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A STRATEGIC SHIFT
In the past few months, as the situation in Iraq has
deteriorated, the Bush Administration, in both its
public diplomacy and its covert operations, has
significantly shifted its Middle East strategy. The
“redirection,” as some inside the White House have
called the new strategy, has brought the United States
closer to an open confrontation with Iran and, in parts
of the region, propelled it into a widening sectarian
conflict between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.
To undermine Iran, which is predominantly Shiite, the
Bush Administration has decided, in effect, to
reconfigure its priorities in the Middle East. In
Lebanon, the Administration has coöperated with Saudi
Arabia’s government, which is Sunni, in clandestine
operations that are intended to weaken Hezbollah, the
Shiite organization that is backed by Iran. The U.S. has
also taken part in clandestine operations aimed at Iran
and its ally Syria. A by-product of these activities has
been the bolstering of Sunni extremist groups that
espouse a militant vision of Islam and are hostile to
America and sympathetic to Al Qaeda.
One contradictory aspect of the new strategy is that, in
Iraq, most of the insurgent violence directed at the
American military has come from Sunni forces, and not
from Shiites. But, from the Administration’s
perspective, the most profound—and unintended—strategic
consequence of the Iraq war is the empowerment of Iran.
Its President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has made defiant
pronouncements about the destruction of Israel and his
country’s right to pursue its nuclear program, and last
week its supreme religious leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, said on state television that “realities in
the region show that the arrogant front, headed by the
U.S. and its allies, will be the principal loser in the
region.”
After the revolution of 1979 brought a religious
government to power, the United States broke with Iran
and cultivated closer relations with the leaders of
Sunni Arab states such as Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi
Arabia. That calculation became more complex after the
September 11th attacks, especially with regard to the
Saudis. Al Qaeda is Sunni, and many of its operatives
came from extremist religious circles inside Saudi
Arabia. Before the invasion of Iraq, in 2003,
Administration officials, influenced by neoconservative
ideologues, assumed that a Shiite government there could
provide a pro-American balance to Sunni extremists,
since Iraq’s Shiite majority had been oppressed under
Saddam Hussein. They ignored warnings from the
intelligence community about the ties between Iraqi
Shiite leaders and Iran, where some had lived in exile
for years. Now, to the distress of the White House, Iran
has forged a close relationship with the
Shiite-dominated government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.
The new American policy, in its broad outlines, has been
discussed publicly. In testimony before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee in January, Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice said that there is “a new
strategic alignment in the Middle East,” separating
“reformers” and “extremists”; she pointed to the Sunni
states as centers of moderation, and said that Iran,
Syria, and Hezbollah were “on the other side of that
divide.” (Syria’s Sunni majority is dominated by the
Alawi sect.) Iran and Syria, she said, “have made their
choice and their choice is to destabilize.”
Some of the core tactics of the redirection are not
public, however. The clandestine operations have been
kept secret, in some cases, by leaving the execution or
the funding to the Saudis, or by finding other ways to
work around the normal congressional appropriations
process, current and former officials close to the
Administration said.
A senior member of the House Appropriations Committee
told me that he had heard about the new strategy, but
felt that he and his colleagues had not been adequately
briefed. “We haven’t got any of this,” he said. “We ask
for anything going on, and they say there’s nothing. And
when we ask specific questions they say, ‘We’re going to
get back to you.’ It’s so frustrating.”
The key players behind the redirection are
Vice-President Dick Cheney, the deputy national-security
adviser Elliott Abrams, the departing Ambassador to Iraq
(and nominee for United Nations Ambassador), Zalmay
Khalilzad, and Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi
national-security adviser. While Rice has been deeply
involved in shaping the public policy, former and
current officials said that the clandestine side has
been guided by Cheney. (Cheney’s office and the White
House declined to comment for this story; the Pentagon
did not respond to specific queries but said, “The
United States is not planning to go to war with Iran.”)
The policy shift has brought Saudi Arabia and Israel
into a new strategic embrace, largely because both
countries see Iran as an existential threat. They have
been involved in direct talks, and the Saudis, who
believe that greater stability in Israel and Palestine
will give Iran less leverage in the region, have become
more involved in Arab-Israeli negotiations.
The new strategy “is a major shift in American
policy—it’s a sea change,” a U.S. government consultant
with close ties to Israel said. The Sunni states “were
petrified of a Shiite resurgence, and there was growing
resentment with our gambling on the moderate Shiites in
Iraq,” he said. “We cannot reverse the Shiite gain in
Iraq, but we can contain it.”
“It seems there has been a debate inside the government
over what’s the biggest danger—Iran or Sunni radicals,”
Vali Nasr, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations, who has written widely on Shiites, Iran, and
Iraq, told me. “The Saudis and some in the
Administration have been arguing that the biggest threat
is Iran and the Sunni radicals are the lesser enemies.
This is a victory for the Saudi line.”
Martin Indyk, a senior State Department official in the
Clinton Administration who also served as Ambassador to
Israel, said that “the Middle East is heading into a
serious Sunni-Shiite Cold War.” Indyk, who is the
director of the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at
the Brookings Institution, added that, in his opinion,
it was not clear whether the White House was fully aware
of the strategic implications of its new policy. “The
White House is not just doubling the bet in Iraq,” he
said. “It’s doubling the bet across the region. This
could get very complicated. Everything is upside down.”

