The Islamic State Reshapes the Middle East
Nuclear talks with Iran have failed to yield an agreement, but the
deadline for a deal has been extended without a hitch. What would have
been a significant crisis a year ago, replete with threats and anxiety,
has been handled without drama or difficulty. This new response to yet
another failure to reach an accord marks a shift in the relationship
between the United States and Iran, a shift that can’t be understood
without first considering the massive geopolitical shifts that have
taken place in the Middle East, redefining the urgency of the nuclear
issue.
These shifts are rooted in the emergence of the Islamic State.
Ideologically, there is little difference between the Islamic State and
other radical Islamic jihadist movements. But in terms of geographical
presence, the Islamic State has set itself apart from the rest. While al
Qaeda might have longed to take control of a significant nation-state,
it primarily remained a sparse, if widespread, terrorist
organization. It held no significant territory permanently; it was a
movement, not a place. But the Islamic State, as its name suggests, is
different. It sees itself as the kernel from which a transnational
Islamic state should grow, and it has established itself in Syria and
Iraq as a geographical entity. The group controls a roughly defined
region in the two countries, and it has something of a conventional military,
designed to defend and expand the state’s control. Thus far, whatever
advances and reversals it has seen, the Islamic State has retained this
character. While the group certainly funnels a substantial portion of
its power into dispersed guerrilla formations and retains a significant
regional terrorist apparatus, it remains something rather new for the
region — an Islamist movement acting as a regional state.
It is
unclear whether the Islamic State can survive. It is under attack by
American aircraft, and the United States is attempting to create a
coalition force that will attack and conquer it. It is also unclear
whether the group can expand. The Islamic State appears to have reached
its limits in Kurdistan, and the Iraqi army (which was badly defeated in
the first stage of the Islamic State's emergence) is showing some signs
of being able to launch counteroffensives.
A New Territorial Threat
The
Islamic State has created a vortex that has drawn in regional and
global powers, redefining how they behave. The group's presence is both
novel and impossible to ignore because it is a territorial
entity. Nations have been forced to readjust their policies and
relations with each other as a result. We see this inside of Syria and
Iraq. Damascus and Baghdad are not the only ones that need to deal with
the Islamic State; other regional powers — Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia
chief among them — need to recalculate their positions as well. A
terrorist organization can inflict pain and cause turmoil, but it
survives by remaining dispersed. The Islamic State has a terrorism
element, but it is also a concentrated force that could potentially
expand its territory. The group behaves geopolitically, and as long as
it survives it poses a geopolitical challenge.
Within Iraq and
Syria, the Islamic State represents elements of the Sunni
Arab population. It has imposed itself on the Sunni Arab regions of
Iraq, and although resistance to Islamic State power certainly exists
among Sunnis, some resistance to any emergent state is inevitable. The
Islamic State has managed to cope with this resistance so far. But the
group also has pressed against the boundaries of the Kurdish and Shiite
regions, and it has sought to create a geographical link with its forces
in Syria, changing Iraq's internal dynamic considerably. Where the
Sunnis were once weak and dispersed, the Islamic State has now become a
substantial force in the region north and west of Baghdad, posing a
possible threat to Kurdish oil production
and Iraqi governance. The group has had an even more complex effect in
Syria, as it has weakened other groups resisting the government of
Syrian President Bashar al Assad, thereby strengthening al Assad's
position while increasing its own power. This dynamic illustrates the
geopolitical complexity of the Islamic State's presence.
Countering with a Coalition
The
United States withdrew from Iraq hoping that Baghdad, even if unable to
govern its territory with a consistent level of authority, would
nevertheless develop a balance of power in Iraq in which various degrees
of autonomy, formal and informal, would be granted. It was an ambiguous
goal, though not unattainable. But the emergence of the Islamic State
upset the balance in Iraq dramatically, and initial weaknesses in Iraqi
and Kurdish forces facing Islamic State fighters forced the United
States to weigh the possibility of the group dominating large parts of
Iraq and Syria. This situation posed a challenge that the United States
could neither decline nor fully engage. Washington's solution was to
send aircraft and minimal ground forces to attack the Islamic State,
while seeking to build a regional coalition that would act.
