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 The Empire Trapped:  The US Unpromising Role in the New Middle East
	  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 8, 2012 
 Editors representing many Asian newspapers stood in a perfect 
	line. They were nervous and giddy at the prospect of meeting Li Changchun, 
	China’s powerful member of the Communist Party’s Politburo Standing 
	Committee. Personally, the Great Hall of the People and the fortitude of 
	Chinese society mesmerized me. Despite its challenges and repeated 
	accusations of corruption and power struggles, China appeared composed while 
	an unwavering forward movement was propelling it. As for the country’s 
	foreign policy, it is governed by a cautious slowly churning agenda, which 
	is unambiguously clear in its long-term objectives.
 
 On that day, 
	nearly two years ago, we knew that Li was awaiting our arrival, for a 
	solitary old jacket, which bore his name with a sticker fastened on the 
	hanger, hung in a closet in the hallway leading to the room where the 
	meeting took place. Li Changchun spoke frustratingly slow as if he were a 
	Hollywood stereotype of a Chinese emperor. Self-assertive and unperturbed by 
	our presence and the many probing questions, Li’s perception of history was 
	much more far-reaching than one expected from the chief of propaganda. Li 
	clearly saw his country’s foreign policy in light of US global military 
	adventures, geopolitical advances and setbacks. No other country seemed to 
	matter. It was a competition and China was determined to win.
 
 A few 
	months later, upheaval struck the Middle East. Its manifestations – 
	revolutions, civil wars, regional mayhem and conflicts of all sorts – 
	reverberated beyond the Middle East. Shrinking and rising empires alike took 
	notice. Fault lines were quickly determined and exploited and players 
	changed positions or jockeyed for advanced ones, as a new Great Game in the 
	resource and strategic rich region was about to begin. The so-called ‘Arab 
	Spring’ was rapidly becoming a game-changer in a region that seemed 
	resistant to transformations of any kind. China was wary of its existing 
	investment in the region. So they moved with predictable caution: Wobbled at 
	times, as in Libya, appearing firmer in Syria, and almost entirely aloof in 
	Bahrain.
 
 For China however, the space for future political movement 
	is boundless. Unlike the United States, a ‘new’ or stagnant Middle East will 
	not change the fact that China is barely associated with an atrocious 
	history of military onslaughts or economic exploitation, with which western 
	powers are undeniably associated. The speed of the political transition 
	underway in the Middle East may require Li Changchun to speak a bit faster, 
	a tad louder and with greater clarity, but it will hardly demand a complete 
	shift in China’s policies. It is the interests and rank of the US, as the 
	dominant foreign power in the region, that will consequently suffer 
	irreparable damage.
 
 When discussed through the prism of sheer 
	political analysis, history can be narrow, selective and problematically 
	short. But based on a methodical historical investigation, reality is much 
	less confusing, and the future is far less unpredictable. The seemingly 
	unbridled conflict in the Middle East is no exception.
 
 In his 
	review of Fredrik Logevall’s recently published book: “Embers of War: The 
	Fall of an Empire and the Making of America’s Vietnam,” Gordon Goldstein 
	wrote, “Over the centuries, strategic overextension by great powers acting 
	on the periphery of their national interests has hobbled ancient empires and 
	modern states” (Washington Post, September 28). Goldstein was referring to 
	US conduct in Southeast Asia, where the US adopted as its own, the 
	disastrous legacy of French colonialism in Indochina (Vietnam, Cambodia and 
	Laos). Both powers were squarely and humiliatingly defeated.
 
 Empires don’t crumble overnight, however. A fall of an empire can be as 
	agonizingly long as its rise. Signs of that collapse are oftentimes subtle 
	and might not be followed by a big boom of any sort, but can be unambiguous 
	and definite.
 
 Since the Second World War, US foreign policy has 
	been largely predicated on military adventures, by severely punishing 
	enemies and controlling ‘friends’. Diplomacy was often the icing on the cake 
	of war, wars that seemed to follow similar patterns such as targeting 
	powerless, economically browbeaten and isolated countries. It was a 
	successful brand while it lasted. It allowed the generals to speak of the 
	invincibility of their military might, the politicians to boast of their 
	global responsibilities and the media to tirelessly promote American values. 
	Few seemed to care much for the millions of innocent people who bore the 
	brunt of that supposed quest for democratization of the Third World.
 
 Few US foreign policy disasters can be compared to that of the Middle East. 
	Similar to its Southeast Asia inheritance from the French, the US 
	‘inherited’ the Middle East from fading British and French empires. Unlike 
	European imperial powers, US early contacts with the region were marred with 
	violence, whether through its support of local dictatorships, financing and 
	arming Israel at the expense of Palestinians and other Arab nations, or 
	finally by getting involved – some say, entangled – in lethal wars.
 
 The problem of ‘great’ empires is that their ability to maneuver is 
	oftentimes restricted by their sheer size and the habitual nature of their 
	conduct. They can only move forward and when that is no longer possible, 
	they must retreat, ushering in their demise. US foreign policy is almost 
	stuck when it is required to be most agile. While the Middle East is finally 
	breaking away from a once impenetrable cocoon, and China – and Russia, among 
	others – is attempting to negotiate a new political stance, the US is 
	frozen. It took part in the bombing of Libya because it knows of no other 
	alternative to achieving quick goals without summoning violence. In Syria, 
	it refuses to be a positive conduit for a peaceful transition because it is 
	paralyzed by its military failure in Iraq and fearful over the fate of 
	Israel, should Syria lose its political centrality.
 
 Even if the US 
	opts to stave off a catastrophic decline in the region, it is shackled by 
	the invasive tentacles of Israel, the pro-Israel lobby and their massive and 
	permeating network, which crosses over competing media, political parties 
	and ideological agendas. The US is now destined to live by the rules – and 
	redlines – determined by Israel, whose national interests are barely 
	concerned with the rise or demise of America. Israel only wants to ensure 
	its supremacy in the ‘new’ Middle East. With the rise of post-revolutionary 
	Egypt, Israel’s challenges are growing. It fears that a nuclear Iran would 
	deprive it from its only unique edge - its nuclear technology and massive 
	nuclear arsenal. If Iran obtains nuclear technology, Israel might have to 
	negotiate in good faith as an equal partner to its neighbors, a circumstance 
	that Israel abhors. Between the Israeli hammer and the anvil of the imminent 
	decline of all empires, the US, which has held the Middle East hostage to 
	its foreign policy for nearly six decades, is now hostage to the limitations 
	of that very foreign policy. The irony is an escapable.
 
 Listening 
	to the monotonous voice of Li Changchun, it was clear that China was in no 
	great hurry. Nor are the other powers now eyeing with great anticipation, 
	the endgame of the Middle East upheaval.
 
 Listening to US President 
	Barack Obama’s lecture to the UN’s General Assembly on September 25, as he 
	spoke of democracy, values and the predictable and self-negating language, 
	it seems that there is no intention in changing course or maneuvering or 
	retreating or simply going away altogether. The empire is entangled in its 
	own self-defeating legacy. This is to the satisfaction of its many 
	contenders, China notwithstanding.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London.)
 
 
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