The Administration’s new policy for containing Iran
seems to complicate its strategy for winning the war in
Iraq. Patrick Clawson, an expert on Iran and the deputy
director for research at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy, argued, however, that closer ties
between the United States and moderate or even radical
Sunnis could put “fear” into the government of Prime
Minister Maliki and “make him worry that the Sunnis
could actually win” the civil war there. Clawson said
that this might give Maliki an incentive to coöperate
with the United States in suppressing radical Shiite
militias, such as Moqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army.
Even so, for the moment, the U.S. remains dependent on
the coöperation of Iraqi Shiite leaders. The Mahdi Army
may be openly hostile to American interests, but other
Shiite militias are counted as U.S. allies. Both Moqtada
al-Sadr and the White House back Maliki. A memorandum
written late last year by Stephen Hadley, the
national-security adviser, suggested that the
Administration try to separate Maliki from his more
radical Shiite allies by building his base among
moderate Sunnis and Kurds, but so far the trends have
been in the opposite direction. As the Iraqi Army
continues to founder in its confrontations with
insurgents, the power of the Shiite militias has
steadily increased.
Flynt Leverett, a former Bush Administration National
Security Council official, told me that “there is
nothing coincidental or ironic” about the new strategy
with regard to Iraq. “The Administration is trying to
make a case that Iran is more dangerous and more
provocative than the Sunni insurgents to American
interests in Iraq, when—if you look at the actual
casualty numbers—the punishment inflicted on America by
the Sunnis is greater by an order of magnitude,”
Leverett said. “This is all part of the campaign of
provocative steps to increase the pressure on Iran. The
idea is that at some point the Iranians will respond and
then the Administration will have an open door to strike
at them.”
President George W. Bush, in a speech on January 10th,
partially spelled out this approach. “These two
regimes”—Iran and Syria—“are allowing terrorists and
insurgents to use their territory to move in and out of
Iraq,” Bush said. “Iran is providing material support
for attacks on American troops. We will disrupt the
attacks on our forces. We’ll interrupt the flow of
support from Iran and Syria. And we will seek out and
destroy the networks providing advanced weaponry and
training to our enemies in Iraq.”
In the following weeks, there was a wave of allegations
from the Administration about Iranian involvement in the
Iraq war. On February 11th, reporters were shown
sophisticated explosive devices, captured in Iraq, that
the Administration claimed had come from Iran. The
Administration’s message was, in essence, that the bleak
situation in Iraq was the result not of its own failures
of planning and execution but of Iran’s interference.
The U.S. military also has arrested and interrogated
hundreds of Iranians in Iraq. “The word went out last
August for the military to snatch as many Iranians in
Iraq as they can,” a former senior intelligence official
said. “They had five hundred locked up at one time.
We’re working these guys and getting information from
them. The White House goal is to build a case that the
Iranians have been fomenting the insurgency and they’ve
been doing it all along—that Iran is, in fact,
supporting the killing of Americans.” The Pentagon
consultant confirmed that hundreds of Iranians have been
captured by American forces in recent months. But he
told me that that total includes many Iranian
humanitarian and aid workers who “get scooped up and
released in a short time,” after they have been
interrogated.
“We are not planning for a war with Iran,” Robert Gates,
the new Defense Secretary, announced on February 2nd,
and yet the atmosphere of confrontation has deepened.
According to current and former American intelligence
and military officials, secret operations in Lebanon
have been accompanied by clandestine operations
targeting Iran. American military and special-operations
teams have escalated their activities in Iran to gather
intelligence and, according to a Pentagon consultant on
terrorism and the former senior intelligence official,
have also crossed the border in pursuit of Iranian
operatives from Iraq.
At Rice’s Senate appearance in January, Democratic
Senator Joseph Biden, of Delaware, pointedly asked her
whether the U.S. planned to cross the Iranian or the
Syrian border in the course of a pursuit. “Obviously,
the President isn’t going to rule anything out to
protect our troops, but the plan is to take down these
networks in Iraq,” Rice said, adding, “I do think that
everyone will understand that—the American people and I
assume the Congress expect the President to do what is
necessary to protect our forces.”
The ambiguity of Rice’s reply prompted a response from
Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel, a Republican, who has been
critical of the Administration:
Some of us remember 1970, Madam Secretary. And that was
Cambodia. And when our government lied to the American
people and said, “We didn’t cross the border going into
Cambodia,” in fact we did.
I happen to know something about that, as do some on
this committee. So, Madam Secretary, when you set in
motion the kind of policy that the President is talking
about here, it’s very, very dangerous.
The Administration’s concern about Iran’s role in Iraq
is coupled with its long-standing alarm over Iran’s
nuclear program. On Fox News on January 14th, Cheney
warned of the possibility, in a few years, “of a
nuclear-armed Iran, astride the world’s supply of oil,
able to affect adversely the global economy, prepared to
use terrorist organizations and/or their nuclear weapons
to threaten their neighbors and others around the
world.” He also said, “If you go and talk with the Gulf
states or if you talk with the Saudis or if you talk
with the Israelis or the Jordanians, the entire region
is worried. . . . The threat Iran represents is
growing.”
The Administration is now examining a wave of new
intelligence on Iran’s weapons programs. Current and
former American officials told me that the intelligence,
which came from Israeli agents operating in Iran,
includes a claim that Iran has developed a three-stage
solid-fuelled intercontinental missile capable of
delivering several small warheads—each with limited
accuracy—inside Europe. The validity of this human
intelligence is still being debated.
