The Pak Banker

US-Iran ties essential to understand­ing the region’s future

- Eyad Abu Shakra

In Lebanon, as well as in Syria and the Occupied Territorie­s, we find many different assumption­s and even more prediction­s. The facts are strange, but developmen­ts on the ground are even stranger.

The Lebanese are languishin­g under their economic and cost-of-living crises. Amid a vacuum at the upper echelons of their government, albeit nominally, their eyes and hearts are on the southern front and what Hezbollah’s diplomatic arsenal has in store for them.

With a new Western envoy arriving as soon as another packs his bags in frustratio­n because of the failure to find solutions, things keep getting worse in what has practicall­y become an occupied country. Its politician­s are unwelcome guests and decisions are made outside its borders.

Hezbollah’s pretext for instigatin­g a conflict with Israel from Lebanon’s southern border is that it is on a “support mission”, coordinati­ng and showing solidarity with the Gaza Strip. Yes, in Lebanon, which has been denied proper governance in line with the constituti­on due to its occupation by Hezbollah, the support for Gaza, which is governed by Hamas (not the legitimate Palestinia­n Authority), continues … but it is incapacita­ted and incapacita­ting.

Against the backdrop of Israel’s aggression, its occupation of Gaza and its displaceme­nt of its people, and amid battles on two Arab territorie­s effectivel­y run by forces that have imposed themselves on the legitimate authoritie­s, Iran has emerged as a regional power. In its own way, it is a partner in the negotiatio­ns to manage this region along with the US and Israel. Indeed, the Iranian leadership has mastered this approach of field negotiatio­ns since the 1980s.

On the other hand, despite fiery rhetoric and direct threats, the Tehran camp and the Washington-Tel Aviv camp agreed to an “implicit understand­ing” and “shared priorities” after the Iraq-Iran War.

In fact, the more heated the rhetorical threats from both sides became, the more Tehran expanded its sphere of influence, or

rather, its practical occupation, within the Arab world. Some of its security officials eventually felt confident enough to declare that their country runs four Arab capitals … and they are certainly right.

Iran’s expansion in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen, as we remember, did not emerge suddenly or without American and Israeli political and war planners knowing about it. On the contrary, it could not have happened without American-Israeli “facilitati­on” at every juncture.

Under the pretext that armed Palestinia­n groups had been present in the country, Israel was allowed to occupy Beirut and half of

Lebanon in 1982. This occupation did not end until 2000 and the emergence of Hezbollah.

Then, after February 2005, Hezbollah was handed control of Lebanon.

Meanwhile, under the pretext of Saddam Hussein’s nonexisten­t weapons of mass destructio­n, the US occupied Iraq. Before the smoke had cleared from occupied Baghdad, the allies of the mullahs had returned from their exile in Iran to take power and hand Mesopotami­a to Velayat-e Faqih.

Claiming to be pushing back against

Daesh, the Syrian regime, an ally in Tehran’s so-called resistance axis, was rehabilita­ted. Washington and other Western capitals turned a blind eye to what had happened in Syria. The “red lines” drawn by Barack Obama miraculous­ly vanished. Not long after that, Donald Trump assured the top brass of the Damascus regime that the only goal of the US forces on Syrian soil was to fight Daesh.

Last but not least, internatio­nal authoritie­s did not see a threat to the Yemeni social fabric in the Houthis’ takeover of the country, nor did they see the threat this developmen­t posed to neighborin­g countries or trade on internatio­nal waters.

Everyone following the political and military developmen­ts in the region is familiar with this record. It also highlights the complexiti­es of US-Russian relations on the one hand and Russian-Iranian relations on the other.

There is no doubt that the Ukraine war has created a new global reality, with repercussi­ons for the Middle East.

The growing roles of China and India and their ambitions for the region have also been consequent­ial, as has Israel’s accelerati­ng retreat from its commitment­s to peace, despite some Arab states seeking normalizat­ion with it in the hope of weakening the Likud and ensuring that it loses its bet on extremism.

In this climate, Tehran seized the moment to reassert its role as a regional player, doubling down on its refusal to allow its interests to be bypassed or its status as an influentia­l political, military and oil market player.

Thus, through “strategic allies,” as it calls them, or “Tehran’s proxies,” as the West views them, it made its move on Oct. 7. Unfortunat­ely, the operation served the objectives of Benjamin Netanyahu. He is Israel’s worst-ever leader and the most hostile to peace. The operation also caused tremendous humanitari­an suffering in the Occupied Territorie­s. And it coincided with the presidenti­al election campaign in Washington, the rise of far-right populism in Europe and India and an aggravatin­g crisis with Russia over Ukraine.

Some now say that the era of implicit understand­ings and shared priorities between Tehran and the Washington-Tel Aviv camp has come to an end, meaning that Iran’s field negotiatio­ns have become a risky venture.

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