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    Arab uprisings reshape map of US influence

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — About 18 months before the Egyptian uprising that would doom Hosni Mubarak, a U.S. diplomatic cable was sent from Cairo. It described Mubarak as the likely president-for-life and said his regime's ability to intimidate critics and rig elections was as solid as ever.

    Around the same time, another dispatch to the State Department came from the American Embassy in Tunisia. In a precise foreshadowing of the revolts to come, it said the country's longtime leader, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, had "lost touch" and faced escalating anger from the streets, according to once-classified memos posted by Wikileaks.

    So what was it? Was America blindsided or bunkered down for the Arab Spring?

    The case is often made that Washington was caught flatfooted and now must adapt to diminished influence in a Middle East with new priorities. But there is an alternative narrative: that the epic events of 2011 are an opportunity to enhance Washington's role in a region hungry for democracy and innovation, and to form new strategic alliances.

    There is no doubt that Washington was jolted by the downfall of its Egyptian and Tunisian allies. The revolutions blew apart the regimes' ossified relationships with the U.S. and cleared the way for long-suppressed Islamist groups that eye the West with suspicion.

    But declaring a twilight for America in the Mideast ignores a big caveat: The Persian Gulf. There are deep U.S. connections among the small but economically powerful and diplomatically adept monarchies, emirates and sheikdoms, which so far have ridden out the upheavals and are increasingly flexing their political clout around the Arab world.

    The Gulf Arabs and America are, in many ways, foreign policy soul mates. Both share grave misgivings about Iran's expanding military ambitions and its nuclear program. The Gulf hosts crucial U.S. military bases — including the Navy's 5th Fleet headquarters in Bahrain — and is an essential part of the Pentagon's strategic blueprint for the Mideast after this year's U.S. withdrawal from Iraq.

    In summary: America's influence took blows from the Arab Spring, but also remains hitched to the rising stars in the Gulf.

    "America has lost the predictability of friends like Mubarak," said Sami Alfaraj, director of the Kuwait Center for Strategic Studies. "But, at the same time, its allies in the Gulf are on the rise. So I would call it a shuffle for America. Maybe a step back in some places, but not in others."

    Led by hyper-wealthy Saudi Arabia and Qatar, the Gulf rulers have stepped up their games in various ways as the region's political center of gravity drifts in their direction.

    NATO's airstrikes in Libya got important Arab credibility from warplane contributions by Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. The Gulf's six-nation political bloc also has tried to negotiate an exit for Yemen's protest-battered president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, and has taken the lead in Arab pressures on Syria's Bashar Assad, one of Iran's most crucial partners.

    Yet the Gulf rulers' desire for change stops at their own borders. In March, they authorized a Saudi-led military force to help their neighbor, Bahrain, defend its 200-year-old unelected Sunni dynasty against pro-reform protests by the island's Shiite majority.

    And here lies one of the paradoxes for U.S. statecraft in the Middle East: to align with rulers who are firmly vested in the status quo, but not be cast as the spoilers of the Arab uprisings.

    "No one is immune from the waves of change," said Nicholas Burns, a former No. 3 official at the State Department. "There's certainly an effort to advise the Gulf Arabs to continue to get on the side of reform."

    Burns believes the Arab Spring has taught U.S. diplomats valuable lessons in patience and perspective.

    "We are witnessing something that is transformative and whose full impact will play out over years, maybe decades, ahead," said Burns, a professor of diplomacy and international politics at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. "Here is one of those times when the U.S. has to not overact and overreact."

    But when events move fast, that may not be the easiest advice to follow. Mubarak was a loyal guardian of Egypt's groundbreaking 1979 peace treaty with Israel, and there is no certainty that whoever succeeds him will do likewise. Meanwhile, the Palestinians have overridden U.S. objections and asked the U.N. for statehood.

    "Our ability to influence is limited today more than at any time in the last 35 years," said Graeme Bannerman, a former State Department analyst on Mideast affairs, at a conference in November co-sponsored by the United States Institute of Peace.

    That assessment may have some traction in places such as in Tunisia or Egypt, where the U.S. is widely viewed as tainted by its long alliance with Mubarak.

    But ask about America's pull in other Mideast points — the free-spending Gulf, the new proto-state in Libya, even slow-healing Iraq and its Iran-friendly government — and the conversation is different. It is more measured about how the U.S. fits into the new Mideast. There is more talk about the arc of history rather than the latest sound bite.

    "It's too early to tell whether U.S. influence has diminished or indeed any change will happen because the Arab Spring is still in process," said Nawaf Tell, former director of the University of Jordan Strategic Studies Center.

    Tell sees the Arab Spring as the death rattle of the Arab revolutions and coups defined by the all-powerful state and embodied by winner-take-all leaders: Egypt's Gamal Abdel-Nasser (1954), Libya's Moammar Gadhafi (1969), the 1970 putsch in Syria that brought Hafez Assad to power in Syria and now a dynasty-in-peril under his son, Bashar, and so on.

    "These regimes have exhausted their revolutionary credibility and have seen their legitimacy go bankrupt," Tell said. And as with any big unraveling, there are new rules in the aftermath."

