Posted on 02/26/2006 11:18:16 PM PST by Cannoneer No. 4
The controversy about the UAE-based company projected to take over operations in a number of US seaports, quickly and unfortunately- dove into domestic politics. The issue was turned into trusting or not the will and the capacity of the Government, particularly the executive branch to secure the nation against Terrorists. And once the debate mutates into investigating the intentions of the policy makers particularly the President and his assistants regarding the prosecution of the War on Terror, most of the exchange diverts to politics instead of policies. The seaports management issue at this point is framed by some more like a Ports-Gate affair rather than a rational examination of a strategic security matter a la 9/11 Commission. Unfortunately the immediate politicization of national security, with its ramifications on the grounds of leadership credibility, of I-told-you-so, and of I-know-better, hurts the greater vision of the debate. Lets try to address the UAE affair in a calm, fair and systematic analysis.
The parties engaged in the debate introduced a number of arguments which complicated the understanding by the public of the core-issue. Here are a few and my comments:
Ethnic identity
The backers of the deal stated that it would be unfair for the US Government to reject the deal with the UAE just because it is an Arab country. This argument doesnt hold because no where in the opposing views a statement was made that the deal must be rejected because the signing party is an Arab country. First, the opposition to the contract applies to other countries from all background: Arab and non-Arab. What applies to a specific issue within the UAE would also apply to Indonesia, Malaysia, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Nigeria, and many other candidates. The issue is not the ethnic identity of the UAE, but the capability of Terrorists to penetrate the US system by penetrating a particular country.
Offending?
Another extreme argument made, not necessarily by Government spokespersons, but by commentators is that not concluding an agreement with an Arab country will offend Arabs in general and in the US in particular: Obviously this is a far fetched lobbyist argument. For the answer to this charge is that it would be not only welcome, but even encouraged to have Arab Americans (and other Middle Eastern Americans) to be assigned high jobs in this field, and also welcomed to sign contracts with Arab-American companies who can carry such jobs. Better, other Arab countries, had they had the possibilities would possibly qualify better, such as Jordan for example.
The Ally factor
A more serious argument is that the UAE is an ally in the War on Terror. Therefore, concludes the proponents, this particular status would obligate the US to grant the management of seaports to companies based in Gulf emirates. In fact the status of ally" in the War on Terror would grant a particular country the privilege to be supported militarily, financially and have its forces trained by the US. It would even grant the UAE and other allies the options of military industrialization within their own borders, including assembling parts of American weapon system. So in term of trust Washington can and should travel the extra mile with its allies, European or other, to translate the alliance into tangible steps. But that doesnt support the argument that these countries, any country with radical networks conditions, would be granted capabilities that could jeopardize US national security, even though indirectly. And it is not the UAE only: Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Indonesia, and in general all allies, could present such complexity.
Britain and UAE
An argument was made about discriminating between the UAE and the UK in terms of who is a better ally in the War on Terror so that they can benefit from US offer in international business. The argument itself doesn't fit the comparative parameters. For the critics of the contract didn't raise the choice between Britain and the Emirates as a reason behind their concerns regarding the choice. The issue is not about London being a better ally in the War on Terror than Dubai. It is about the deployment of Salafists organizations and Khumeinist agencies within that federation of monarchies. But since the architects of the PR campaign not necessarily the Administration- on behalf of the agreement are naturally inclined to use any argument to win the bid, including twisting geopolitical realities for a business deal, it is important not to let the argument have a free ride unchecked, at least for future similar crisis. My point is simple: Yes the United Kingdom's strategic commitments and integration in the War on Terror are more advanced than those of the UAE. Even if this isn't the real issue, these are the reasons why Londons position is higher: a) Great Britain is listed as a target by al Qaida, not the UAE; b) Toni Blair was sitting in the US Congress when President Bush declared War on the Taliban in October 2001, not the monarchs of the UAE; c) The UK has a clear strategy against the Jihadist-Terrorists, not the Emirates; and last but not least, the Prime Minister of the Isles declared the ideology of al Qaida as terrorist and criminal, not Dubais rulers. These, plus many other considerations grants Britain a clear status of strategic ally in the War with the Jihadists over the UAEs somewhat cooperation against al Qaida.
