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Alastair Crooke: “Mr Bolton’s Long Game Against Iran – Pakistan Becomes Saudi Arabia’s New Client State”

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Written by Alastair Crooke; Originally appeared on strategic-culture.org

The Wall Street Journal has an article whose very title – Ambitions for an ‘Arab NATO’ Fade, Amid Discord – more or less, says it all. No surprise there at all. Even Antony Zinni, the retired Marine General who was to spearhead the project (but who has now resigned), said it was clear from early on that the idea of creating an “Arab NATO” was too ambitious. “There was no way that anybody was ready to jump into a NATO-type alliance,” he said. “One of the things I tried to do was kill that idea of a Gulf NATO or a Middle East NATO.” Instead, the planning has focused on ‘more realistic expectations’, the WSJ article concludes.

Alastair Crooke: "Mr Bolton’s Long Game Against Iran – Pakistan Becomes Saudi Arabia’s New Client State"

Apparently, “not all Middle Eastern nations working on the proposal, want to make Iran a central focus – a concern that has forced the US to frame the alliance as a broader coalition”, the WSJ recounts. No surprise there either: Gulf preoccupations have turned to a more direct anxiety – which is that Turkey intends to unloose (in association with Qatar) the Muslim Brotherhood – whose leadership is already gathering in Istanbul – against Turkey’s nemesis: Mohammad bin Zaid and the UAE (whom Turkish leadership believes, together with MbS, inspired the recent moves to surround the southern borders of Turkey with a cordon of hostile Kurdish statelets).

Even the Gulf leaders understand that if they want to ‘roll-back’ Turkish influence in the Levant, they cannot be explicitly anti-Iranian. It just not viable in the Levant.

So, Iran then is off the hook? Well, no. Absolutely not. MESA (Middle East Security Alliance) maybe the new bland vehicle for a seemingly gentler Arab NATO, but its covert sub-layer is, under Mr Bolton’s guidance, as fixated on Iran, as was ‘Arab NATO’ at the outset. How would it be otherwise (given Team Trump’s obsession with Iran)?

So, what do we see? Until just recently, Pakistan was ‘on the ropes’ economically. It seemed that it would have to resort to the IMF (yet again), and that it was clear that the proximate IMF experience – if approved – would be extremely painful (Secretary Pompeo, in mid-last year, was saying that the US probably would not support an IMF programme, as some of the IMF grant might be used to repay earlier Chinese loans to Pakistan). The US too had punished Pakistan by severely cutting US financial assistance to the Pakistani military for combatting terrorism. Pakistan, in short, was sliding inevitably towards debt default – with only the Chinese as a possible saviour.

And then, unexpectedly, up pops ‘goldilocks’ in the shape of a visiting MbS, promising a $20 billion investment plan as “first phase” of a profound programme to resuscitate the Pakistani economy. And that is on top of a $3 billion cash bailout, and another $3 billion deferred payment facility for supply of Saudi oil. Fairy godmothers don’t come much better than that. And this benevolence comes in the wake of the $6.2 billion, promised last month, by UAE, to address Pakistan’s balance of payments difficulties.

The US wants something badly – It wants Pakistan urgently to deliver a Taliban ‘peace agreement’ in Afghanistan with the US which allows for US troops to be permanently based there (something that the Taliban not only has consistently refused, but rather, has always put the withdrawal of foreign forces as its top priority).

But two telling events have occurred: The first was on 13 February when a suicide attacker drove an explosives-laden vehicle into a bus that was transporting IRGC troops in the Sistan-Baluchistan province of Iran. Iran’s parliamentary Speaker has said that the attack that killed 27 members of Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) was “planned and carried out, from inside Pakistan”. Of course, such a provocative disruption into Iran’s most ethnically sensitive province may mean ‘nothing’, but perhaps the renewed inflow of Gulf money, fertilizing a new crop of Wahhabi madrasa in Pakistan’s Baluch province, may be connected – as IRCG Commander, General Sulemani’s stark warning to Pakistan suggests.

In any event, reports suggest that Pakistan, indeed, is placing now intense pressure on the Afghan Taliban leaders to accede to Washington’s demand for permanent military bases in Afghanistan.

The US, it seems, after earlier chastising Pakistan (for not doing enough to curb the Taliban) has done a major U-turn: Washington is now embracing Pakistan (with Saudi Arabia and UAE writing the cheques). And Washington looks to Pakistan rather, not so much to contain and disrupt the Taliban, but to co-opt it through a ‘peace accord’ into accepting to be another US military ‘hub’ to match America’s revamped military ‘hub’ in Erbil (the Kurdish part of Iraq, which borders the Kurdish provinces of Iran). As a former Indian Ambassador, MK Bhadrakumar explains:

“What the Saudis and Emiratis are expecting as follow-up in the near future is a certain “rebooting” of the traditional Afghan-Islamist ideology of the Taliban and its quintessentially nationalistic “Afghan-centric” outlook with a significant dosage of Wahhabi indoctrination … [so as to] make it possible [to] integrate the Taliban into the global jihadi network and co-habitate it with extremist organisations such as the variants of Islamic State or al-Qaeda … so that geopolitical projects can be undertaken in regions such as Central Asia and the Caucasus or Iran from the Afghan soil, under a comprador Taliban leadership”.

