EFTA02000711.pdf
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To: jeevacation©gmail.comfjeevacation@gmail.com]
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent• Tue 10/16/2012 6:53:29 PM
Subject: October 15 update
14 October, 2012
Article 1.
NYT
U.S. Suspects Iran Was Behind a Wave of
Cyberattacks
Thom Shanker and David E. Sander
A
Al-Monitor
Egypt's Morsi Gets Marks for Speed, Not Style in
Foreign Policy
Nabil Fahmy
Ic 3
Asharq Alawsat
American election: It is not the economy, stupid!
Amir Taheri
Ariac 4
The Daily Star
New hope, and fears, in the Arab world
Rami G. Khouri
Article 5.
The Washington Post
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A preemptive strike on the foreign policy failures
of the next administration
Daniel Byman
Article 6.
The National Interest
China's Uncertain Path
Jonathan Levine
Ankle I.
NYT
U.S. Suspects Iran Was Behind a
Wave of Cyberattacks
Thom Shanker and David E. Sanger
October 13, 2012 -- American intelligence officials are
increasingly convinced that Iran was the origin of a serious wave
of network attacks that crippled computers across the Saudi oil
industry and breached financial institutions in the United States,
episodes that contributed to a warning last week from Defense
Secretary Leon E. Panetta that the United States was at risk of a
"cyber-Pearl Harbor."
After Mr. Panetta's remarks on Thursday night, American
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officials described an emerging shadow war of attacks and
counterattacks already under way between the United States and
Iran in cyberspace.
Among American officials, suspicion has focused on the
"cybercorps" that Iran's military created in 2011 — partly in
response to American and Israeli cyberattacks on the Iranian
nuclear enrichment plant at Natanz — though there is no hard
evidence that the attacks were sanctioned by the Iranian
government.
The attacks emanating from Iran have inflicted only modest
damage. Iran's cyberwarfare capabilities are considerably
weaker than those in China and Russia, which intelligence
officials believe are the sources of a significant number of
probes, thefts of intellectual property and attacks on American
companies and government agencies.
The attack under closest scrutiny hit Saudi Aramco, the world's
largest oil company, in August. Saudi Arabia is Iran's main rival
in the region and is among the Arab states that have argued
privately for the toughest actions against Iran. Aramco, the
Saudi state oil company, has been bolstering supplies to
customers who can no longer obtain oil from Iran because of
Western sanctions.
The virus that hit Aramco is called Shamoon and spread through
computers linked over a network to erase files on about 30,000
computers by overwriting them. Mr. Panetta, while not directly
attributing the strike to Iran in his speech, called it "probably the
most destructive attack that the private sector has seen to date."
Until the attack on Aramco, most of the cybersabotage coming
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out of Iran appeared to be what the industry calls "denial of
service" attacks, relatively crude efforts to send a nearly endless
stream of computer-generated requests aimed at overwhelming
networks. But as one consultant to the United States government
on the attacks put it several days ago: "What the Iranians want to
do now is make it clear they can disrupt our economy, just as we
are disrupting theirs. And they are quite serious about it."
The revelation that Iran may have been the source of the
computer attacks was reported earlier by The Washington Post
and The Associated Press.
The attacks on American financial institutions, which prevented
some bank customers from gaining access to their accounts
online but did not involve any theft of money, seemed to come
from various spots around the world, and so their origins are not
certain. There is some question about whether those attacks may
have involved outside programming help, perhaps from Russia.
Mr. Panetta spoke only in broad terms, stating that Iran had
"undertaken a concerted effort to use cyberspace to its
advantage." Almost immediately, experts in cybersecurity
rushed to fill in the blanks.
"His speech laid the dots alongside each other without
connecting them," James A. Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies, wrote Friday in an essay
for ForeignPolicy.com. "Iran has discovered a new way to
harass much sooner than expected, and the United States is ill-
prepared to deal with it."
Iran has a motive, to retaliate for both the American-led
financial sanctions that have cut its oil exports nearly in half,
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and for the cybercampaign by the United States and Israel
against Iran's nuclear enrichment complex at Natanz.
That campaign started in the Bush administration, when the
United States and Israel first began experimenting with an
entirely new generation of weapon: a cyberworm that could
infiltrate another state's computers and then cause havoc on
computer-controlled machinery. In this case, it resulted in the
destruction of roughly a fifth of the nuclear centrifuges that Iran
uses to enrich uranium, though the centrifuges were eventually
replaced, and Iran's production capability has recovered.
