Ronald E. Neumann, Jerry Feierstein and Deborah A. McCarthy discuss the United States, Iran, and security issues in the Persian Gulf. This event is a part of our Weiser Diplomacy Center Launch Series. November, 2019.
Transcript:
Good afternoon. Good afternoon.
There we go. I know it's raining
outside but we can be awake and
excited and lively in here.
I'm Michael Barr, I'm the dean of
Gerald R. Ford School of Public
Policy here at the University
of Michigan.
I'm delighted to welcome you
all here to the Ford School, to
welcome our wonderful panelist.
We're going to hear from four
distinguished diplomats on the
topic of U.S., Iran, and Security in
the Persian Gulf.
Not a small or uncomplicated
topic.
The director of the Weiser
Diplomacy Center, my colleague
John Ciorciari, will introduce
our honored guests in a moment.
Before he does that,
I want to say a few words
of welcome and a few word about
the Weiser Diplomacy Center.
Today is the final event in our
semester long series that
launched here at the Ford
school.
Briefly mission of the Weiser
diplomacy center is to provide
practical training to students
interested in international
affairs.
Inform verge on type I cans
related to diplomacy and serve
as a hundred with the foreign
policy community.
The Weiser Diplomacy Center has
brought an amazing array of
visitors here.
We've hosted two former
secretaries of state i former
ambassador to the united
nations.
Former national security advisor
and the current special
representative for North Korea.
Who was recently nominated to
serve as deputy Secretary of
State.
Not a bad lineup even before
today.
We have a wonderful panel today
as well.
The Weiser diplomacy series I
described elevated the caliber
of discussion about diplomacy
and foreign policy here at the
University of Michigan.
And it elevated the Ford
school's pronile policy making
and diplomats in Washington,
D.C. and around the world.
I want to offer my deepest
gratitude to ambassador and Mrs. Weiser who are here with us
today and to their entire family
for their generous gift and for
their vision of this amazing
program here at the Ford school.
Please join me the thanking Ron
and ilene.
[applause]
many of you will snow that Ron
served as discuss ambassador and
ilene serve add long side them.
They are both passionately
committed to the importance of
diplomacy and to the men and
women ho serve our country
abroad.
We're grateful for their
friendship and support of the
Ford school and University of
Michigan.
We appreciate your work and the
great gift you've given to our
community.
We are deeply grateful.
Today's event and the series was
hosted as part of the Ford's
school conversations across
difference initiative bringing
people from lots of different
political backgrounds and
perspectives here to the Ford
school to talk about foreign
policy.
Practicing diplomacy both abroad
and here at home is essential
for working through moments
where differences seem
insurmountable.
The art of talking and of
listening across political and
other differences is critical
for advancing public policy and
diplomacy alike.
With that let me turn things
over to John who will introduce
our panel.
[applause]
.
hello everybody and welcome.
Lady like to thank the Weiser
family and the American academy
of diplomacy.
The topic we're going to address
is timely and extremely
important.
We're going to talk about U.S.
Iran relations , the nuclear
deal, politics and security in
the gulf more generally and of
course those issues are linked
to a whole range of other
regional issues relevant to U.S.
foreign policy and the Middle
East from Israel and the
Palestinian territories to the
conflicts in sir y Yemen,
Afghanistan and beyond.
And to have a discussion on such
an important and wide range ago
Ray of issues we've assembled a
dream team of diplomats with
experience in the region.
I'm going to introduce them
briefly.
Trust me introducing them in a
time efficient manner requires a
lot of distillation of their
incredible accomplishments
across decades in U.S. foreign
service.
I'm going to start on my left,
your right with ambassador
Gerald Feierstein who is a 41
year career veteran in the
foreign service.
Now retired he was ambassador to
Yemen during the Obama
administration from 2010-13.
Principle deputy assistant
deputy of state for Middle East
affairs from 2013-16 and many
other crucial post including
deputy chief of mission mission
this Pakistan and in the counter
terrorism bureau and postings
elsewhere in Saudi Arabia,
Lebanon, jambeau and he's now
senior Vice President of the
Middle East institute which is a
leading think tank in
Washington.
Immediately to his right is
ambassador Patrick Theros who is
president and executive director
at the business council.
He has a foreign service career
with many distinguished post
including U.S. ambassador to
qatar and advisor to commander
in chief for the U.S. military
command with coverage of the
Middle East region.
He is also been deputy chief of
mission in Jordan and the you'd
Arab Emirates and counselor in
Syria among other roles.
Ambassador Ronald Nunez to his
right is president of the
American academy of diplomacy
and served three times as
ambassador to al jeer y Iran and
most recently to Afghanistan
from 2005 to 7.
He served in Baghdad
coordinating political aspect
was to military intervention in
you Iraq at the time.
He was deputy assistant
secretary in the bureau of
middle even eastern affairs in
the Clinton administration and
other senior roles.
I think you get idea.
There is a tremendous amount of
expertise here.
During the Obama second term.