    This may mean a less privileged position for U.S. interests and more legwork for Washington's envoys, said Morris Reid, managing director of the Washington-based BGR Group, which works often in liaison roles between Mideast officials and U.S. companies.

    The U.S. approach to the region "will be better," he said. "Not necessarily stronger."

    "The U.S. will have to work harder for intelligence, diplomatic relations, commercial deals," said Reid after meetings in mid-November at the Dubai Airshow, where Boeing Co. made a slew of deals including a record $18 billion order from the fast-growing air carrier Emirates. "The U.S. will now have to prove their value as allies."

    A showcase for that in the coming year is likely to be Iraq, and the contest for influence between neighboring Iran and the U.S. after U.S. military forces are gone. That rivalry in turn is influenced by events in Syria, Iran's main Arab ally, and the concerns of emirates and sheikdoms that lie just across the Persian Gulf from Iran.

    "Look at it this way: If you accept that the Arab Spring is a once in a four- or five-generations moment, then, of course, it will reorder the entire game of influence and politics by the big powers," said Salman Shaikh, director of The Brookings Doha Center in Qatar.

    "U.S. leadership does matter," he continued. "It's naive to say it will become irrelevant. But it's also wrong not to notice that America's era as the region's diplomatic superpower is coming to an end. The Arab Spring has brought much more independent-minded diplomacy by nations and a new empowerment among Arab people. America is a big player, but no longer Big Brother."

    ___

    Associated Press writer Dale Gavlak in Amman, Jordan, contributed to this report.

     

    170 comments

    • mike  •  Pittsburgh, United States  •  5 mths ago
      OK so where is the MAP, why mention a "map of US influence" if you are going to provide a before and after mao...
    • Ralph  •  5 mths ago
      If the middle east is going to be democratic and peaceful what need do they have for the U.S. other than trade? I don't think the U.S. would need any major influence in the region if the region could learn to co-exist with the international community in a peaceful way. If you think the U.S. is after your oil, you've lost your mind. American oil companies have been suppressing many technologies which make the requirement for oil obsolete. The American demand for oil is not real, it only exists because of greedy oil companies. Regardless of those greedy oil companies activities, the technologies will still reach the market eventually but countries that rely on oil income and don't play nice with others will have no future.
    • The Hun  •  Peoria, United States  •  5 mths ago
      What did you expect? ObaMARX and Hillary are TOTALLY CLUELESS about the ARAB World!!
    • TerryS  •  Chillicothe, United States  •  5 mths ago
      President Obama encouraged the revolts and history will show that under his leadership the well being of the U.S. was seriously harmed.
    • libtardsuc  •  Wilmington, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Search Obama classmate and communist at Occidental college...the dude finally had someone rat him out
    • Stephan  •  5 mths ago
      Obama will clearly go down as by far the worst president in US history, and Hillary Clinton the worst secretary of state in US history, and it's unanimous.
    • DAVID  •  Miami, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Despite the sky high price of oil,and our total dependence on arab supplies,Obama ignores the situation.But this is the man who bowed down to the dictator king of saudi arabia.
    • roy  •  5 mths ago
      Two many of the powers that be in the Western world belive in the theory of television. That is not how real power works. Wake up and smell the roses. Islam means to be King of the world. Mohammed made that plain in the 7th Century. And the so called allies of the USA want the Caliphate to come from their country.
    • nefrin  •  Tehran, Iran  •  5 mths ago
      Who is the Major Producer & Exporter of FOOD in the world ??? USA.
      So Who has the control on the FOOD price ???............................. USA.
      When Arabs uprising begun ???........After Radical changes in FOOD price.
      WHO served 6 April and other groups in EGYPT ???.................... USA. (based on Wikileaks).
      SO who Opened this PANDORA BOX ??? .................................... ??? ( you tell me who).
      check this out : NED (National Endowment for Democracy) its a nice layer of security services.
    • roy  •  5 mths ago
      The lands of Arabia are flexing their muscles at the expense of the civilized world. There is a real reason and that is to place Islam as a one world religion and a one world political leader.
      • MPA2000 5 mths ago
        What's wrong with that? Under the Ottoman Empire, the west was essentially shielded from what the Muslims did. When they were dismantled and Israel was created, that was the beginning of the terrorism that spread to the west.

        It would have been better to replace the Caliphate with a pro-western person and create Israel as an autonomous state.

        Ah well...
      • anonymouse 5 mths ago
        what goes around, comes around, you reap what you sow...i'm sure there's more, but maybe you get the idea?
      • GregVlad 5 mths ago
        Type of violation *:
        Impersonation Harassment Obscenity Derogatory language Other
        content that is racist, inflammatory or that encourages hatred or violence against a person or group, including based on sex, religion, caste, community, race, disability, nationality, age, sexual orientation, or any other distinguishing characteristic.
    • ron  •  5 mths ago
      The US government, thanks to AIPAC, defends Israel's expansionist crimes and condemns the Arabs strive to become democratic. This earns us many many enemies that happen to have lots and lots of oil.