Iran became aware of the attacks in the summer of 2010, when
the computer worm escaped from the Natanz plant and was
replicated across the globe. The computer industry soon named
the escaped weapon Stuxnet.
Iran announced last year that it had begun its own military
cyberunit, and Brig. Gen. Gholamreza Jalali, the head of Iran's
Passive Defense Organization, said the Iranian military was
prepared "to fight our enemies" in "cyberspace and Internet
warfare." Little is known about how that group is organized, or
where it has bought or developed its expertise.
The United States has never acknowledged its role in creating
the Stuxnet virus, nor has it said anything about the huge covert
program that created it, code-named Olympic Games, which was
first revealed earlier this ,ma y The New York
Times. President Obama drastically expanded the program as a
way to buy time for sanctions to affect Iran, and to stave off a
military attack on the Iranian facilities by Israel, which he feared
could quickly escalate into a broader war.
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In advance of Mr. Panetta's speech in New York on Thursday,
senior officials debated how much to talk about the United
States's offensive capabilities, assessing whether such an
acknowledgment could help create a deterrent for countries
contemplating attacks on the country
But Mr. Panetta carefully avoided using the words "offense" or
"offensive" in the context of American cyberwarfare, instead
defining the Pentagon's capabilities as "action to defend the
nation."
"We won't succeed in preventing a cyber attack through
improved defenses alone," Mr. Panetta said. "If we detect an
imminent threat of attack that will cause significant, physical
destruction in the United States or kill American citizens, we
need to have the option to take action against those who would
attack us to defend this nation when directed by the president.
For these kinds of scenarios, the department has developed that
capability to conduct effective operations to counter threats to
our national interests in cyberspace."
The comments indicated that the United States might redefine
defense in cyberspace as requiring the capacity to reach forward
over computer networks if an attack was detected or anticipated,
and take pre-emptive action. These same offensive measures
also could be used in a punishing retaliation for a first-strike
cyberattack on an American target, senior officials said.
One senior intelligence official described a debate inside the
Obama administration over the pros and cons of openly
admitting that the United States has deployed a new cyber
weapon, and could use it in response to an attack, or pre-
emptively.
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For now, officials have decided to hold back. "The countries
who need to know we have it already know," the senior
intelligence official said.
Article 2.
Al-Monitor
Egypt's Morsi Gets Marks for Speed,
Not Style in Foreign Policy
Nabil Fahmy
(Translatedfrom: Al-Masry Al-Youm — Egypt)
Oct 13, 2012 -- President Mohammed Morsi did not list
Egyptian foreign policy as one of the five issues that would be
prioritized during the first 100 days of his presidency. He
specified these priorities to be: providing citizens with bread,
energy stability, security and cleanliness, as well as solving the
problem of traffic jams. These priorities bewildered us, and
through them, Morsi hit and missed at the same time.
It confused us, because he included issues that are impossible to
solve in 100 days. He put himself into a dilemma, and it was
inevitable that the public's assessment concerning his ability to
solve these issues would be negative.
The president did well, because it is only natural to give priority
to the internal Egyptian situation, led by finalizing new Egyptian
state institutions, and on the basis of a constitution that brings us
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all together, guarantees us equal rights and provides a civilized
foundation for the relationship between the ruler and the ruled,
and between citizens in general, to ensure that democracy is
achieved and remains.
Morsi also made a mistake, because you cannot separate our
foreign relations from our internal affairs or vice versa. Egypt's
regional status in Africa and the Arab world is a part of its
identity, and Egypt's regional and international weight serves
our internal projects.
Furthermore, regional and international parties and events will
not wait for Egypt to organize itself internally, and whoever
doesn't participate in these events becomes subordinate to them
and those driving them.
Then President Morsi surprised us by the fact that his actions
during the first 100 days did not correspond to what he had said.
On the international front, he set out actively and with force.
Foreign relations enjoyed the largest part of his attention at the
expense of other issues, with one exception: He regained his
authority as the president of the republic, ending an era of
military rule in the country that had lasted since 1956. He visited
approximately 10 foreign countries, which is more than the
number of Egyptian governorates he visited in this period.
He gave an important speech at the Non-Aligned Movement
(NAM) summit, and participated in the annual session of the
United Nations General Assembly, leaving the prime minister
and his cabinet to implement his domestic electoral program.
It is not logical or fair to assess general policies — whether they
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be domestic or foreign — on such a short period of time. It's too
early to assess President Morsi's domestic and foreign policy, it
is imperative that we allow for enough time for these policies to
be translated into reality.