She was principle deputy
assistant Secretary of State for
economic and business affairs
and serve add among many other
important roles as deputy chief
of mission and deputy assistant
secretary for narcotics and law
enforcement.
She is going to take it from me
this a moment and moderate a
conversation for about 45
minutes with our expert guests
before we open it to all of you.
For your questions, you'll see
people going around with note
cards, please pass your
questions in writing to them and
they'll bring them to us where
we will select that's are
representative of the group to
pose to our expert panel.
Thank you to our guests and we
look forward to a great
conversation.
[applause]
.
in moderating the dream team,
by the way , the dream team was
the basketball team.
I won't go into that.
As you can see with the vast
experience they have all across
the Middle East, deep experience
from years in the diplomatic
service, I wanted to start the
panel as follows, to talk a
little bit about what is
happening inside the region.
Then we'll get to what is
happening between the U.S. and
Iran.
And then if we have time we'll
put it in the bigger political
context.
To draw on your deep history
knowledge of the history of the
culture and our bilateral
relations, I want each of to you
talk for a couple of minutes on
the power dynamics taking place
today within the region and
specifically to talk about how
Iran is perceived by its
neighbors in the gulf.
Thank you.
Delighted to be here with all
all of you today.
The basic elements of the power
dynamics in the region are
particularly the competition
between Iran and the major
states of the gcc in the gulf.
Saudi Arabia.
And between Iran and Israel as
well.
When you look at the reach of
the region, whether what you are looking
at is the reaction of the other
states to what is broadly
perceived as Iran expansion
programs, its search for gemny
in the region and the reaction
of those states to what they see
as the threat from an
expansionist Iranen state.
That of course plays into what
we're going to be talking about
a little bit later on in terms
of U.S. and Iran and the other
states.
So three aspects of Iranian
behavior quickly, one is the
ballistic missile programs,
second is Iranian interference
in the internal affairs of its
neighbors.
In the gulf context that is
Yemen.
And third is Iranian support for
terrorism and how the region
responds the those three
perceived threats.
all of those threats real.
You have to take one thing into
context.
This is not a new development.
I've talked to many gulf leaders
all of whom say it was the same
in the days of the shah.
It's been in this area for the
last several centuries.
This is not terribly new.
In fact, if anything for the
small states in the gulf , the
problem in the last century or
so has gotten much more
difficult because there are two
red tear powers.
Someone Saudi Arabia on one side
which has a dispute with Iran
and seen as expansionist by the
small states.
They've for the last two
centuries tried to find an
outside protector.
The gulf states were prepared to
give up a certain amount of
independence in return for their
protection.
After the British left, the
United States was seen as
supporting both Saudi Arabia and
Iran against their interest.
They saw Iraq as a valuable to
both countries for years.
Iraq was seen as a plus for most
of the gulf states except
Kuwait.
When we took them out, we
destroyed their own balance of
power.
Iran is the strongest country in
the gulf far and away and
without outside protection would
be the principle threat to the
gulf states.
However this is not to say they
are not other threats as well
such as Saudi Arabia.
Iran is perceived differently
to different countries.
They've just moved up the
ladder.
Remember the leadership of the
states in several cases has
changed sand younger and break
ago way from the traditional
conservative almost passive
defensive approach to power and
feeling the musculature and
challenging more so old
dynamics.
At the same time you have a real
doubling down of monarchies
defending systems.
And there is a tendency
particularly in the west to say
monarchies, old news, gone.
We've done that too back in the
They've become more to
progressive.
They are less tolerant.
Saudi Arabia of various
criticism liberalizing the
social benefits.
It's a mixture of one respect
very liberal regimes and
Christian churches are open.
Jewish centers are open and
various places.
And at the same time oppression.
They are all still pretty
popular.
Chances of remaining are pretty
good.
Snog guaranteed.
But the chances of them
surviving in this form of
government rather they are not
moving to democracy and they are
doubling down on not moving.
And for them the lesson of the
Arab spring is this thing is
awful.
Look what happened when you
pulled down these regimes.
You got chaos and god shed and
all kinds of disruption that is
still going on.
A lot of loss of life and that's
not a pretty picture and we
don't want to go there.
The last thing I would note in
passing is the east countries
are very different protect
ourself each other.
There is a tendency in the to us
see the smaller states as being
very much -- a bunch of guys
running around in bed sheets.
In fact they are very different
from each other.
They have historical differences
with each other.
I won't go through them doesn't
say the notion that they are
similar in how they regard their
citizens and how they work with
each other and how they work
with their own people, to argue
that is the same in each of them
is completely incorrect.
That's a good point.
Let me turn to the relationship
the United States has with Saudi
Arabia as we build up to other
things.
We have a strong defense and
security relationship.
Many have criticized the United
States for overlooking Saudi
Buss and human rights.
Congress passed a resolution to
end involvement in the war in
Yemen.
This was to end human surfing in
Yemen and killing.
Can you give us an inside view
of the U.S. Saudi relationship.
