Chattanooga Times Free Press

IS MIDDLE EAST IN DANGER OF SPINNING OUT OF CONTROL?

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There is only so much a single person can do to control the events around them. Joe Biden is learning in real time that one of life’s golden rules also applies to the president of the United States.

Despite holding the most powerful position in the world, Biden is finding it increasing­ly difficult to accomplish one of his top priorities in the Middle East today: ensuring the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza doesn’t snowball into a wider escalation that draws in the region’s big powers. If anything, regardless of Biden’s best efforts, the risk of a regional conflagrat­ion may only grow as long as the fighting in Gaza persists — and if we take Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s word for it, Israel is no mood to stop its military offensive anytime soon.

Netanyahu aims to destroy Hamas in its entirety and deradicali­ze the Palestinia­n polity, understand­able objectives given the depravitie­s of the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas. But they portend a dismal future ahead for Palestinia­ns in Gaza and the West Bank, many of whom have nothing to do with Hamas. More than 21,000 Palestinia­ns have already died over the last 12 weeks, according to health officials, in what is the most ferocious urban assault this century.

If you take Israel’s word for it, thousands of Hamas fighters have been killed, but that still leaves around 15,000 to 20,000 members left in its ranks. Even if Israel were to miraculous­ly kill them all, the notion that Hamas will simply disappear, as Netanyahu seems to think, is contradict­ed by the fact that the organizati­on is an integral part of the Palestinia­n social fabric. U.S. officials aren’t confident Israel’s maximalist goals can be accomplish­ed.

What’s happening outside the immediate war zone, however, might be even more concerning to Biden. The flare-up in violence around the region could very well pull the U.S. into a conflict it doesn’t want to fight.

The Israel-Lebanon border, fragile but relatively peaceful since the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, is for all intents and purposes a theater of active hostilitie­s. Although the Hezbollah missile attacks and Israeli airstrikes have been confined to the border region, the Israelis are signaling with renewed vigor that a big military operation against Hezbollah may be a matter of when, not if.

For Netanyahu, allowing a Lebanese terrorist organizati­on to permanentl­y displace tens of thousands of Israelis is simply unsustaina­ble and exposes his coalition government as a bit powerless. While his government’s first priority remains dislodging Hamas, pushing Hezbollah away from Israel’s northern border is a close second.

About 1,500 miles to the south, off Yemen’s coast, another flashpoint is growing in intensity. Civilian tankers and vessels using the Red Sea as a shortcut to European ports have been targeted by the Houthis for weeks. The Iran-supported Houthis claim that any ships traveling to Israel or linked to Israel in any way will be attacked, yet in reality, the Houthi missile and drone strikes have been indiscrimi­nate.

The situation has prompted the U.S. Navy to volunteer as the Red Sea’s police force.

The problem has gotten to such a point that Washington organized a coalition of the willing to preserve freedom of navigation in the area. The problem: Like other multilater­al initiative­s, it’s the U.S. doing most of the work and taking on most of the risk.

For Biden, this chain of events is an ominous one that is becoming ever more difficult to contain. Unfortunat­ely, these events also serve as a reminder that, despite its best intentions, the U.S. is not an all-powerful force that can bring peace into existence. Local actors are the key decision-makers.

 ?? ?? Daniel DePetris
Daniel DePetris

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