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MEMO to the President
MEMORANDUM TO: President Barack Obama DATE: July 7, 2009 SUBJECT: Your Middle East policy, refuse to be drawn AUTHOR: Charles Strohmer
Mr. President:
When
you were a candidate for President you promised to extend the language
of diplomacy toward the Middle East, exhibiting a political wisdom in
which talking to people who are different than us would become
normative. As President you are fulfilling that promise, and its irenic
message is being well received by intended audiences. Your special
video outreach to Iranians celebrating Nowruz, your speech in Ankara
before the Turkish parliament, and your speech in Cairo are just three
reminders. Many of us hope that more cooperative arrangements with the
Muslim Middle East will arise over time from this changed direction in
U.S. foreign policy. Yet ideologues and demagogues, at home and abroad,
have their own hope. Agents of the foreign policy status quo, they want
to choke off the new international mood. And to do that, they want to
bait you. Refuse to be drawn.
Iran’s Ahmadinejad has now accused
you of interfering in his country’s recent presidential elections. Yet
you have been a model of restraint, respecting Iran’s sovereignty while
speaking firmly, yet in a way that has not added injury to the Iranian
people. At great personal cost to themselves, they have been crying out
to their political and religious leaders for more open and cooperative
relations with the West. Any American who previously doubted the strong
democratic will of the Iranian people need question it no longer.
Ahmadinejad, however, reveals by his recent rhetoric a desire to
prolong, if not worsen, adversarial relations between our two
countries. Evidently, that suits his interests. Mr. President, refuse
to be drawn.
Here at home, strong opposition voices in
Washington and on talk radio decry your diplomatic outreach. This
mulish stance didn’t work for us in the spring of 2003, when the Bush
administration froze out Tehran when it wanted to start serious talks,
and it won’t work now. The blowback from that decision has been
considerable and has contributed to the regime’s intransigence toward
Washington. But as Moshe Dyan once said, “If you want to make peace you
don’t talk to your friends, you talk to your adversaries.” Today’s
ideologues and demagogues in Iran and the United States seem to like
the view from the precipice. They must be lonely there, for they give
every indication of wanting the world to join them. Mr. President,
refuse to be drawn.
The new international mood you are creating
must be sustained if wiser U.S.-Middle East relations are to see their
day. Style matters in foreign policy, as your own Dennis Ross has said,
precisely because it affects the substance. Having begun wisely, Mr.
President, keep going. Keep the doors open for talks, even should your
Iran desk begin to differ. Not a few Iranian analysts interpret what is
taking place as being the birth of a powerful new political front in
Iran. The smartest move you could now make is to keep offering to talk.
Which is what you are doing. The recent brutal crackdown by the regime
in Tehran and the polemical opposition here at home will checkmate your
promise only if you let it.
Changing U.S. policy toward the
Middle East is, however, as you know, like trying to turn a supertanker
around in the ocean during a storm. It takes a lot of patience,
prudence, and concerted effort against forces of resistance.
Unfortunately, that’s the geopolitical weather today. Fortunately, it’s
still possible to turn the ship of state toward more cooperative
arrangements with the Middle East. Mr. President, that means staying
the course. There is no justifiable defense or honorable offense
against the offer of improved relations.
(Charles
Strohmer is an author, independent researcher, and visiting fellow of
the Center for Public Justice. He is at work on a new book about
wisdom-based approaches to U.S.-Middle East relations.)
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