A similar argument about an imminent threat posed by
weapons of mass destruction—and questions about the
intelligence used to make that case—formed the prelude
to the invasion of Iraq. Many in Congress have greeted
the claims about Iran with wariness; in the Senate on
February 14th, Hillary Clinton said, “We have all
learned lessons from the conflict in Iraq, and we have
to apply those lessons to any allegations that are being
raised about Iran. Because, Mr. President, what we are
hearing has too familiar a ring and we must be on guard
that we never again make decisions on the basis of
intelligence that turns out to be faulty.”
Still, the Pentagon is continuing intensive planning for
a possible bombing attack on Iran, a process that began
last year, at the direction of the President. In recent
months, the former intelligence official told me, a
special planning group has been established in the
offices of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, charged with
creating a contingency bombing plan for Iran that can be
implemented, upon orders from the President, within
twenty-four hours.
In the past month, I was told by an Air Force adviser on
targeting and the Pentagon consultant on terrorism, the
Iran planning group has been handed a new assignment: to
identify targets in Iran that may be involved in
supplying or aiding militants in Iraq. Previously, the
focus had been on the destruction of Iran’s nuclear
facilities and possible regime change.
Two carrier strike groups—the Eisenhower and the Stennis—are
now in the Arabian Sea. One plan is for them to be
relieved early in the spring, but there is worry within
the military that they may be ordered to stay in the
area after the new carriers arrive, according to several
sources. (Among other concerns, war games have shown
that the carriers could be vulnerable to swarming
tactics involving large numbers of small boats, a
technique that the Iranians have practiced in the past;
carriers have limited maneuverability in the narrow
Strait of Hormuz, off Iran’s southern coast.) The former
senior intelligence official said that the current
contingency plans allow for an attack order this spring.
He added, however, that senior officers on the Joint
Chiefs were counting on the White House’s not being
“foolish enough to do this in the face of Iraq, and the
problems it would give the Republicans in 2008.”

PRINCE BANDAR’S GAME
The Administration’s effort to diminish Iranian
authority in the Middle East has relied heavily on Saudi
Arabia and on Prince Bandar, the Saudi national-security
adviser. Bandar served as the Ambassador to the United
States for twenty-two years, until 2005, and has
maintained a friendship with President Bush and
Vice-President Cheney. In his new post, he continues to
meet privately with them. Senior White House officials
have made several visits to Saudi Arabia recently, some
of them not disclosed.
Last November, Cheney flew to Saudi Arabia for a
surprise meeting with King Abdullah and Bandar. The
Times reported that the King warned Cheney that Saudi
Arabia would back its fellow-Sunnis in Iraq if the
United States were to withdraw. A European intelligence
official told me that the meeting also focussed on more
general Saudi fears about “the rise of the Shiites.” In
response, “The Saudis are starting to use their
leverage—money.”
In a royal family rife with competition, Bandar has,
over the years, built a power base that relies largely
on his close relationship with the U.S., which is
crucial to the Saudis. Bandar was succeeded as
Ambassador by Prince Turki al-Faisal; Turki resigned
after eighteen months and was replaced by Adel A. al-Jubeir,
a bureaucrat who has worked with Bandar. A former Saudi
diplomat told me that during Turki’s tenure he became
aware of private meetings involving Bandar and senior
White House officials, including Cheney and Abrams. “I
assume Turki was not happy with that,” the Saudi said.
But, he added, “I don’t think that Bandar is going off
on his own.” Although Turki dislikes Bandar, the Saudi
said, he shared his goal of challenging the spread of
Shiite power in the Middle East.
The split between Shiites and Sunnis goes back to a
bitter divide, in the seventh century, over who should
succeed the Prophet Muhammad. Sunnis dominated the
medieval caliphate and the Ottoman Empire, and Shiites,
traditionally, have been regarded more as outsiders.
Worldwide, ninety per cent of Muslims are Sunni, but
Shiites are a majority in Iran, Iraq, and Bahrain, and
are the largest Muslim group in Lebanon. Their
concentration in a volatile, oil-rich region has led to
concern in the West and among Sunnis about the emergence
of a “Shiite crescent”—especially given Iran’s increased
geopolitical weight.
“The Saudis still see the world through the days of the
Ottoman Empire, when Sunni Muslims ruled the roost and
the Shiites were the lowest class,” Frederic Hof, a
retired military officer who is an expert on the Middle
East, told me. If Bandar was seen as bringing about a
shift in U.S. policy in favor of the Sunnis, he added,
it would greatly enhance his standing within the royal
family.
The Saudis are driven by their fear that Iran could tilt
the balance of power not only in the region but within
their own country. Saudi Arabia has a significant Shiite
minority in its Eastern Province, a region of major oil
fields; sectarian tensions are high in the province. The
royal family believes that Iranian operatives, working
with local Shiites, have been behind many terrorist
attacks inside the kingdom, according to Vali Nasr.
“Today, the only army capable of containing Iran”—the
Iraqi Army—“has been destroyed by the United States.
You’re now dealing with an Iran that could be
nuclear-capable and has a standing army of four hundred
and fifty thousand soldiers.” (Saudi Arabia has
seventy-five thousand troops in its standing army.)
