By Stephen Green in PJ Media
Here’s Politico’s Adam Baron,
more or less parroting the Administration’s Pravda on the situation in Yemen:
The truth is far more complex, and
the solution right now should be more along the lines of: Just stay out of it.
While the chief combatants in the civil war are certainly playing the sectarian
card to some degree, there is reason to think that Yemen will not necessarily
become part of some regional sectarian conflict. Regardless of their foreign
ties, both the Shiite Houthis and their Sunni opponents are deeply rooted in
Yemen, and they are motivated primarily by local issues.
The main danger now is that the
Western powers, Saudi Arabia or Egypt will overreact and seek to intervene,
ostensibly to counter Iranian influence or to quash the efforts of Al Qaeda in
the Arabian Peninsula to gain territory. Yet foreign intervention could very
well be the worst approach now—further regionalizing what is still a local fight,
injecting a stronger sectarian tone into the conflict while threatening to push
Yemen closer to implosion.
“It’s five PM; please don’t threaten
to push me closer to cocktails.”
I trust you see where I’m going with
this.
When Iranian-backed rebels have forced
a country’s president to flee by boat, presumably because air travel is too
dangerous or even impossible, it’s fair to say that the country has already
imploded.
Now it is true that Yemen’s troubles
are mostly local and deeply rooted — it was actually two countries as recently
as 1990, and the marriage has never been a happy one. North Yemen was the
southern tip of the old Ottoman Empire and its people are generally more
religious, despite flirting with Arab nationalism in the ’60s and ’70s. South
Yemen was a British protectorate before independence in the ’60s, and was
secular enough to put the Communists in power. Even on its own, South Yemen
wasn’t much of a country. In reality it wasn’t much more than the wealthy city
of Aden lording it over poor hicks in the sticks.
So, yes, like pretty much all of the
post-colonial Arab world, Yemen is several bags of hurt shoved together into a
bigger bag of hurt.
But you know what? Libya’s troubles
were mostly local, too, and now that country is also a playground for ISIS and
al Qaeda — in no small part because we dealt Death from Above while strenuously
avoiding Boots on the Ground. To varying degrees, that’s also been
administration policy in Iraq and in Yemen, and both places imploded. Both
countries are also now battlegrounds between Iran and ISIS — at a time when
Obama requires Iran’s cooperation to put together a nuclear deal to seal his
foreign policy legacy. If you think that’s nuts, it gets worse. The U.S. Air
Force is now hitting targets in Tikrit to aid the Iranian-led Iraqi Shi’ite
forces trying to retake that Sunni city, while our Sunni Saudi allies, using
American intelligence aid, are launching air strikes against Iranian-led
Shi’ite Houthi forces in Yemen.
What is the enemy of our enemy of
our enemy, anyway? “You’re either with us or against us” seems so very long ago
and far away.
Anyway, Baron’s point was supposed
to be “foreign intervention in a local fight would be the worst course anyone
could take.” But with U.S. forces fleeing, and Iranian and Saudi forces
fighting over the corpse of what was once our ally, then “avoiding foreign
intervention” is something of a moot point, yes? Trying to keep this fight
local is akin to locking the barn door after the horse has been slaughtered and
the barn set on fire.
But enough of Politico Magazine,
which we learned yesterday is a paid-for
Washington favorite — and I guess for good reason.
Instead, let’s go to The Daily Beast, where Shane Harris and Tim Mak present a more honest assessment:
“It’s a big setback,” Bruce Riedel,
a former CIA officer with extensive experience in the Middle East, said of the
rapidly deteriorating security situation in Yemen, which now more than ever
seems in the grips of an outright civil war. “Without both a U.S. presence on
the ground or a reliable ally, it will be much more difficult to target al
Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula,” Riedel told The Daily Beast, referring
to the terror group’s Yemeni branch—the one that U.S. intelligence officials
say is most capable of attacking in Europe and the United States. “Much of
eastern Yemen will be a chaotic no-man’s-land where al Qaeda can operate.”
What’s the solution? There isn’t
one. We can’t go back to the relatively tranquil days of 2007-08 — not without
a World War II-scale, region-wide intervention, and that’s just not going to
happen. Instead we’re stuck with the bitter fruit of six years of malign
neglect by President Obama, whose job in the Middle East should have been
comparatively simple. All he had to do was keep a lid on Iraq, keep Iran boxed
in, and work with local authorities at playing Whack-a-Mole with the region’s
various terror groups. Instead, Obama abandoned Iraq, set Iran loose, and
failed at creating any sort of strategic vision for dealing with Arab
governments or terror groups.
The so-called Arab Spring
complicated things, but bad judgment (let us call it that) made several bad
situation worse. Obama preferred disengagement in Syria, where something more
proactive was required. In Egypt, Obama openly supported the Muslim
Brotherhood, and turned his back on the secular military government. Temperance
was required to help hold Libya together, but Obama chose instead to recklessly
depose the Ghaddafi regime, despite years of anti-terror cooperation. From
Benghazi to Tikrit, from Mosul to Sanaa, Obama has left death and disorder in
his wake.
So to paraphrase Lenin, you can’t
make an omelet with egg on your face — Obama’s bad judgement (let us still call
it that) has left much of the Arab world broken, probably for a generation or
more.
The best posture we could adopt now
would be to strenuously back Cairo and Riyadh, as Saudi money and Egyptian
manpower could both be put to good use against ISIS and Iran. But that posture
simply isn’t possible for Obama, who prefers the Muslim Brotherhood to Egypt’s
military government and Iranian mullahs to Saudi sheiks.
The next American president,
Republican or Democrat, seems likely to inherit an even worse situation —
today’s chaos plus a potential Saudi/Iranian nuclear standoff. Imagine
the Cold War writ small, or Syria writ large, but where the major players are
both psychotic.
The loss of Yemen is going to seem
like the least of our problems.
Stephen
Green,
also known as ”VodkaPundit,” was one of the first bloggers to join PJ
Media. He’s also the personality behind PJTV’s Hair of the
Dog and The Week in Blogs, and he appears alongside Scott Ott and
Bill Whittle on Trifecta.
You
may be wondering where the name ”VodkaPundit” came from. As Steve
puts it, he wanted ”something reminiscent of Instapundit, but dumber.”
Steve
grew up half-Jewish in the preppy part of St. Louis County. He has also lived
in the hip Central West End of the city of St. Louis, among the hippies and
loggers of California’s north coast, and in San Francisco’s extremely naughty
Tenderloin district. He currently lives on the Front Range of the Rocky
Mountains with his wife and two sons.
His
work background includes the steel industry, pop radio, investing, and new
media — both the written word and video. As the father of two small boys, his
hobbies include very strong cocktails and yelling. All of that gives him some
small insight into the wonderful and crazy mixed-up mess that is American life.
When
it comes to the topics he enjoys writing about the most, Steve says this is
something he didn’t figure out until recently:
Ed
Driscoll covers the intersection of politics and pop culture. Roger Simon’s beat
is the intersection of Hollywood and politics. Zombie infiltrates the left,
armed only with a camera and, one assumes, a careless disregard for patchouli.
The list goes on. My beat, it seems, is the absurd in American
politics. That must be some kind of job security.
You
can find Stephen Green’s musings about the latest American political absurdity
at Vodkapundit.
He’s also an active tweeter – you can follow him at @VodkaPundit.
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