhile, Amman has embarked on an austerity program, cutting food and energy subsidies—and engendering popular anger—to meet the terms of its International Monetary Fund (IMF) Stand-By Arrangement. To prevent the rise of domestic instability, the kingdom will need more financial backing. The United States has wisely supported Jordan's efforts to access the international bond market by providing the kingdom with loan guarantees. But refugees are flowing over the border in increasing numbers, placing an ever-expanding burden on Jordan's public services and fueling what is likely to be competition with the regime's most loyal supporters for scarce public funds. In this environment, additional support will be needed. Washington could take several steps, including providing Amman with more bilateral aid, organizing "friends of Jordan" to augment their own support to the kingdom, and using its influence to convince Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states to fulfill their pledges of financial support. Support Credible Anticorruption Measures Corruption has served as a potent rallying cry for the kingdom's disparate opposition groups. It has also proven highly corrosive to the stature of the monarchy, which—notwithstanding the establishment of an Anticorruption Commission in 2006—suffers from the perception that it is insufficiently committed to rooting out high-level corruption. While Jordan ranks among the least corrupt Arab states and the government has pursued some sensitive, high-profile cases, the perception of endemic public corruption prevails. To counter this perception, Washington could encourage the king to intensify his stated commitment to fighting corruption by pursuing high-profile trials, licensing organizations such as Transparency International to open offices in Jordan, and rescinding legislation restricting Internet publications, which have been outspoken in efforts to expose corruption in the kingdom. Promote Sound Leadership and Adequate Funding for Military and Security Services Holding government officials accountable is essential in the fight against corruption. However, viewed from a different perspective, Jordan's partners and allies should not take solace in the fact that two recent heads of Jordan's General Intelligence Directorate have been jailed for financial crimes. The public disgrace of these intelligence chiefs almost surely has had a demoralizing effect on the institution on which the king relies for internal security. In this regard, there is little Washington can do other than keep a close watch on disaffection within the security services and encourage the appointment of leaders focused solely on protecting the kingdom. Washington could also push Amman to take measures that strengthen its armed forces—the other pillar of regime security. Washington could encourage the government to shrink the procurement budget for the air force, which has long enjoyed special attention (and oversized budgets) despite its peripheral role in national security, in favor of the land forces, which provide the men and equipment that are vital in addressing threats facing the kingdom. Particularly during difficult economic times, it is important that Jordan retain traditional levels of funding for military hospitals and schools, a critical social service for poor East Banker families. Jordan should be counseled to not commit the "unforced error" of slighting military infrastructure that is essential for its internal stability. Enhance Quiet Cooperation on Syria Syria—both in its current state of civil war and in the post-Assad era—will pose a substantial threat to Jordanian security, one that rivals or even surpasses the heightened operational tempo of al-Qaeda in Jordan following the U.S. invasion of Iraq. The spread of radical ideologies from Islamist groups in Syria, an influx of violent jihadis, the threat of cross-border terrorism, and trade in sophisticated weapons will erode Jordan's internal stability. To help Jordan address this range of threats and insulate its internal politics from developments in Syria, the United States could increase its already strong intelligence sharing and cooperation with Jordan. But it should work with Jordan quietly. Whatever additional deterrence is created vis-à-vis Syria by advertising U.S.-Jordanian military and intelligence cooperation, including the deployment of U.S. forces to prepare for contingencies, is offset by inflaming local passions that could ignite if circumstances worsen. Promote a Natural Gas Deal with Israel Jordan's economic morass has much to do with energy. While Egypt was long a source of cheap gas, the absence of security in postrevolutionary Egypt made the pipeline to Jordan vulnerable to terrorist attacks, forcing Jordan to find alternative energy suppliers at exorbitant prices. Amman faced an unbudgeted expense of more than $1 billion in 2012, and Egypt will not return as a reliable supplier of cheap gas in the foreseeable future. In the short term, a concessionary arrangement with Iraq and, perhaps, discounted Gulf oil may fill the gap. But Jordan's strategic answer is Israel, soon to emerge as a major gas exporter, which is willing to provide Jordan's needs at concessionary prices well into the future. Anti-Israel sentiment pervades Jordanian public opinion and inhibits Jordan from pursuing a gas deal. The United States could play matchmaker, persuading the palace and the Jordanian people to accept a deal that is manifestly in Jordan's strategic, commercial, and security interests, all while strengthening the Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty. Advocate for Credible, if Modest, Reform While political reform is not the main source of opposition to the monarchy, modest democratic changes would no doubt be welcome, both for their substantive benefits and for the improved image of the king they would provide. Shortly after the Arab revolts began in early 2011, the king initiated a process that resulted in constitutional reforms approved by 70 percent of Jordanians. While the United States should not endorse the transformational changes advocated by Islamists, Washington should support more moderate reforms, including the revision of media laws to provide for a less repressive press environment and the modification of the electoral law to modestly increase the number of representatives elected from a national list, which