How does it work and how does
our diplomacy balance security
interest with our support for
human rights in this part of the
world?
it's actually a very
difficult balance to strike.
I I has Ron said we're dealing
with political systems, with
systems of government and
society that are different from
hours where the analytic of the
two sides to really understand
one another and to coordinate
and cooperate is limited.
What we have with Saudi Arabia
is a relationship that goes back
to the end of world war to and
in some ways before the end of
World War II that has been built
around two core pillars.
One is energy and recognition of
Saudi Arabia as the paramount
producer of oil in the world.
And therefore a major anchor for
global economic security.
And then the other aspect , the
other pillar is what we have
done with the Saudis over the
course of these past years in
terms of building up Saudi
Arabia's own defense
capabilities and the second
aspect is how we work with the
Saudis to promote regional
security in places like
Afghanistan where we work
closely together all the way
through to the gulf to Syria, to
Iran.
So these have been core
principles at every use
administration has pursued going
all the way back to the
Roosevelt administration,
Republican, democrat, it hasn't
mattered.
We have a stressful situation
right now where we do have some
significant differences.
And those differences reflect
particularly our different views
about the rights of citizens,
the interaction between citizen
and state , the rights
particularly for women, for
other human rights, civil
liberties.
Where this has created real
tension and friction between our
bilateral relationship.
So the question how do awe dress
it?
How do you balance between the
partnership we have preserved
for all of these years against
what has been the fact frommous
peered in our relationship N. my
view and the Obama
administration and trump
administration, we need to look
at what the core U.S. interests
are in the region which are
primarily the stability and
energy pillars and to what
extent or the other do you then
press on these human rights?
My own view is we have not
pressed as much on the human
right side as we should
recently.
We should take the murder more
seriously than we have.
We need to correct that balance.
But I also believe that at the
end of the day we do need to
recognize that preserving a good
strong Saudi U.S. relationship
is important for to us achieve a
broader objective in the region.
I wanted to add a perspective
I got.
Because we tend to be very
certain of our moral recollectty
rectitudewhen we look at a murder.
When I was there.
What I got was wait a minute, we
depend for our security on Saudi
Arabia.
This crown prince is under
taking C.I.A. critical reforms
that are essential for this
stability of the place.
By the way, you go on having
your relations with Russia even
though Putin murders citizens in
various different countries.
Why are you so hung and in
danger of destroying this
relationship and bring us into
danger as well over one killing
here where you tolerate multiple
killings over there.
I don't say that's the view you
should take.
I just put that out there to to
show there are different views
of looking at this thing.
I want to turn to the U.S.
relationship with Iran.
It's been 40 years since the
U.S. hostage taking in Iran.
Since then we've had no official
diplomatic relations and no
embassy in Iran.
Our interest there are
represented by Switzerland.
While there was extensive
contact, most communication
today is done by press
statements and announcements.
You lived in Iran as a younger
officer and also with a director
of the Iran office.
You lived inside the country.
Can you talk a little bit about
how from that perspective with
such limited context how can we
manage our relations?
badly.
it's true.
We tend to look at it
superficially.
As they toned look at us too.
It's a very long period.
There is the debillty that there
are great splits in Iran.
There are people for whom the
revolution key piece of the
revolution is maintaining the
ideological friction.
It creates -- I had a great time
in Iran.
I enjoyed the people.
People who visit Iran find
Iranians far more welcoming to
Americans passing through than
many other states there.
One of the problems with our
relations with Iran is whether
you ought to have relations,
whether you ought to improve the
relations.
Whether that's a good thing.
When you get into negotiations
you have there as you have here
a need to show that you are
really doing something that
works well in order to pacify
your domestic critics.
Since the same situation exists
here, that sets up a situation
in which for each side a
successful negotiation is one in
which they have to show they've
done really well which usually
means the things the other side
can't afford to have you show in
order to pacify their critics.
That's not an impossible
situation as the nuclear
agreement showed.
But it is a very fought
situation in which to hold out
negotiations making it
particularly fraught when you
have an approach that says we'll
tell you what we want add we
don't really need to talk to you
again.
Afterwards you are going to
ask questions about what it was
like to live there.
The U.S. pulled out of the jcpoa
and other party versus remained.
The eu warned they may start
withdrawing from the deal.
This past fall there was a
report the president and
President Trump with the support
of the French president were
moving to an agreement which
included lifting of the U.S.
sanctions in exchange for Iran's
agreement to remain a nonnuclear
weapon state.
What do you think of the
prospects of the U.S. and Iran
getting back to the table?
And if you disagree?
I don't think we can do it on
our own.
I don't believe that the
American government or the Iran
government have any formulas
whereby the two of us can get
there.
It's got to be on a grander
level than just France despite
its glory.
The p5 plus someone probably the
only vehicle around.
Although principle members of
the U.N. security council and eu
trying to gang up on both sides.
Gang up maybe the wrong term.