We must allow for these policies to have reverberations among
public opinion, even if a candidate was overly excited prior to
the elections and made unrealistic promises for his first 100 days
to attract voters, by appealing to their emotions and hopes rather
than their minds and realities. Naturally, this applies to Morsi's
foreign policy and his first 100 days, especially given that he
didn't promise to achieve anything relating to these matters
during this period.
But it is our right — rather our duty — to assess the
performance of the president up until now when it comes to
foreign policy in order to decide whether we support it or not,
and in order to maintain Egyptian national interests after the
2011 revolution.
The practice of democracy is an ongoing political process
between the ruler and the ruled, and does not end with the
election of the president, nor is it merely delayed until the next
electoral process. Otherwise, we would just be electing
autocratic regimes for given periods of time between one
election and the next.
Morsi's performance related to foreign policy has been
characterized by rapid movement and activity, and that in itself
is a positive development to his credit. This movement in itself
reflects the availability of energy and enthusiasm to enable the
state — if all the necessary elements exist — to be effective or
influential regionally or internationally.
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Moreover, President Morsi's movement was characterized by
diversity — he visited countries in Asia, the Arab world, Africa
and Europe, in addition to the United Nations — which is also a
good thing.
If he seriously uses this to his advantage, this can open the door
to diversification and plurality in the options available to Egypt
at the international level. This would remove us from being
aligned with the East or the West, at a time when we boast about
the fact that we make decisions for ourselves and are a non-
aligned state.
The Egyptian president took a strong stance when he
participated in the Non-Aligned Movement summit despite all of
the pressure, as well as when he announced his strong position
in Tehran, saying that he was an opponent of the Syrian regime
and stood firmly with the Syrian people. These are positions that
I fully support.
The president's performance at the foreign level was
characterized by movement and had positive aspects, however
there were also quite a few negative points and errors made.
The first error was that he rushed to take action without giving
himself the opportunity to prepare a general assessment of the
international situation, or to envision the configuration of the
international community and Egypt's neighboring region in the
Arab world and Africa over the next five or 10 years. This
would have allowed him to specify goals and priorities, and to
determine opportunities and challenges ahead of us in the near
future, in order to develop the necessary plans and foreign
policies to achieve specific goals and preserve our interests.
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How can we implement a policy without having a basic vision
for the political arena or the circumstances that we are operating
in? Foreign policy always faces the challenge of reconciling
between our interests and priorities on the one hand, and the
visions of other countries on the other. This policy requires
serious consideration, proper planning and deliberate action —
things which we have yet to see.
The second error relating to President Morsi's performance at
the international level is that he acted without explaining his
philosophy or goals, not even to the Egyptian people who
participated in the 2011 revolution.
If he aspires to participate in the present administration of the
country and to help plan for its future, the Egyptian president
must explain his philosophy relating to foreign policy to both
the Egyptian and foreign public before continuing forward with
his actions. This will ensure that he involves the people and
gains their support.
I think that he will find the required support — regarding Arab
and African relations — very quickly. An explanation of this
philosophy is also required so that the people can warn him of
any unexpected inclinations that the people may not agree with,
as we saw recently regarding the idea of sending Egyptian forces
to Syria.
Moreover, this is necessary so that every foreign move we make
is not explained as being based on already existing Egyptian
relations. This is a claim that was repeated in the US, Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates at the announcement of
presidential visits to China and Iran.
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The third mistake relating to the president's performance is that
he still looks at the world from the perspective of a
representative of the Egyptian Islamic movement, not from the
perspective of Egypt's president and a representative of all
Egyptians.
His foreign policy speeches always begin with religious
approaches at the beginning. His reference to the companions of
the Prophet Muhammad at the onset of his speech in front of the
NAM summit is an example of this.
Furthermore, Morsi's comments during his recent visit to New
York were largely defensive, focused on reassuring the audience
of the moderateness of the political approaches of the Egyptian
Islamic movement. He also gave a traditional speech in front of
the UN General Assembly, the largest of the world's political
theaters.
In this address he reiterated traditional positions expressed by
former Egyptian presidents Gamal Abdel Nasser, Anwar Sadat
and Hosni Mubarak, rather than adding any new notions
regarding perspectives of "revolutionary Egypt," "future Egypt"
or "democratic Egypt."
Another indicator that political Islamic perspectives would
continue to dominate was the fact that the Egyptian president
canceled his visits to Brazil and to attend the Arab-South
American Summit in Peru in order to attend the Turkish Justice
and Development Party's annual conference. This is despite the
fact that in the near future — before the end of this year —
Egypt and Turkey will exchange presidential visits once again.