UAE and other Arab allies
Another argument was made about how Washington shouldnt reject a deal with a company -just because it is owned by an Arab Government- in this case the UAE. Well, had the deal been with Jordan, the grade could have been different. The Hashemite Government is now ideologically engaged against al Qaida. The King rejected the Takfir doctrine, a key weapon in the Jihadists mobilization. Dubai is still silent on it. Amman paid the price in blood when Zarqawi attacked its downtown few months ago. To be more sophisticated in the analysis, al Qaida attacked targets inside Saudi Arabia, but Riyadh didnt engage the radical clerics yet. So it is not about Arab or not Arab, Muslim or not Muslim, it is essentially about the strategic determination among US allies, to climb the ladder of counter-Jihadism to the end. Below that level, catching al Qaida operatives from time to time shouldnt provide the vital security clearance to US hinterlands access points.
Administrative versus security
In the original explanation of the deal, officials reassured people with concerns that there was no threat coming from the UAE because the company is to manage the administrative space of the ports operations exclusively, not the security areas. While the argument is logical, that isnt the logic of the would-be terrorists. Bureaucracy and security are intertwined when it comes to strategic penetration. Al Qaida teams arent going to play a Hollywoodian James Bond movie and were not going to necessarily see Dubai CEOs jumping on a freight boat strapped with kilograms of TNT. Things are not square and triangular in the Terrorism business, but more fluid. The Jihadists wont be that obvious in their use of a potential infiltration. The deeper danger of penetration will be more complex: First, the enemy will penetrate from the UAE end, aided by Salafi or even Khumeinist sympathizers. This first line of defense could be breached by hiring elements to form a network inside the company, or subcontracted hostile entities in the future. Second, while moving inside the layers of the management the net could then hire elements coming from the American side. If we project that Jihadists are operating inside the US, a UAE company managing six main US ports would be a first rate opportunity for them to connect. Hence, one can project that once a network installs itself inside the corporation, it would be able to recruit US citizens and residents sympathizers with or part of the movement. A bridge would thus be established between the outside cells and the inside cells through a perfectly legitimate outlet.
Action would come once the bridge is operational. It could develop into multiple directions. General intelligence and spying in the US is only one possibility. Storing material in these sensitive areas is two. Learning about the security systems in these ports from the administrative end is three. Disrupting national security operations is four. The deeper the layers, the wider possibilities would open to the Jihadists. But the initial hole is what allows the chain to develop.
Security Check
Officials have assured the public that a thorough process of security check has been accomplished. I do not doubt the efforts and I can project how meticulous it was and remain. The question is: "what" was checked? If oversimplifying- the bureaucrats CVs were reviewed, it is less likely that a Zarqawi equivalent would be posting his bio online: al Qaida basic manuals would prevent it. So, would US authorities be able to watch salient activities inside the administrative part of the deal? Most likely, but the threat doesnt start there, it debuts outside the company, on the UAE side, that is inside a sovereign nation, albeit ally. There, US agencies do not have a legal ground to inspect the lower layers of the potential threat. Only their counterparts can, hence the risk. So the problem isnt where Americas agencies have the upper hand, inside the ports and within the company, but inside the UAE and within the layers of recruitment. And there is where the enemy would be awaiting for his moment.
Al Qaida and Iranian penetration threat
By this stage in the War on terror, the US is targeted by two powers: the al Qaida led Salafists and the Iran controlled Khumeinists. Both are omnipresent in the UAE. The Salafists have manifested their presence before and after 9/11. Reports about sympathies are abundant. UAE efforts to curb their influence were indeed been noticeable, but no major state-led offensive has waged a systematic campaign as in Jordan. Individual al Qaida supporters have been sought after, but Jihadism wasnt outlawed. On the other hand, the Emirates have been infiltrated by Iranian services for decades. These two streams are the reason for why assigning US Ports management is a matter of national security. However, these realities need to be checked and evaluated as a prelude to re-reading the contract with Dubais DP World. For a blunt rejection of the agreement based on domestic and generally uninformed politics is not the way to go. A rational and healthy process of review should look into the strategic roots of future Terror not the current static situation.