But providing cover for both
sides to come to the table and
start talking to each other
because frankly I don't believe
that given dynamics that Iran
was describing that there is any
leeway on each side to make the
necessary even cosmetic
concessions that would permit to
us come together and have a
serious conversation.
What would be worse would
approximate coming together with
each side having expectations of
the other and not having them
met and frankly, without going
into too much detail, I think
we're heading for a train wreck
with Iran which could be very
damaging to the world's economy
in the gulf because of what it
would do, what the Iranians
demonstrated they could do in
spades.
I think it behooves us and
perhaps the Iranians to try and
get more international
intervention to make something
work.
I'll take a little bit of
issue with pat and take a
slightly more optimistic view.
And that is if you look at the
Obama policy on Iran and if you
look at the trump policy on
Iran, what you would see are two
policies that were opposed.
The Obama theory of the case
that was effective in the Iran
nuclear deal , the jcpoa was
basically if awe dressed what it
was key international concern
about Iranian behavior and that
was its pursuit of a nuclear
weapons capability, if you put
this place an agreement to
address that, then over time by
bringing Iran into closer
relationship with the
international community,
addressing their economic
concerns, doing other things,
you could then set up the
possibility of getting the
Iranians to address these other
issues that I mentioned earlier
that were also a broad concern
about the missiles, about the
interference, about support for
terrorism.
The trump administration took
basically the opposite view
which was we can't wait, we're
not going to wait for the
Iranians to come around on their
own, they won't do it and the
only way to get them to move on
those issues is to basically
beat them with a stick until
they cry uncle.
The Obama approach would work.
The trump approach clearly has
not worked.
And what we saw with the macron
initiative was an effort to
basically begin the dialogue
again and to bring the U.S. and
Iran together at the table where
they could begin to work through
some of these issues.
I actually think they can do
that.
And it's very clear from both
the position of Donald trump
himself and from what the
Iranians have said that both
sides gingerly are interested in
finding a way to get back to the
table.
Neither of them wants the train
wreck that pat is concerned
about because both sides
recognize that a train wreck
kills a lot of people including
the engineers.
So both sides would like to get
back to the table.
And what -- the period we're in
right now is the maneuvering
between these two sides to
figure out who is going to be
the stronger party when they sit
down at the table.
But I do believe that they will
sit down at the table probably
sometime before our presidential
election next year.
Optimism is free.
Having said that I'm not quite
as optimistic.
I would joust just note two
things.
One is the legacy of suspicion
and distrust.
It's not only an American
legacy.
It's a huge Iranian legacy going
well back into the 50's when we
overthrew an Iranian government.
Something which they never
forget.
I remember my friend who was one
of the hostages and has been a
real advocate of the two
countries working together.
Talking to an Iranian saying you
have to get over that hostage
stuff.
He said yes, I agree, we should.
But never it was answer.
We've had several initiatives of
reaching out and in each case we
walk add way and betrayed
things.
I do not think -- we will see.
You could -- I think what is --
there is a recognition of what
pat was talking about train
wreck possibility.
That's not just Iranians, that's
the Saudis and uae.
On various sides how do we talk
about this and deconflict.
I think it is knock on wood
possible that we will avoid the
ultimate stupidity of war
because there is a recognition
of just how dangerous that is.
And so there is this kind of
tentative reaching outlooking
for ways to low ter temperature
and deconflict.
I am personally very pessimistic
particularly given the long
history and the sense -- Iran
has a sense of we made an
agreement and you walked away
from it.
So what is the point because you
can't trust the northern hold to
an agreement they make anyway.
And when you look at Syria and
other things with this
administration of you can't even
trust them to keep their own
policy straight.
Why get into this.
I'm pessimistic you will get
negotiations.
Some day I think it has to
happen.
Not in the last year before an
election I don't think.
If I could add to defend
myself.
But the one obstacle to a trump
phone conversation in New York
in September it was simple issue
that they were not able to
decide whether or not a U.S.
reductions in sanctions would
come before the call or after
the call.
But the two had agreed to make
the call.
And again you are absolutely
right, I don't think that it
will be an easy negotiation.
We know it was not an easy
negotiation in 2015 either.
But the reality is whether you
like it or not the one thing
that maximum pressure has Dunn
is it has inflicted real
economic pain on Iran.
And therefore they have a strong
incentive try to figure out how
the deal with us in a way to get
sanctions reduction.
And I think -- I don't think
they are going to do it because
they love us.
I don't think they are going to
do it -- but I think ha both
sides will make the decision to
go back to negotiating table
because both sides recognize
that it's in their interest to
do it.
I prefer you to be right.
I'm going to add one thing.
I ran the sanctions team at the
state department.
The last time when we squeezed
Iran, we got very good at
sanctions.
So we had capabilities today
that we didn't have last time
and they were pretty good.
we are very good at
sanctions.
The Iranians say they are
offering graduate courses on how
the avoid American sanctions.
They have more limited capacity
to do that.
