Confronting Terrorism and Instability in the Middle East: The Common National Interests of Iran and the United States

The terrorist group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has taken over several Iraqi cities, including Mosul, the country’s second most important city, and has been moving toward Baghdad, Iraq’s capital. Unfortunately, most people pay little attention to the root causes of terrorism in the Middle East. To understand why ISIS has been able to accomplish what it has, many factors must be taken into consideration:

  1. The partition of the Middle East along ethnic and religious lines by colonial powers in the early years of the 20th century.
  2. The establishment of the state of Israel in 1948, which gave rise to the still-unresolved Palestine problem, and Israel’s occupation of the West Bank, which many believe may lead to an apartheid state. I believe the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the root cause of all the problems in that region.
  3. Western powers’ support for corrupt, dictatorial secular regimes, paving the way for Islamist groups as the only alternative available to the people.
  4. The creation of the Afghan mujahedeen by the United States and its regional allies, namely Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and others, to fight the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, which, after the Cold War, gave rise to al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The creators are now harvesting the fruits of their efforts.
  5. The invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq by the United States, the intervention of the U.S. and NATO in Libya, and Western powers’ financial and military backing of the Syrian opposition, which transformed a struggle between democratic groups and the secular dictatorship of President Bashar al-Assad into a sectarian war against democracy and development.
  6. The existence of different interpretations of Islamic teachings. Some consider the Quran to be a manifesto for peace, while others interpret it as an order for war, making God the eternally bloodthirsty commander-in-chief of an eternal war. The United Nations has reported that a number of civilians and military personnel have been executed by ISIS. Human Rights Watch has expressed concerned over war crimes committed by ISIS. Both the UN and HRW have repeatedly declared that Islamist terrorists have committed war crimes in Syria. Another report indicates that 1,700 civilians have been murdered by ISIS, that an Iraqi officer has been beheaded, and that ISIS has bragged about using the head as a “soccer ball.” UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay has declared the executions by ISIS to be “war crimes.”
  7. The transformation of the Arab Spring into a sectarian war between Shiites and Sunnis by dictatorial regimes such as Saudi Arabia and Bahrain in order to escape the establishment of democratic regimes and respect for human rights in those nations.
  8. The struggle between Iran and Saudi Arabia. The ISIS war in Iraq is essentially a war between Iran and Saudi Arabia for influence in the region, as the latter is opposed to empowering the Shiites. For example, even though 70 percent of the population of Bahrain is Shiite, Saudi Arabia intervened militarily in that country to prevent the Arab Spring from succeeding there. There is widespread discrimination against Shiites in Yemen and Saudi Arabia, and the latter’s dictatorial regime is also opposed to elected Shiite-but-secular government in Baghdad, because it is Iran’s ally. The fact that the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is incompetent, or the fact that Maliki himself is a divisive figure, does not imply that the democratic elections in Iraq should be ignored. The ridiculous aspect of this is that Saudi Arabia, a reactionary, dictatorial regime, is calling for new elections in Iraq, and this is while, as Robert Fisk of the Independent argued, the sectarian war in the Middle East and the extremist Sunni groups are all funded by Saudi Arabia.

There is no doubt that the most important factor in the creation of the present bloody chaos in Iraq is that country’s invasion by the U.S. and Britain in 2003. Even Hillary Rodham Clinton, a hawk in U.S. foreign policy, admits that although she acted with good intentions when she supported the 2002 Senate resolution authorizing the war in Iraq, she now believes that she committed a grave mistake. In fact, the U.S. knew exactly what would happen if it invaded Iraq. As early as 1994, Dick Cheney had predicted:

Once you got to Iraq and took it over, and took down Saddam Hussein’s government, then what are you going to put in its place? That’s a very volatile part of the world, and if you take down the central government of Iraq you can easily end up seeing pieces of Iraq fly off. Part of it the Syrians would like to have to the west. Part of eastern Iraq, the Iranians would like to claim, fought over for eight years. In the north you’ve got the Kurds, and if the Kurds spin loose and join with the Kurds in Turkey, then you threaten the territorial integrity of Turkey. It’s a quagmire.

As Sen. Rand Paul (R – Kentucky) put it:

There is chaos in the Middle East, and I think that’s because we created a vacuum. Before the Iraq War, I think there was something of a standoff between Sunni and Shiite for maybe 1,000 years, off and on. Now we have a chaotic situation; we have a vacuum. And I think one of the reasons why ISIS has been emboldened is because we’ve been arming their allies. We have been allied with ISIS in Syria.