Today,
the key to this coalition is Turkey. Ankara has become a substantial
regional power. It has the largest economy and military in the region,
and it is the most vulnerable to events in Syria and Iraq, which run
along Turkey's southern border. Ankara's strategy under President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has been to avoid conflicts with its neighbors, which it
has been able to do successfully so far. The United States now wants
Turkey to provide forces — particularly ground troops — to resist the
Islamic State. Ankara has an interest in doing so, since Iraqi oil would
help diversify its sources of energy and because it wants to keep the
conflict from spilling into Turkey. The Turkish government has worked
hard to keep the Syrian conflict outside its borders and to limit its
own direct involvement in the civil war. Ankara also does not want the
Islamic State to create pressure on Iraqi Kurds that could eventually
spread to Turkish Kurds.
Turkey is in a difficult situation.
If it intervenes against the Islamic State alongside the United States,
its army will be tested in a way that it has not been tested since the
Korean War, and the quality of its performance is uncertain. The risks
are real, and victory is far from guaranteed. Turkey would be resuming
the role it played in the Arab world during the Ottoman Empire,
attempting to shape Arab politics in ways that it finds
satisfactory. The United States did not do this well in Iraq, and there
is no guarantee that Turkey would succeed either. In fact, Ankara could
be drawn into a conflict with the Arab states from which it would not be
able to withdraw as neatly as Washington did.
At the same time,
instability to Turkey's south and the emergence of a new territorial
power in Syria and Iraq represent fundamental threats to Ankara. There
are claims that the Turks secretly support the Islamic State, but I
doubt this greatly. The Turks may be favorably inclined toward other
Islamist groups, but the Islamic State is both dangerous and likely to
draw pressure from the United States against any of its
supporters. Still, the Turks will not simply do America's bidding;
Ankara has interests in Syria that do not mesh with those of the United
States.
Turkey wants to see the al Assad regime toppled, but the
United States is reluctant to do so for fear of opening the door
to a Sunni jihadist regime (or at the very least, jihadist anarchy)
that, with the Islamic State operational, would be impossible to shape.
To some extent, the Turks are floating the al Assad issue as an excuse
not to engage in the conflict. But Ankara wants al Assad gone and a
pro-Turkey Sunni regime in his place. If the United States refuses to
cede to this demand, Turkey has a basis for refusing to intervene; if
the United States agrees, Turkey gets the outcome it wants in Syria, but
at greater risk to Iraq. Thus the Islamic State has become the focal
point of U.S.-Turkish ties, replacing prior issues such as Turkey's
relationship with Israel.
Iran's Changing Regional Role
The
emergence of the Islamic State has similarly redefined Iran's posture
in the region. Tehran sees a pro-Iranian, Shiite-dominated regime in
Baghdad as critical to its interests, just as it sees its domination of
southern Iraq as crucial. Iran fought a war with a Sunni-dominated Iraq
in the 1980s, with devastating casualties; avoiding another such war is
fundamental to Iranian national security policy. From Tehran's point of
view, the Islamic State has the ability to cripple the government in
Baghdad and potentially unravel Iran’s position in Iraq. Though this is
not the most likely outcome, it is a potential threat that Iran must
counter.
Small Iranian formations have already formed in eastern
Kurdistan, and Iranian personnel have piloted Iraqi aircraft in attacks
on Islamic State positions. The mere possibility of the Islamic State
dominating even parts of Iraq is unacceptable to Tehran, which aligns
its interests with those of the United States. Both countries want the
Islamic State broken. Both want the government in Baghdad to
function. The Americans have no problem with Iran guaranteeing security
in the south, and the Iranians have no objection to a pro-American
Kurdistan so long as they continue to dominate southern oil flows.