We have dug ourself, we and the
Iranians have both dug ourselves
into a public position, Pompeo's
ultimatum to the Iranians
resembles 19 14.
Surrender everything before we
talk to you.
I don't see this administration
easily backing off of it and I
don't see the Iranians trusting
us if we have the conversation
that it will happen.
I remember when we did have the
first reformist Iranian
president in which collectively
in our wisdom we decided if we
were nice to them it wouldn't
work.
We might help them.
This is partly the mind that's
the Iranians are working from
that they see on our side.
We're going to come back here
a year from today and we'll see
who is right.
if I'm right we're not going
to be able to afford gasoline
get here.
We may have to meet in a
bunker.
the United States has a
strong military presence in the
region.
I know several of you have
served in the gulf.
Hosting 5,000 military
personnel, 10,000 approximate
qatar and two bases.
The role of Kuwait international
airport.
We have sent more personnel to
Saudi Arabia and we've launched
a new security initiative
construct in the region to
protect shipping.
Many of the gulf countries are
increasing their own
capabilities as well.
How does had affect power
dynamics in the region and our
U.S. interests?
partly this rush to become
the owners of the biggest
arsenals in the world is meant
to deal with the Iranians.
I think it is a bit of a power
play between the gulf states.
We don't trust each other.
The recent when cutter was
blockaded by the neighbors, they
felt I don't know how much
justification but they convinced
themselves that the only reason
the Saudis weren't coming across
the border is they didn't want
to telegraph their intent by
massing on the border.
What is on the books, Saudi
Arabia is a much larger more
powerful country than qatar.
They see their military as
having two real functions.
Someone deterring an attack by
their neighbors, or long enough
for the Americans to get there.
And secondly dealing with the
potential of the breakdown and
order they talk a lot about
breakdown of orderer in Saudi
Arabia.
Their nightmare would be civil
war in Saudi Arabia if something
happened which is something they
talk about a lot.
I think the uae buildup of
military force is aimed at Iran
and building up the weight in
the gulf cooperation council.
And my experience of the uae has
the same sort of dark look at
Saudi Arabia's own power
pretension.
The Saudis have been chip ago
way at the border for
generations.
I think a very large portion of
that is part of the jockeying
for power between the gulf
states.
You asked particularly about
the military balance and how the
buildup of gulf states changes
that.
The sort answer is very little.
These are fundamentally weak
states who are very aware of
their weakness.
They made a real effort to
expand the quality of its
military to some extent I think
has succeeded and shown a
certain ability for power
projection effectively.
The Saudi military has shown
very poorly.
Went into Yemen and it has
really done badly.
They reminded me of something my
father said to me years ago when
the Soviets went into
Afghanistan and said every
country entitled to the Vietnam
of its choice.
First of all, there are
economically powerful and weak.
They want to exaggerate a lot of
the buildup of supplies but
don't have to use it.
I remember reading once there
was a technique of riding your
camels in a circle to stir up
the dust so the enemy would be
frightened by the size of your
force and you wouldn't have to
fight them.
There is some of that still
going on.
You look at them.
They have enormous dependence on
their decal nation facilities,
on the oil refineries.
These things are all vulnerable
to missile attack.
You can have these societies
crippled quickly in a war really
clear.
And they have small populations.
They can't have a large
military.
They can have a lot of
equipment.
They can hire a certain number
of mercenaries to help them run
it.
But they don't have v the
population base to have a strong
military.
In several cases they've gotten
used to foreigners doing this
stuff.
The Saudis have had several
military experiences including
the first gulf war and none of
them they have shown particular
military greatness.
Less than two million people in
the whole country.
These are fundamentally weak
states.
The bottom line is they can get
more powerful to some extent for
their own protection, not to the
exThant we can use that as a
change in our relationship.
I would say that two critical
developments over the last ten
years that have driven these
decisions, particularly again by
Saudi Arabia and the uae to
build their own internal
security capabilities.
One was the perception rightly
or wrong think perception that
U.S. commitment, U.S. interests
and U.S. willingness to carry
through on our long standing
defense and security umbrella
for the gulf is fading.
And you can go back to the Obama
administration.
You can even go back to the
George H. bush administration
and see a declining level of
interest to the gulf states that
has played out.
The second issue is the collapse
of the traditional Sooni Arab
leadership.
Particular think focus Egypt has
had since 2010.
The collapse of Syria, of Iraq
as pillars of the Sooni Arab
world.
And therefore what you have seen
are two things.
One the rise of the gulf states
and their view that they are now
responsible for leadership in
the Sooni world.
And that is exacerbated or
compounded by the younger
leadership, the more ambitious
leadership that we have.
Therefore as a result of these
two things we've seen two
developments.
Someone they are no longer
relying on the United States.
You see this in turn towards a
more positive, more focused
relations with Russia and China.
But you also see anytime terms
of their decisions they are
going to take on greater
responsibility for their own
security, their own protection
than they did before.
They are not going to wait for
the seventh Calgary to come over
the horizon anymore.
