The P5+1 negotiations with Iran, mostly a Washington-Tehran affair,
may be a means to a complex and ambitious end: a new strategic and
energy equation in Southwest Asia. U.S. President Barack Obama’s recent
State of the Union address indicates that to reach this goal, the U.S.
is steering away from war to diplomacy
Look at how U.S. President Barack Obama configured the U.S.-Iran
relationship during his State of the Union address on January 28: “These
negotiations do not rely on trust; any long-term deal we agree to must
be based on verifiable action that convinces us and the international
community that Iran is not building a nuclear bomb. If John F. Kennedy
and Ronald Reagan could negotiate with the Soviet Union, then surely a
strong and confident America can negotiate with less powerful
adversaries today.”
Admittedly, Obama is fighting a formidable array of interests against
a rapprochement between Tehran and Washington – from the Israel lobby
and the Gulf petrodollar lobby to the Capitol Hill minefield (Democrats
and Republicans alike), some sectors of the
industrial-military-surveillance complex, and the neo-cons blaring
inside the right-wing corporate media box.
However, it does also sound as if Obama was sabotaging his own
negotiations. Iran “is not building a nuclear bomb,” as the alphabet
soup of U.S. intelligence has already, tirelessly, established. And
Obama’s America is not “strong and confident.” But at least he pledged
to veto any bill sent to him by Congress to derail the negotiations. The
American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the U.S.’s pro-Israel lobby,
has tried and will keep trying again
Obama is not exactly a master of foreign policy. He “withdrew” from
Iraq only because of a formidable rebuff by the Iraqi Parliament. On
Afghanistan, it’s the Pentagon – and the CIA – that have always run the
show. Because of one of his reckless “red lines,” Obama was, recently,
on the brink of bombing Syria – with cataclysmic consequences – until he
was saved by Moscow.
But now, it looks like Obama is steering away from war to diplomacy.
For his administration, the P5+1 negotiations with Iran – which is
essentially a Washington-Tehran affair – are a means to a complex and
ambitious end: reaching a new strategic equation in Southwest Asia.
Obama himself would never conceptualise it this way – because he
doesn’t know much about China. But it’s as if the Obama administration
saw Iranian President Hassan Rouhani as a Persian Deng Xiaoping – with
all manner of juicy business possibilities open if a definitive nuclear
deal is reached. And reaching a deal would be Obama’s “Nixon in China”
moment.
As much as Iran does not need to “rejoin the community of nations”
(as Obama said), because it was never expelled from it, the myth of U.S.
“geopolitical primacy” in Southwest Asia remains what it is – just a
myth. You can’t have “primacy” in the region anymore based on a Likudnik
Israel, a paltry military dictator in Egypt, and the petrodollar
paragons of democracy in the Gulf.
The fact is that in an inevitably multipolar-bound world, Washington
needs a new game. And an intelligent game implies a minimally decent
relationship with Tehran. Otherwise, Iran will keep advancing as a key
developing country on its own anyway, allied with Russia and China and
expanding trade/business relations with everyone from Turkey, India and
Pakistan to Northeast and Southeast Asia.
So now the formula could be: follow the money; follow the business
sense; and follow a new strategic balance. Obama is certainly
calculating that a broad understanding with Iran implies no more U.S.
wars in West Asia, in parallel to the U.S. depending on less imported
oil from the region. No wonder the House of Saud is agitated.
All through 2014, the P5+1 negotiations will hinge on whether we are
slowly moving away from U.S. imperial power towards a new Southwest Asia
equation where multipolar players include the U.S., Russia, Iran, the
European Union and Turkey. The Saudi reaction has been to intensify,
weaponise and then try to sell – again – the myth of a Sunni-Shia war,
blaming the Shias, Persians and/or Arabs, as the source of all regional
problems.
The possibility of a marriage of reason between Washington and Tehran
is as enticing as the certainty of a divorce in the money marriage
between Washington and Riyadh.
If he’s being true to himself, Obama ought to have observed that
there are absolutely no common values between the U.S. he extolled at
the State of the Union address and the land of a universal, non-stop
jihad. Without those millions of barrels of oil a day, Saudi Arabia
would have been “sanctioned” to death, if not outright shocked and awed,
a long time ago.
But it’s too early to tell whether we are about to marvel at the
first post-imperial U.S. presidency since World War Two. There’s always
2016; meanwhile, perhaps a U.S.-Iran deal may still be reached in 2014.
Pepe Escobar, born in Brazil, is the roving correspondent
for Asia Times, Hong Kong. He has been a foreign correspondent for 30
years, working out of Europe, the U.S., and Asia. He is also an op-ed
writer and contributes to various websites and radio stations from South
America to West Asia. He is the author of five books, including ‘Obama
does Globalisation’ (2009).