George Friedman
The United States reportedly
sent a letter to Iran via multiple intermediaries last week warning Tehran that
any attempt to close the Strait of Hormuz constituted a red line for
Washington. The same week, a chemist associated with Iran's nuclear program was
killed in Tehran. In Ankara, Iranian parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani met
with Turkish officials and has been floating hints of flexibility in
negotiations over Iran's nuclear program.
This week, a routine rotation
of U.S. aircraft carriers is taking place in the Middle East, with the
potential for three carrier strike groups to be on station in the U.S. Fifth
Fleet's area of operations and a fourth carrier strike group based in Japan about
a week's transit from the region. Next week, Gen. Michael Dempsey, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will travel to Israel to meet with senior Israeli
officials. And Iran is scheduling another set of war games in the Persian Gulf
for February that will focus on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps'
irregular tactics for closing the Strait of Hormuz.
While tensions are escalating
in the Persian Gulf, the financial crisis in Europe has continued, with
downgrades in France's credit rating the latest blow. Meanwhile, China
continued its struggle to maintain exports in the face of economic weakness
among its major customers while inflation continued to increase the cost of
Chinese exports.
Fundamental changes in how
Europe and China work and their long-term consequences represent the major
systemic shifts in the international system. In the more immediate future,
however, the U.S.-Iranian dynamic has the most serious potential consequences
for the world.
The U.S.-Iranian Dynamic
The increasing tensions in the
region are not unexpected. As we have argued for some time, the U.S. invasion
of Iraq and the subsequent decision to withdraw created a massive power vacuum
in Iraq that Iran needed -- and was able -- to fill. Iran and Iraq fought a
brutal war in the 1980s that caused about 1 million Iranian casualties, and
Iran's fundamental national interest is assuring that no Iraqi regime able to
threaten Iranian national security re-emerges. The U.S. invasion and withdrawal
from Iraq provided Iran an opportunity to secure its western frontier, one it
could not pass on.
If Iran does come to have a
dominant influence in Iraq - and I don't mean Iran turning Iraq into a
satellite - several things follow. Most important, the status of the Arabian
Peninsula is subject to change. On paper, Iran has the most substantial
conventional military force of any nation in the Persian Gulf. Absent outside
players, power on paper is not insignificant. While technologically
sophisticated, the military strength of the Arabian Peninsula nations on paper
is much smaller, and they lack the Iranian military's ideologically committed
manpower.
But Iran's direct military
power is more the backdrop than the main engine of Iranian power. It is the
strength of Tehran's covert capabilities and influence that makes Iran
significant. Iran's covert intelligence capability is quite good. It has spent
decades building political alliances by a range of means, and not only by
nefarious methods. The Iranians have worked among the Shia, but not exclusively
so; they have built a network of influence among a range of classes and
religious and ethnic groups. And they have systematically built alliances and
relationships with significant figures to counter overt U.S. power. With U.S.
military power departing Iraq, Iran's relationships become all the more
valuable.
The withdrawal of U.S. forces
has had a profound psychological impact on the political elites of the Persian
Gulf. Since the decline of British power after World War II, the United States
has been the guarantor of the Arabian Peninsula's elites and therefore of the
flow of oil from the region. The foundation of that guarantee has been military
power, as seen in the response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. The United
States still has substantial military power in the Persian Gulf, and its air
and naval forces could likely cope with any overt provocation by Iran.
But that's not how the
Iranians operate. For all their rhetoric, they are cautious in their policies.
This does not mean they are passive. It simply means that they avoid high-risk
moves. They will rely on their covert capabilities and relationships. Those
relationships now exist in an environment in which many reasonable Arab leaders
see a shift in the balance of power, with the United States growing weaker and
less predictable in the region and Iran becoming stronger. This provides
fertile soil for Iranian allies to pressure regional regimes into
accommodations with Iran.
The Syrian Angle
Events in Syria compound this
situation. The purported imminent collapse of Syrian President Bashar al
Assad's regime in Syria has proved less imminent than many in the West
imagined. At the same time, the isolation of the al Assad regime by the West --
and more important, by other Arab countries -- has created a situation where
the regime is more dependent than ever on Iran.