Nasr went on, “The Saudis have considerable financial
means, and have deep relations with the Muslim
Brotherhood and the Salafis”—Sunni extremists who view
Shiites as apostates. “The last time Iran was a threat,
the Saudis were able to mobilize the worst kinds of
Islamic radicals. Once you get them out of the box, you
can’t put them back.”
The Saudi royal family has been, by turns, both a
sponsor and a target of Sunni extremists, who object to
the corruption and decadence among the family’s myriad
princes. The princes are gambling that they will not be
overthrown as long as they continue to support religious
schools and charities linked to the extremists. The
Administration’s new strategy is heavily dependent on
this bargain.
Nasr compared the current situation to the period in
which Al Qaeda first emerged. In the nineteen-eighties
and the early nineties, the Saudi government offered to
subsidize the covert American C.I.A. proxy war against
the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. Hundreds of young
Saudis were sent into the border areas of Pakistan,
where they set up religious schools, training bases, and
recruiting facilities. Then, as now, many of the
operatives who were paid with Saudi money were Salafis.
Among them, of course, were Osama bin Laden and his
associates, who founded Al Qaeda, in 1988.
This time, the U.S. government consultant told me,
Bandar and other Saudis have assured the White House
that “they will keep a very close eye on the religious
fundamentalists. Their message to us was ‘We’ve created
this movement, and we can control it.’ It’s not that we
don’t want the Salafis to throw bombs; it’s who they
throw them at—Hezbollah, Moqtada al-Sadr, Iran, and at
the Syrians, if they continue to work with Hezbollah and
Iran.”
The Saudi said that, in his country’s view, it was
taking a political risk by joining the U.S. in
challenging Iran: Bandar is already seen in the Arab
world as being too close to the Bush Administration. “We
have two nightmares,” the former diplomat told me. “For
Iran to acquire the bomb and for the United States to
attack Iran. I’d rather the Israelis bomb the Iranians,
so we can blame them. If America does it, we will be
blamed.”

In the past year, the Saudis, the Israelis, and the Bush
Administration have developed a series of informal
understandings about their new strategic direction. At
least four main elements were involved, the U.S.
government consultant told me. First, Israel would be
assured that its security was paramount and that
Washington and Saudi Arabia and other Sunni states
shared its concern about Iran.
Second, the Saudis would urge Hamas, the Islamist
Palestinian party that has received support from Iran,
to curtail its anti-Israeli aggression and to begin
serious talks about sharing leadership with Fatah, the
more secular Palestinian group. (In February, the Saudis
brokered a deal at Mecca between the two factions.
However, Israel and the U.S. have expressed
dissatisfaction with the terms.)
The third component was that the Bush Administration
would work directly with Sunni nations to counteract
Shiite ascendance in the region.
Fourth, the Saudi government, with Washington’s
approval, would provide funds and logistical aid to
weaken the government of President Bashir Assad, of
Syria. The Israelis believe that putting such pressure
on the Assad government will make it more conciliatory
and open to negotiations. Syria is a major conduit of
arms to Hezbollah. The Saudi government is also at odds
with the Syrians over the assassination of Rafik Hariri,
the former Lebanese Prime Minister, in Beirut in 2005,
for which it believes the Assad government was
responsible. Hariri, a billionaire Sunni, was closely
associated with the Saudi regime and with Prince Bandar.
(A U.N. inquiry strongly suggested that the Syrians were
involved, but offered no direct evidence; there are
plans for another investigation, by an international
tribunal.)
Patrick Clawson, of the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy, depicted the Saudis’ coöperation with the
White House as a significant breakthrough. “The Saudis
understand that if they want the Administration to make
a more generous political offer to the Palestinians they
have to persuade the Arab states to make a more generous
offer to the Israelis,” Clawson told me. The new
diplomatic approach, he added, “shows a real degree of
effort and sophistication as well as a deftness of touch
not always associated with this Administration. Who’s
running the greater risk—we or the Saudis? At a time
when America’s standing in the Middle East is extremely
low, the Saudis are actually embracing us. We should
count our blessings.”
The Pentagon consultant had a different view. He said
that the Administration had turned to Bandar as a
“fallback,” because it had realized that the failing war
in Iraq could leave the Middle East “up for grabs.”

JIHADIS IN LEBANON
The focus of the U.S.-Saudi relationship, after Iran, is
Lebanon, where the Saudis have been deeply involved in
efforts by the Administration to support the Lebanese
government. Prime Minister Fouad Siniora is struggling
to stay in power against a persistent opposition led by
Hezbollah, the Shiite organization, and its leader,
Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah. Hezbollah has an extensive
infrastructure, an estimated two to three thousand
active fighters, and thousands of additional members.
Hezbollah has been on the State Department’s terrorist
list since 1997. The organization has been implicated in
the 1983 bombing of a Marine barracks in Beirut that
killed two hundred and forty-one military men. It has
also been accused of complicity in the kidnapping of
Americans, including the C.I.A. station chief in
Lebanon, who died in captivity, and a Marine colonel
serving on a U.N. peacekeeping mission, who was killed.
(Nasrallah has denied that the group was involved in
these incidents.) Nasrallah is seen by many as a staunch
terrorist, who has said that he regards Israel as a
state that has no right to exist. Many in the Arab
world, however, especially Shiites, view him as a
resistance leader who withstood Israel in last summer’s
thirty-three-day war, and Siniora as a weak politician
who relies on America’s support but was unable to
persuade President Bush to call for an end to the
Israeli bombing of Lebanon. (Photographs of Siniora
kissing Condoleezza Rice on the cheek when she visited
during the war were prominently displayed during street
protests in Beirut.)