      Solution: Outlaw AIPAC and every other lobby
    • Young Black JFK  •  Ellenwood, United States  •  5 mths ago
      FAMILIES STARVE AND LIVE IN CARS, AS TRILLIONS THROWN AT BAD WARS
      Close the 700 plus overseas military bases
      end the illegal immoral resource war
      end the many secret wars(Yemen, Columbia, Somolia)
      cut defense spending down to 150 billion a year.
      NO WAR WITH IRAN.
      Take America back from the military industrial complex
    • ron  •  5 mths ago
      Israel is the cause of all our problems in the region. Stop putting Israel above everyone else, and everyone else will stop hating you.
    • Joe  •  5 mths ago
      The Archbishop of Canterbury introduced and closed an almost 5-hour debate in the House of Lords on the situation of Christians in the Middle East.

      Lord Wood of Anfield and Lord Howell of Guildford concluded the debate on behalf of the Opposition and the Government, watch it on www.parliamentlive.tv.
      http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/articles.php/2277/house-of-lords-debate-on-christians-in-the-middle-east
      My Lords, many people these days have a short and skewed historical memory. It is all too easy to go along with the assumption that Christianity is an import to the Middle East rather than an export from it. Because the truth is that for two millennia the Christian presence in the Middle East has been an integral part of successive civilisations—a dominant presence in the Byzantine era, a culturally very active partner in the early Muslim centuries, a patient and long-suffering element, like the historic Jewish communities of the Maghreb and the Middle East, in the complex mosaic of ethnic jurisdictions within the Ottoman Empire and, more recently, a political catalyst and nursery of radical thinking in the dawn of Arab nationalism. To be ignorant of this is to risk misunderstanding a whole world of political and religious interaction and interdependence and to yield to the damaging myth that, on the far side of the Mediterranean or the Bosphorus, there is a homogeneous Arab and Muslim world, a parallel universe. I do not need to elaborate for your Lordships the dangers we invite in accepting any such assumption. The Middle East is not a homogeneous region, and the presence of Christians there is a deep-rooted reality. We are not talking about a foreign body, but about people who would see their history and their destiny alike bound up with the countries where they live, and bound up in local conversations with a dominant Muslim culture, which they are likely to see in terms very different from those that might be used by western observers.
    • j w  •  Huntsville, United States  •  5 mths ago
      It kind of looks like the U.S. is losing all it's influence in the Arab country's. Just maybe we can get out of all of them now(at least I hope so) I do not understand why we are there now. when I was 30 we had the most power in the world now it looks like we are turning into a third world country.
      Personally I think it is time for we the people to take back what has been stolen from us. Which is all the jobs and money plus getting loaded with garbage from other places.
      Let us all band together and get rid of the thieves in Washington.
      Then find some one that is of the people and for the people.
      We are the ones that control the government so if the ones that are voted in do not do what they are supposed to then vote them out again then we can control the time limits on all.
      Personally I think Ron Paul is the best at this time all the others just seem to be for their selves and their buddy,s
      If I knew any one else then I would be voting for them if I thought they were better for we the people.Just make sure your vote counts even if you have to stand and watch the ones that count the votes
      When I was about 20 I was in a conversation with some folks about the government and the question was asked about who would be the best to vote for.A woman said the only one to vote for was a lawyer of course I was a dumb kid at that time and didn't know any better but I do now. And the best thing I can say to any one is do not vote for a lawyer for they are the ones that have gotten us in this mess that we are in now. Better A Doctor than a Lawyer!
    • BallsofKungfucious  •  5 mths ago
      MYOB
    • James L  •  Port St. Lucie, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Fairy tale from Russia Luve yah putie :::The call of the Russian ships in Tartus should not be seen as a gesture towards what is going on in Syria," the spokesman told the paper, adding the Admiral Kuznetsov would also visit Beirut, Genoa and Cyprus.



      "This was planned already in 2010 when there were no such events there. There has been active preparation and there is no need to cancel this," added the spokesman.



      Russia and the West have become deeply split over the situation in Syria, with Moscow insisting that sanctions and pressure against the Assad regime is not the way to solve the crisis.



      Izvestia said the Admiral Kuznetsov – Russia's only operational aircraft carrier - would head down from the Russian Far North in December, keeping west of Europe and heading into the Mediterranean through the Strait of Gibraltar. It would also carry around a dozen aircraft.
    • anonymouse  •  5 mths ago
      OMG i wish more people had a CLUE as to how complicated things are, how things work in international relations(and in our own gov't/society). so many Americans NEED to free themselves from partisan dogma, practice some independence and critical thinking, rather than reacting to the media/political spin that appeals to their preconceptions and biases.
    • RickT  •  5 mths ago
      This AP idiot Murphy doesn't see the loss of Mubarak for the absolute middle east disaster that it is??? Even a moron can see the problem after the Islamic Brotherhood won the elections in Egypt last week. They are a declared enemy of Israel, and want to tear up their peace treaty with them. No, what could go wrong with that? Influence? What influence do we have left there. Maybe some of the army, if they want to pull off a coup. That's about it.
    • nino  •  5 mths ago
      US believe in democracy only when it fit it's interests, check out about US interventions around the world only to help install puppet dictators this is US dark history that many people ignore.
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