Israeli think
tank: Don’t destroy ISIS; it’s a “useful tool” against Iran, Hezbollah, Syria
Head of a right-wing think tank says
the existence of ISIS serves a "strategic purpose" in the West's
interests
TUESDAY,
AUG 23, 2016
According to a think tank that does contract work for NATO and the
Israeli government, the West should not destroy ISIS, the fascist Islamist
extremist group that is committing genocide and
ethnically cleansing minority groups in Syria and Iraq.
Why? The so-called Islamic State “can be a useful tool in undermining”
Iran, Hezbollah, Syria and Russia, argues the think tank’s director.
“The continuing existence of IS
serves a strategic purpose,” wrote Efraim Inbar in “The Destruction of Islamic
State Is a Strategic Mistake,” a paper published
on Aug. 2.
By cooperating with Russia to fight the genocidal extremist group, the
United States is committing a “strategic folly” that will “enhance the power of
the Moscow-Tehran-Damascus axis,” Inbar argued, implying that Russia, Iran and
Syria are forming a strategic alliance to dominate the Middle East.
“The West should seek the further weakening of Islamic State, but not
its destruction,” he added. “A weak IS is, counterintuitively, preferable to a
destroyed IS.”
Inbar, an influential Israeli
scholar, is the director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, a
think tank that says its mission is
to advance “a realist, conservative, and Zionist agenda in the search for
security and peace for Israel.”
The think tank, known by its acronym
BESA, is affiliated with Israel’s Bar Ilan University and has been supported by
the Israeli government, the NATO Mediterranean Initiative, the U.S. embassy in
Israel and the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.
BESA also says it “conducts specialized research on contract to the
Israeli foreign affairs and defense establishment, and for NATO.”
In his paper, Inbar suggested that it would be a good idea to prolong
the war in Syria, which has destroyed the country, killing hundreds of
thousands of people and displacing more than half the population.
As for the argument that defeating ISIS would make the Middle East more
stable, Inbar maintained: “Stability is not a value in and of itself. It is
desirable only if it serves our interests.”
“Instability and crises sometimes contain portents of positive change,”
he added.
Inbar stressed that the West’s “main enemy” is not the self-declared
Islamic State; it is Iran. He accused the Obama administration of “inflat[ing]
the threat from IS in order to legitimize Iran as a ‘responsible’ actor that
will, supposedly, fight IS in the Middle East.”
Despite Inbar’s claims, Iran is a mortal enemy of ISIS, particularly
because the Iranian government is founded on Shia Islam, a branch that the
Sunni extremists of ISIS consider a form of apostasy. ISIS and its affiliates
have massacred and ethnically cleansed Shia Muslims in Syria, Iraq and
elsewhere.
Inbar noted that ISIS threatens the regime of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad. If the Syrian government survives, Inbar argued, “Many radical
Islamists in the opposition forces, i.e., Al Nusra and its offshoots, might
find other arenas in which to operate closer to Paris and Berlin.” Jabhat
al-Nusra is Syria’s al-Qaida affiliate, and one of the most powerful rebel
groups in the country. (It recently changed its name to Jabhat Fatah al-Sham.)
Hezbollah, the
Lebanese-based militia that receives weapons and support from Iran, is also
“being seriously taxed by the fight against IS, a state of affairs that suits
Western interests,” Inbar wrote.
“Allowing bad guys to
kill bad guys sounds very cynical, but it is useful and even moral to do so if
it keeps the bad guys busy and less able to harm the good guys,” Inbar
explained.
Several days after Inbar’s paper was
published, David M. Weinberg, director of public affairs at the BESA Center,
wrote a similarly-themed op-ed titled
“Should ISIS be wiped out?” in Israel Hayom, a free and widely read right-wing
newspaper funded by conservative billionaire Sheldon Adelson that strongly
favors the agenda of Israel’s right-wing Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu.
In the piece, Weinberg defended his colleague’s argument and referred to
ISIS as a “useful idiot.” He called the U.S. nuclear deal with Iran “rotten”
and argued that Iran and Russia pose a “far greater threat than the terrorist
nuisance of Islamic State.”
Weinberg also described the BESA Center as “a place of intellectual
ferment and policy creativity,” without disclosing that he is that think tank’s
director of public affairs.
After citing responses from two other associates of his think tank who
disagree with their colleague, Weinberg concluded by writing: “The only
certain thing is that Ayatollah Khamenei is watching this quintessentially
Western open debate with amusement.”
On his website, Weinberg includes
BESA in a list of resources for “hasbara,” or
pro-Israel propaganda. It is joined by the ostensible civil rights organization
the Anti-Defamation League and other pro-Israel think tanks, such as the Middle
East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) and the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy (WINEP).
Weinberg has worked extensively with
the Israeli government and served as a spokesman for Bar Ilan University. He
also identifies himself on his website as a “columnist and lobbyist who is a
sharp critic of Israel’s detractors and of post-Zionist trends in Israel.”
Inbar boasts an array of accolades. He was a member of the political
strategic committee for Israel’s National Planning Council, a member of the
academic committee of the Israeli military’s history department and the chair
of the committee for the national security curriculum at the Ministry of
Education.
He also has a
prestigious academic record, having taught at Johns Hopkins and Georgetown and
lectured at Harvard, MIT, Columbia, Oxford and Yale. Inbar served as a scholar
at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and was appointed as a
Manfred Wörner NATO fellow.
The strategy Inbar
and Weinberg have proposed, that of indirectly allowing a fascist Islamist
group to continue fighting Western enemies, is not necessarily a new one in
American and Israeli foreign policy circles. It is reminiscent of the U.S. Cold
War policy of supporting far-right Islamist extremists in order to fight
communists and left-wing nationalists.
In the war in Afghanistan in the 1980s, the CIA and U.S. allies Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia armed,
trained and funded Islamic fundamentalists in their fight
against the Soviet Union and Afghanistan’s Soviet-backed socialist government.
These U.S.-backed rebels, known as the mujahideen, were the predecessors of
al-Qaida and the Taliban.
In the 1980s,
Israel adopted a similar policy. It supported right-wing Islamist groups like
Hamas in order to undermine the Palestine Liberation Organization, or PLO, a
coalition of various left-wing nationalist and communist political parties.
“Hamas, to my great regret, is Israel’s creation,” Avner Cohen, a
retired Israeli official who worked in Gaza for more than 20 years, told The
Wall Street Journal.
As far back as 1957, President Dwight Eisenhower insisted
to the CIA that, in order to fight leftist movements in the
Middle East, “We should do everything possible to stress the ‘holy war’
aspect.”
Ben Norton is a politics reporter and staff writer
at Salon. You can find him on Twitter at@BenjaminNorton.
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