The Bush Administration has publicly pledged the Siniora
government a billion dollars in aid since last summer. A
donors’ conference in Paris, in January, which the U.S.
helped organize, yielded pledges of almost eight billion
more, including a promise of more than a billion from
the Saudis. The American pledge includes more than two
hundred million dollars in military aid, and forty
million dollars for internal security.
The United States has also given clandestine support to
the Siniora government, according to the former senior
intelligence official and the U.S. government
consultant. “We are in a program to enhance the Sunni
capability to resist Shiite influence, and we’re
spreading the money around as much as we can,” the
former senior intelligence official said. The problem
was that such money “always gets in more pockets than
you think it will,” he said. “In this process, we’re
financing a lot of bad guys with some serious potential
unintended consequences. We don’t have the ability to
determine and get pay vouchers signed by the people we
like and avoid the people we don’t like. It’s a very
high-risk venture.”
American, European, and Arab officials I spoke to told
me that the Siniora government and its allies had
allowed some aid to end up in the hands of emerging
Sunni radical groups in northern Lebanon, the Bekaa
Valley, and around Palestinian refugee camps in the
south. These groups, though small, are seen as a buffer
to Hezbollah; at the same time, their ideological ties
are with Al Qaeda.
During a conversation with me, the former Saudi diplomat
accused Nasrallah of attempting “to hijack the state,”
but he also objected to the Lebanese and Saudi
sponsorship of Sunni jihadists in Lebanon. “Salafis are
sick and hateful, and I’m very much against the idea of
flirting with them,” he said. “They hate the Shiites,
but they hate Americans more. If you try to outsmart
them, they will outsmart us. It will be ugly.”
Alastair Crooke, who spent nearly thirty years in MI6,
the British intelligence service, and now works for
Conflicts Forum, a think tank in Beirut, told me, “The
Lebanese government is opening space for these people to
come in. It could be very dangerous.” Crooke said that
one Sunni extremist group, Fatah al-Islam, had
splintered from its pro-Syrian parent group, Fatah al-Intifada,
in the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp, in northern Lebanon.
Its membership at the time was less than two hundred. “I
was told that within twenty-four hours they were being
offered weapons and money by people presenting
themselves as representatives of the Lebanese
government’s interests—presumably to take on Hezbollah,”
Crooke said.
The largest of the groups, Asbat al-Ansar, is situated
in the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp. Asbat al-Ansar
has received arms and supplies from Lebanese
internal-security forces and militias associated with
the Siniora government.
In 2005, according to a report by the U.S.-based
International Crisis Group, Saad Hariri, the Sunni
majority leader of the Lebanese parliament and the son
of the slain former Prime Minister—Saad inherited more
than four billion dollars after his father’s
assassination—paid forty-eight thousand dollars in bail
for four members of an Islamic militant group from
Dinniyeh. The men had been arrested while trying to
establish an Islamic mini-state in northern Lebanon. The
Crisis Group noted that many of the militants “had
trained in al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan.”
According to the Crisis Group report, Saad Hariri later
used his parliamentary majority to obtain amnesty for
twenty-two of the Dinniyeh Islamists, as well as for
seven militants suspected of plotting to bomb the
Italian and Ukrainian embassies in Beirut, the previous
year. (He also arranged a pardon for Samir Geagea, a
Maronite Christian militia leader, who had been
convicted of four political murders, including the
assassination, in 1987, of Prime Minister Rashid Karami.)
Hariri described his actions to reporters as
humanitarian.
In an interview in Beirut, a senior official in the
Siniora government acknowledged that there were Sunni
jihadists operating inside Lebanon. “We have a liberal
attitude that allows Al Qaeda types to have a presence
here,” he said. He related this to concerns that Iran or
Syria might decide to turn Lebanon into a “theatre of
conflict.”
The official said that his government was in a no-win
situation. Without a political settlement with
Hezbollah, he said, Lebanon could “slide into a
conflict,” in which Hezbollah fought openly with Sunni
forces, with potentially horrific consequences. But if
Hezbollah agreed to a settlement yet still maintained a
separate army, allied with Iran and Syria, “Lebanon
could become a target. In both cases, we become a
target.”
The Bush Administration has portrayed its support of the
Siniora government as an example of the President’s
belief in democracy, and his desire to prevent other
powers from interfering in Lebanon. When Hezbollah led
street demonstrations in Beirut in December, John
Bolton, who was then the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N.,
called them “part of the Iran-Syria-inspired coup.”
Leslie H. Gelb, a past president of the Council on
Foreign Relations, said that the Administration’s policy
was less pro democracy than “pro American national
security. The fact is that it would be terribly
dangerous if Hezbollah ran Lebanon.” The fall of the
Siniora government would be seen, Gelb said, “as a
signal in the Middle East of the decline of the United
States and the ascendancy of the terrorism threat. And
so any change in the distribution of political power in
Lebanon has to be opposed by the United States—and we’re
justified in helping any non-Shiite parties resist that
change. We should say this publicly, instead of talking
about democracy.”
Martin Indyk, of the Saban Center, said, however, that
the United States “does not have enough pull to stop the
moderates in Lebanon from dealing with the extremists.”