Another grave mistake by the U.S. was its dissolution of the Iraqi army. Iraq currently has a military of only a little over 270,000 personnel, practically without any air force. Its army has only 336 old tanks and 100 helicopters. The U.S. has yet to deliver the F-16 fighters that it has sold to Iraq. And Peter Bergen, a director at the New American Foundation, has called Iraq “one of George W. Bush’s most toxic legacies.”

But perhaps the most unfortunate comment was made by former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a comment that clearly demonstrates U.S. officials’ attitude toward that region. Gates claimed that the countries of the Middle East and North Africa can be held together only by authoritarian regimes; otherwise they would disintegrate, he says.

The U.S. response to the 2013 military coup in Egypt that toppled the democratically elected regime of President Mohamed Morsi is a manifestation of Gates’ attitude. The U.S. has not taken any significant action against the regime of General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who was just “elected” as president. The Egyptian military, which has ruled that nation since 1952, has pushed Egypt back to the Hosni Mubarak era in order to preserve its economic and political power and privileges. It murdered thousands of people last year in the aftermath of the coup, which Human Rights Watch called “the worst crime in Egypt’s contemporary history.”

Libya is in complete chaos, and General Khalifa Belqasim Haftar, who staged a coup in May, claims, like General Sisi in Egypt, that he is acting to save his country. The U.S. response is another manifestation of Gates’ declaration. General Haftar is believed by many to have close relations with the CIA.

Syria has practically been partitioned into three regions, controlled by the Kurds, the Assad government, and the rebels, respectively.

And ISIS, in collaboration with Saddam Hussein’s supporters, is taking control of the Sunni region in Iraq.

The Iraqi Kurds have set up their own quasi-state, have their own army of 100,000 troops, and have been exporting oil from the region under their control. In fact, they have begun selling oil to Israel. After the recent ISIS attacks, the oil-rich Kirkuk region was taken over by the Kurds. After the ISIS offensive, the Kurdish forces entered three Iraqi provinces that are not part of the Kurdish area. According to Article 140 of Iraq’s Constitution, drafted during the U.S. occupation of that country, if any region outside Iraqi Kurdistan wishes to join it, it has to be through a referendum. Even if the current war ends, Kurdish forces will not easily leave the territory that they have just occupied. In fact, Nechirvan Barzani, the prime minister of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan, told the BBC that it would be very hard for Iraq to return to the situation that existed before the Sunni militants took control of Mosul. The New York Times reported on June 19 that the longtime dream of the Kurds is materializing, given the chaos in Iraq. It quoted a Kurdish military officer saying that since the takeover of Mosul by ISIS, “a new era, a new situation” has begun for the Kurds.

The formation of “Greater Kurdistan,” consisting of the Kurdish regions in Iraq, Turkey, Iraq and Syria, is an old plan and is supported by Israel. In the 1970s Israel, together with the regime of the shah of Iran, helped the Iraqi Kurds. After the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the end of the Iran-Iraq War in 1988, Israel continued working with Iraqi Kurds. Its goal has been twofold. One is supporting the secessionist forces among Iranian Kurds, while the second goal is having intelligence outposts in Iraqi Kurdistan to monitor Iran.

On June 20, in an interview with MSNBC, Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser, attributed the present chaos in Iraq to the U.S. invasion of that nation in 2003 and declared that the day the U.S. began its invasion was the day Iraq’s territorial integrity was forgotten, and that Iraq has practically been partitioned into three regions: Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish. On the same program Richard Haass, President of the Council on Foreign Relations, said that the U.S. should not corner itself by trying to support Iraq’s territorial integrity or the Maliki government. According to Haass, the U.S. has certain interests in that region that it should pursue, and he said that events on the ground have surpassed the question of Iraq’s territorial integrity. This notion seems to have become so prevalent that in its latest issue, Time declared the end of Iraq, believing that it will disintegrate into Kurdistan, Shiitistan, and Sunnistan.

And ISIS has lofty plans for its own “state,” which would include Iraq, Kuwait, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Palestine, with Jordan being the next target. To materialize such illusions, ISIS may wage some of the bloodiest wars in the region if it is not stopped.

If the United States opposes the disintegration of the Middle East into small, unstable “states,” if it is opposed to terrorism, and if it wishes to end chaos, bloodshed and instability in the Middle East, it has to work with Iran. Even Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina), an ardent foe of Iran, has proposed working with Iran to stem the tide of ISIS in Iraq.

Both countries have common interests in the region. The current war in Iraq threatens the national security of both nations. Of course, neither country should send troops to Iraq, but they can still work together to address the present grave danger. The U.S. is well aware that the financing of the Islamist extremists comes from the Arab nations of the Persian Gulf, its allies. It must exert pressure on them to stop the flow of money to the extremists.

