An inauspicious start to Biden’s democracies v. autocracies campaign
It was odd that Blinken chose to meet with Middle East
autocrats in Israel at the same time Biden was marshaling the forces of the
‘rules-based order.’
MARCH 28, 2022
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2022/03/28/an-inauspicious-start-to-bidens-democracies-v-autocracies-campaign/
Written by
Jim Lobe
If Secretary
of State Antony Blinken wanted to highlight the hypocrisy that so many
non-Western nations perceive in President Biden’s efforts to depict the Russian
invasion of Ukraine as a global “battle between democracy and
autocracy,” he couldn’t have chosen better
than to attend the Middle East foreign ministers’ meeting in Israel today.
All five of
his interlocutors from Israel, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and
Morocco represent governments that are either monarchical, outright tyrannical or have invaded and occupied their neighbors’ territory by the force of arms.
Blinken’s
enthusiastic endorsement of this burgeoning axis of Mideast states regardless
of their human rights records marks a return to the familiar Cold War politics
where generous U.S. support for all kinds of repressive states, especially in
the Global South, was justified by the overriding necessity of containing and
defeating the Soviet Union.
Blinken of
course is trying to get these same governments to back up sweeping U.S. and EU
sanctions against Russia in order to demonstrate their opposition to Moscow’s
aggression — even as a growing number of Putin-enabled oligarchs seek a safe haven in
Israel and the UAE, in particular.
Blinken also
hopes to at least soften or mute their opposition to the still-to-be-concluded
revived nuclear deal, no doubt by reassuring them that Washington will sell
them ever more sophisticated and expensive U.S.-made weapons systems and
participate in more joint military exercises with them.
Thus far,
Washington has commanded Israel’s efforts to mediate between Moscow and Kyiv
and its dispatch of humanitarian aid but has otherwise been disappointed by
Tel Aviv’s failure to provide Ukraine with specific weapons that could
materially help Kyiv repel the invasion.
As for the
five Arab states at the meeting, despite voting to condemn Russia’s aggression
in the UN General Assembly, they have tried to steer a more neutral course on
the war. The Biden administration has been particularly frustrated by the UAE’s
rejection of urgent Western appeals to increase the country’s badly needed oil
and gas exports to help make up for the shortfall in global markets caused by
Western sanctions against Russia. It also didn’t help that its de facto leader,
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, extolled his March 1 telephone
conversation with Putin while reportedly refusing to take a call
from Biden.
Whether
Blinken succeeds in persuading his interlocutors to take stronger measures to
isolate Russia or reconcile them to Washington’s revival of the nuclear deal
remains to be seen. But the warm embrace of his Israeli and Arab counterparts
in Monday’s meeting would seem to undermine — at least in the Middle East —
Biden’s sweeping message Saturday that Washington is a defender of an
international rules-based liberal order that is leading the “perennial struggle
for democracy and freedom.”
Egypt under
President Abdel al-Sisi is widely considered, along with Syria, to be perhaps
the most repressive dictatorship in the region with thousands of peaceful
dissidents languishing for years in overcrowded prisons and most
non-governmental organizations operating under unprecedented constraints when
they are permitted to operate at all.
“Egyptians
under Sisi are living through the worst repression in the country’s modern
history, according to the latest edition of Human Rights Watch’s “World Report.”
Bahrain,
whose Sunni royal family rules over a restive Shia majority, according to the
same report, pursues a policy of “zero tolerance for dissent,” continues to
conduct mass trials against dissidents, and has imprisoned key leaders of the
Shia community since the 2011 “Arab Spring.”
Particularly
ironic given the Biden administration’s support for Ukraine’s defense of its
territorial integrity in the face of Russia’s invasion and possible occupation,
three of the five participating governments in Monday’s meeting have invaded
and occupied their neighbors’ territory in defiance of international law.
Morocco invaded and eventually annexed Western Sahara in the wake of
Spain’s 1975 withdrawal, prompting a mass exodus of most of the former colony’s
Sahrawi inhabitants, many of whom remain in refugee camps in Algeria.
Of course,
Israel gained control of and occupied the Gaza Strip, Syria’s Golan Heights,
East Jerusalem, and the West Bank in the 1967 war and subsequently unilaterally
annexed East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights also in defiance of international
law. It has also established 130 government-approved settlements housing more
than 400,000 of its Jewish citizens on the West Bank in violation of the
Geneva Convention, leaving some 2.7 million Palestinians on the West Bank under
military occupation, a situation which a growing number of international human
rights organizations have denounced as a form of “apartheid.”
As for the
UAE, which, along with Saudi Arabia, led the counterrevolution across the
Middle East against the “Arab Spring” imprisoned scores
of activists, academics, lawyers, and other dissidents under “dismal and
unhygienic conditions” at home, its participation in the Yemen war has resulted
in its effective occupation of Yemen’s
Mayun Island in the Bab al-Mandab Strait,
and control of Socotra Island. It has also promoted armed secessionist
groups elsewhere in southern Yemen.
If Blinken
wants to focus on Russia’s aggression and defiance of the international
“rules-based order,” this meeting is not a good look.
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