They are going to take that on
themselves.
Now we can talk about whether
they are good at it or not good
at I, it doesn't matter.
The reality is that's a decision
they are making and they are
going to purr site and that has
strong implications in terms of
our own role and
responsibilities in the region
going forward.
If I could add one quick
point the this.
We say we don't need the gulf
because we are an oil exporting
country reenforces this
perception that when the balloon
goes up we're not going to come
for it.
That is nonsense.
I want to wrap up by putting
this in a larger context before
we get to the questions.
What relevance does gulf region
have in the broader geopolitical
competition between the U.S. and
China and the U.S. and Russia?
I'll take a swing at China.
I don't think it has to be part
of the competition.
China is very dependent on the
gulf.
I forget the numbers.
the gulf.
If there is one country for whom
a major war in the gulf would be
catastrophic to their economy
it's China and I'm speechless at
the Chinese refuse toll get
involved.
Maybe it's their whole political
history in modern times.
They don't want to get involved.
They have sort of vent to
sanctions are a blockade to oil.
They have the most to lose and
they are not doing anything.
I don't think they are looking
for any confrontation.
I don't believe that the Chinese
see themselves moving into the
gulf.
Vladimir Putin is a guy who
has played a weak hand very,
very well.
Russia does not have thisth
economic or the military or the
diplomatic capacity to really
challenge the United States and
the region.
But he is a past master at
identifying vacuums and figuring
out how Russia can move in.
And he is somebody who has a
vision of Russia as a great
power who believes that Russia
by dent of its great power
status should have a seat at the
table when all of these
political and security issues
are debated in the Middle East.
He's going to do that.
At the end of the day he is not
our competition.
The competition ha the U.S. has
in terms of the great powers is
China.
China is eating our lunch
economically.
They are becoming increasingly
the number one economic partner
for the gulf states.
That's going to continue.
I agree with pat that the
Chinese are perfectly willing to
let us take on the hard issues
of security and stability in the
region while they focus on
building their economic
relations and prospering through
the relationships with the gulf
states.
But I think that is also
changing.
I don't think it's an distant
the only two -- an distant the
only two naval facilities China
has outside China are Pakistan
and in the horn of Africa
because they understand their
security and their economic
survival depends on access
through those waterways to the
energy and also to the export
markets.
there are no Chinese military
forces there.
they have the capability.
There is nothing stationed
there.
But they have the capability of
using it for military.
They are gingerly moving into
some of these more aggressive
positions.
But you are right that what they
want to do is they want to us
take the headaches and let them
take the money.
I do think what you are
seeing is overall a less stable
world.
I agree with my colleagues that
the gulf states are less secure
in their relationship with us
and they are therefore looking
elsewhere and in particular the
Russians.
The problem is they are looking
to their own defenses building
them.
these are policies which they
feel they are forced to because
they can't rely on the
relationship they had with us.
But they are not able to
supplant that relationship.
The Russians will sell them arms
but they are not going to come
to their defense.
Their own defense capabilities
for all the equipment remain
weak.
So what you have is a
relationship where we're not
quite backing away.
We got a lot of troops there.
But they are unsure of us and
it's not clear what we're
actually prepared to do.
Building up their arsenals
without the real capacity to to
deter the people they are most
worried about.
When you have that altogether
you have a less secure region
and more dangerous one.
When you have the solid U.S.
relationship, clumsy as it might
often have been, everybody knew
where you were.
Therefore you didn't mess with
it.
Now you have one that is very
shaky and uncertain and that has
room for mistakes.
we will now turn to
questions.
thanks so much for being
here.
I'll be giving you your first
question.
How do you see the increased
wave of protest impacting the
Iranian regime.
These are the current ones.
you want to predict future.
This is really tough.
they are posing threats.
The regime is incredibly ware of
the danger of these riots.
You are seeing the fact there
are social cracks after these
years since the Iran revolution.
I personally doubt this period
will lead to that much change.
I think if there is one lesson
that the older leaders of the
revolution really learned from
the revolution itself, it was
how they gained strength as the
shaw vacillate.
You had a period during the
revolution where the shah had
put down.
demonstrations and then he would
not always.
And move back and forth.
As he vacillated, the
demonstrations got bigger and
bigger.
If there is any lesson which I
think the older revolutionary
leaders have carried away, it is
not to make the mistake of the
shah.
I believe they will put these
eye riots down.
They have a lot of force but
don't have leadership.
The revolution had leadership in
the wings ready to come forth
and take hold.
I don't think they have it.
I think you have something that
is very interesting.
It shows you how much
dissatisfaction there is.
Whether or not after this you
get something else, but I don't
believe these riots themselves
are going to lead tie lot of
change real quick.
I would say I agree
completely with that.
The absence of a coherent or
popular Iranian revolutionary
presence abroad.
Right now the United States is
chose on the support probably
the single most hated Iranian
exile organization as the
substitute.
I think I saw something today
which said they have already
killed about 100 demonstrators
in Iran.