My fourth objection relates to a lack of transparency. Reasons
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for foreign action are not explained before action is taken.
Moreover, no one gives an explanation for the cancelation of
planned visits - such as the visit to Brazil — and no official
statements are released following interviews with the president
regarding the content of these meetings.
This places the presidency in a constant state of self defense,
denying or correcting what is published in papers and attributing
it to a foreign element.
There are many examples of this, such as the when the Egyptian
president exchanged messages of congratulations and thanks
with Israeli president Shimon Peres, or regarding the content of
the president's meetings and phone calls with Hillary Clinton
and Barack Obama.
There was an announcement that President Obama had invited
President Morsi to attend the UN General Assembly meeting,
which was later corrected. It was also announced that the British
prime minister had promised to return all of the Egyptian money
smuggled into Britain, when in fact all that he promised was to
provide technical expertise that would enable Egypt to meet the
requirements that will allow proper progress related to the return
of smuggle funds.
In addition to all of this we have repeated the practices of the
past, relating to exaggeration and inaccuracy in statements
regarding the president's international contacts.
This is particularly true regarding talks involving foreign aid to
Egypt — whether they be in China, the European Union, Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Turkey or the US. This aid is frequently
characterized by loans, short-term deposits or memorandums of
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understanding, rather than grants or foreign investment in Egypt.
Furthermore, there is uncertainty regarding our negotiations
with the International Monetary Fund, something we support at
times and oppose at other times.
Concerning foreign policy, Morsi's performance has somewhat
succeeded in attracting the attention of the Egyptian public, as
he is looking to restore Egypt's role regionally and
internationally. He also succeeded in announcing Egypt's desire
and willingness to take action on the international front, because
this action has thus far not benefited from the momentum of the
Egyptian revolution.
This is because we have yet to announce new titles for our
foreign policy programs, and haven't even proven that Egypt is
capable of regaining its full role. We are still strongly dependent
on foreign states both financially, militarily and politically, and
there are many sensitive and complex issues we have yet to deal
with.
One of these issues is our relationship with other Middle Eastern
states. The president hasn't mentioned the word "Israel" in any
of his speeches, yet official contacts with Israel — regarding
both military and security issues — have continued and
intensified since his election.
Where are we in all of this? It is imperative that Morsi
harmonize relations between Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority, and work to reignite Egypt's relations with Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
It is notable that officials from these countries have not visited
Egypt — even after the elections — despite the fact that Morsi
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visited Saudi Arabia multiple times, and was invited to visit the
Emirates. Furthermore, the president did not visit Sudan, despite
the importance of this relationship to Egypt historically, as well
as in the present and future.
No progress has been made on issues relating to the Nile River
Basin, despite resounding statements regarding the opening of a
new page in these relations.
How can Egypt preserve its political independence at a time
when it needs to borrow furiously from abroad, and will soon
need to import power, as it is already doing for food?
This has made us consider resorting to Iran, despite what that
would involve in terms of violating the sanctions that have been
imposed on it. The president must reconcile between Egypt's
desire to restore its role and its independent position, with the
continuation of our important relationship with the US, despite
the sensitivity of issues relating to the Middle East, and we must
continue to cooperate with them in matters relating to terrorism,
as well as on other issues.
All of this is possible if Egypt continues with its active
movement, and this is done in the framework of an integrated
plan and transparent study to maintain Egypt's national
interests.
Nabil Fahmy is the dean of the School of Global Affairs and
Public Policy at the American University in Cairo. He served as
Egypt's ambassador to the United Statesfrom 1999 to 2008,
and as envoy to Japan between 1997 and 1999.
Article 3.
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Asharq Alawsat
American election: It is not the
economy, stupid!
Amir Taheri
12 October 2012 -- Seduced by catchy formulae, American
punditry is often a prisoner of clichés. One such is: "It's the
economy, stupid!", initially circulated by Bill Clinton's first
presidential campaign. For decades the meaningless phrase has
cast a shadow on American politics. Uttering it clinches an
argument, presenting the utterer as a man of wisdom.
Thus, the current presidential election is presented as a clash of
rival economic programs.
A closer look reveals a more complex picture.
More than ever, this presidential race might be about rival
visions of America.
Until Barack Obama appeared on the scene, all those who
aspired after the presidency agreed on a number of beliefs, or
foundation myths if you prefer, regarding the United States.