The Middle East has been turned into a region of several failed or almost-failed states, and if the United States and Iran do not work together constructively, terrorism and instability will continue there for years to come. Confronting terrorism requires serious international cooperation, in particular the U.S. and Iran working together. The U.S. cannot turn a blind eye to what its allies in the Persian Gulf are doing and then be surprised by terrorist attacks like the September 11 attacks. The terrorists are from the nations that are supposedly the U.S.’s allies, not from Iran.

The Middle East needs a grand plan that guarantees the national security of all its countries. Free elections must be the basis for any group to come to power, and there must be no discrimination against anyone, regardless of their ethnic or religious origin. Partition of the region along ethnic or religious lines will lead to more bloodshed. This was the grave mistake that the colonial powers of France, Britain and Italy made at the beginning of the 20th century, and through its interventions in the Middle East, the U.S. has exacerbated the negative results of that historical mistake, as has the Islamic Republic of Iran by supporting the Shiite groups. The Middle East needs true peace that recognizes everyone’s rights, a secular peace that is based on humanity and human rights, not ethnic and religious considerations. In addition, the present borders must be guaranteed by the UN. The Palestinian people must have their own viable state, and the region must be cleansed of any weapons of mass destruction.

If these are achieved, then Robert Gates will be proven wrong, and the Middle East will experience peace and democracy.

This blog post was translated by Ali N. Babaei.

Taking and Giving: Responding to the Kidnapping of Three Young Israelis

For many in Israel, and among those who are attuned to Israeli life, the kidnapping of three teenagers over one week ago tore open a hole that cannot yet be sewn back. While there is a flurry of activity, from military operations to press conferences, prayer vigils to hashtag campaigns, the overall feeling is one of overwhelming powerlessness and uncertainty. Those who chose to carry out this assault, whatever their ultimate plans or fate may be, sought just this outcome. Beyond the heart-wrenching reality of the aftermath of terror, beyond the mobilization of forces to find these boys and bring the kidnappers to justice, how can we respond to these despicable acts?

Last week the Torah told a story that hinges on the kind of calculation central to the use of terror. Korach is a cousin of Moses, a fellow Levite, but he takes it upon himself to agitate against Moses’ leadership and the elevation of Moses’ brother Aaron to the role of high priest. He frames his challenge in high-minded terms, arguing that the “entire people is holy” and that Moses and Aaron take too much upon themselves. However, in the beginning of the story of Korach, there are signs that he and his band of associates are employing the rhetoric of holiness and fairness to advance a personal agenda: “Vakikach Korach … anshei Shem. ” (“Korach took for himself … men of name.”) The Hebrew echoes with the word “koach” (“power”). Taking power is the hallmark of this rebellion. Korach perverts the true meaning of the holiness for which he claims to fight and eschews the humility that must go with it in order to mock Moses and aggrandize himself.

We should not be afraid to talk about the grievances that some claim justify violence. After all, the Torah even gives us the motivation for the first act of cruel brutality, the murder of Abel by Cain. We learn that Cain was upset that G*d thought more of his brother’s animal sacrifice than of his own offering of fruits and vegetables. He thought it was unfair and degrading. And yet there is no sympathy for Cain’s reaction, no ambiguity about the condemnation he deserved for rising up against Abel and taking his life. The blood that Cain shed “cries out from the ground” that swallowed it.

Just as the words surrounding the beginning of the Korach story echo the idea of “taking power,” Cain’s name in Hebrew denotes taking something as a possession In the world of Cain and Korach, the giving and the taking are part of measuring things solely by what they seem to be worth — a tradeoff that is all too much at the heart of the political world. It’s the weighing of all actions by either their justification or their cost.

And this calculus is also behind the cynically named tactic called, in Hebrew, “Tag Mechir” (“price tag”), which uses vandalism, threats and violent harassment to make Arabs or Israeli authorities “pay a price” for uprooting settlements or concessions to Palestinians. As the perpetrators, usually young, ideologically driven kids, target mosques and Israeli-Arab businesses with graffiti and arson, another group has responded with a different approach: “Tag Meir,” a play on words that means “value of light.” “Tag Meir” organizes efforts to restore the damage or visit the victims of “Tag Mechir” and, in recent days, gathered together Christians, Muslims, and Jews of Palestinian and Israeli origin to pray together at the spot from which the three teens were last heard.

The use of terror is the ultimate act of reducing human beings to means to an end. A terrorist, especially a kidnapper, is dealing not in the infinite worth of a human being but in what a human life may be worth to someone else. However, understanding that all human beings are created in the Divine image, a teaching common to many religions, including Islam, Christianity, and Judaism, must preclude us from treating human life as something that can be reduced to a give-or-take.

