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A different version of this article appeared in the Jerusalem Post. I own the rights. Please read and link only to this version.
By Barry Rubin
Of course, conflicts between Sunni and Shia Muslims are not
at all new, but the fact that this is becoming a central feature on the regional strategic level is a dramatic shift. After all, as long as there were secular-style regimes preaching an
all-inclusive Arab nationalist identity, differences between religious
communities were subordinated. Once there are Islamist regimes, theology becomes
central again, as it was centuries ago.
However, no one should misunderstand the situation. This is
fundamentally a struggle for political power and wealth. When Sunni and Shia
states or movements battle they are acting as political entities not pursuing old theological disputes.
The growing power and influence of Iran’s Islamist regime
posed a tremendous problem for Arab Sunni Islamists. They generally did not
like Iran because it was Persian and Shia, yet it was the only Islamist game in
town. Thus, Arab Sunni Islamist Hamas became an Iranian client. The Iran-Iraq
war reflected these antagonisms, as best seen in Iraqi propaganda. Yet Iraq’s
regime was also able to keep the Shia majority there under control.
Saddam Hussein’s removal by a U.S.-led international
intervention opened up the question of confessional relations in Iraq. The Arab
Shia were inevitably going to win any election, given their three-to-one advantage over the Sunni and the Kurds opting
out for what is, in effect though not name, their own state in the north. Despite the terrorist, anti-American, and
al-Qaida elements of the Sunni insurgency, it was essentially a last-ditch
attempt by the Sunnis to reclaim power. It failed and while violence continues,
the main Sunni emphasis will be on negotiating the best possible division of
power.
In Lebanon, the Shia triumphed too, led by Hizballah and aided by Syria and Iran. But all
of this was prelude to the year 2011. The “Arab Spring” was an overwhelmingly
Sunni affair, their own equivalent in some ways of Iran’s 1979 revolution. Only in Bahrain, where they were repressed,
did the Shia take the offensive.
Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya all had Sunni insurgencies against
Sunni Arab governments. The situation in
Syria is far more complex with an Alawite non-Muslim regime that pretends to be
Shia Muslim and is allied with Iran, opposed by a variety of rebels.
Nevertheless, in this context, the upheaval is a Sunni-led (though far from
just Islamist) revolt against a “Shia” regime.
Here’s the bottom line: Sunni Arab Islamists no longer need
Iran or even Turkey because they now have their own power. What is likely to
emerge is at least a loose Sunni Arab and largely Islamist-flavored bloc consisting
of Egypt, the Gaza Strip, Libya, and Tunisia along with the Muslim Brotherhood elements
in Jordan and Syria.
The key element here
is the Muslim Brotherhood, an organization that doesn’t like Shia Muslims in
general and Iran in particular. Little events, like Brotherhood guru Yusuf
al-Qaradawi’s support for the Sunni regime in Bahrain against the Shia
opposition, show the direction of their thinking. The even more radical Salafists—a term now
used for the small revolutionary Islamist groups, are even more anti-Shia. One
factor here is the continued unwillingness of the majority of Arab states to
welcome Shia-ruled Iraq into their ranks. Iraq is not going to become a satellite
of Iran. It certainly feels more comfortable in a Shia bloc but will probably
continue to be relatively uninvolved in regional affairs.
Note, too, that to a large extent this situation leaves the
Palestinian Authority as an orphan. While it can depend on very general Arab,
Iranian, and Turkish support, the Islamists prefer to back Hamas, especially the ever-stronger Sunni Islamists. This, of course, encourages the Palestinian
Authority’s (Fatah’s) alliance with Hamas while also weakening its leverage
toward that Islamist partner. (And that means a continued disinterest in
negotiating with Israel, much less reaching a negotiated solution with it.)
Thus, despite appearances, 2011 was a defeat for Iran and
Turkey because Sunni Arab Islamists are far less receptive to Tehran’s
influence and view it as a rival, while Arab Islamists don’t want leadership
from Turks either.
Can these blocs unite effectively against the United States,
the West or Israel? In a word: No. Their
power struggles for regional power and for control of individual states
(Bahrain, Lebanon, Syria, and to a far lesser extent Iraq) will keep them in
conflict. Even on the anti-Israel consensus each side will seek to exploit it
for their own, often conflicting, interests.
By the same token, however, the hope for moderation is
minimal. In a region when regimes and movements are competing to prove their militancy
and loyalty to a radical interpretation of Islam, nobody is going to want to
make peace with Israel. And regimes will only work with the United States I they
feel that America can and will protect them, a rather forlorn hope with an
Obama Administration eager to make friends with Islamists.
There is also another aspect to this Sunni-Shia rivalry, the
formation of blocs, the competition in militancy, and the battle for control of
individual states. The region will continue to waste lives, time, and resources
in political strife as the lure of ideology and power rather than pragmatism
and economic productivity.
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