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Bush: The strategist in the shadows
Asia Times ^ | March 5, 2005 | Robert A. Juhl

Posted on 03/05/2005 4:33:13 AM PST by billorites

Is US President George W Bush a dimwitted bumpkin who allowed a cabal to deceive him into undertaking a foolish war in Iraq? Or is he a competent strategist following a cynical plan that may bring about a settlement in the Middle East? To answer this question, let us begin by looking at fundamentals.

Traditional US strategy in the Middle East
For decades, US geopolitical strategy in the Middle East has relied on Israel being the dominant player. Israel's power to inflict huge losses on its enemies has kept the rest of the Middle East players dependent on outside powers and disunited. This was a strategy that provided stable, cheap oil prices as long as oil supplies were plentiful and consumers had the upper hand.

In recent years, however, this strategy was becoming increasingly counter-productive. One typical assessment is in a Council on Foreign Relations study from 2001 titled Strategic Energy Policies for the 21st Century. "... Recently things have changed. [The United States'] Gulf allies are finding their domestic and foreign-policy interests increasingly at odds with US strategic considerations, especially as Arab-Israeli tensions flare. They have become less inclined to lower oil prices in exchange for security of markets ... A trend toward anti-Americanism could affect regional leaders' ability to cooperate with the United States in the energy area." According to this and other establishment assessments, traditional Israel-centered US strategy faced a bleak outlook.

At the same time, the playing field was changing. The rise of China and other energy consumers started putting pressure on oil supplies, and producer countries began to hold the upper hand. With tight oil supplies in view for the foreseeable future, US support of Israel as the regional super-power had become a net liability rather than a net advantage.

It was time for a fundamental change in strategy toward the Middle East. The question Bush confronted was how to reduce US reliance on Israel in a manner that would allow it to survive and, with skillful diplomacy, prosper.

Basis of a solution
A settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was the obvious place to begin. In his first administration, Bush Jr saw three major obstacles to a Middle East settlement. The first was former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. The second and third were linked: the presence of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein and a strong Iraq hostile to Israel.

Bush's strategy: lay foundations for a settlement. Easier said than done. But one pragmatic place to start was to eliminate Saddam and remove Iraq as a threat to Israel. With Saddam gone, over the near and medium term Iraq would be too preoccupied with internal power questions to pose a threat to anyone. The next question facing Bush was the tactic to get rid of Saddam. After a short detour into Afghanistan, caused by the attacks of September 11, 2001, Bush's focus returned to the Middle East and Iraq. Speaking in early 2003, before the invasion of Iraq, he predicted a "new stage for Middle East peace" once Saddam lost power. He saw the time was ripe to move on Iraq using the neo-conservative gambit.

Who used whom?
"How did the neo-con defense intellectuals ... manage to capture the Bush administration?" asked political analyst Michael Lind. It is a question that has been asked by many observers. The popular perception is that a clever cabal of neo-cons used deceptive tactics to sway a rather dim-witted president into attacking Iraq.

If my analysis is closer to the truth, the situation was just the opposite: Bush saw a group - the neo-cons - who were both arrogant enough and foolish enough to think that their hands could guide US policy from the shadows backstage. To Bush, they were a godsend. He used the neo-cons by letting them think they were steering US policy toward Iraq. Had the plan for Iraq failed, the blame could have been shifted to fall on their heads. If the Iraq venture succeeds, as now appears possible, Bush stands ready to take credit as the provider of democracy to Iraq and a driving force behind a settlement between the Israelis and Palestinians.

To make this point clear, let us assume a scenario in which the United States and Britain had not invaded Iraq but Arafat had died. Can anyone believe that Israel would be releasing Palestinian prisoners and inviting ambassadors from 10 Arab countries to Tel Aviv if Saddam were still in power? It would be unthinkable. The difference now is that Arafat is dead, Saddam is in prison, and Iraq will be politically and militarily marginal for the foreseeable future. These key changes have paved the way for discussions about a settlement between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. And two of these key changes were the result of actions by Bush. They are actions that, in my opinion, are part of a far-reaching strategic plan.

Not a divorce but a separation
If my reading of Bush's strategy is right, then the coming period of high oil prices and tight supplies will drive the US to put distance between itself and Israel. Does this mean that the US will abandon Israel? Of course not. But if things go well, and mutual hostilities diminish as a settlement takes shape, Israel will no longer need to rely so heavily on US support. So we will probably see Israel scrambling to cement mutually beneficial ties with its Arab neighbors. And the US will increasingly be able to act in accordance with its own interests, without taking Israel's into account as well.

Waning of negative pressures
Other factors favoring a renewed settlement process are emerging. According to polls, a majority of Palestinians, some 52%, oppose violence against Israel, for the first time since the outbreak of the intifada in September 2000. Palestine Liberation Organization chief Mahmoud Abbas has stated: "I think now that the intifada in its entirety was a mistake and it should not have continued." And Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has begun calling Israeli leader Ariel Sharon the region's best chance for peace.