I agree completely with Ron they
are going to do whatever they
need to do to stop the
demonstrations.
They have been very clear.
What you need to remember is
that the methodology that Assad
has used in sir y he was taught
by the Iranians.
That is the irgc that went into
Syria and really helped the shah
use the extreme measures that
he's used in order to stop the
Syrian uprising.
The riots in Iraq have much
more potential for political
change but that was not the
question.
thank you again for being
here.
I am a , Jr. in the Ford school
undergraduate program.
The next question we have for
you is how do U.S. relations in
the gulf interact with U.S.
relations with Israel in
particular how do U.S. Saudi
relations with the U.S.
involvement with Saudi Arabia in
Yemen impact Israel?
there was a theory in the
trump administration that
because the Israelis and the
gulf -- an opportunity actually
push forward this idea of what
is outside in.
You could get gulf states to
take steps to normalize the
relationship with Israel on this
basis and to open diplomatic
relations to do all the other
steps regardless of where the
Israelis were in their
negotiations with the
Palestinians.
I think what eve seenover the
past couple of years is that
expectation, that idea was
vastly exaggerated.
And that while the two sides
there, is no doubt that quietly
under the table Israelis and
gulf Arabs are working much more
closely together, that the gulf
states are more willing to be
open about the nature of some of
their relationships,
particularly on the security
side than they were in the past,
nevertheless, nevertheless there
is a cap on how farther going to
be willing to go in the absence
of some movement towards a
resolution of the Palestinian
issue and particularly the what
is called the abrailroad peace
initiative which is basically
full normalization between
Israel and the Arab world in
exchange for a two state
solution, Palestinian state with
east Jerusalem as its capitol.
This is the position.
It is still position.
And I think that the reality is
that unless there is something
that addresses Palestinian
requirements, you are not going
to see the gulf states go beyond
the.
if I could add one point.
I've seen this movie before in
the course of my career.
There have been I can think of
three historical instance when
is American policy beginning
with the mom tear sen toe aligns
that led to the overthrow of the
monarchy in Iraq where we were
going get Israel and the further
Arab states against the Soviet
union.
We tried et a couple more times.
Hague was building a trying to
build a aligns against -- I
forget if it was Soviet union or
Iran at this point.
Soviet union with the gulf
states.
So we've done this.
We've done had several times.
We think that we have no memory
so it's a fresh idea.
Exactly.
next question.
next question for you.
What are the most effective
strategies for combating Iranian
backed groups in the Middle
East?
since we haven't seen one yet
it's hard to know what it will
be.
we're doing our best to fix
the problem so you dry up the
swamp in which they dwell.
if you try deal with them
directly, this is their turf,
they know their turf, they know
how the survive in that turf.
If progress on the Palestinian
issue.
I don't even know how the deal
with Iraq.
I couldn't begin at this moment
the suggest how we deal the
Iraqis.
The Iranians have gotten a
lot of power in Iraq.
But the Iranians are not well
liked.
And Americans are often make the
mistake of thinking because they
are if I rack therefore somehow
they are close to the Iranians.
They forget eight years of the
Iran Iraq war with thousands of
people killed.
They never changed sides.
They never went over against
their own government.
When I served in Iraq after our
invasion, you could -- it was
not good for you if you were an
Iraq can I politician to be seen
as too close to the Iranians.
Now you are getting a lot of
push back.
The Iranians do best this Iraq
when the country unstable.
Because then they can work with
different power centers for
their own interests.
They always had the risk that a
stable Iraq would be a threat to
Iran again as it was back to the
battle so this is a not new
thing.
We keep reminding you things are
not so new.
Right now they have a -- I think
one can say that some things --
things one should not do are
clearer.
Right now when you have a lot of
backlash against Iranian
pressure is a good time for to
us kind of shut up and sit down
and not to be very heavily
involved.
Kind of consult quietly with
people.
You have a very volatile
politics.
You have some things going in
the direction we kind of like.
So don't try -- we have a desire
usually to do something.
This is one of those places
where you are much better off
right now watch it golf you may
see an opportunity to do
something useful.
But don't assume you have to do
something.
one quick point.
Just to set at rest this
question of Iranian shia control
over Iraq.
Looking at theological terms.
Require ace certain
historical perspective to know
what you are talking about.
if I can just add the
experience in Yemen and I think
it kind of sharp Tennessee point
en the pointthat Ron and pat were making
that they've been able to
establish relations to work, to
build aen lines, relationships,
Israeli unique to that set of
circumstances.
In the case of Yemen where you
have the hooties.
Yes they have a relationship
with Iran.
Yes they have exploited that
relationship and the Iranians
have exploited the relationship
in order to achieve an object
they've they have which is to
stress and put pressure on Saudi
Arabia.
But nevertheless the issues that
are unique to the conflict that
is goingen in no one Yemen right
now are issues that are internal
to Yemen.
They are not fighting because
they are partners or proxies of
Iran.
They are fighting because of
their circumstances in Yemen.