would give political parties greater representation in the lower house of parliament. Engaging with Israel and Saudi Arabia Two Middle Eastern states have deep interests in Jordan's stability—Israel and Saudi Arabia—and the United States could bolster Jordan by promoting ties with each. For Israel, whose peace with Jordan is a major strategic asset, finding ways to ensure stability in its eastern neighbor is a high priority. Saudi Arabia's interests are more complicated. Despite the Saudi ruling family's checkered relationship with the Hashemites, Jordan is a critical buffer against instability from the north. While Israeli and Saudi interests are not identical, they are complementary, and there is much that Washington can do to deepen political, security, and intelligence coordination vis-à-vis Amman with Jerusalem and Riyadh. Other actors—the United Arab Emirates, major European states, and pro-Western East Asian countries—have a supportive role to play, especially in terms of the provision of economic aid. Their role at a moment of crisis, however, will be minimal. Mitigating Options Should Jordan face a rapidly deteriorating situation, the United States should first take actions that ensure the safety of U.S. embassy personnel and American expatriates residing in the kingdom. Beyond that, there are important steps Washington could take on its own and in concert with other states to mitigate dangerous instability in Jordan. They include the following. Public Messaging of Support In the event of violence or large demonstrations in Jordan, Washington could privately encourage the palace to continue its longstanding policy of nonviolent crowd control while avoiding public criticism of King Abdullah II and high-profile contacts with opposition figures; both would be taken as signs of wavering U.S. support for the monarchy. Pressing the king to make drastic political changes such as allowing for full or near-full parliamentary representation by national list candidates may appear to mesh with democratic principles but is only likely to benefit Jordan's Islamist movement instead. Securing Immediate Infusions of Cash Money cannot ensure stability in Jordan, but it could buy the king time to ride out economic difficulties fueling popular unrest. A large cash infusion provided by Gulf states or Western donors in the midst of a crisis could prove a helpful stopgap measure, enabling the palace to temporarily resume subsidies, provide pay increases to government employees, or take other steps to defuse demonstrations. The king could then resume his program of managed reform once the situation stabilizes. Warning the Muslim Brotherhood's External Patrons Washington could consider more assertive measures to prevent outside actors from stoking instability, such as issuing stern warnings to Egypt (where the Muslim Brotherhood is strongest) and Qatar (the Brotherhood's main financier) not to interfere in Jordanian politics. In the event Amman finds itself embroiled in East Bank disaffection, Cairo and Doha could sense an opportunity to expand Islamist influence and contribute to a dangerous escalation by urging Jordanian Islamists into the streets in a tactical alliance with East Bankers. To dissuade them, the United States could communicate the substantial costs that Egypt and Qatar would pay for intruding in Jordan's domestic affairs. Recommendations The United States has important interests at stake in Jordan and should take steps now to lower the likelihood of major threats to Jordan's stability emerging in the near future. The most urgent factor contributing to instability in Jordan is financial; the IMF recently reported that Jordan's midterm fiscal situation appears positive, but to get to the "midterm," especially if the regional security situation worsens, Jordan needs help. At the same time, Jordan cannot be insulated from the deepening crisis in Syria but it can be protected from its most negative repercussions. In this regard, the Obama administration should take the following steps. Work with Congress to maintain military assistance to Jordan and organize "friends of Jordan" to provide additional financial support to offset the costs of sheltering Syrian refugees. The precise amount of additional support—which may be in the hundreds of millions of dollars—should include needs assessments conducted by the U.S. and Jordanian governments and relevant international institutions as well as a political premium designed to cushion the regime against shocks and prevent the rise of instability resulting from competition for limited public funds. In addition, the Obama administration should encourage Saudi Arabia and other donors to fulfill outstanding aid commitments. Together, these steps should ease Jordan's budget deficit and provide Amman with the means to address the demands of important constituencies. Lobby King Abdullah privately to implement more systemic anticorruption efforts while boosting open, transparent investments in East Banker–dominated areas. This message should be a consistent talking point high on the agenda of U.S.-Jordan consultations. The European Union's leadership should reinforce this message and provide technical assistance on anticorruption measures. Encourage Amman to prioritize its military expenditures on areas most essential for regime maintenance. Spending should be focused on land forces, intelligence agencies, and military support institutions (e.g., hospitals and schools), rather than air force procurement and other areas peripheral to maintaining stability. Urge the Jordanians to continue incremental political reform. This might include loosening media restrictions and increasing the number of national list parliamentarians. Any changes should strike the balance of maintaining forward movement without raising expectations of a rapid political transformation or providing regime opponents with opportunities to advance revolutionary change. Counter the spread of radical Islamist ideologies and jihadist terrorism to Jordan. This can be achieved by enhancing the already cooperative U.S.-Jordanian intelligence-sharing relationship, warning outside actors—especially Egypt and Qatar—against efforts to exploit Jordanian vulnerabilities to expand Islamist influence in the country, working to prevent a Hamas takeover in the West Bank, and bolstering Jordan's quiet cooperation with Israel and Saudi Arabia.