General Votel, the head of Centcom told the US Senate Armed forces Committee on 11 February, “If Pakistan plays a positive role in achieving a settlement to the conflict in Afghanistan, the US will have opportunity and motive to help Pakistan fulfill that role, as peace in the region is the most important mutual priority for the US and Pakistan.” MESA is quietly proceeding, but under the table.

And what of that second, telling occurrence? It is that there are credible reports that ISIS fighters in the Deir a-Zoor area of Syria are being ‘facilitated’ to leave East Syria (reports suggest with significant qualities of gold and gemstones) in a move to Afghanistan.

Iran has long been vulnerable in its Sistan-Baluchistan province to ostensibly, secessionist factions (supported over the years by external states), but Iran is vulnerable, too, from neighbouring Afghanistan. Iran has relations with the Taliban, but it was Islamabad that firstly ‘invented’ (i.e. created) the Deobandi (an orientation of Wahhabism) Taliban, and which traditionally has exercised the primordial influence over this mainly Pashtoon grouping (whilst Iran’s influence rested more with the Tajiks of northern Afghanistan). Saudi Arabia of course, has had a decades long connection with the Pashtoon mujahidin of Afghanistan.

During the Afghan war of the 1980s and later, Afghanistan always was the path for Islamic fundamentalism to reach up into Central Asia. In other words, America’s anxiety to achieve a permanent presence in Afghanistan – plus the arrival of militants from Syria – may somehow link to suggest a second motive to US thinking: the potential to curb Russia and China’s evolution of a Central Asian trading sphere and supply corridor.

Putting this all together, what does this mean? Well, firstly, Mr Bolton was arguing for a US military ‘hub’ in Iraq – to put pressure on Iran – as early as 2003. Now, he has it. US Special Forces, (mostly) withdrawn from Syria, are deploying into this new Iraq military ‘hub’ in order, Trump said, to “watch Iran”. (Trump rather inadvertently ‘let the cat out of the bag’ with that comment).

The detail of the US ‘hub encirclement’ of Iran, however, rather gives the rest of Mr Bolton’s plan away: The ‘hubs’ are positioned precisely adjacent to Sunni, Kurdish, Baluch or other Iranian ethnic minorities (some with a history of insurgency). And why is it that US special forces are being assembled in the Iraqi hub? Well, these are the specialists of ‘train and assist’ programmes. These forces are attached to insurgent groups to ‘train and assist’ them to confront a sitting government. Eventually, such programmes end with safe-zone enclaves that protect American ‘companion forces’ (Bengahazi in Libya was one such example, al-Tanaf in Syria another).

The covert element to the MESA programme, targeting Iran, is ambitious, but it will be supplemented in the next months with new rounds of economic squeeze intended to sever Iran’s oil sales (as waivers expire), and with diplomatic action, aimed at disrupting Iran’s links in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq.

Will it succeed? It may not. The Taliban pointedly cancelled their last scheduled meeting with Pakistani officials at which renewed pressure was expected to be exerted on them to come to an agreement with Washington; the Taliban have a proud history of repulsing foreign occupiers; Iraq has no wish to become ‘pig-in-the middle’ of a new US-Iran struggle; the Iraqi government may withdraw ‘the invitation’ for American forces to remain in Iraq; and Russia (which has its own peace process with the Taliban), would not want to be forced into choosing sides in any escalating conflict between the US, Israel and Iran. Russia and China do not want to see this region disrupted.

More particularly, India will be disconcerted by the sight of the MESA ‘tipping’ toward Pakistan as its preferred ally – the more so as India, likely will view (rightly or wrongly), the 14 February, vehicle-borne, suicide attack in Jammu-Kashmir that resulted in the deaths of 40 Indian police, as signaling the Pakistan military recovering sufficiently confidence to pursue their historic territorial dispute with India over Jammu-Kashmir (perhaps the world’s most militarised zone, and the locus of three earlier wars between India and Pakistan). It would make sense now, for India to join with Iran, to avoid its isolation.

But these real political constraints notwithstanding, this patterning of events does suggest a US ‘mood for confrontation’ with Iran is crystalizing in Washington.

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Ambricourt

Limiting China’s Belt and Road expansion is a major US objective in cultivating Pakistan and permanently occupying Afghanistan.

Jesus

Pakistan was a client state of the US, it is now firmly entrenched on the Chinese side and SCO, US is sucking wind in a never ending conflict in Afghanistan, the Chinese Silk Road and BRI can circumvent Afghanistan and accomplish their goal. That much for American political foresight. Do what feels good now!