May Naftali Frenkel, Eyal Yifrach and Gilad Shaar be brought home in safety without delay, and may we find a new light to illuminate the infinite worth of all human beings soon and in our days.

What If Feminists Stole the National Health Agenda?

We all develop our interest in wellness at different moments in our lives, and what we are told is good or bad for us is determined by the source of our news and the current state of accepted science. Personally, I have always found most of my information in The New York Times and medical journals, and I often post about it here.

Over the last two decades I have witnessed the shape-shifting health enemy go from fats to carbohydrates to sugar to gluten. I have been consecutively persuaded to wear well-heeled running shoes, run barefoot, and give up running altogether in favor of walking. I began by exclusively wearing cotton athletic wear because it was a natural fabric, only to be told later to throw it all out because cotton doesn’t “breathe.” I recently read “The 7 Things Not to Wear to the Gym” and then remembered that I hate the gym and don’t want to go there in any clothing. Still, it bugs me that a synthetic fabric is the new correct material simply because it is moisture-wicking. And while I love to ride a bicycle, I have no interest in spin classes. Instead, I think I will wait until that trend passes, as it surely will, going the way of step classes, Jazzercise and Zumba.

Recently, on one of my now-approved long walks, I asked myself, “What if we started from scratch and redefined ‘health and wellness’ in a way that is fad-proof and could withstand the test of time without dictating regular changes in diet, exercise and outfits? What would that look like?” Still dreaming, I added another requirement that the term “healthy body” should conjure up images of a wide range of sizes, shapes and ages. Next, I would make “wellness” more inclusive than it is usually understood to be; my definition would include mental health and good sex. I mean, I shouldn’t be considered healthy if I’m unhappy, lonely and not having a satisfying sex life. And finally, becoming and staying healthy should not entail the purchase of any equipment.

Then, last week, a friend sent me a link to Ms. Fit, an e-magazine that took all my wishes and made them true for feminist and queer women, even consciously including trans* women. The editors bettered my personal definitions by also requiring that healthy food be consumed in an Earth-conscious manner; it can’t count as good for humans if it is bad for the planet. As the Ms. Fit manifesto states, “our wellness also depends on the wellness of the earth and everyone on the earth.”

Ms. Fit starts with an unapologetically feminist, body-positive, LGBT-friendly perspective on fitness and then encourages readers to take better care of their bodies while also loving them as they currently are. As they say, “we recognize that being strong and healthy is an act of political defiance against those who would like to see us weak”.

In a phone call with me, the editor-in-chief, Kathie Bergquist, cited research confirming that the key factors to health are personal habits, not the size and shape of a body. In other words, moving and eating well are bigger determinants of longevity than thinness, so it is both shaming and useless to compare ourselves unfavorably with the airbrushed bodies of most women we see in mainstream fitness magazines. If their thinness comes at the price of nutritious eating, it can’t fairly be called “healthy.” And the shame we can feel when we compare our bodies with theirs is not motivating but often paralyzing.

In the last 18 months Ms. Fit has published six issues, each with a specific focus. The next issue will be called “Stretch” but will go beyond encouraging readers to touch their toes; instead, it will encourage women to stretch their definitions of themselves, to put themselves into new situations and try some mental stretching.

Like a good feminist endeavor, Ms. Fit does not seek to simply expand their readership; they want to “cultivate a community of likeminded feminists and queer people who see our strength and wellness as part of the liberation process.” It seems to be working. Their Web analytics show that their readers hang around the magazine, reading multiple articles per visit and, more importantly, coming back again and again. If this is the new wellness community, count me in.

What the biggest companies are from each state in the US

What the biggest companies are from each state in the US

The most popular brands in America are not always the largest companies making the most revenue. Brands that you know, stores that you go to and places that you associate with some states get replaced by faceless monoliths who basically repurpose oil, energy, technology, other people’s money, etc. into more money.

Read more…



Engadget Daily: how to disappear, the deal with 3D printers and more!

