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A re- elected Obama, redrawn Mideast

Uneasy allies, bolder foes await in Arab Spring’s wake

- By Jeffrey Fleishman Tribune Newspapers jfleishman@ tribune. com Tribune Newspapers’ Edmund Sanders in Jerusalem and special correspond­ents Alexandra Sandels in Beirut and Ramin Mostaghim in Tehran contribute­d.

CAIRO — President Barack Obama faces a more volatile Middle East than the one he brought a sense of promise to nearly four years ago when he delivered his seminal “new beginnings” speech here to an intrigued, if suspicious, Muslimworl­d.

Unpopular Westernfri­endly autocrats no longer run Egypt and Tunisia, and in Libya, the mercurial Moammar Gadhafi is dead and gone. But the White House has to contend with an aggressive, political Islam born of Arab Spring movements even as it grapples with ongoing bloodshed in Syria, terrorist attacks on Americans and the persistent tinderbox that is Iran.

Obama is likely to encounter many such sober realities during his second term. But there is a pervading belief in the region that he was a wiser choice than the hawkish Mitt Romney in terms of confrontin­g a dangerous new era of recasting alliances and dealing with a restive young generation of Arabs seeking to balance Western- inspired aspiration­s with Islamic sensibilit­ies.

“There’s a sense of relief in the Middle East. People feel Obama understand­s the region at a much higher level than Romney,” said Randa Habib, a writer and political analyst in Jordan. “But his re- election does not have the great excitement of four years ago.”

Obama faces the fluid contours of an Arab world with an emerging political Islam sharply divided between moderates and ultraconse­rvatives. This struggle is central to the region’s identity and stability and has forced the U. S. to make wary bargains with Islamist pragmatist­s, such as Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, who need foreign investment and aid to rescue faltering economies.

Pragmatism vs. extremism is the potent undercurre­nt in a part of the world that continues to mistrust America and bristles at Obama’s perceived shortcomin­gs. The U. S., which has thinned the ranks of al- Qaida’s leadership in Yemen and Pakistan with much- criticized drone strikes, fears a resurgence of radicalism in countries such as Libya, where in September, militants attacked the U. S. mission in Benghazi, killing Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.

In less- restive Egypt, there is worry over the voices of hard- line Islamists. The Obama administra­tion has been supporting — its critics say placating — Morsi and the dominant Muslim Brotherhoo­d in what the U. S. sees as an effort to stem extremism that could endanger the Egypt- Israeli peace treaty and tug the region farther away fromWashin­gton’s influence.

Also more tenuous than four years ago is the bond between Washington and Israel. The longtime allies are at odds over howbest to deal with the potential nuclear threat from Iran. The Obamaadmin­istration’s aim of curtailing Tehran’s atomic developmen­t program by intensifyi­ng economic sanctions and diplomatic pressure remains unpopular in much of Israel.

Israel has threatened military strikes on Iran but has, at least publicly, tempered its language. The possibilit­y remains, however, that the U. S., with Israel’s urging, may be drawn into military action if Iran continues to enrich uranium. But that prospect did not appear immediate Wednesday.

“I feel relieved, at least there is no imminent war,” said a building janitor in Tehran who would give only his first name, Ahmad, after hearing of Obama’s re- election. “I think the Iranian government ought to be happy.”

In Israel, there is also a sense that Obama, with an eye toward his legacy, will redouble efforts at peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns, a move that would help restore Arabs’ faith in him. Acentral question, though, is the future of what has been a frosty relationsh­ip between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Many in Israel and the U. S. accused Netanyahu of working quietly to support Romney, and some now worry about a political blowback if Obama supports the center- left bloc and undermines the prime minister’s re- election bid.

“There is undoubtedl­y disappoint­ment on the part of Netanyahu and his circle,” said Stuart Schoffman, a fellowat ShalomHart­man Institute, aJerusalem- based Jewish studies think tank. “I don’t think they are going to be any fonder of Obama, but they will have to deal with the fact that they don’t have any chance of deposing him as they hoped.”

Such political intrigues are at play in a region where bloodshed is already a norm.

The conflict in Syria foreshadow­s how sectarian animositie­s between Shiite and Sunni Muslims could spill across borders and ignite unrest in Lebanon and Iraq. The Arab monarchies in the Persian Gulf, notably Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, are close U. S. allies but are under intensifyi­ng pressure to allow freer societies. And Yemen has become a base from which al- Qaida can threatenU. S. interests at the crossroads of the Middle East and theHorn of Africa.

These scenarios were accelerate­d by or born of the uprisings that erupted nearly two years ago when a fruit seller in Tunisia set himself on fire. But the Arab Spring also disrupted generation­sold narratives and agitated deeply embedded political and religious tinderboxe­s in countries such as Syria.

Obama has been criticized for not providing overt military support to Syrian rebels in a war that has claimed at least 30,000 lives. The conflict has attracted Islamic militants from Iraq and other countries that will complicate a scramble for power if the government of President Bashar Assad falls. Analysts suggest that as in Libya, where theU. S. backed internatio­nal airstrikes against Gadhafi, Obama may be forced to quicken Assad’s fall by providing military aid to certain rebel groups.

“There is a new belief that as the struggle ( inSyria) becomes longer, al- Qaida will grow stronger,” said Mohammed Abu Rumman, a political analyst at the Strategic Studies Center at the University of Jordan in Amman. “The U. S. and Jordan will not accept al- Qaida gains. I believe … there will be a shift in strategy. Something will happen on the ground in Syria with Obama.”

 ?? PHILIPPE DESMAZES/ GETTY- AFP PHOTO ?? Some analysts say the U. S. might give more support to Syrian rebels in order to blunt al- Qaida’s influence in the struggle.
PHILIPPE DESMAZES/ GETTY- AFP PHOTO Some analysts say the U. S. might give more support to Syrian rebels in order to blunt al- Qaida’s influence in the struggle.

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