While his handlers worked assiduously Tuesday
to ensure that U.S. President George W. Bush did not run into his Iranian nemesis,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in the corridors of the UN, a legendary fixer for the Bush
family announced that the White House had cleared him to meet with a "high
representative" of Tehran's government.
Former Secretary of State James Baker, who co-chairs a bipartisan, congressionally
appointed task force called the Iraq
Study Group (ISG), said that the timing of the meeting with that representative,
whom he declined to name, had yet to be arranged but that permission for such
a meeting to take place has been granted.
"I'm fairly confident that we will meet with a high representative of
the [Iranian] government," he said at a press conference at the U.S. Institute
of Peace (USIP), one of several think tanks, including the Center for Strategic
and International Studies, the Center for the Study of the Presidency, and Baker's
own Houston-based Institute for Public Policy, that are supporting the Study
Group's work.
Such a meeting would no doubt feed speculation here that Baker, a consummate
"realist" who reportedly has been privately critical of the administration's
Middle East policies, could help tilt the balance of power within the administration
in favor of fellow realists, centered in the State Department. They generally
support greater flexibility in dealing with perceived U.S. foes in the region,
and against right-wing hawks led by Vice President Dick Cheney who have steadfastly
opposed engagement with both Iran and Syria.
Indeed, Baker also announced Tuesday that his task force will meet later this
week with the foreign minister of Syria, against which the administration has
mounted a diplomatic boycott for almost two years. The task force has already
met with Damascus' ambassador here, as part of a series of meetings with Washington-based
envoys from Iraq's Arab neighbors.
The ISG was launched by Congress and quietly endorsed by the White House last
April at the suggestion of a senior Republican lawmaker, Rep. Frank Wolf, who
expressed growing concern about both the increasingly obvious deterioration
of the situation in Iraq – and the threats it posed to the larger region –
and the increasingly rancorous and partisan tone of the domestic debate about
the war here.
Baker, who served as Washington's chief diplomat under President George H.
W. Bush, agreed to the appointment after gaining the personal approval of the
younger Bush himself.
The ISG is co-chaired by former Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton, who also serves
as the head of the Wilson International Center for Scholars here, and consists
of eight other members divided equally among prominent Republicans and Democrats,
including several former senior members of the Reagan, elder Bush, and Clinton
administrations.
Aiding the task force, which spent four days in Iraq earlier this month, are
some five dozen policy experts and Middle East specialists from think tanks,
academic institutions, and the private sector. They range from neoconservative
hawks, such as Clifford May of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies,
to outspoken foes of the original decision to invade Iraq, such as the president
of the Middle East Policy Council, retired ambassador Charles Freeman. They
in turn are divided into four working groups: economy and reconstruction; military
and security; political development; and strategic environment.
All participants have been ordered repeatedly by Baker not to talk to the press
or anyone else about the ISG's deliberations until its work was concluded, probably
some time early next year, so as not to influence the mid-term congressional
elections in November. Hamilton said the group's final report and recommendations
will be made public immediately after they are submitted to Congress and the
president.
In their remarks Tuesday, the ISG's first public appearance since its formation,
both Baker and Hamilton stressed that the group had not yet begun discussing
those recommendations. Hamilton, however, also stressed the urgency and the
Iraqi government's responsibility for reversing negative trends.
"No one can expect miracles, but the people of Iraq have the right to
expect immediate action," he said, adding, "The next three months
are critical."
Unlike the elder Bush's other top "realist" foreign policy aide,
national security adviser Brent Scowcroft, with whom he remains close, Baker
has been discreet about his criticism of the younger Bush's Middle East policies.
"He has never overtly criticized Bush," noted Steve Clemons, director
of the American Strategy Project at the New America Foundation. Unlike Scowcroft,
"he has essentially kept a foothold in the administration."
Indeed, Baker, who led lead a major diplomatic effort for Bush in 2004 to reduce
Iraq's staggering foreign debt, has confined his public criticism to the way
the Pentagon handled the Iraq invasion and its aftermath.
Nonetheless, Baker, whose law firm has long represented some of the U.S.'s
biggest oil companies, is widely believed to agree with Scowcroft's criticisms
of Bush's virtually unconditional alignment with Israel and his refusal to engage
Iran and Syria, not only with respect to stabilizing Iraq – the ISG's focus
– but also on a variety of other regional issues.
"He's always been a proponent of dialogue," said Trita Parsi, an
Iran expert and author of Treacherous Triangle: The Secret Dealings of Iran,
Israel, and the United States, who suggested that the Baker talks may offer
an opportunity for "informal talks" with Iran and, in any event, "should
help reduce the negative trend and the loss of trust" between Tehran and
Washington. "I think the fact that the talks will take place is quite significant
in and of itself," he added.
Indeed, during last month's conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, the director
of the Baker Institute, Edward Djerejian, who also served as a former ambassador
to Damascus and as Baker's top Middle East adviser in the State Department during
the 1991 Gulf War, called explicitly for the administration to engage in direct
talks with both Syria and Iran on a range of issues.
"Despite the tragedy we see unfolding in the region on all sides, this
crisis does represent an opportunity to get on with the real core issues in
the region, and this will require contacting and dealing with all the players.
All the players," Djerejian, who has advised Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice and mentored her public-diplomacy chief and longtime Bush adviser, Karen
Hughes, told an interviewer on National Public Radio in early August.
Rice, who has tried with limited success to move U.S. policy in a more flexible
direction, particularly with respect to Iran, has reportedly come to largely
share that view, but has been thwarted by Cheney and other senior officials,
including Elliot Abrams, the neoconservative director of Middle East affairs
in the National Security Council, in implementing it.
Whether Baker, in his work on the ISG or alongside, might help establish the
kind of dialogue publicly advocated by Djerejian is speculative at this point.
Many observers believe that, at the very least, a strong recommendation by him
or the group as a whole that Washington directly engage Tehran would be difficult
for the administration to resist, particularly if current trends are not reversed.
"It seems to me that Rice has gotten the latitude from Bush to pursue
this sort of alternative course with Iran and the broader Middle East,"
Clemons said, adding "But it doesn't mean that the president has bought
into the process."
Ten months ago, the administration in fact agreed to a suggestion by its ambassador
in Baghdad, Zalmay Khalilzad, to initiate talks with Tehran about the stabilizing
Iraq, but Washington subsequently backed away from the idea.
(Inter Press Service)