Obama has questioned those beliefs with a mixture of annoyance
and humor.
The first belief is that of American special-ness. From George
Washington to George W Bush all US presidents were
convinced, or pretended to be, that the United States is a special
nation, an unprecedented and so far unique phenomenon in
history.
Obama has tried to de-bunk that by suggesting that other
nations, for example the Greeks, could also claim "special-ness".
If "special-ness" is a sentiment all nations share, claiming it for
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the US is meaningless. If everybody is somebody, then nobody
is anybody.
The second belief questioned by Obama is that the United
States' manifest destiny is to provide leadership. By its very
creation the US led humanity away from arbitrary rule. The War
of Independence, dubbed "the Revolution" by Americans,
inspired the French Revolution and, thence, the revolutionary
experiences of all other nations. US leadership in two world
wars and the Cold War saved humanity from domination by
totalitarian powers.
Obama has challenged that belief with his "leading from behind"
strategy. He has apologized for America's "past behavior" and
indicated that the US does not even aspire to be primus inter
pares. All US presidents since James Monroe developed a
"doctrine" to define American leadership. Obama has not done
so.
The third belief challenged by Obama is that of American
individualism based on the myths of pioneers, frontiersmen and,
yes, the Lone Ranger. According to that belief it is the
individual that makes scientific and technological discoveries,
creates art and culture, and produces wealth. American states are
full of commemorative icons celebrating individuals of
exceptional achievement in all walks of life.
Obama has questioned that belief by asserting that without
social support, including the government, individuals could
achieve very little. For example, Michael Phelps who won six
gold and silver medals in the London Olympics would have
achieved nothing without the help of coaches and sponsors.
Beyond the role of parents, one needs "a whole village to raise a
child".
In this regard, Obama's views are close to those of Western
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European Social Democrats who claim that without state
support, guidance and regulation the individual would not only
achieve less than he could but might even harm himself and
society. Obama's healthcare initiative is the most dramatic
example of the belief that individuals need state chaperonage
even to cater for their health needs.
The fourth belief challenged by Obama is that of the necessity of
a "big stick" to ensure American security. With the exception of
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 the US had never
experienced an invasion since 1812 Yet, fear of foreign
aggression and a quest for military supremacy have been major
themes of American politics. The American collective mental
landscape is filled with images of conflict, from the War of
Independence to Civil War, Indian wars, wars with Mexico and
Spain, two world wars, and the wars in the Korean Peninsula
and Indochina, not to mention more recent campaigns in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Obama has tried to shift the emphasis to "soft power", including
his own powers of persuasion, to ensure American security. He
has presided over massive cuts in the defense budget with
promises of more to come, if re-elected. Obama hopes that,
under his leadership, America would be loved rather than feared.
After all he attracted 200,000 people in Berlin before becoming
president and won the Nobel Peace Prize even before he had
done anything.
Perhaps without knowing it, Obama subscribes to Wittgenstein's
dictum: "The possibility of a thought ensure its truth!"
Obama is also uneasy with a fifth traditional American belief,
that of the primacy of English language and literature as vehicles
for national self-expression. Along with European post-
modernists, Obama believes in the equal value of all languages
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and literatures as expressions of cultural diversity. Also like
European post-modernists he rejects any hierachization of
cultures in the name of respect even when the object of respect
is not respectable.
There is a sixth belief that Obama implicitly rejects, that of a
national history seamlessly traced back to the Founding Fathers.
For him, the United States is a constantly changing reality, or, in
Hegelian jargon, a "becoming" not a "being". The original
WASP founders have been in constant retreat since the massive
arrival of black slaves from Africa. In the 19th century the US
absorbed millions of immigrants from Europe, and since the
1970s it has been the destination of some three million
immigrants each year, not to mention wetbacks. In the past three
decades, the overwhelming majority of new immigrants have
come from "developing nations" in Latin America, Africa, the
Middle East and Asia. In the three most populous states of
California, New York and Texas WASPs are either already in a
minority or will be within a decade. The "melting pot" has
evolved into a "salad bar" of parallel communities with
individuals claiming double-barrel identities. By underlining his
African, as opposed to African-American, identity mixed with
his Islamic background and Asian childhood experience, and a
possible conversion to Christianity, Obama casts himself as the
new homo Americanus.
Not surprisingly, strongest support for Obama comes from
minorities notably African-Americans, Latinos, Jews, Arabs,
Muslims, and native Americans along with social minorities
such as gays and lesbians and feminists.