Should the al Assad regime --
or the Syrian regime without al Assad -- survive, Iran would therefore enjoy
tremendous influence with Syria, as well as with Hezbollah in Lebanon. The current
course in Iraq coupled with the survival of an Alawite regime in Syria would
create an Iranian sphere of influence stretching from western Afghanistan to
the Mediterranean. This would represent a fundamental shift in the regional
balance of power and probably would redefine Iranian relations with the Arabian
Peninsula. This is obviously in Iran's interest. It is not in the interests of
the United States, however.
The United States has sought
to head this off via a twofold response. Clandestinely, it has engaged in an
active campaign of sabotage and assassination targeting Iran's nuclear efforts.
Publicly, it has created a sanctions regime against Iran, most recently
targeting Iran's oil exports. However, the latter effort faces many challenges.
Japan, the No. 2 buyer of
Iranian crude, has pledged its support but has not outlined concrete plans to
reduce its purchases. The Chinese and Indians -- Iran's No. 1 and 3 buyers of
crude, respectively -- will continue to buy from Iran despite increased U.S. pressure.
In spite of U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's visit last week, the
Chinese are not prepared to impose sanctions, and the Russians are not likely
to enforce sanctions even if they agreed to them. Turkey is unwilling to create
a confrontation with Iran and is trying to remain a vital trade conduit for the
Iranians regardless of sanctions. At the same time, while the Europeans seem
prepared to participate in harder-hitting sanctions on Iranian oil, they
already have delayed action on these sanctions and certainly are in no position
politically or otherwise to participate in military action. The European
economic crisis is at root a political crisis, so even if the Europeans could
add significant military weight, which they generally lack, concerted action of
any sort is unlikely.
Neither, for that matter, does
the United States have the ability to do much militarily. Invading Iran is out
of the question. The mountainous geography of Iran, a nation of about 70
million people, makes direct occupation impossible given available American
forces.
Air operations against Iran
are an option, but they could not be confined to nuclear facilities. Iran still
doesn't have nuclear weapons, and while nuclear weapons would compound the
strategic problem, the problem would still exist without them. The center of
gravity of Iran's power is the relative strength of its conventional forces in
the region. Absent those, Iran would be less capable of wielding covert power,
as the psychological matrix would shift.
An air campaign against Iran's
conventional forces would play to American military strengths, but it has two
problems. First, it would be an extended campaign, one lasting months. Iran's
capabilities are large and dispersed, and as seen in Desert Storm and Kosovo
against weaker opponents, such operations take a long time and are not
guaranteed to be effective. Second, the Iranians have counters. One, of course,
is the Strait of Hormuz. The second is the use of its special operations forces
and allies in and out of the region to conduct terrorist attacks. An extended
air campaign coupled with terrorist attacks could increase distrust of American
power rather than increase it among U.S. allies, to say nothing of the question
of whether Washington could sustain political support in a coalition or within
the United States itself.
The Covert Option
The United States and Israel
both have covert options as well. They have networks of influence in the region
and highly capable covert forces, which they have said publicly that they would
use to limit Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons without resorting to overt
force. We assume, though we lack evidence, that the assassination of the
Iranian chemist associated with the country's nuclear program last week was
either a U.S. or Israeli operation or some combination of the two. Not only did
it eliminate a scientist, it also bred insecurity and morale problems among
those working on the program. It also signaled the region that the United
States and Israel have options inside Iran.
The U.S. desire to support an
Iranian anti-government movement generally has failed. Tehran showed in 2009
that it could suppress demonstrations, and it was obvious that the
demonstrators did not have the widespread support needed to overcome such repression.
Though the United States has sought to support internal dissidents in Iran
since 1979, it has not succeeded in producing a meaningful threat to the
clerical regime. Therefore, covert operations are being aimed directly at the
nuclear program with the hope that successes there might ripple through other,
more immediately significant sectors.
