Iran: The Syria Lens w/Saudi Arabia (and Lebanon)
That being said, the timing of President Obama reinstating a U.S. Ambassador to Syria shows that he's already hedging his bet that this uprising won’t succeed, or at the very least that if it does, it'll be a long term situation. It is also part of his sustained push to improve relations, mend fences, with the Arab world but the timing is important to notice here. Although President Obama and Sec. of State Hillary Clinton sent two high level diplomats to Syria in March to try and change Syrian/American relations through "preliminary conversations", those conversations didn't just happen to come to fruition in the midst of the ongoing violence.
With former Sen. George Mitchell and current Special Envoy for the Obama administration's efforts for Middle East peace with Israel having visited Syria (seen as a key player in this administration in any future peace involving Israel) and Lebanon it appears that President Obama may have already determined that to hamper Iran's growing influence in the region, as well as the world, the U.S. must cut off its outside terrorist networks in Hezbollah and Hamas, starting with Hezbollah by taking advantage of Hezbollah's unexpected losses in the Lebanese elections to a U.S. backed majority which some have said were a broader regional affair. The Obama administration seems to be hoping that's the reality despite some observers making a strong case that the Lebanon elections were the most corrupt ever with the hundreds of millions of dollars that was spent in the elections by Saudi Arabia alone (both links via this article on WPR, sub. req.). With one adviser to the Saudi government saying “We’re supporting candidates running against Hezbollah, and we’re going to make Iran feel the pressure” it explains why the Saudi Arabian media is now taking an anti-Iranian government slant with Lebanon media following suit; meanwhile Syrian media is supporting the outcome in Iran as is. This assessment of Saudi Arabian feelings is very apt:
I think a Gulf Arab conclusion is that the problems, the threats they face from Iran, aren’t about the Shah, they’re not about Ayatollah Khomenei, and they’re not about Mohammad Khatami or Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. They’re about the traditional imperial ambition emanating from Tehran.They could also be worried about the numerous sleeper cells in Saudi Arabia that haven't been dealt with. In the same sleeper cell article, this jumped out:
The view of many in the Gulf is that the United States may play a more prominent role in the Gulf or a less prominent role in the Gulf, but whatever happens, the Iranians will still be there.
Arab countries will have no independent role in the anticipated confrontation between the West and Iran. Arab countries will only contribute what the West designates for them. The West needs a united and stable Arab front; therefore, the United States will work hard to solve all the issues impeding a united Middle Eastern front against Iran. Jadallah claims the attempt to solve the Arab-Israeli conflict is evident in Israel’s conciliatory gestures toward Syria. An Israeli-Syrian peace deal would end the strategic Syrian-Iranian alliance, although Hezbollah would remain the biggest threat to Israel if war breaks out with Iran.The cells, as well as the situation in Iran, explain Saudi Arabia contemplating buying more aircraft and satellite-guided bombs from the U.S. and Britain. The satellite-guided bombs could also be a signal that if it comes down to it, it won't be Israel taking out the Iranian nuclear facilities.
It seems in the Obama administrations' goals to connect (sub. to WPR req.) all of the Middle East problems by including the Near East and South Asia together in order to establish Middle East peace rather than focus on just Israel-Palestine or just Afghanistan-Pakistan, they're viewing flipping Syria into an ally and strengthening Saudi Arabia's influence in the region (plus other measures like putting pressure on India-Pakistan to thaw relations) as central to that -on top of taking advantage of the Lebanon election results. If this strategic view works it would go a long way to marginalizing Hezbollah -as long as reestablishing ties with Venezuela leads to help with cracking down on Hezbollah cells in South America.
Hopefully the ambassadors won’t merely be friends but instead real diplomats with legitimate political credentials. It is smart to consider the isolation inflation of Syria's importance but I'm not sure what other cards are available at the moment with this article (via Syria Comment) noting:
The United States is moving quickly to normalize relations with Syria, and there’s talk of working with the Saudis to draw elements of the radical Palestinian group Hamas away from its Iranian patrons, toward a coalition government that would be prepared to negotiate with Israel.Maybe all along the Obama administration viewed weakening Iran from the outside while talking directly with it as a winning strategy and they aren't going to allow the current situation to change that course.
…It has, of course, long been a dream of some Israelis and allies of Israel that they could “flip” Syria away from its sturdy, 30-year alliance with Iran. “Peeling them away” is a less crude and possibly more nuanced version of the same idea.
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