At the same time, there is some evidence that the demographic pressure of the Palestinians is easing. A recent study suggests that the Palestinian birthrate has fallen to approximately the replacement rate. And because of ongoing emigration, the population may actually be declining. These factors too are helping to set the stage for a renewed push for a settlement.

The roadmap
The common goal is to make progress on the "roadmap", an internationally backed peace plan that envisages an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel. The roadmap, which was launched in 2002 by a quartet consisting of the United States, the European Union, Russia, and the United Nations, envisages an independent Palestinian state existing side by side in peace with the Israeli state. Moreover, this year, 2005, is the target year for establishment of the Palestinian state.

Fortunately, this time Bush comes to the Middle East negotiating table encumbered by fewer constraints. As this is his final term as president, he no longer needs to cater to powerful lobbies. And by an amazing coincidence, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is currently investigating the most powerful pro-Israel lobby, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Although this investigation will not sideline AIPAC, it will diminish the lobby's hitherto unmatched power to influence important people in Washington.

Growing optimism
Meanwhile, Bush approaches the negotiations with considerable optimism. The year 2005 "is very important because it is going to lead to peace. I not only believe that, I also know that it's going to happen," he has stated flatly, continuing: "Sharon has understood that. It is very important that the Palestinians understand as well that peace is not something that is achieved with words, but with action. I have reason to believe that the new Palestinian leadership understands that and is moving in the right direction."

Of course, the end game has not started. In the early 1990s, Bush Sr hinted to the Arabs that the United States would address the Arab-Israeli conflict as soon as Iraq was kicked out of Kuwait. He proved incapable of keeping his implied promise. The determination of Bush Jr and his ability to twist arms at the negotiating table are yet to be tested. If my hypothesis is correct, however, Bush Jr, in keeping with his grand strategy, has made far more thorough preparations paving the way to settlement negotiations than his father.

Will the son actualize his father's promise?
To return to my initial question, is Bush a bumpkin or a strategist? I think the evidence is clear: he is a competent strategist who is following a plan. His plan is cynical, partially based on invading Iraq under what turned out to be false pretenses. Yet an unprecedented opportunity to stabilize the geopolitical landscape of the Middle East is likely to drop into his lap. With good fortune, he may rise to the occasion, to succeed where his father failed.

Robert A Juhl is a translator and writer living in Malaysia.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bush; eib; limbaughechosyndrome; rush; rushlimbaugh; strategery
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1 posted on 03/05/2005 4:33:13 AM PST by billorites
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To: billorites

Executive Summary: Bush is actually a smart guy following a cynical strategy. Invading Iraq had nothing to do with 911 or Sadaam Hussein. It was to enable a peace settlement between Israel and the Palestinians. He has created the public appearance that he has been duped by neocons in order to give him cover for this strategy.


2 posted on 03/05/2005 4:42:41 AM PST by ModelBreaker
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To: billorites
Well, well, well, what do you know.

Another of the foreign media now asking if maybe, just maybe, Bush isn't a stupid, cretinous, half witted country bumpkin and cowboy moron, but perhaps could be (gasp) pretty smart?

And (double gasp) right?
3 posted on 03/05/2005 4:49:12 AM PST by bill1952 ("All that we do is done with an eye towards something else.")
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To: ModelBreaker
Give me a dimwitted bumpkin Texan any day as opposed to the two smartest fools that used to be in the White House!!!!!!!
4 posted on 03/05/2005 4:51:48 AM PST by Coldwater Creek ('We voted like we prayed")
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To: ModelBreaker

Well, since the tide is turning in the Middle East, we have to make up yet another personna for Bush, in which he is a crafty and cynical behind the scenes manipulator, duping the neocons so that he can enact his grand strategy: cheap oil.


5 posted on 03/05/2005 5:01:37 AM PST by Miss Marple
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To: billorites
This analysis, IMO, is flawed in most of its points, for example the "contrived" attack on Iraq, however, the main point that W is a strategist cnnot seriously be argued.

I beleive that W understood from the beginning that no peace in the ME was possible as long as Arafat and Saddam were still players. Removing them has changed the geometry altogether. W immediately isolated both and was instrumental in both of their departures.

Furthermore, I beleive that w/o 9/11 W would never have done any of these things. It was only the security threat posed by a virulent islamism that forced action.

One may argue underlying strategies infinitum, but W's actions have brought us to a threshold where peace w/ Isreal and stable oil markets are not mutually exclusive. This outcome would not have been possible w/o W's determination and courage in the face of negative world opinion nor, and this is the key, w/o the steadfastness of the American public that gave W a rousing vote of confidence even in the darkest days of the Iraqi "quagmaire".

It is the US public, ultimately, that should receive the most credit for the hoped for realignment in the ME because unlike Spain and the EU, we have not flinched from the face of evil. Nor will we.

6 posted on 03/05/2005 5:04:29 AM PST by Pietro
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To: Pietro

This was a great article.