As we have long argued, the
Iranians already have a "nuclear option," namely, the prospect of
blockading the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 35 percent of seaborne
crude and 20 percent of the world's traded oil passes daily. Doing so would
hurt them, too, of course. But failing to deter an air or covert campaign, they
might choose to close off the strait. Temporarily disrupting the flow of oil,
even intermittently, could rapidly create a global economic crisis given the
fragility of the world economy.
The United States does not
want to see that. Washington will be extremely cautious in its actions unless
it can act with a high degree of assurance that it can prevent such a
disruption, something difficult to guarantee. It also will restrain Israel,
which might have the ability to strike at a few nuclear facilities but lacks
the force to completely eliminate the program much less target Iran's
conventional capability and manage the consequences of that strike in the
Strait of Hormuz. Only the United States could do all that, and given the
possible consequences, it will be loathe to attempt it.
The United States continues,
therefore, with sanctions and covert actions while Iran continues building its
covert power in Iraq and in the region. Each will try to convince the region
that its power will be supreme in a year. The region is skeptical of both, but
will have to live with one of the two, or with an ongoing test of wills -- an
unnerving prospect. Each side is seeking to magnify its power for psychological
effect without crossing a red line that prompts the other to take extreme
measures. Iran signals its willingness to attempt to close Hormuz and its
development of nuclear weapons, but it doesn't cross the line to actually
closing the strait or detonating a nuclear device. The United States pressures
Iran and moves forces around, but it doesn't cross the red line of commencing
military actions. Thus, each avoids triggering unacceptable actions by the
other.
The problem for the United
States is that the status quo ultimately works against it. If al Assad survives
and if the situation in Iraq proceeds as it has been proceeding, then Iran is
creating a reality that will define the region. The United States does not have
a broad and effective coalition, and certainly not one that would rally in the
event of war. It has only Israel, and Israel is as uneasy with direct military
action as the United States is. It does not want to see a failed attack and it
does not want to see more instability in the Arab world. For all its rhetoric,
Israel has a weak hand to play. The only virtue of the American hand is that it
is stronger -- but only relatively speaking.
For the United States,
preventing the expansion of an Iranian sphere of influence is a primary
concern. Iraq is going to be a difficult arena to stop Iran's expansion. Syria
therefore is key at present. Al Assad appears weak, and his replacement by a
Sunni government would limit -- but not destroy -- any Iranian sphere of
influence. It would be a reversal for Iran, and the United States badly needs
to apply one. But the problem is that the United States cannot be seen as the
direct agent of regime change in Syria, and al Assad is not as weak as has been
claimed. Even so, Syria is where the United States can work to block Iran
without crossing Iran's red lines.
The normal outcome of a
situation like this one, in which neither Iran nor the United States can afford
to cross the other's red lines since the consequences would be too great for
each, would be some sort of negotiation toward a longer-term accommodation.
Ideology aside -- and the United States negotiating with the "Axis of Evil"
or Iran with the "Great Satan" would be tough sells to their
respective domestic audiences -- the problem with this is that it is difficult
to see what each has to offer the other. What Iran wants -- a dominant position
in the region and a redefinition of how oil revenues are allocated and
distributed -- would make the United States dependent on Iran. What the United
States wants -- an Iran that does not build a sphere of influence but instead
remains within its borders -- would cost Iran a historic opportunity to assert
its longstanding claims.
We find ourselves in a
situation in which neither side wants to force the other into extreme steps and
neither side is in a position to enter into broader accommodations. And that's
what makes the situation dangerous. When fundamental issues are at stake, each
side is in a position to profoundly harm the other if pressed, and neither side
is in a position to negotiate a broad settlement, a long game of chess ensues.
And in that game of chess, the possibilities of miscalculation, of a bluff that
the other side mistakes for an action, are very real.
Europe and China are
redefining the way the world works. But kingdoms run on oil, as someone once
said, and a lot of oil comes through Hormuz. Iran may or may not be able to
close the strait, and that reshapes Europe and China. The New Year thus begins
where we expected: at the Strait of Hormuz.
George Friedman, Stratfor, January
17, 2012
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