He added, “The President sees the region as divided
between moderates and extremists, but our regional
friends see it as divided between Sunnis and Shia. The
Sunnis that we view as extremists are regarded by our
Sunni allies simply as Sunnis.”

In January, after an outburst of street violence in
Beirut involving supporters of both the Siniora
government and Hezbollah, Prince Bandar flew to Tehran
to discuss the political impasse in Lebanon and to meet
with Ali Larijani, the Iranians’ negotiator on nuclear
issues. According to a Middle Eastern ambassador,
Bandar’s mission—which the ambassador said was endorsed
by the White House—also aimed “to create problems
between the Iranians and Syria.” There had been tensions
between the two countries about Syrian talks with
Israel, and the Saudis’ goal was to encourage a breach.
However, the ambassador said, “It did not work. Syria
and Iran are not going to betray each other. Bandar’s
approach is very unlikely to succeed.”
Walid Jumblatt, who is the leader of the Druze minority
in Lebanon and a strong Siniora supporter, has attacked
Nasrallah as an agent of Syria, and has repeatedly told
foreign journalists that Hezbollah is under the direct
control of the religious leadership in Iran. In a
conversation with me last December, he depicted Bashir
Assad, the Syrian President, as a “serial killer.”
Nasrallah, he said, was “morally guilty” of the
assassination of Rafik Hariri and the murder, last
November, of Pierre Gemayel, a member of the Siniora
Cabinet, because of his support for the Syrians.
Jumblatt then told me that he had met with
Vice-President Cheney in Washington last fall to
discuss, among other issues, the possibility of
undermining Assad. He and his colleagues advised Cheney
that, if the United States does try to move against
Syria, members of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood would be
“the ones to talk to,” Jumblatt said.
The Syrian Muslim Brotherhood, a branch of a radical
Sunni movement founded in Egypt in 1928, engaged in more
than a decade of violent opposition to the regime of
Hafez Assad, Bashir’s father. In 1982, the Brotherhood
took control of the city of Hama; Assad bombarded the
city for a week, killing between six thousand and twenty
thousand people. Membership in the Brotherhood is
punishable by death in Syria. The Brotherhood is also an
avowed enemy of the U.S. and of Israel. Nevertheless,
Jumblatt said, “We told Cheney that the basic link
between Iran and Lebanon is Syria—and to weaken Iran you
need to open the door to effective Syrian opposition.”
There is evidence that the Administration’s redirection
strategy has already benefitted the Brotherhood. The
Syrian National Salvation Front is a coalition of
opposition groups whose principal members are a faction
led by Abdul Halim Khaddam, a former Syrian
Vice-President who defected in 2005, and the
Brotherhood. A former high-ranking C.I.A. officer told
me, “The Americans have provided both political and
financial support. The Saudis are taking the lead with
financial support, but there is American involvement.”
He said that Khaddam, who now lives in Paris, was
getting money from Saudi Arabia, with the knowledge of
the White House. (In 2005, a delegation of the Front’s
members met with officials from the National Security
Council, according to press reports.) A former White
House official told me that the Saudis had provided
members of the Front with travel documents.
Jumblatt said he understood that the issue was a
sensitive one for the White House. “I told Cheney that
some people in the Arab world, mainly the
Egyptians”—whose moderate Sunni leadership has been
fighting the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood for
decades—“won’t like it if the United States helps the
Brotherhood. But if you don’t take on Syria we will be
face to face in Lebanon with Hezbollah in a long fight,
and one we might not win.”

THE SHEIKH
On a warm, clear night early last December, in a
bombed-out suburb a few miles south of downtown Beirut,
I got a preview of how the Administration’s new strategy
might play out in Lebanon. Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, the
Hezbollah leader, who has been in hiding, had agreed to
an interview. Security arrangements for the meeting were
secretive and elaborate. I was driven, in the back seat
of a darkened car, to a damaged underground garage
somewhere in Beirut, searched with a handheld scanner,
placed in a second car to be driven to yet another
bomb-scarred underground garage, and transferred again.
Last summer, it was reported that Israel was trying to
kill Nasrallah, but the extraordinary precautions were
not due only to that threat. Nasrallah’s aides told me
that they believe he is a prime target of fellow-Arabs,
primarily Jordanian intelligence operatives, as well as
Sunni jihadists who they believe are affiliated with Al
Qaeda. (The government consultant and a retired
four-star general said that Jordanian intelligence, with
support from the U.S. and Israel, had been trying to
infiltrate Shiite groups, to work against Hezbollah.
Jordan’s King Abdullah II has warned that a Shiite
government in Iraq that was close to Iran would lead to
the emergence of a Shiite crescent.) This is something
of an ironic turn: Nasrallah’s battle with Israel last
summer turned him—a Shiite—into the most popular and
influential figure among Sunnis and Shiites throughout
the region. In recent months, however, he has
increasingly been seen by many Sunnis not as a symbol of
Arab unity but as a participant in a sectarian war.
Nasrallah, dressed, as usual, in religious garb, was
waiting for me in an unremarkable apartment. One of his
advisers said that he was not likely to remain there
overnight; he has been on the move since his decision,
last July, to order the kidnapping of two Israeli
soldiers in a cross-border raid set off the
thirty-three-day war. Nasrallah has since said
publicly—and repeated to me—that he misjudged the
Israeli response. “We just wanted to capture prisoners
for exchange purposes,” he told me. “We never wanted to
drag the region into war.”
