Plausibly what is needed is a boundary commission that includes the whole Middle East, including Turkey and Iran and put everything on the table. All clans would be a party to this arrangement and they establish a system for dispute resolution between clans.
I would then determine urban complexes as unique to a particular clan allowing full self rule to be exercised within mutually agreed upon National guidelines.
All rermining land rights would then be alienated to the super state allowing free trade and ownership rights. This allows an independent judiciary for the State while the clans have their own internal judiciary.
In the meantime tribalism at the state level has raised the stakes to unsustainable levels and has triggered the present bloodbath in Iraq. This could stop htat process.
Iraq and Syria Follow Lebanon's Precedent
http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/iraq-and-syria-follow-lebanons-precedent#axzz3BWUPtES7
Lebanon
was created out of the Sykes-Picot Agreement. This agreement between
Britain and France reshaped the collapsed Ottoman Empire south of Turkey
into the states we know today -- Lebanon, Syria and Iraq, and to some
extent the Arabian Peninsula as well. For nearly 100 years, Sykes-Picot
defined the region. A strong case can be made that the nation-states
Sykes-Picot created are now defunct, and that what is occurring in Syria
and Iraq represents the emergence of post-British/French maps that will
replace those the United States has been trying to maintain since the
collapse of Franco-British power.
The Invention of Middle East Nation-States
Sykes-Picot, named for French diplomat Francois Georges-Picot and his
British counterpart, Sir Mark Sykes, did two things. First, it created a
British-dominated Iraq. Second, it divided the Ottoman province of
Syria on a line from the Mediterranean Sea east through Mount Hermon.
Everything north of this line was French. Everything south of this line
was British. The French, who had been involved in the Levant since the
19th century, had allies among the region's Christians. They carved out
part of Syria and created a country for them. Lacking a better name,
they called it Lebanon, after the nearby mountain of the same name.
The British named the area to the west of the Jordan River after the
Ottoman administrative district of Filistina, which turned into
Palestine on the English tongue. However, the British had a problem.
During World War I, while the British were fighting the Ottoman Turks,
they had allied with a number of Arabian tribes seeking to expel the
Turks. Two major tribes, hostile to each other, were the major British
allies. The British had promised postwar power to both. It gave the
victorious Sauds the right to rule Arabia -- hence Saudi Arabia. The
other tribe, the Hashemites, had already been given the newly invented
Iraqi monarchy and, outside of Arabia, a narrow strip of arable ground
to the east of the Jordan River. For lack of a better name, it was
called Trans-Jordan, or the other side of the Jordan. In due course the
"trans" was dropped and it became Jordan.
And thus, along with Syria,
five entities were created between the Mediterranean and Tigris, and
between Turkey and the new nation of Saudi Arabia. This five became six
after the United Nations voted to create Israel in 1947. The Sykes-Picot
agreement suited European models and gave the Europeans a framework for
managing the region that conformed to European administrative
principles. The most important interest, the oil in Iraq and the Arabian
Peninsula, was protected from the upheaval in their periphery as Turkey
and Persia were undergoing upheaval. This gave the Europeans what they
wanted.
What it did not do was create a framework that made a great deal of
sense of the Arabs living in this region. The European model of
individual rights expressed to the nation-states did not fit their
cultural model. For the Arabs, the family -- not the individual -- was
the fundamental unit of society. Families belonged to clans and clans to
tribes, not nations. The Europeans used the concept of the nation-state
to express divisions between "us" and "them." To the Arabs, this was an
alien framework, which to this day still competes with religious and
tribal identities.
The states the Europeans created were arbitrary, the inhabitants did
not give their primary loyalty to them, and the tensions within states
always went over the border to neighboring states. The British and
French imposed ruling structures before the war, and then a wave of
coups overthrew them after World War II. Syria and Iraq became
pro-Soviet states while Israel, Jordan and the Arabians became
pro-American, and monarchies and dictatorships ruled over most of the
Arab countries. These authoritarian regimes held the countries together.
Reality Overcomes Cartography
It was Lebanon that came apart first. Lebanon was a pure invention
carved out of Syria. As long as the Christians for whom Paris created
Lebanon remained the dominant group, it worked, although the Christians
themselves were divided into warring clans. But after World War II, the
demographics changed, and the Shiite population increased. Compounding
this was the movement of Palestinians into Lebanon in 1948. Lebanon thus
became a container for competing clans. Although the clans were of
different religions, this did not define the situation. Multiple clans
in many of these religious groupings fought each other and allied with
other religions.
Moreover, Lebanon's issues were not confined to Lebanon. The line
dividing Lebanon from Syria was an arbitrary boundary drawn by the
French. Syria and Lebanon were not one country, but the newly created
Lebanon was not one country, either. In 1976 Syria -- or more precisely,
the Alawite dictatorship in Damascus -- invaded Lebanon. Its intent was
to destroy the Palestinians, and their main ally was a Christian clan.
The Syrian invasion set off a civil war that was already flaring up and
that lasted until 1990.
Lebanon was divided into various areas controlled by various clans.
The clans evolved. The dominant Shiite clan was built around Nabi Berri.