Sinbad2

Kazakhstan has also been vassaled by the yanks. Their tentacles are in all the dark places.

Zionism = EVIL

Pakistan and the Zionist cancer occupying Palestine were both created by the devious British masters to sow mayhem in the region at at the same time in 1947-48. Both have been a destructive cancer for all their neighbors and main source of regional terrorism and instability;iyt. However, beggar Pakistan and Saudi pimps are nothing as ZERO plus ZERO still equals ZERO.

peter mcloughlin

If there is an elaborate program to encircle Iran it has the potential to bring about regime change, certainly destabilize the country and the region. If the Arab Spring has been a disaster: a Persian spring will be a catastrophe in all-likelihood. China and Russia, also with vital interests in Central Asia and the Caucasus, would be dragged into the conflict, bringing them into confrontation with the US-led campaign. Alastair Crooke is right about the ‘patterning of events’, they give a clear indication where things are moving. A directi confrontation between the Great Powers would mean world war. Unfortunately, the pattern of history suggests that’s the destination we are heading for. https://www.ghostsofhistory.wordpress.com/

Pave Way IV

Hey Bolton – Saudi Arabia and the UAE are f’king BROKE. You’ll have a hell of a lot more to worry about with your little Israeli buddies than Iran once the Wahhabi chimp-out starts in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. What’s your plan for that? Retirement? Resignation? You deserve an extended stay in Guantanamo – I hear the meals there are great!

TiredOfBsToo

The US maintaining peace in the Middle East is like stating that the Empire isn’t driven by humanities lowest of the low psychopaths!

Zionism = EVIL

It is a dying empire being bled dry by Zionist parasites as power shifts to Asia.

verner

pakistan is sort of deciding which way to go – the quick and uncertain buck with saudi or a much more stable and secure buck with china, and a gasline from iran to pakistan paid for by china and the silk road over hindukush to pakistan – the decision isn’t that hard actually although mohammad bin salman can confound some people some of the time but not all the time and china’s purse and long term planning beats anything mbs can even get close to, unless he decides to khashoggi donny’s son in law.but he won’t so china it is!!!

purplelibraryguy

I don’t think Pakistan is deciding any such thing. They’ll take both and then do what they want. Pakistan is never on anyone’s side nearly as much as any of the people paying Pakistan off may think. They don’t stay bought. So if someone wants to shower them with short term money for some short term payoff then fine, they’ll take it and maybe even provide the payoff, but they won’t consider themselves aligned with the source.

Long term trade is perhaps a different matter.

verner

probably right although one would think china’s silk road and the gasline from iran into pakistan would be persuasive enough but on the other hand the one doesn’t have to preclude the other and after all mbs is offering china 100 billion bucks to build a new refinery.sure that will be an impetus to continue refining hydrocarbons long after it’s declared a health risk and also a certain offloader for saudi. so at the end of the day, it might not mean all that much except that mbs is widening his sphere of interest quite a bit.

and I have predicted that within say 2 to 3 years all oil moving east from nigeria, angola etc will be priced on the yuan based chinese futures market, to the despair of moronistan.

Sinbad2

The Americans will kill the children of a few Pakistani politicians, to make them see that America is the one true god.

S Melanson

Yes and they learned that from the British 250 years ago

hvaiallverden

Yeah, Pakistan, for once I stand with them in this latest attack on their country, and this terror attack, was as obvious an “false flag” in order to blame Pakistan for this, and to me, timing, that is way to conviniant to be overlooked, why now and Cue Bono, caphiche.

India, sometimes, I wounder do the heat boil their brains, and I and probably a lot of others, knows that India is just an string puppet, waving arms when strung, huh, and I blame them for everything, even if they where pushed, and of course, when Pakistan for once have an man whom is trying His best to drag Pakistan up from the mud, this happens, and do you seriouslly think we will bite into that bullshit. Afgainistan, is probably just some months from peace, I really hope so, and the region can reconsile and realigne, because prospects then can be dealth with, no war helps. There is more but not for now. Iran, is of course in it because of ISISrael. what on earth else, but, ISISrael. And the rest, Turks, huh, the Kurds should be wipped in public, and sent home. The Saudi-barbarians, and the rotten little kingdoms, like the dungeon UAE. Mooney talks, bullshit walks. WE see that in Yemen, humanism they scream and whines about an aid truck lighted, but when over 80 000 Yemen children have died and so far is dying isnt even mentioned in this avalance of sudden urge to drool something about respecting others. Yeah, what could possibly go wrong.

peace

John

Over commitment.

I like the article. It highlights what was pointed out only a few days ago; the US never slows down. It would take a lot of money, over a very long period of time, to keep Pakistan happy. Looking at the financial drain on both the KSA and UAE lately, they don’t have it anymore. My take folks. I wish well to all.

S Melanson

Yes. I liked this article. Well written.

John

Hi Melanson. I agree. He is one of the best writers I encounter these days.

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