Nasrallah accused the Bush Administration of working
with Israel to deliberately instigate fitna, an Arabic
word that is used to mean “insurrection and
fragmentation within Islam.” “In my opinion, there is a
huge campaign through the media throughout the world to
put each side up against the other,” he said. “I believe
that all this is being run by American and Israeli
intelligence.” (He did not provide any specific evidence
for this.) He said that the U.S. war in Iraq had
increased sectarian tensions, but argued that Hezbollah
had tried to prevent them from spreading into Lebanon.
(Sunni-Shiite confrontations increased, along with
violence, in the weeks after we talked.)
Nasrallah said he believed that President Bush’s goal
was “the drawing of a new map for the region. They want
the partition of Iraq. Iraq is not on the edge of a
civil war—there is a civil war. There is ethnic and
sectarian cleansing. The daily killing and displacement
which is taking place in Iraq aims at achieving three
Iraqi parts, which will be sectarian and ethnically pure
as a prelude to the partition of Iraq. Within one or two
years at the most, there will be total Sunni areas,
total Shiite areas, and total Kurdish areas. Even in
Baghdad, there is a fear that it might be divided into
two areas, one Sunni and one Shiite.”
He went on, “I can say that President Bush is lying when
he says he does not want Iraq to be partitioned. All the
facts occurring now on the ground make you swear he is
dragging Iraq to partition. And a day will come when he
will say, ‘I cannot do anything, since the Iraqis want
the partition of their country and I honor the wishes of
the people of Iraq.’ ”
Nasrallah said he believed that America also wanted to
bring about the partition of Lebanon and of Syria. In
Syria, he said, the result would be to push the country
“into chaos and internal battles like in Iraq.” In
Lebanon, “There will be a Sunni state, an Alawi state, a
Christian state, and a Druze state.” But, he said, “I do
not know if there will be a Shiite state.” Nasrallah
told me that he suspected that one aim of the Israeli
bombing of Lebanon last summer was “the destruction of
Shiite areas and the displacement of Shiites from
Lebanon. The idea was to have the Shiites of Lebanon and
Syria flee to southern Iraq,” which is dominated by
Shiites. “I am not sure, but I smell this,” he told me.
Partition would leave Israel surrounded by “small
tranquil states,” he said. “I can assure you that the
Saudi kingdom will also be divided, and the issue will
reach to North African states. There will be small
ethnic and confessional states,” he said. “In other
words, Israel will be the most important and the
strongest state in a region that has been partitioned
into ethnic and confessional states that are in
agreement with each other. This is the new Middle East.”
In fact, the Bush Administration has adamantly resisted
talk of partitioning Iraq, and its public stances
suggest that the White House sees a future Lebanon that
is intact, with a weak, disarmed Hezbollah playing, at
most, a minor political role. There is also no evidence
to support Nasrallah’s belief that the Israelis were
seeking to drive the Shiites into southern Iraq.
Nevertheless, Nasrallah’s vision of a larger sectarian
conflict in which the United States is implicated
suggests a possible consequence of the White House’s new
strategy.
In the interview, Nasrallah made mollifying gestures and
promises that would likely be met with skepticism by his
opponents. “If the United States says that discussions
with the likes of us can be useful and influential in
determining American policy in the region, we have no
objection to talks or meetings,” he said. “But, if their
aim through this meeting is to impose their policy on
us, it will be a waste of time.” He said that the
Hezbollah militia, unless attacked, would operate only
within the borders of Lebanon, and pledged to disarm it
when the Lebanese Army was able to stand up. Nasrallah
said that he had no interest in initiating another war
with Israel. However, he added that he was anticipating,
and preparing for, another Israeli attack, later this
year.
Nasrallah further insisted that the street
demonstrations in Beirut would continue until the
Siniora government fell or met his coalition’s political
demands. “Practically speaking, this government cannot
rule,” he told me. “It might issue orders, but the
majority of the Lebanese people will not abide and will
not recognize the legitimacy of this government. Siniora
remains in office because of international support, but
this does not mean that Siniora can rule Lebanon.”
President Bush’s repeated praise of the Siniora
government, Nasrallah said, “is the best service to the
Lebanese opposition he can give, because it weakens
their position vis-à-vis the Lebanese people and the
Arab and Islamic populations. They are betting on us
getting tired. We did not get tired during the war, so
how could we get tired in a demonstration?”

There is sharp division inside and outside the Bush
Administration about how best to deal with Nasrallah,
and whether he could, in fact, be a partner in a
political settlement. The outgoing director of National
Intelligence, John Negroponte, in a farewell briefing to
the Senate Intelligence Committee, in January, said that
Hezbollah “lies at the center of Iran’s terrorist
strategy. . . . It could decide to conduct attacks
against U.S. interests in the event it feels its
survival or that of Iran is threatened. . . . Lebanese
Hezbollah sees itself as Tehran’s partner.”
In 2002, Richard Armitage, then the Deputy Secretary of
State, called Hezbollah “the A-team” of terrorists. In a
recent interview, however, Armitage acknowledged that
the issue has become somewhat more complicated.
Nasrallah, Armitage told me, has emerged as “a political
force of some note, with a political role to play inside
Lebanon if he chooses to do so.” In terms of public
relations and political gamesmanship, Armitage said,
Nasrallah “is the smartest man in the Middle East.” But,
he added, Nasrallah “has got to make it clear that he
wants to play an appropriate role as the loyal
opposition. For me, there’s still a blood debt to pay”—a
reference to the murdered colonel and the Marine
barracks bombing.