7 posted on 03/05/2005 5:10:55 AM PST by chris1 ("Make the other guy die for his country" - George S. Patton Jr.)
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To: ModelBreaker

Yeah, the writer has made some intellectual progress but he needs more "therapy". As you say, any analysis without reference to 9-11 is incomplete.

Without 9-11 or some other defining event, we would not have invaded Iraq.


8 posted on 03/05/2005 5:10:59 AM PST by libertylover (Being liberal means never being concerned about the truth.)
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To: mariabush
Parts of this article are debatable, but the overall premise is right.

GWB has brought the Effective Executive program to the White House. He decides which Global Goals he truly believes in, puts people in place that have the same desire to reach each particular goal and other people in place that know the obstacles to those goals and how to get rid of them.

He then has only to keep track of the performances of each participant instead of trying to do everything himself.

Domestically, I don't agree with what he's doing, but maybe I don't see where he's heading because the goal and the politics of getting there as opposed to the mechanics of getting there are never readily apparent.

9 posted on 03/05/2005 5:14:18 AM PST by leadhead (Never Underestimate the Power of Stupid People in Large Groups)
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To: billorites

so none of this has anything to do with 9-11?


10 posted on 03/05/2005 5:15:15 AM PST by wildcatf4f3 (out of the sun)
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To: leadhead

You have said it well!!!! I too have mixed feelings about the domestic agenda, but I really hope that he can put the SS privation to work. It won't help us, but our children and grandchildren will really benefit.

One of our boy's is an officer in the Navy. Went in when he was 18 and immediately saw the importance of preparing for retirement. The first 5 years was able to save over 5,000.00 and after 17 years probably will have millions for retirement, in addition to his Military pension.


11 posted on 03/05/2005 5:24:36 AM PST by Coldwater Creek ('We voted like we prayed")
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To: ModelBreaker
"Invading Iraq had nothing to do with 911 or Sadaam Hussein."

------------------------------------

That is correct.

___________________________________________

"It was to enable a peace settlement between Israel and the Palestinians."

-----------------------------

That is only partially correct.

12 posted on 03/05/2005 5:26:20 AM PST by wtc911 ("I would like at least to know his name.")
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To: Miss Marple
Don't you imagine that when George Bush leaves the White House and returns to Texas, that he will become the CEO of Halliburton???????
13 posted on 03/05/2005 5:26:54 AM PST by Coldwater Creek ('We voted like we prayed")
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To: mariabush

Make that 25,000.00


14 posted on 03/05/2005 5:29:00 AM PST by Coldwater Creek ('We voted like we prayed")
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To: chris1
"This was a great article."

I disagree. The idea that W could have "hidden" behind the nefarious noe-cons is absurd. W was and is front and center, he has never, not once, tryed to shift the "blame" for his policy onto anyone else.

The attack on Iraq had nothing to do w/ the price of oil. That comfortable chestnut is a standard prop for all UN apologists, which this writer most certainly is. It is the UN mishandling of Saddam which required the strong US response, not Isreal nor oil prices.

Methinks the globaloneyists are a bit too machiavellian in their efforts to understand W. He ain't stupid but then again he's not complex. He says what he thinks and does what he says. They're convinced there must be more to it than that, but I'm not.

15 posted on 03/05/2005 5:31:39 AM PST by Pietro
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To: Miss Marple
we have to make up yet another persona for Bush

They certainly can't accept the fact that Bush says what he means and means what he says. That would mean their entire rubric was wrong.

16 posted on 03/05/2005 5:42:28 AM PST by Samwise (On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog.)
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To: Pietro
He ain't stupid but then again he's not complex. He says what he thinks and does what he says. They're convinced there must be more to it than that, but I'm not.

Those secretly taped Bush recordings merely proved to me that private Dubya and President Bush are one and the same.

17 posted on 03/05/2005 5:45:05 AM PST by Samwise (On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog.)
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To: ModelBreaker
Invading Iraq had nothing to do with 911 or Sadaam Hussein.

Aside from the summary, it did have to do with Hussein. As long as he stood there, he emboldened e neighborhood thugs, who had learned that we had no will to enforce their agreements with us, or to inhibit their poor behaviour. 911 only made it more urgent - the need was there all along.

18 posted on 03/05/2005 6:08:49 AM PST by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: Pietro
Furthermore, I beleive that w/o 9/11 W would never have done any of these things.

As has been exploited by the Democrats and their co-liberals in the media, these things were in the works before 911. 911 simply made the timetable more urgent, and gave public voice in support so that the Dems weren't able to undermine it before it began.

19 posted on 03/05/2005 6:11:44 AM PST by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: billorites

His description of previous US Middle East policy is too cynical. We have always supported Israeli-Palestinian peace -- there just was not a partner on the Palestinian side willing to work for peace prior to Arafat's demise.


20 posted on 03/05/2005 6:40:20 AM PST by Unam Sanctam
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