As the war in Gaza approaches its third week,
a chorus of influential voices in the U.S. media has cast the conflict as a
proxy war in which the real enemy is not Hamas but Iran.
The result has been a growing tendency in the U.S. to view Gaza as simply
one battleground in a larger war between Iran and the West, and to dismiss
the stated concerns of the Palestinians as a mere smoke screen for Iranian
influence.
But critics charge that this way of framing the conflict is both overly simplistic
and agenda-driven. By overstating the importance of Iran's operational aid
to Hamas, they claim, these opinion-makers aim to increase hostilities with
Iran, to bolster an increasingly shaky Israeli rationale for war, and to curtail
any inclination to reach a peace settlement with the Palestinians.
For years, it has been a commonplace among neoconservatives that Iran is the
real source of opposition to the U.S. and Israel throughout the Middle East,
from Palestine to Lebanon to Iraq. During Israel's 2006 war with Hezbollah
in Lebanon, prominent neoconservatives urged the West to focus "less on
Hamas and Hezbollah, and more on their paymasters and real commanders in Syria
and Iran," as William Kristol wrote in the Weekly Standard.
Similarly, neoconservatives have taken the current war with Hamas as a sign
that the West needs to take a harder line with Iran. "It's all about Iran,"
Michael Ledeen, a prominent Iran hawk based at the Foundation for the Defense
of Democracies, wrote in National Review inline on Dec. 30. "[The
Israelis] are left to contend with the tentacles of the terrorist hydra, while
the main body remains untouched. They may chop off a piece of Hamas or Hezbollah,
but it will regenerate and grab them again."
However, the belief that Hamas is merely an Iranian proxy has spread beyond
neoconservative circles to be voiced by opinion-makers closer to the political
center. Self-described realist Robert Kaplan wrote in the Atlantic on
Monday that "Israel's attack on Gaza is, in effect, an attack on Iran's
empire.
Our own diplomacy with Iran now rests on whether or not Israel
succeeds."
In the New York Times, influential neoliberal Thomas Friedman implied
that Iran was to blame for the outbreak of hostilities in Gaza, writing that
Tehran can "stop and start the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at will."
In the Los Angeles Times, Israeli commentators Yossi Klein Halevi and
Michael B. Oren wrote an op-ed titled "In Gaza, the Real Enemy Is Iran,"
which warned that if Hamas "manipulat[es] world opinion into the imposition
of a premature cease-fire
[it] would mean another triumph for Iran."
And in the literature released by hawkish advocacy groups such as the Israel
Project, Hamas is rarely mentioned without the adjective "Iran-backed."
It is widely accepted that Iran has in fact provided weaponry and other operational
assistance to Hamas in recent years. However, there are few reliable estimates
of the scope of this aid.
"I'm very skeptical whenever I see figures in the media," former
State Department intelligence official Wayne White, now of the Middle East
Institute, told IPS. "Even when I was in the intelligence community, exact
details were often elusive."
Many feel that those blaming Iran for the Gaza crisis attach too much importance
to Iran's operational aid to Hamas when they suggest that Hamas is nothing
more than an Iranian "proxy."
White suggested that Iran's relationship with Hamas is "more symbiotic
than dictatorial," and that its influence with Hamas is more limited than
is portrayed in the media. "Iranian inspiration is being given far too
much weight in the overall Israeli-Hamas equation. Hamas has every reason to
make its own decisions, most of which are sufficiently militant to please the
Iranians," he said.
Critics charge that framing the Gaza conflict as an U.S.-Iran proxy war is
a tendentious move that is meant to advance several covert political goals.
The most obvious of these goals is to increase hostilities with Iran. Unsurprisingly,
many of those espousing the "proxy war" argument, such as Ledeen,
are advocates of regime change in Tehran, backed if necessary by military force.
But the proxy war argument has also been deployed to bolster the Israeli case
for war in Gaza, as Israel's war aims have become increasingly slippery and
elusive over the past two weeks.
Israeli officials have at times suggested that the war is intended to halt
all rocket fire from Gaza, or to overthrow Hamas rule in Gaza, but both of
these goals are viewed by many as unrealistic, and the Israeli government has
subsequently backed off of them.
Casting the military campaign as a struggle against Iranian power provides
a broader rationale for war, and has been used as a way to rally support from
U.S. policymakers who are skeptical of the campaign's wisdom. On this analysis,
Israel is doing the U.S.' dirty work by confronting Iranian power.
In this vein, the Wall Street Journal editorialized on Monday that
the war would help President-elect Barack Obama's diplomatic efforts with Iran,
since "the mullahs are going to be more interested in diplomacy if their
military proxies have been defeated."
And hawkish liberal Jim Hoagland suggested in the Washington Post that
Israel's attack was helping to hold off the possibility of a nuclear Iran,
writing that "only Israel poses any threat of military action to halt
Iran's drive to enrich enough uranium to build a nuclear bomb."
But one important consequence of the proxy-war argument, critics say, has
more to do with Palestine than with Iran. By portraying Hamas as nothing more
than a projection of Iranian power, commentators implicitly reject any notion
that the group may derive its influence from specifically Palestinian concerns.
By doing so, the critics argue, these commentators seek to assuage Israeli
consciences by portraying Hamas as the product of a nebulous Islamist menace
rather than of local grievances about occupation, refugees, or settlements.
But more than that, they seek to remove any impetus to compromise on such
issues. If Iranian power is the real cause of Israel's Palestinian problem,
then a local settlement with the Palestinians would do little to alleviate
Israel's insecurity.
In response, a growing number of analysts have spoken out against this line
of thinking.
"Yes, the conflict has been exploited on many sides and certainly by
Iran and other hardliners in the region," wrote former Israeli peace negotiator
Daniel Levy of the New America Foundation on Monday. "[B]ut if the unaddressed
Palestinian grievance did not exist then it would not be there to exploit."
White concurred in his assessment of the situation.
"The [proxy war] view is a very unsophisticated one," he told IPS.
"This is at bottom a struggle between Hamas, along with many other Palestinians,
and the Israelis."
(Inter Press Service)