Robert Baer, a former longtime C.I.A. agent in Lebanon,
has been a severe critic of Hezbollah and has warned of
its links to Iranian-sponsored terrorism. But now, he
told me, “we’ve got Sunni Arabs preparing for
cataclysmic conflict, and we will need somebody to
protect the Christians in Lebanon. It used to be the
French and the United States who would do it, and now
it’s going to be Nasrallah and the Shiites.
“The most important story in the Middle East is the
growth of Nasrallah from a street guy to a leader—from a
terrorist to a statesman,” Baer added. “The dog that
didn’t bark this summer”—during the war with Israel—“is
Shiite terrorism.” Baer was referring to fears that
Nasrallah, in addition to firing rockets into Israel and
kidnapping its soldiers, might set in motion a wave of
terror attacks on Israeli and American targets around
the world. “He could have pulled the trigger, but he did
not,” Baer said.
Most members of the intelligence and diplomatic
communities acknowledge Hezbollah’s ongoing ties to
Iran. But there is disagreement about the extent to
which Nasrallah would put aside Hezbollah’s interests in
favor of Iran’s. A former C.I.A. officer who also served
in Lebanon called Nasrallah “a Lebanese phenomenon,”
adding, “Yes, he’s aided by Iran and Syria, but
Hezbollah’s gone beyond that.” He told me that there was
a period in the late eighties and early nineties when
the C.I.A. station in Beirut was able to clandestinely
monitor Nasrallah’s conversations. He described
Nasrallah as “a gang leader who was able to make deals
with the other gangs. He had contacts with everybody.”

TELLING CONGRESS
The Bush Administration’s reliance on clandestine
operations that have not been reported to Congress and
its dealings with intermediaries with questionable
agendas have recalled, for some in Washington, an
earlier chapter in history. Two decades ago, the Reagan
Administration attempted to fund the Nicaraguan contras
illegally, with the help of secret arms sales to Iran.
Saudi money was involved in what became known as the
Iran-Contra scandal, and a few of the players back
then—notably Prince Bandar and Elliott Abrams—are
involved in today’s dealings.
Iran-Contra was the subject of an informal “lessons
learned” discussion two years ago among veterans of the
scandal. Abrams led the discussion. One conclusion was
that even though the program was eventually exposed, it
had been possible to execute it without telling
Congress. As to what the experience taught them, in
terms of future covert operations, the participants
found: “One, you can’t trust our friends. Two, the C.I.A.
has got to be totally out of it. Three, you can’t trust
the uniformed military, and four, it’s got to be run out
of the Vice-President’s office”—a reference to Cheney’s
role, the former senior intelligence official said.
I was subsequently told by the two government
consultants and the former senior intelligence official
that the echoes of Iran-Contra were a factor in
Negroponte’s decision to resign from the National
Intelligence directorship and accept a sub-Cabinet
position of Deputy Secretary of State. (Negroponte
declined to comment.)
The former senior intelligence official also told me
that Negroponte did not want a repeat of his experience
in the Reagan Administration, when he served as
Ambassador to Honduras. “Negroponte said, ‘No way. I’m
not going down that road again, with the N.S.C. running
operations off the books, with no finding.’ ” (In the
case of covert C.I.A. operations, the President must
issue a written finding and inform Congress.) Negroponte
stayed on as Deputy Secretary of State, he added,
because “he believes he can influence the government in
a positive way.”
The government consultant said that Negroponte shared
the White House’s policy goals but “wanted to do it by
the book.” The Pentagon consultant also told me that
“there was a sense at the senior-ranks level that he
wasn’t fully on board with the more adventurous
clandestine initiatives.” It was also true, he said,
that Negroponte “had problems with this Rube Goldberg
policy contraption for fixing the Middle East.”
The Pentagon consultant added that one difficulty, in
terms of oversight, was accounting for covert funds.
“There are many, many pots of black money, scattered in
many places and used all over the world on a variety of
missions,” he said. The budgetary chaos in Iraq, where
billions of dollars are unaccounted for, has made it a
vehicle for such transactions, according to the former
senior intelligence official and the retired four-star
general.
“This goes back to Iran-Contra,” a former National
Security Council aide told me. “And much of what they’re
doing is to keep the agency out of it.” He said that
Congress was not being briefed on the full extent of the
U.S.-Saudi operations. And, he said, “The C.I.A. is
asking, ‘What’s going on?’ They’re concerned, because
they think it’s amateur hour.”
The issue of oversight is beginning to get more
attention from Congress. Last November, the
Congressional Research Service issued a report for
Congress on what it depicted as the Administration’s
blurring of the line between C.I.A. activities and
strictly military ones, which do not have the same
reporting requirements. And the Senate Intelligence
Committee, headed by Senator Jay Rockefeller, has
scheduled a hearing for March 8th on Defense Department
intelligence activities.
Senator Ron Wyden, of Oregon, a Democrat who is a member
of the Intelligence Committee, told me, “The Bush
Administration has frequently failed to meet its legal
obligation to keep the Intelligence Committee fully and
currently informed. Time and again, the answer has been
‘Trust us.’ ” Wyden said, “It is hard for me to trust
the Administration.”
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