19 Apr 2024
Wednesday 7 January 2015 - 11:24
Story Code : 143386

The fantasy of an Iran-US partnership

[caption id="attachment_142177" align="alignright" width="166"] The file photo shows the ISIL Takfiri militants in Iraq.[/caption]
Iran remains profoundly skeptical of US intentions and professed determination to degrade and destroy ISIL.
Western pundits who blithely assert that the Islamic Republic of Iran can or will cooperate with the United States in Iraq against ISIL ignore a basic problem; how can the US be a serious partner in fighting a terrorist movement that Washington may have played a critical role in creating?

When US Vice-President Joe Biden told an American university audience in October that Turkey, the UAE and Saudi Arabia are responsible for arming al-Nusra, ISIL, and other al-Qaeda-rooted extremists in Syria and that there is no "moderate middle" in the country, there was (as most non-Americans expected) little coverage of thisstunning admission in the US mainstream media.

Indeed, what little coverage there was focused on Biden's subsequent apologies to Turkish, Emirati, and Saudi leaders for having madesuch comments in the first place.

Predictably, there was no follow-up reporting in theNew York Timesreminding Americans that the US is itself complicit in funding and arming extremists in Syria.

CIA producing weapons

In early 2013, the newspaper reported what many in the region already knew; that since the beginning of 2012,the CIA had been deeply involved in procuring weaponsfor anti-Assad forces, airlifting arms to Jordanian and Turkish airports, and "vetting" rebel commanders - all to help US allies "support the lethal side of the civil war".Other reports pointed out that these shipments were actuallypaid for by US allies, at the bidding of the Obama administration.

But, after the Biden revelation, the so-called "newspaper of record" made no reference to how the US, in violation of international law, helped to facilitate the Syrian civil war - and, in the process, to enable the rise of ISIL.

Western-backed extremismis neither a new nor regionally-bound concept. Whether it is the "Contra" rebels in Nicaragua or al-Qaeda-like groups in Afghanistan,the objective has always been to achieve strategic objectives through the infliction of mass suffering - for, in the "free and civilised world" of the US and its allies, the utopian end too often justifies the Mephistophelean means.

More recently, an important footnote to the Libyan civil war was the involvement of Abdul Hakim Belhaj, previously the leader of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group as well as an al-Qaeda member.

He was one of many Libyan militants influenced by atakfiri(apostate) ideology; the groups with which he was affiliated were designated as terrorist organisations by the US State Department.

Nevertheless, he, along with other like-minded militants, became central components in the efforts of western and Arab-backed anti-Gaddafi forces to capture Tripoli, the Libyan capital.

Western willingness to cooperate with al-Qaeda (or "former" al-Qaeda) militants in Libya was a major turning point. Even thesubsequent death of the US ambassador to Libyadid not change US policy in this regard.Belhaj became the representative of Libya's interim president after Gaddafi's overthrow (before the complete ruin of the country).

More importantly, the willingness of the US and European and "Middle Eastern" allies to embrace al-Qaeda-like militants took US and western foreign policy in the region back to what it had been before the September 11, 2001 attacks - a policy of cooperation with violent extremists to undermine regional actors the West considers problematic.

Monster they created

This policy quickly expanded from Libya to Syriaand the repercussions are being felt today in countries like Pakistan, Nigeria, Australia, and China.

After Gaddafi's overthrow, Turkey - a NATO member - allegedly helped Belhaj to meet with leaders of the so-called "Free Syrian Army" in Istanbul and along the Syrian-Turkish border. In the meetings the former al-Qaeda leaderdiscussed supporting the FSAwith money, weapons, and fighters,at a time when the CIA was amajor conduit for the transferof weapons from Libya to Syria.

While Belhaj was just one of many al-Qaeda affiliates involved in violent anti-government campaigns in both Libya and Syria, his openly acknowledged role underscores how the supposedly "moderate" FSA was, from early on in the Syrian civil war, as Iran repeatedly warned, deeply associated with and infiltrated by extremists.

Over time, the problem grew so large with ISIL's rise that it becameimpossible to hide the monsterthat the US and its allies had created.And so, Washington launched yet another chapter in its never-ending post-9/11 "war on terror".

Notwithstanding Washington's professed determination to degrade and, ultimately, to destroy ISIL, Iran remains profoundly skeptical of US intentions.

Even after dramatic gains by ISIL in Iraq and the formation of a US-led coalition of the guilty to fight it, this coalition has, on average, carried out justnine airstrikes per day in both Iraq and Syria.

In comparison, western reports indicate that, in the same period, the Syrian air force alone has at times carried out up to200 strikes in 36 hours.Even as these largely inconsequential US-led airstrikes are carried out in Iraq and Syria, some regional players continue to provideextensive logistical support to ISIL; alongSyria's borders with Jordanand theIsraeli regime,the Nusra Front continues tocollaborate with other extremist militiasbacked by foreign (including western) powers.

In light of these realities, Iranians - who have beenindispensable in preventing the fallof Damascus, Baghdad, Aleppo, and Erbil -simply do not buy the argument that a repentant US is now waging a real war against ISIL, the Nusra Front, and other extremist organisations in Iraq and Syria.

Rather, Iranians see the evidence as pointing to a complex(yet foolish) policyundertaken by Washington and its allies for the purpose of "containing" the Islamic Republic.

What, then, would be the justification- under such circumstances and as Iranian allies are successfully pushing back extremists in Iraq and Syria - for theIslamic Republic to cooperate with the US in Iraq?

No matter how much some may try to tempt it, Iran will not play Faust to America's Mephistopheles.

This article was written by Seyed Mohammad Marandi for Al Jazeera Opinion page on January 7,2014. Seyed Mohammad Marandi is professor of North American Studies and dean of the Faculty of World Studies at the University of Tehran.

 

The Iran Project is not responsible for the content of quoted articles.
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