  • United States
    Jordanian King Abdullah at the White House: What a Difference a Month Makes
    King Abdullah of Jordan is slated to meet President Obama at the White House on Friday. Though meetings between the two leaders are frequent and even commonplace, it is still noteworthy that the Hashemite leader is meeting the president just four weeks after hosting him in Jordan. World leaders don’t meet that frequently unless there is something urgent to discuss, and there is: Syria. The crisis in neighboring Syria is of utmost concern to King Abdullah, and it should be. Half a million Syrians having taken refuge in Jordan so far—10 percent of the kingdom’s population—and there is no end to the refugee flow in sight. Abdullah noted when he met Obama in Amman that though the number of Syrian refugees in Jordan could easily double by the end of the year, the kingdom would not shut its border to Syrian refugees—“It’s not the Jordanian way,” the king quipped. Still, Syrian refugees are starting to spark social tensions in Jordan and the cost of housing them is expected to reach one billion dollars this year. And cash-strapped and resource poor Jordan already has its fill of Palestinian and Iraqi refugees from previous Middle East wars. Recognizing that leaving the Syria crisis unaddressed only makes matters worse, Abdullah was the first Arab leader to call on Assad to step down. Taking such a bold step publicly while the UN and the United Sates refuse to provide military support to Assad’s opponents has left Abdullah feeling extremely vulnerable, given that his capital is a mere one hundred miles away from Assad’s. When the two leaders met in Amman last month, President Obama said before King Abdullah, as he has repeatedly over the past year, that “the use of chemical weapons by the Assad regime would be a game-changer from our perspective because once you let that situation spin out of control it’s very hard to stop, and can have enormous spillover effects across the region.” Yet the British and French governments told the United Nations last week that they have “credible evidence,” based on soil samples and witnesses, that the Syrian regime has used small amounts of chemical weapons against its own people in recent months. Israel’s senior most military intelligence analyst yesterday said the Syrian government had repeatedly used chemical weapons last month. In the month since Abdullah and Obama met the game has apparently changed, to use the president’s term. What will the President say about it when he hosts King Abdullah in the Oval Office on Friday?
  • United States
    Middle East Matters This Week: Palestine’s Political Shake-up, Syria’s Opposition Gains, and Mubarak’s Re-Trial
    Significant Developments Palestine. Palestinian Authority prime minister Salam Fayyad’s resignation was accepted over the weekend by President Mahmoud Abbas. Fayyad will reportedly remain in the post until Abbas names a replacement. Political tensions rose between the two Palestinian leaders in early March when Finance Minister Nabil Qassis announced he was quitting. Fayyad accepted the resignation, but was overruled by Abbas, in contravention of the Palestinian Basic Law–in effect challenging the prime minister’s authority to hire and fire cabinet ministers and sparking a constitutional crisis. Syria. Opposition forces seized a military base in Homs today after weeks of fighting for control of the facility. The opposition had been trying to make gains in strategically located areas near the Lebanese border. Meanwhile, European Union members reached preliminary agreement yesterday to relax sanctions against Syria’s oil sector in a bid to provide an economic boost to oil-rich regions in opposition strongholds. EU foreign ministers are likely to endorse the agreement next Monday. In Damascus, Syrian president Bashar al-Assad issued a new amnesty on Tuesday that reduces death sentences for all crimes except those of “treason, espionage, and terrorism.” Moaz al-Khatib, leader of the Syrian National Coalition, said that Assad would need to release over 160,000 prisoners, mostly women and children, before the amnesty could be considered meaningful. Egypt. Former president Hosni Mubarak was moved back to prison from an army hospital today after he appeared in good health in court on Saturday for the opening of his retrial. The judge, however, recused himself from the trial. The next session is scheduled for May 11 with a new judge. Meanwhile, a team from the International Monetary Fund left Egypt without securing a deal for an aid package after nearly two weeks of talks. U.S. Foreign Policy Syria. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel told the Armed Services Committee yesterday that the Pentagon is sending approximately two hundred soldiers to Jordan. The troops will assist efforts to contain violence along the Syrian border and in planning for any necessary contingencies involving chemical weapons. The new troops, all hailing from the 1st Armored Division, are replacing a similar number of U.S. forces currently stationed in Jordan, who came from various units, in an effort to increase teamwork. An unnamed U.S. official reportedly said that the number of troops in Jordan could expand to some 20,000 in certain contingencies. Hagel’s announcement comes ahead of his trip to the region beginning this weekend that will take him to Israel, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates primarily to discuss Syria and Iran. General Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the same Armed Services Committee hearing that he no longer thinks the United States can clearly identify the right people to arm amongst Syria’s opposition. According to Dempsey, “It’s actually more confusing on the opposition side today than it was six months ago.” In contrast, Secretary of State John Kerry told the House Foreign Affairs Committee yesterday that the Syrian opposition has a clear ability to “make sure what goes to the moderate, legitimate opposition, is in fact, getting to them.” Kerry also said that the United States is coordinating “very, very closely” with those providing lethal aid to the Syrian opposition. Israel-Palestine. Secretary of State Kerry warned the House Foreign Affairs Committee yesterday that he believes that the window for a two-state solution is closing. He said that “we have some period of time, a year, a year-and-a-half, or two years or it’s over.” Kerry pledged to honor the urgency and “see what we can do to move forward.” While We Were Looking Elsewhere Iraq. Separate attacks in Mosul and Baghdad killed four people and wounded eight more today in the latest of spate of violence in the run-up to Saturday’s provincial elections. The local elections will be the first since the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq in 2011. Attacks have occurred every day this week, leaving at least seventy-two dead. Meanwhile, Iraq’s self-ruled Kurdish region decided today to set September 21 as the date for new parliamentary and presidential elections. Iran. General Majid Bokaei, Iran’s deputy defense minister, declared on Tuesday that Iran had test-fired a new land-to-sea ballistic missile in the Gulf. The announcement came two days before Iran’s commemoration of National Army Day today, an occasion often marked by the unveiling of military technological advances. Kuwait. Kuwaiti police fired teargas yesterday to disperse thousands of protesters demonstrating against the conviction of prominent opposition leader and former MP Mussallam al-Barrack. A Kuwaiti court sentenced al-Barrack on Monday to five years in prison for insulting the country’s emir. The protesters marched to the central prison chanting “We will not let you,” a phrase taken from al-Barrack’s fiery speech at a political rally in October. Tunisia. Amine Mati, head of the International Monetary Fund mission to Tunisia, said on Tuesday that the IMF and Tunisia are “very close” to concluding a $1.75 billion loan agreement. The loan was delayed amidst the turmoil surrounding the assassination of opposition politician Chokri Belaid in February. However, the restoration of calm has facilitated the return of the IMF, and Mati suggested that a deal may be signed in May. This Week in History Yesterday marked the sixty-seventh anniversary of Syria’s independence from France. Celebrated as “Evacuation Day,” the national holiday commemorates the departure of the last French soldier from Syria on April 17, 1946, marking the end of the French Mandate. Syrian president Bashar al-Assad gave a rare interview to Syrian state television channel al-Ikhbariya in commemoration of Evacuation Day yesterday claiming that Western nations would suffer for funding al-Qaeda in Syria, as they did in Afghanistan. The state television channel previewed Assad’s interview with footage from the French Mandatory era, drawing parallels between “the heroes of independence” and today’s Syrian army. Earlier in the day, Syria’s foreign ministry warned France to not interfere in Syria’s domestic affairs and said that “the Syrian people will not allow France to return to their country through its support for armed terrorist groups, and by conspiring to cause Syrian bloodshed."
  • Iran
    Weekend Reading: Controversy in Jordan, A New Year in Iran, and Religion in Syria
    The Jordanian perspective on Jordan’s current political situation and King Abdullah’s recent commentary in the Atlantic. Farhang Jahanpour gives his take on President Obama’s message to the leaders and people of Iran on their annual celebration of Nowruz, the Persian new year that dates back several thousand years. Syria Deeply interviews Syrian activists to understand better the secularist-Islamist dynamic among Syria’s rebels.