Because
of the Islamic State — as well as greater long-term trends — the United
States and Iran have been drawn together by their common
interests. There have been numerous reports of U.S.-Iranian military
cooperation against the Islamic State, while the major issue dividing
them (Iran's nuclear program) has been marginalized. Monday's
announcement that no settlement had been reached in nuclear talks was
followed by a calm extension of the deadline for agreement, and neither
side threatened the other or gave any indication that the failure
changed the general accommodation that has been reached. In our view, as
we have always said, achieving a deliverable nuclear weapon is far more
difficult than enriching uranium, and Iran is not an imminent nuclear
power. That appears to have become the American position. Neither
Washington nor Tehran wants to strain relations over the nuclear issue,
which has been put on the back burner for now because of the Islamic
State's rise.
This new entente between the United States and Iran
naturally alarms Saudi Arabia, the third major power in the region if
only for its wealth and ability to finance political movements. Riyadh
sees Tehran as a rival in the Persian Gulf that could potentially
destabilize Saudi Arabia via its Shiite population. The Saudis also see
the United States as the ultimate guarantor of their national security,
even though they have been acting without Washington's buy-in since the
Arab Spring. Frightened by Iran’s warming relationship with the United
States, Riyadh is also becoming increasingly concerned by America’s
growing self-sufficiency in energy, which has dramatically reduced Saudi
Arabia's political importance to the United States.
There has
been speculation that the Islamic State is being funded by Arabian
powers, but it would be irrational for Riyadh to be funding the group.
The stronger the Islamic State is, the firmer the ties between the
United States and Iran become. Washington cannot live with a
transnational caliphate that might become regionally powerful someday.
The more of a threat the Islamic State becomes, the more Iran and the
United States need each other, which runs completely counter to the
Saudis' security interests. Riyadh needs the tensions between the United
States and Iran. Regardless of religious or ideological impulse,
Tehran's alliance with Washington forms an overwhelming force that
threatens the Saudi regime's survival. And the Islamic State has no love
for the Saudi royal family. The caliphate can expand in Saudi Arabia's
direction, too, and we've already seen grassroots activity related to
the Islamic State taking place inside the kingdom. Riyadh has been
engaged in Iraq, and it must now try to strengthen Sunni forces other
than the Islamic State quickly, so that the forces pushing Washington
and Tehran together subside.
America's Place at the Center of the Middle East
For
Washington's part, the Islamic State has shown that the idea of the
United States simply leaving the region is unrealistic. At the same
time, the United States will not engage in multidivisional warfare in
Iraq. Washington failed to achieve a pro-American stability there the
first time; it is unlikely to achieve it this time. U.S. air power
applies significant force against the Islamic State and is a token of
America's power and presence — as well as its limits. The U.S. strategy
of forming an alliance against the Islamic State is extremely complex,
since the Turks do not want to be pulled into the fight without major
concessions, the Iranians want reduced pressure on their nuclear
programs in exchange for their help, and the Saudis are aware of the
dangers posed by Iran.
What is noteworthy is the effect that the
Islamic State has had on relationships in the region. The group's
emergence has once again placed the United States at the center of the
regional system, and it has forced the three major Middle Eastern powers
to redefine their relations with Washington in various ways. It has
also revived the deepest fears of Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia. Ankara
wants to avoid being drawn back into the late Ottoman nightmare of
controlling Arabs, while Iran has been forced to realign itself with the
United States to resist the rise of a Sunni Iraq and Saudi Arabia, as
the Shah once had to do. Meanwhile, the Islamic State has raised Saudi fears of U.S. abandonment in favor of Iran, and the United States' dread of re-engaging in Iraq has come to define all of its actions.
In
the end, it is unlikely that the territorial Islamic State can
survive. The truth is that Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia are all waiting
for the United States to solve the Islamic State problem with air power
and a few ground forces. These actions will not destroy the Islamic
State, but they will break the group's territorial coherence and force
it to return to guerrilla tactics and terrorism. Indeed, this is already
happening. But the group's very existence, however temporary, has
stunned the region into realizing that prior assumptions did not take
into account current realities. Ankara will not be able to avoid
increasing its involvement in the conflict; Tehran will have to live
with the United States; and Riyadh will have to seriously consider its
vulnerabilities. As for the United States, it can simply go home, even
if the region is in chaos. But the others are already at home, and that
is the point that the Islamic State has made abundantly clear.
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