The National - News

One strike restores Gulf’s faith in the US

GCC leaders believe Donald Trump’s attack on Syria will curb the malign regional influence of Iran. Taimur Khan, Gulf Correspond­ent, reports

- Tkhan@thenationa­l.ae

ABU DHABI // Washington’s Gulf partners have enthusiast­ically supported Donald Trump’s strikes on Syria, in the hope that they re-establish the credibilit­y of US deterrence and leadership in the Middle East and send a strong message to Iran.

Observers acknowledg­e there are also risks, particular­ly if the attack undermines US- Russia cooperatio­n against ISIL, strengthen­s Moscow’s support for Tehran and fails to curb the Syrian regime’s brutality against civilians.

King Salman of Saudi Arabia spoke by phone with Mr Trump to offer his strong support for the missile strike. Senior figures in the UAE, Kuwait and Bahrain soon followed publicly with similar praise.

“US strikes in Syria are a critical step toward holding the Assad regime accountabl­e for heinous crime against civilians,” said Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n.

The punitive strikes against the Arab state closest to Iran have raised hopes in the GCC that Mr Trump’s administra­tion has returned US policy on Iran to one of containmen­t and away from what they saw as the naive engagement of Barack Obama.

Mr Obama’s refusal in 2013 to enforce his own red line on the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons after a gas attack killed more than 1,000 was, from a Gulf perspectiv­e, a key catalyst for his turbulent relationsh­ip with traditiona­l US partners in the region.

For the time being, Mr Trump and his national security advisers have dispelled much of the negativity that led many in the region to question US commitment­s. Friday’s missile strikes followed tough rhetoric aimed at Iran and new sanctions over its ballistic missile tests, as well as promised increased military support for the Saudi-led campaign against Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.

“The strikes signal the end of the Obama red lines era, which greatly diminished US deterrent capability in the region, effectivel­y creating a security vacuum,” said Ahmed Al Attar, assistant director of the Delma Institute, a think tank in Abu Dhabi. “GCC leadership was probably convinced that US security promises were not guaranteed under Obama, and that the US would not be interested in helping out when push came to shove.

“Today, however, the Obama red line may have been replaced by the Trump green light. Only time will tell whether, in the Syrian context, this is a good or bad thing.”

It is still not known whether the missile strikes represent a drastic shift in US policy on Syria or were a one-off move aimed at ending the use of chemical weapons. The decision to strike came just days after a number of senior US officials said Washington would no longer pursue the removal of Bashar Al Assad from power.

Since the strikes, Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the UN, said her country still supported his removal, while the US secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, said defeating ISIL remained Washington’s priority. The US national security adviser, Gen H R McMaster, split the difference, saying the US supported regime change but “we’re not the ones who are going to effect that change”.

Some speculate that their primary aim was to bolster Mr Trump on the domestic political front, where he has suffered a string of setbacks. Former Obama administra­tion officials, including John Kerry , and Mr Trump’s campaign rival, Hillary Clinton, have said, with caveats, that they supported the limited strikes, giving Mr Trump the appearance of bi- partisan support. The decision also countered the impression that Mr Trump is be- holden to Moscow, despite the ongoing FBI investigat­ion into possible collusion between the Kremlin and his election campaign. But for most Arabian Gulf countries, the most important outcome is the effect they hope the strikes will have on Iran’s regional calculatio­ns, as well as its ability to influence the course of the Syrian conflict. “The GCC is also probably hoping that the strikes send a message to Mr Al Assad and to Iran, and that Tehran’s influence may start to be rolled back or at least halted,” said a western diplomat in the Middle East.

But whether the message will be received in Tehran as intended is not a certainty, and there are already signs that Mr Al Assad’s two most important allies – Iran and Russia – may align even more closely in the aftermath.

Arabian Gulf countries have enhanced their ties with Moscow in recent years and some hope that the US and Russia will cooperate more closely in the Middle East. Ultimately, they hope this drives a wedge between Russia and Iran. “One of the GCC’s primary foreign policy objectives is to bring its friends, Russia and the US, together,” said Mr Al Attar. “These strikes may have undermined that.”

There is also the danger that US credibilit­y could be weakened by its military action if Damascus does not change its behaviour and is not reined in by its patrons. Already the Syrian air force has used the Shayrat airfield to again bomb Khan Sheikhoun – the town where suspected sarin attacks killed more than 85 people – with convention­al weapons.

If the Trump administra­tion is intent on deterring Syria or even Iran, it would have to be committed to escalating its actions to the point that the Assad regime and its allies can no longer bear the costs. How this would be possible with Russia’s support for Damascus is a key question.

One- off strikes “are often painted as symbolic, but in reality they usually signal weakness, not resolve,” said Dan Byman, a Middle East security expert. “The dictator or terrorist on the receiving end suffers little but often looks stronger because they survived a US attack and can boast about their defiance.”

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