Dr. Alon Ben-Meir

Dr. Alon Ben-Meir is a professor of international relations at the Center for Global Affairs at New York University. He teaches courses on international negotiation and Middle Eastern studies.

2020 will be more turbulent than 2019, unless…

Sadly, efforts launched by the UN, EU, and the US to quell or resolve many conflicts – from Lebanon, Libya, South Sudan, or many other countries – have largely failed.

Unless some drastic measures are taken, the various conflicts in the Middle East will become ever more intractable and exact a horrifying toll in blood and massive economic predicament.

The continuing severity of these crises and their repercussions will depend on whether or not the combatants assume a realistic posture, or new leadership rises and commits to finding equitable solutions that can endure. We must keep in mind though that the turmoil we experienced in 2019 may further intensify in 2020 because of the continuing global crisis of leadership and the challenges posed to the global order that was established in the wake of World War II.

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Israel and the Palestinians:

The following brief review of seven Mideast conflicts reflects these developments and raises the question as to what must be done to change the dynamics in the hope of solving some of these conflicts.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the oldest and most intractable conflict that has consumed both people for more than 70 years. Israelis and Palestinians must now choose between endless violence, or living in amity and peace.

Iran: 

Following the revolution in 1979, Iran sought to become the region's hegemon and obtain nuclear weapons. The turmoil sweeping the Middle East points to Iran's complicity in most of the conflicts destabilizing the region, including Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, and Syria, while enlisting financing, and training jihadist and terrorist groups, and threatening Israel's existence.

Iran's defiance led to crippling US sanctions. Seeking regime change and destroying Iran's nuclear facilities is not the answer. The resumption of US-Iran talks offers the only way out, provided Iran plays a constructive regional role and abandons its grandiose delusion to become a nuclear power and the region's hegemon.

Yearning for identity:

Since Iraq was established in 1932, it went through frequent political turbulence, overshadowing its glorious history. Following the revolution in 1958, the Baath Party, a nationalist and socialist regime, rose to power and was able to finance ambitious projects throughout the 1970s. In 1979, Saddam Hussein, a ruthless autocrat, assumed power and led the country to the disastrous Iran-Iraq and Gulf Wars. The 2003 war killed over 100,000 Iraqis, decimated the country, and invited Iran to exercise immense influence on all Iraqi affairs, while the people suffer from profound economic hardship. The current massive demonstrations against Iran's influence will ultimately prevail and restore Iraq's unique national identity, for which all Iraqis yearn.

Killing in God's name:

The Yemen war will be remembered as one of the most horrific humanitarian disasters in modern history. It is a proxy war pitting the leader of Sunni Muslims – Saudi Arabia, which supports the internationally recognized government and is determined to prevent Iran from establishing a foothold in the Arabian Peninsula – against the leader of Shiite Muslims – Iran, which backs the Houthi rebels. Yemen became the battleground, and the Yemenis are killed in God's name. Tens of thousands have died, millions are starving, and over a million children are infected with cholera, all while the country lies in ruin. Five years later, the warring parties have finally realized the war is simply unwinnable. Ultimately, both sides must negotiate a solution.

The price of insatiable lust for power:

Syria's civil war, which started in 2011, is hard to fathom. What began as a peaceful demonstration became the most devastating war of the 21st century. Had President Bashar Assad responded to his fellow citizens' demands by providing them with basic human rights, he might have averted a calamitous war that has killed nearly 700,000 people, rendered 11 million refugees, and leveled half the country to the ground. Now Assad is at the mercy of Russia, Turkey, and Iran, who are determined to maintain a permanent foothold in Syria. Syria may well become the battleground between Israel and Iran, while scores of jihadists roam the country with no foreseeable end.

Erdogan's self-defeating dictatorship:

Soon after Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan came to power in 2002, it was believed that under his stewardship Turkey would become the first functioning Islamic democracy. He embarked on sociopolitical reforms and engaged the Kurds to end a decadeslong conflict while improving Turkey's prospective integration into the EU. But then he reversed gears. For him, democracy was only a vehicle to promote his Islamic agenda and lead the Sunni Muslim world. He pursued his religious and ideological rivals with vengeance, imprisoning tens of thousands of, along with nearly 200 journalists who are still languishing in jails. He will leave behind a legacy of a ruthless leader possessed with Ottoman revivalism, who squandered Turkey's prospective brilliant future for a self-defeating dictatorship.

A preordained defeat:

The Afghanistan War, the longest in American history, should have ended one year after it began in 2001. It was clear that the Taliban's initial defeat was temporary and that they would return to reclaim their supposedly inherent right to the millennium-old land of their ancestors. American efforts to establish a democracy, coupled with a mounting build-up of US troops and escalating cost, have borne little fruit. The Taliban relentlessly maintained their counteroffensive and, irrespective of their heavy losses, reestablished their central role. Under any negotiated agreement, the Taliban will eventually take over. All that the US can do is require the Taliban to fully adhere to human rights, and punish any violations with crippling punitive sanctions.

There are certainly many other countries in the Middle East and North Africa suffering from political instability, daunting economic hardship, violence, uncertainty, and fear. Sadly, the efforts that have been made by the UN, EU, and the US to quell or resolve many of these conflicts – be they in Lebanon, Libya, South Sudan, or many other countries – have largely failed.

The year 2020 will most likely be as turbulent if not more so than 2019 due mainly to the lack of American leadership and the rush of other powers, especially Russia, China, and to a lesser extent Turkey and Iran, to fill the vacuum the US is leaving behind.

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