Later, Iran sponsored another faction, Hezbollah. Each religious
faction had multiple clans, and within the clans there were multiple
competitors for power. From the outside it appeared to be strictly a
religious war, but that was an incomplete view. It was a competition
among clans for money, security, revenge and power. And religion played a
role, but alliances crossed religious lines frequently.
The state became far less powerful than the clans. Beirut, the
capital, became a battleground for the clans. The Israelis invaded in
order to crush the Palestinian Liberation Organization, with Syria's
blessing, and at one point the United States intervened, partly to block
the Israelis. When Hezbollah blew up the Marine barracks in Beirut in
1983, killing hundreds of Marines, U.S. President Ronald Reagan,
realizing the amount of power it would take to even try to stabilize
Lebanon, withdrew all troops. He determined that the fate of Lebanon was
not a fundamental U.S. interest, even if there was a Cold War underway.
The complexity of Lebanon goes far beyond this description, and the external meddling from
Israel, Syria, Iran and the United States is even more complicated. The
point is that the clans became the reality of Lebanon, and the Lebanese
government became irrelevant. An agreement was reached between the
factions and their patrons in 1989 that ended the internal fighting --
for the most part -- and strengthened the state. But in the end, the
state existed at the forbearance of the clans. The map may show a
nation, but it is really a country of microscopic clans engaged in a
microscopic geopolitical struggle for security and power. Lebanon
remains a country in which the warlords have become national
politicians, but there is little doubt that their power comes from being
warlords and that, under pressure, the clans will reassert themselves.
Repeats in Syria and Iraq
A similar process has taken place in Syria. The arbitrary
nation-state has become a region of competing clans. The Alawite clan,
led by Bashar al Assad (who has played the roles of warlord and
president), had ruled the country. An uprising supported by various
countries threw the Alawites into retreat. The insurgents were also
divided along multiple lines. Now, Syria resembles Lebanon. There is one
large clan, but it cannot destroy the smaller ones, and the smaller
ones cannot destroy the large clan. There is a permanent stalemate, and
even if the Alawites are destroyed, their enemies are so divided that it
is difficult to see how Syria can go back to being a country, except as
a historical curiosity. Countries like Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Israel and
the United States might support various clans, but in the end, the
clans survive.
Something very similar happened in Iraq.
As the Americans departed, the government that was created was
dominated by Shia, who were fragmented. To a great degree, the
government excluded the Sunnis, who saw themselves in danger of
marginalization. The Sunnis consisted of various tribes and clans (some
containing Shiites) and politico-religious movements like the Islamic
State. They rose up in alliance and have now left Baghdad floundering,
the Iraqi army seeking balance and the Kurds scrambling to secure their
territory.
It is a three-way war, but in some ways it is a three-way war with
more than 20 clans involved in temporary alliances. No one group is
strong enough to destroy the others on the broader level. Sunni, Shiite
and Kurd have their own territories. On the level of the tribes and
clans, some could be destroyed, but the most likely outcome is what
happened in Lebanon: the permanent power of the sub-national groups,
with perhaps some agreement later on that creates a state in which power
stays with the smaller groups, because that is where loyalty lies.
The boundary between Lebanon and Syria was
always uncertain. The border between Syria and Iraq is now equally
uncertain. But then these borders were never native to the region. The
Europeans imposed them for European reasons. Therefore, the idea of
maintaining a united Iraq misses the point. There was never a united
Iraq -- only the illusion of one created by invented kings and
self-appointed dictators. The war does not have to continue, but as in
Lebanon, it will take the exhaustion of the clans and factions to
negotiate an end.
The idea that Shia, Sunnis and Kurds can live together is not a
fantasy. The fantasy is that the United States has the power or interest
to re-create a Franco-British invention crafted out of the debris of
the Ottoman Empire. Moreover, even if it had an interest, it is doubtful
that the United States has the power to pacify Iraq and Syria. It could
not impose calm in Lebanon. The triumph of the Islamic State would
represent a serious problem for the United States, but no more than it
would for the Shia, Kurds and other Sunnis. As in Lebanon, the
multiplicity of factions creates a countervailing force that cripples
those who reach too far.
There are two issues here. The first is how far the disintegration of
nation-states will go in the Arab world. It seems to be underway in
Libya, but it has not yet taken root elsewhere. It may be a political
formation in the Sykes-Picot areas. Watching the Saudi peninsula will be
most interesting. But the second issue is what regional powers will do
about this process. Turkey, Iran, Israel and the Saudis cannot be
comfortable with either this degree of fragmentation or the spread of
more exotic groups. The rise of a Kurdish clan in Iraq would send
tremors to the Turks and Iranians.
The historical precedent, of course, would be the rise of a new
Ottoman attitude in Turkey that would inspire the Turks to move south
and impose an acceptable order on the region. It is hard to see how
Turkey would have the power to do this, plus if it created unity among
the Arabs it would likely be because the memories of Turkish occupation
still sting the Arab mind.
All of this aside, the point is that it is time to stop thinking
about stabilizing Syria and Iraq and start thinking of a new dynamic
outside of the artificial states that no longer function. To do this, we
need to go back to Lebanon, the first state that disintegrated and the
first place where clans took control of their own destiny because they
had to. We are seeing the Lebanese model spread eastward. It will be
interesting to see where else its spreads.
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