Aristotle taught that, in a democracy, leaders should resemble
the people they represent. Thus the real question in this
American election is whether Barack Obama or Mitt Romney,
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not physically but culturally and philosophically, more
resembles a majority of the new America that has emerged in
recent decades.
The question is what America believes itself to be and what it
hopes to become. It is not the economy, stupid!
Amir Taheri was born in Ahvaz, southwest Iran, and educated
in Tehran, London and Paris. Taheri has published 11 books,
some of which have been translated into 20 languages. Taheri's
latest book "The Persian Night" is published by Encounter
Books in London and New York.
Ardck 4.
The Daily Star
New hope, and fears, in the Arab
world
Rami G. Khouri
October 13, 2012 -- It has been almost 22 months now since the
Arab uprisings erupted in rural Tunisia, triggering dramatic
events and structural changes across much of the Arab world,
though the outcomes of the historic transformations under way
remain largely unclear. Some of the pressing issues still to be
decided include the outcome of the struggle for Syria, whether
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North African countries creating new governments can establish
credible and stable political systems, and whether most Arab
countries can create enough new jobs to stave off new uprisings.
A common question around the region and the world is whether
the Islamist groups that are doing well in most new elections
will consolidate their democratic legitimacy, or in some cases
use their power to force an Islamization of society.
The widespread realization has set in that we may not have
definitive answers to these and other key questions for some
years. It is useful nevertheless to step back a bit from day-to-day
events, or even short-term trends, and try to identify some of the
changes that are apparent in both political realities and the
mindsets of ordinary people. The latter issue — how ordinary
Arab men and women feel about themselves, their societies and
their future prospects — now matters more than it did during
recent decades, because we have seen the consequences of mass
action by such people.
I learned something about this matter when I had the pleasure
this week in Washington, D.C. of being on a panel at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The session
discussed a report on Arab youth produced by the institute that I
direct at the American University of Beirut — the Issam Fares
Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs — with the
support and cooperation of the Unicef regional office for the
Middle East and North Africa. My fellow panelist was Dalia
Mogahed, a senior analyst and executive director of the Gallup
Center for Muslim Studies, who has tracked and analyzed
attitudes of citizens in Muslim majority countries for the past
decade. Her observations on some of the changes in the past 22
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months are worth noting, because they point to both the positive
developments in our region as well as some of the continuing
vulnerabilities. Among the points she made were the following:
Broadly speaking, people across the region in countries where
democratic transitions have started to occur are more optimistic
than before about their country and themselves. They expect that
the changes under way will eventually lead to better governance
systems and improvements in their own sense of well-being.
People also feel more empowered, in the sense that they feel
they have the ability to improve conditions when those
conditions are unsatisfying to them.
This mood coincides with the general increase in trust in
government institutions. People's faith in the honesty of
elections has risen from 20 percent to over 90 percent in some
countries.
Ironically, this has happened while daily economic conditions
have worsened in most countries, and at a time when more
citizens feel that security conditions are worse now than they
were before the uprisings. Citizens' fear of crime has increased
in countries where regimes were overthrown, even though the
formal crime rate based on reported attacks or robberies has not
changed significantly.
Despite these economic and security problems, Mogahed noted,
majorities of citizens in countries in transition (Libya, Egypt,
Tunisia and Libya) still feel that conditions and their own well-
being will improve in coming years. People's faith in their
ability to bring about changes for the better through peaceful
means has also increased broadly, which parallels their increased
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confidence in state institutions such as the judiciary, parliament
and constitutional systems.
The danger here, though, she noted, is that the stubborn
expectations of better days ahead may not be fulfilled in all
cases. And if today's high expectations are dashed, we might
face unpredictable responses or even new threats.
One fascinating new trend she pointed out has been the increase
in criticisms of American policies in the region. For example,
about 60 percent of Egyptians before the uprising felt the United
States was not serious about promoting democracy and opposed
receiving American aid. Both those figures have risen to 80
percent today.
Looking beyond the transitioning countries, she noted
appreciable differences between the views of their publics and
the views in countries that have not experienced uprisings and
regime changes. Countries that did not experience uprisings
mostly looked with anxiety at countries in the midst of often
messy transitions, which they saw mainly in terms of difficult
economic, political and security challenges, and even chaos.
They also tended to see a foreign hand in some of the uprisings,
while the citizens in transforming countries saw their changes as
a consequence of indigenous action and will.
This divide between these two groups of Arab countries may
grow in the future, Mogahed suggested, and this may have
unpredictable consequences.
