The New Arab-Israeli Alliance
Last edited Wed Jan 25, 2017, 04:23 PM - Edit history (2)
During the early years of the Obama administration, conventional wisdom in Washington held that the IsraeliPalestinian conflict trumped everything else in the Middle East, that no problem could be resolved until that one was out of the way. Without doubt, former president Jimmy Carter said, the path to peace in the Middle East goes through Jerusalem. The reason, said his former national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, now a professor of foreign policy at Johns Hopkins University, is because, The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the single most combustible and galvanizing issue in the Arab world.
Similar views were expressed across the political spectrum, from President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Defense Secretary Chuck Hegel and General David Petraeus.
If we can solve the Israeli-Palestinian process, Obama said in 2008, then that will make it easier for Arab states and the Gulf states to support us when it comes to issues like Iraq and Afghanistan. It will also weaken Iran, which has been using Hamas and Hezbollah as a way to stir up mischief in the region. If weve gotten an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal, maybe at the same time peeling Syria out of the Iranian orbit, that makes it easier to isolate Iran so that they have a tougher time developing a nuclear weapon.
This has long been a dubious theory and events in the meantime have proven it. The main drivers of chaos in the Middle East are conflicts between Sunni and Shia Muslims, between Arabs and Persians, and between secularists and Islamists. This has been true for decades, but with civil war in Syria, the rise of The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), anarchy in Libya, a region-wide proxy war in Yemen, and an Iran unshackled by sanctions, it is obvious now even to casual observers. The IsraeliPalestinian conflict has been reduced almost to an asterisk.
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/article/new-arab%E2%80%93israeli-alliance