Following are few recommendations:
1) Building alliance with the UAE
Regardless of the Ports takeover project, a US policy to strengthen the anti-Terror alliance with Dubai is a must. It is consistent not only with the US Government general strategies since 9/11 but is specifically needed in view of the location, position, resources and will of the Government and people of the UAE. The Emirates have a great potential of joining the front-liners in the War on al Qaida, along with Iraq, Jordan and potentially a free Government in Lebanon. Progressive forces within the UAE, along with many businesses have shown clear intention to join the world community in modernization and resistance to fundamentalism. It is towards these particular sectors that the US commitment must concentrate its efforts. Building a greater alliance with the UAE consists of extending military, security and diplomatic support to its Government in as much as it manifest a will to assist, join, and use its resources in the War on terror. Washingtons strategic choice of winning the minds and hearts of Arab societies is crucial. But such advances must first be embodied via a real cultural and political alliance, before it can be translated into capitalist privileges. A scale of engagement with the allies is warranted. The more the ally engages it self in rooting out the ideology of the enemy, the more it solidifies its alliance in the War in terror. And that is the door leading to financial rewarding deeper in US layers.
2) Levels of gratification
If the UAE is to be rewarded for its progress in that path, it should be proportional to the levels it has reached. One, Washington is already granting the UAE a security preferential treatment in return for Dubais facilitation for the US Navy and other arms. Second, the US can open its domestic markets for investments short of the sectors sensitive to national security: Entertainment, automobile manufactures, tourism, nutrition, energy, etc. to name a few. If rewarding is a must why to corner this friendship with national security? Even during WWII, the US didnt offer such deals to its closest allies. Why not asking Saudi Arabia to manage Americas public school system? Because radical clerics would transform it into madrassas: Why not asking Qatar to takeover the management of C-Span, PBS and NPR? Because the same Qatari companies that finances al Jazeera would take over the public airwave. Not all allies are the same, not all forces within some allied countries are our allies too.
3) Focus the debate and de-politicize it
It is of essence for the debate in the War on terror not to sink instantly in domestic politics, when the debated issue is essentially on national security. The Dubai case is striking: Instead of looking into the actual issue: is there a Jihadi threat yes or no, the spasms were about which foreign policy should we adopt. Instead of analyzing the measurement of penetration and infiltration, commentators dove into the timing of announcing the project and the intentions of the Administration. It is obvious that the latter is waging a relentless war on terror that it had spoken against Islamic Fundamentalism, and that it targets the groups that produce Jihadism. The issue at hand was to determine with good faith- if the US can or cannot strike at the deeper layers of future Jihad in partnership with the UAE. In short, is Dubai as a Government ready to uproot that threat from its end, as Jordan, the UK or Australia does, or had it not reached that capability and intention yet. Here lays the real debate. Both the Administration and its critics on this issue have to concentrate on where the danger is coming from. For only then, and calmly, both sides can determine, for the sake of Americas security, if the gates to our hinterland can be opened or not by using the Emirates window. Neither Washington nor Dubai should feel bad about an initially analytical conclusion, if we assume that they are real allies.
Final analysis
1. The general Terror threat to US port system has been and remain -regardless of the Dubai deal- about the capacity of Terrorists to strike inside the Harbors. But the specific potential threat emanating from the current crisis is different in nature: it is about an additional layer of terror risk that could be produced by a Jihadist breach via a commercial transaction.
2. A solution to the crisis is to examine the very specific matter of Jihadi penetration inside UAE and to evaluate it. If indeed the threat exist and could transplant itself to targets within the US, then measures has to be taken. In this case, these measures would include special legislation in the UAE and a testing period fot it. If the implementation of these measures is successful, the upgrade of the country conditions could be done, and hence a deal could be safe. If neither the measures are taken, nor they are successful, then logically, such deal would present national security hazards. (See interview on MSNBC)
I hope the extension granted by the company to the Administration will give all parties enough space to study how can the Jihadists play that game and how to disrupt it. Everything else, from money to politics, is less relevant.
Dr Walid Phares is a Senior Fellow with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies in Washington, a professor of Comparative Politics and author of the book Future Jihad. www.futurejihad.com
ping
As the author points out, Jordan has been a cooperative ally. UAE has not.
What makes an ally "cooperative?"
Reead teh full article. He shows the records of Britain, Jordan, the UAE, and does a nice job of making a case for why the UAE's record is unacceptable.
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