Rami G. Khouri is published twice weekly by THE DAILY
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STAR.
Arlick 3.
The Washington Post
A preemptive strike on the foreign
policy failures of the next
administration
Daniel Byman
Question: Is the following a critique of U.S. foreign policy
during Mitt Romney's first term or President Obama's second
term?
October 2016
To say that the administration has dropped the ball on foreign
policy would be a gross understatement.
The full list of disasters resulting from neglect and inaction is
too long to recount, but we can highlight the most damning:
Israel and the Palestinians are further from peace than ever.
Egypt's once-promising move toward democracy has stalled as
the Muslim Brotherhood government has become more
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authoritarian. Narcotics continue to flow north into American
cities while a drug war bleeds our southern neighbor. And of
course, the Europeans still have not gotten their economic house
in order.
Yet, the administration's greatest failures came about in those
key moments when it lacked decisiveness, ignored complexity
and relied on flawed analysis. In Syria, it refused to deploy the
U.S. airpower that had been so effective in Libya. Instead, it
embraced an effort to arm the self-evidently ineffective and
incoherent opposition in its doomed effort to overthrow Bashar
al-Assad. The administration said Assad's fall was inevitable but
refused to make it so. Thousands died as Washington fiddled;
instability and violence spread into Lebanon, Iraq and Jordan;
and U.S. weapons leaked into terrorist hands. Now civil war has
virtually engulfed the most strategic region in the world, making
it a playground for al-Qaeda and Iran's Quds Force.
The administration's effort to get tough on China also backfired.
Rather than seek to integrate a power whose unstoppable rise
was clear to all who cared to look, the administration built up
the U.S. military presence in Asia, criticized China's human
rights abuses and increased trade restrictions on Chinese goods.
Beijing responded with predictable wrath and flexed its new
muscles, slowing its purchases of U.S. Treasury bills and
restricting U.S. goods coming into China, which plunged the
United States back into recession. China is now doubling its
defense budget, demanding that Washington end military
assistance to Taiwan and making grandiose claims about
extending its territorial waters — leaving us with the miserable
choice of abandoning our allies to a bully or risking military
conflict.
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The chaos in Syria and the setbacks in China, however, are
nothing next to the looming war between India and Pakistan,
which threatens to be the first war between two nuclear powers.
The administration focused on the problems of the past, wasting
its energy on East Asia, Europe and the Middle East, and missed
the obvious crisis in South Asia.
Despite repeated acts of terrorism sponsored by Pakistan against
India, somehow the administration failed to heed its own
intelligence predicting the brutal Lashkar-i-Taibaattacks on
hotels and tourist sites in Mumbai last month — attacks that
paralleled strikes in 1993, 2006 and 2008. (Just see today's
Washington Post column by David Ignatius, in which he quotes
intelligence warnings about the risk of a terrorist attack
emanating from Pakistan and describes the heroic but
unsuccessful efforts of senior military and counterterrorism
officials to get the administration to listen.) Policy toward the
subcontinent before the attacks consisted of drone strikes, troop
withdrawals from Afghanistan and neglect — no wonder
Pakistan thought it could act with impunity.
This time, however, India is not turning the other cheek.
Nationalistic politicians are calling for blood, and India is
massing troops along the border. Had the administration not
spent the past four years obsessing about a possible Israeli strike
on Iran — a transparent bluff— it might have prevented the
escalation toward nuclear war that now confronts us.
Answer: Either one — take your pick.
Will all the failures described here come to pass in the next four
years? Probably not. But international crises occur during
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virtually every administration, and a Romney presidency or an
Obama second term would be no exception. And when crises
happen, opponents and experts will decry Washington's
responses as failures. These problems were "inevitable" or
"obvious" or "preventable," they'll say.
While the criticisms may ring true in hindsight, they'll be unfair.
Presidents must act before history is written, often with
incomplete information and uncertain odds. (Imagine
perceptions of Obama's foreign policy credentials if the raid on
Osama bin Laden's compound had failed, as it easily could
have.)
At times we truly face no-win situations. Syria, no matter what
the United States does, will have a grim future. Meanwhile,
Washington has tried to engage Beijing, but China is still
increasingly aggressive in Asia. A tougher U.S. stance might
make China throw its weight around even more; then again, a
softer American approach might make the Chinese sense
weakness. Which stance is right? Whichever one happens to
work out — and it's very hard to know ahead of time which one
will.
