By
Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
Two
interlinked wars may be coming to the Middle East. Either
could break out within a few years’ time.
One
conflict will pit Israel against an Iranian-led coalition
based in Lebanon and Syria.
Another
may well erupt between Saudi Arabia and its Sunni allies in
the Persian Gulf on the one side, and Iran and its Shia proxy
armies on the other, for hegemony in the Muslim Middle East.
Tensions
have been building on Israel’s northern fronts with Syria and
Lebanon as Shia militias loyal to Tehran, alongside the
regular Syrian army, complete their victory over the Islamic
State and other Sunni forces.
Iran’s
plans to entrench and consolidate an anti-Israel military
front in Syria include long-term military strongholds, a
permanently deployed proxy army and the creation of industrial
facilities for the production of precision rockets in Syria
and Lebanon.
Tehran
is building a land corridor from Iran through Iraq and Syria
to the Mediterranean Sea. This will further consolidate Iran’s
already significant sway over the governments of Iraq, Syria,
and Lebanon.
The
route would physically link Hezbollah in Lebanon, the regime
of Bashar al-Assad in Syria, and the Iranian satellite
government in Baghdad.
Iranian
military plans include the creation of a naval base not far
from the Russian base in Tartus, an air base near Damascus,
and a ground base for armed sectarian forces under Iranian
command south of Damascus.
Tehran
is changing into a powerful geopolitical player whose
influence will be projected hundreds and maybe thousands of
kilometres beyond its borders.
During
the Syrian civil war, Iran created a number of Hezbollah-type
militia forces. These include the pro-regime National Defence
Forces in Syria and the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces, an
umbrella organization composed of some 40 militias.
These
groups have helped win the civil war for Assad’s Alawite
Shiite regime. Meanwhile, Sunni Arab efforts to assist the
rebels, in which Saudi Arabia played a large role, ended
largely in shambles.
In
Iraq, the ruling Islamic Dawa Party is traditionally
pro-Iranian, while the militant Badr Organization controls the
powerful interior ministry, which has allowed it to blur the
boundaries between the official armed forces and its own
soldiers.
In
October, it appears that Iran helped Baghdad retake the
disputed city of Kirkuk from the Kurds following the ill-fated
referendum on Kurdish independence.
Lebanon
is now effectively an Iranian vassal state. The establishment
of a cabinet dominated by Hezbollah in December 2016, and the
appointment of Hezbollah’s ally Michel Aoun as president two
months earlier, solidified Iran’s grasp over the country.
Saudi
Arabia’s bizarre attempt to force Lebanese Prime Minister Saad
al-Hariri to resign last November -- which he later withdrew
-- also demonstrated the ineptness of Saudi policy.
In a
future northern war, therefore, Israel expects to encounter
the battle-hardened Hezbollah along with a reconstructed
Syrian army, backed by Iran.
Seyyed
Abdolrahim Mousavi, the current commander-in-chief of Iran’s
army, warned Israel in October that Tehran can “destroy the
Zionist entity at lightning speed, and thus shorten the 25
years it still has left.” He threatened to “turn Tel Aviv and
Haifa into dust.”
Elsewhere,
too, Iranian leaders have been brilliant in their ability to
play internal fissures and grievances across the region to
Tehran’s advantage. They see a map not of crumbling artificial
states, but rather one of ethnic, political, and sectarian
divides.
The
Sunni rulers of Saudi Arabia, Yemen and the Gulf states have
reason to worry. With its ability to monopolize Shiite
religious authority, Iran has been able to utilize minority
communities across the region.
Saudi
Arabia’s oil-rich Eastern Province and neighboring Bahrain are
heavily Shiite and these populations harbour grievances
against their rulers. Bahrain is so afraid it has even sent
out feelers towards Israel.
Meanwhile,
the Saudi-led ineffectual embargo of Qatar has driven the gas
and oil-rich emirate closer to Iran.
The
Houthis in Yemen, who are Zaydi Shias, are now gaining ground
in a civil war with Iranian help, despite direct Saudi
intervention. They have even fired Iranian-made missiles at
Riyadh.
They
may well prove to be the Islamic Republic’s breakthrough on
the southwestern corner of the Arabian Peninsula. This would
provide Iran with the ability to control the mouth of the Red
Sea.
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