The National - News

The Middle East is tired of living under threat

▶ The US has hit back after losing troops, but the region needs a strategy for stabilisat­ion

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In the end, the retaliatio­n promised by the US for the deaths of three American soldiers in Jordan last week was not long in coming. Less than a week after US President Joe Biden said America would “hold all those responsibl­e to account at a time and in a manner [of] our choosing”, it launched 85 strikes against Iran-allied militia targets at four locations in Syria and three in Iraq. It is unlikely to be America’s final word on the matter.

Then, on Saturday – just a day after the operations in Iraq and Syria – the US and Britain carried out a third round of strikes against Houthi targets in Yemen, meaning that in the space of two days, three Arab countries were the site of powerful strikes from a global superpower. This spectacle is understand­ably worrying, as these strikes are not carried out in a vacuum but are often in the vicinity of civilian locations. Moreover, there are the calculatio­ns of what kind of backlash it could produce.

Meanwhile, Washington’s key ally in the region continues with an offensive in Gaza that has sown the seeds of anger across the Arab world.

It is a deeply complex and volatile mix, with plenty of room for miscalcula­tion. Into this scene steps US Secretary of State Antony Blinken who is beginning a regional tour – his fifth since October 7. The US is in a tough spot and Mr Blinken will have to demonstrat­e some deft diplomacy. Although Washington may want to talk about peace and de-escalation, it needs to understand the anger that has met its support for Israel’s ongoing operation as well as its latest strikes on Arab countries.

Yes, the US was obliged to respond to the deaths of its troops, and the vast majority of government­s in this region want to see Red Sea shipping remain open. However, Washington has the power to pursue a twin-track approach that not only deters those attacking it and internatio­nal shipping but also reins in an Israeli state that is using US-supplied weapons in an assault on Gaza that has long ceased to be a proportion­ate response to the violence it suffered on October 7.

No one knows where all this will end but the are some reasons for a little optimism.

The National revealed last week that a senior Iranian commander travelled to Baghdad and met Tehran-backed militants to urge de-escalation immediatel­y after the deaths of the three US soldiers on the Jordanian-Syrian border, suggesting that at least some of these groups will not seek to worsen the situation. Hezbollah has still not committed to a full-scale war on Israel’s northern border. In the US, the domestic clamour for a ceasefire in Gaza is growing, and Mr Biden’s team know that the Middle East has become a livewire electoral issue.

Neverthele­ss, the people of this region should not have to live under threat like this. All the various antagonist­s have it within their power to make sure this doesn’t become an uncontroll­able situation. America has made its point. Now, if Mr Blinken’s visit is to achieve anything, it will have to be a demonstrat­ion of cool thinking and a long-term strategy for stabilisat­ion amid a conflict that is threatenin­g to grow out of control.

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