Even as we criticize policy failures, we often ignore real
achievements. Most victories are subtle and apparent only in
hindsight. Peace has prevailed among the great powers for
decades. We have avoided nuclear conflict. Democracy has
spread, albeit fitfully, across the globe. These are huge
successes, but we take them for granted, even as we dissect the
problem of the day in exhaustive and damning detail. Our
perceptions change only slowly, with the benefit of time. George
H.W. Bush, for instance, is increasingly considered a skilled
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foreign policy president, even though he left office with the
Balkans descending into the abyss and Saddam Hussein clinging
to power — two "failures" that many thought would forever
taint his legacy.
With foreign policy problems, the United States is usually
choosing between bad and risky options: For example, do you
let Iran go nuclear, or do you conduct or support a military
strike that could fail and backfire? Timing, implementation and
luck all come into play. Indeed, the United States needs to plan
for failure as well as success.
Americans like to think that all problems can be solved and that,
if they aren't, incompetence or malfeasance is to blame. Often,
however, the challenge is overwhelming and U.S. influence is
limited. The problem is not that Democrats are wimps, that
Republicans are warmongers or that Washington's halls of
power are filled with the greedy and the hapless, but rather that
few foreign policy problems can truly be solved. Most can at
best be managed, and just getting by is often the best we can do.
This should be the standard by which the foreign policy of the
next administration is measured. But one of the few sure
predictions we can make is that it won't be.
Daniel Byman is a professor in the security studies program at
Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service and the
research director of the Saban Centerfor Middle East Policy at
the Brookings Institution.
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Article 6.
The National Interest
China's Uncertain Path
Jonathan Levine
October 12, 2012 -- With the announcement that November 8
will mark the official Chinese leadership transition, the country
brings to a close what has at times been a painful process. The
decennial communist ritual has been marred this year by a series
of embarrassing scandals [6], including Bo Xilai's fall from
grace and the dismissal of a corrupt railways chief.
While China's current lame-duck cadres do their best to mop
things up before the big day, their woes of the last few months
are only dress rehearsals for the far more consequential
difficulties that will face the incoming leadership of president-
"elect" Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang. Over the next
decade, China will have to grapple with a number of structural
dilemmas, and the potential solutions go well beyond the current
reforms. Whether the new leadership is up to the task remains an
open question, but no one can deny that Mr. Xi will enter office
next year with a very full plate.
Islands of Instability
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In 1831, the underwater volcano Empedocles erupted off the
coast of Sicily and resulted in the emergence of new island,
Ferdinandea. But before the lava had even cooled, England,
France, Spain and the Kingdom of Sicily had laid claim to the
simmering rock, stoking waves of popular nationalism in the
press. Conflict was only averted when erosion caused the fiery
island to sink back into the sea. It is doubtful that China and its
Asian neighbors will be so lucky in their island disputes.
As I have written before, China's international actions over
various disputed islands have caused a balancing coalition to
form, which seems likely to become a long-term geopolitical
headache for leaders in Beijing. But the islands' effect on
China's domestic landscape may prove a much more profound
predicament.
As popular protests convulsed the capital and major cities last
month, the world saw firsthand one of China's great demons:
nationalism. The force of popular anger has toppled more than
one government in China's past. Today, rather than being an
organic outgrowth, it has been harnessed by the Communist
Party as a tool of statecraft, a straw man on an international
scale. If the people's rage can be kept simmering at Japan, the
United States or Taiwan, it is less likely to be directed at the
Communist Party—and its excesses.
However, nationalism is at best a double-edged sword and at
worst puts the party in a straightjacket. China-Japan trade is an
extensive $345 billion enterprise and recently the two nations
marked (quietly) the fortieth anniversary of normalized
relations. In short, heeding the angry calls of nationalists for
economic boycott [10] and worse [11] would be catastrophic for
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China, especially as mounting evidence of economic slowdown
has begun to emerge.
By creating nationalism and then ignoring it, leaders in Beijing
open themselves up to charges of weakness. Mao and Deng,
secure in their own command, could brush it off, but Beijing's
new technocrats are far less secure within China's immature
civil-military institutions. They are more vulnerable to the anger
of the mob if they seek compromise. The end result is a Faustian
choice where the only thing worse than ignoring the mob would
be obeisance to it. Xi Jinping will have to navigate through this
dilemma if he hopes to name his successor in 2022.
The End of the Miracle
Doomsayers have been predicting the end of China almost since
the beginning of China as we know it in the late 1970s. They
have been wrong for over thirty years, and those still predicting
the elusive "hard landing" and subsequent collapse probably are
still mistaken. However, that does not mean China's growth will
n
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