US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo walks after stepping off his plane upon arrival at King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, September 18, 2019. Mandel Ngan/Pool via REUTERS
A series of recent US administration decisions to disengage or not
to engage at all have overturned old assumptions about US goals, capabilities,
and commitments in the Middle East.
These include the troop withdrawal from northeast Syria; the muted response to Iran’s attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure at Abqaiq; the refusal of US policy makers to engage with elements of the Iraqi and Lebanese governments; and near total lack of engagement on Libya.
But alongside these decisions are multiple indicators that point
to continued US commitment to the region. This commitment is
evident in the volume of US investment in training and capacity building;
interoperability and equipping; counterterrorism and intelligence sharing;
trade and investment; and support for reforms initiated by the region in areas
like good governance, justice, law enforcement, and finance.
The United States has over 35,000 troops stationed in NATO countries, but 45,000-65,000 in the Gulf alone, according to open source numbers recently reported by The New York Times. Those numbers, notably, do not include US troops in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Another tangible sign of commitment is the administration’s
continued call for a Middle East Strategic Alliance (or MESA). The US president
advocated for this alliance several times in his remarks at the UN General
Assembly (UNGA) in September and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo held a
margin meeting on MESA at UNGA as well. The National Security Council continues
to conduct policy meetings on MESA with the interagency, and coordination
meetings on MESA with regional partners.
The push to establish this architecture, with economic, security,
and energy components, is a strong indication of the US intent to remain
engaged in the Middle East and to strengthen this commitment. It should
be noted that the delay in establishing MESA is due to a push from some
regional partners to limit MESA to a security-only agreement. In other
words, the United States is seeking to be engaged and committed at a deeper
level, but the signal from the region itself is that this is not what the
region wants.
Combine this with the region’s flirtations with stronger security relationships with Russia and China. Or the fact that the region was upset when the United States entered the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) without consulting partners, but the region is now conducting backchannel talks with Iran without notifying Washington.
Questions about the region’s commitment to its relationship with
the United States did not begin this year. In spring 2018, the US
administration asked Gulf countries to provide financial support to US
operations in Syria, since they were not willing to contribute their own troops
to the effort. The US administration warned then that without regional partners
sharing the responsibility, the United States would need to draw down its
presence and reduce its financial burden. This ask was denied. Yet the
expectation remained that Washington would continue to fight the Islamic State
and challenge Bashar al-Assad’s hold on power.
Fast forward to autumn 2019. President Trump’s startling decision
to withdraw from northeastern Syria was undoubtedly influenced by his
perception that no Arab leaders had skin in the game and that several are
normalizing relations with Assad.
Look also to the US administration’s continued requests for
resolution of the rift between Qatar and its Gulf neighbors. On no other issue
during this administration has the interagency been so unanimously
on-message. The president signed two beseeching letters to the heads of
state of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Bahrain, and the State Department
dispatched Tony Zinni as a special envoy solely dedicated to ending the
dispute. The US request for resolution remains wholly rebuffed.
While US actions are causing confusion about Washington’s commitment, regional actions are also calling into question the region’s commitment to its relationship with the United States and to its own stability.
Mutual commitment: Two actionable steps
To end this confusion and reinforce the mutual commitment, two
actions should be taken.
First, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) plus Jordan and Egypt,
as initial founding members, should establish MESA. This platform would lock-in
a sustained US role in the region. As a defensive alliance envisioned to be
able to address the unknown threats of the future and incentivize other
regional nations to eventually join, this bloc would have greater leverage
internationally and with the United States than any single nation.
The intent of MESA’s four pillars (economy, security, energy, and
governance of the alliance) is twofold. One: build the members’ economies
smartly and in a networked way that boosts resilience and regional
self-sufficiency. Two: establish a regional security architecture. When
member nations plan for defense jointly, each member nation effectively pushes
its borders out to the region’s borders. This creates a buffer for each nation,
making each nation safer.
It is in the interest of the region to finalize an agreement that
frames the base level for a US role in the region going forward. Such an
agreement could be expanded in time to include other friends and partners. It
would clarify for potential adversaries the level of US obligation to the
region and act as a demonstrable explanation of US policy and redlines, thereby
supporting deterrence.
Second, the Middle East, Europe, Asian partners, and the United
States should create a mechanism to draft coordinated strategies for
stabilizing countries in turmoil or transition. This will prevent transitioning
countries from continuing to be destabilized by the competing interests of
external actors. It will encourage greater US involvement, when Washington sees
this “burden sharing” by others.
It will create opportunities for constructive engagement among nations
with tense relations, as specific, shared objectives related to stability are
pursued.
Follow the strategies with implementation plans. Begin executing. There is no time to lose.
Renew your vows
A window of opportunity remains for the region and the United States to reassure one another that the friendship is hard and fast. The urgency is driven by the decision timelines of Arab regimes who must respond to overtures from Russia and China and threats from neighbors and non-state actors. It is likewise driven by the US election cycle, where campaigns will soon need to finalize their national security platforms. The United States and the region need to be vocal about the level of commitment they believe they have a right to expect from the other and the quantifiable level of commitment they are willing to make in accord, before the campaigns define this for them.
Kirsten Fontenrose is director of Regional Security in the Atlantic Council’s Middle East Programs.
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While US actions are causing confusion about Washington's commitment, regional actions are also calling into question the region’s commitment to its relationship with the United States and to its own stability.
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