Today, we review Sony’s lifelogging SmartBand wearable, investigate the ins and outs of 3D printing, learn how to escape the clutches of the internet and take a look at SportsCenter’s new home. Read on for Engadget’s news highlights from the last 24…

Nest Learning Thermostat has its security cracked open by GTVHacker

While we wait for Google I/O (which starts tomorrow) to find out what will become of the company’s TV platform, a team that we’ve seen bust open the padlocks on Google TV, Chromecast and Roku has a new target. GTVHacker just revealed an exploit for…

South Korea debates video game addiction

South Korea is facing what it calls a video game addiction problem, something that has caused incidents, some more tragic than others. Aiming to address it is the Game Addiction Law, the subject of which was at the center of a recent debate called “Video Games: Addiction or Art?” The debate was hosted by the Democratic Party of Korea, where … Continue reading

Possible Android “L” Screenshots Leaked

android l screen 640x384Google has followed an alphabetical system when it comes to naming their Android versions. Right now we are in “K” which stands for KitKat, and previously we had “J” for Jelly Bean, “I” for Ice Cream Sandwich, and so on. So based on this, we can only assume that the next Android build will be based on the letter “L”.

Right now it’s pretty much anyone’s guess as to which L-named dessert that Google could name the next build of Android after, but thanks to a bunch of screenshots that made its way onto Reddit, it seems like the use of the “L” name might have been confirmed. The original images surfaced on the Chromium Issue Tracker which has since been taken down, but not before they were saved and posted onto Reddit.

android l 2 screenAs you can see in the top left corner in the screenshot, it shows an icon the seems to represent the letter “L”. They also show a login dialog that looks different from the current build of Android, along with what appears to be a redesigned version of Chrome that seems to be based on Google’s alleged Quantum Paper design language. There’s no telling how accurate or real these screenshots are, but Android Police, who have had a pretty solid reputation, seems to think that they are, so that’s worth taking note of.

Google I/O will be kicking off this Wednesday so hopefully Google will have additional details about their next Android build at the event, so do check back with us then to find out more.

Possible Android “L” Screenshots Leaked , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Sony “Dancing In The Aisles” When Xbox One Was Announced For $499

hubertnguyen playing ps4 e3 2013 640x425

Playing with the PS4 during E3

Both the Sony PlayStation 4 and the Microsoft Xbox One were launched at different price points. Sony’s was priced cheaper at $399 while the Xbox One was priced at $100 more at $499. Microsoft attempted to justify their price by claiming that it came bundled with a Kinect sensor, but we all know how that turned out when Microsoft eventually caved and released the Xbox One sans Kinect for $399.

That being said, it seems that Sony was extremely happy when Microsoft had initially announced the Xbox One for $499. Speaking to ArsTechnica, Sony’s Head of Worldwide Studios America, Scott Rohde, was quoted as saying that they were literally dancing in the aisles and high-fiving each other when they found out that Microsoft had made the decision to price their console higher than Sony’s.

According to Rohde, “I’m not gonna lie. I remember exactly where I was. We were in press conference rehearsals last year. We had a feeling they were going to come in at $499, but we weren’t sure. So yeah, we were dancing in the aisles and high-fiving. It was great. Anyone that came in on an interview, it didn’t matter what the question was, I could always just answer it with $399. It was the answer to every question.”

It seems that Sony had been eyeing the $399 price point right from the start, having learnt their lesson with the PlayStation 3 which was pretty expensive when it was initially released. However did Sony anticipate that Microsoft would eventually release a cheaper Xbox One? According to Rohde, yes. “I think that, to be truthful, we always assumed that eventually they’d have to release a SKU without a camera. So we were waiting for it to a degree, and we were ready for it.”

Sony “Dancing In The Aisles” When Xbox One Was Announced For $499 , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Valve’s Steam Machines Could “Someday” Be Competition For Sony

steam machinesWhen it comes to gaming in the living room, consoles are currently dominating because that’s usually how it has been all this while. PC gaming, on the other hand, was more or less limited to your room which is not a bad thing, but this is something Valve is hoping to change with its Steam Machines and SteamOS.

For those unfamiliar, Steam Machines is Valve’s answer to the console. Instead of being merely another console, the Steam Machines will basically allow gamers to play games from their Steam library on their TV, sort of like Big Picture except with dedicated hardware. It’s an interesting idea but could it be a worthy competitor to consoles? Sony seems to think that it has potential.

Speaking to ArsTechnica, Sony’s Head of Worldwide Studios America, Scott Rohde, said that “maybe someday” Valve’s Steam Machines could end up being a competitor to their console, or any other console for that matter. However he notes that Valve could face some hurdles and cited examples like the 3DO, which was a hardware standard that was licensed out to various OEMs, much like Steam Machines.

He also adds that the device is still in its early stages and might be too soon to tell. “It’s in its infancy, we don’t know exactly what it is, even, or when it will happen or what it will actually be. I guess they’ve settled on a controller. We’re not even really sure. They’ve been bouncing around for a while.” What do you guys think? Does Valve have what it takes to challenge the status quo with its Steam Machines?

Valve’s Steam Machines Could “Someday” Be Competition For Sony , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.