And the best thing that we can
do to the exThant we can do it
is to help resolve those
internal issues.
If you deny the Iranians the
vacuum that they have been very
successful at exploiting, then
you can deny them the air they
need to develop these
relationships.
And that is true I think with
Iraq, in Lebanon and it's
absolutely flew Yemen.
the basic point that
underlies all of these is you
have to actually know something.
And you have to pay attention to
the different situations and the
differences and you can't do
this on the basis of kind of two
dimensional policy and sound
bytes about Iran which is where
we carry out our public
discussion.
You have to know about
Canterbury.
we'll go to the next
question.
we have a question turning
towards combating terrorism.
Can the Arab coalition of states
be trusted to combat terrorism
in line with U.S. and global
geopolitical interests?
maybe sometimes no.
Mostly no.
it depends on -- I think that
the Saudis were good partners
for us in fighting against Al
Qaeda and the Arabian peninsula.
We had a lot of success.
There was one particular
instance you may or may not
remember called the cartridge
bomb attempt in 2010.
Where there was an attempt to
smuggle explosives on board an
airplane in printer cartridges.
We would not have known about
that.
We would not have caught on to
that had it not been for Saudi
intelligence and their tipping
us offnd the British off about
this plot.
So there have been instances
where in fact they were
extremely important partners for
us.
Saudi policy has on occasion
exacerbated terrorist threats
and Mayed made it more difficult
for to us deal, Libya being a
good example.
How does turkey and the
president fit into the equation?
badly.
turkey has a lot of it own
agenda.
It's feeling its oats as it's
moved into Syria.
Turkey has end in certain areas.
It's helped combat extreme
movements.
At the same time many parts of
Syria you have turkey being
quite tolerant of movements with
the Islamic state because the
turks are worried about other
things.
They are far more worried about
Kurdish terrorism than the
Islamic state.
If helping works, they'll help.
But if helping gets us gets
crossways with where they see a
stronger threat and interest,
then they are not so helpful.
Turks also are really feeling
their oats on an expansion of
their influence.
This is like policy 2.0 because
they had same same view after
the breakup with the central
union.
The lift was way heavier than
they had capacity to undertake.
Now they are kind of trying some
of that again.
And again I think they are going
to find that their am -- their
reach I think exceeds their
grasp.
I would add there is an
internal dynamic.
He came to power how many years
now.
His first 7 or 8 years in power
were fantastic.
The best ruler, best leader of
modern turkey you could imagine.
He did bring an enormous
difference for turkey.
Some place along the line, he
has had problems.
The problems reflect themselves
in election results, local
election versus not gone well
for him.
And like most guys who -- like
most leaders who want to stay in
power an occasional foreign
adventure is not a bad thing
properly managed.
Your comments at the
beginning you commented on the
potential of some sort of
movement or lack of potential
for movement in Iranian U.S.
relations.
I'm wondering what does recent
rise in tensions between Israel
and Iran mark bedty Israeli air
force strikes against targets in
Syria a couple of days ago
suggest about Iranian ambitions
in Syria and what is the risk of
this turn into a larger conflict
and impacting the potential for
change?
this is one of those places
where I don't believe that the
two countries really have annexo
essential view of the other as a
threat.
I think a lot of this is Iran
trying to maintain its controls
or its influence in Syria.
And in large mart is Israeli
domestic politics because it's
really use to feel have the
Iranians as the boogie man
sitting out there.
I think this is more of a hype
inside the United States and
domesticically in both
countries, hype rather than -- I
don't think either country wants
to have a war with the other.
there is no doubt that the
Iranians were far more invested
in the survival of the saA sad
and his regime than the Russians
are.
That for Iran Assad is an
important partner.
Access to Lebanon through Syria
is incredibly important.
I think for their own reasons.
The Iranians see the ability to
expand their military
partnership with his Bo La in
Syria as well as Lebanon is use
informal personals of
threatening Israel.
The Israelis have responded.
I think interesting something
the Israeli versus responded
extremely aggressively against
Iranian presence.
They have gone after the Iranian
arms depos.
They have killed a number of
Iranians in Syria.
It's one of those situations
where the two sides have decide
this is a game they are going to
play and keep it confined to
this particular battleground and
not allow it to spill out into
other kinds of conflict.
thank you.
How does current state of
U.S. Iran relations affect U.S.
diplomatic efforts in the
country to Iran's east
Afghanistan?
what is happening in
Afghanistan , the Iranians were
initially quite supportive of
intervention in Afghanistan.
There is a big difference in the
way they look at Afghanistan.
Iraq is a historic threat to
Iran.
The shah years ago, every year
the troops had an annual
military exercise where they
exercised on the basis of the
Iraqi invasion of Iran pushing
Iraqis back.
Afghanistan is not a strategic
threat.
They get nervous about us.
This were very helpful in the
negotiations in putting
government in place in
Afghanistan.
I think I had probably the last
meeting with the Iranians in
Afghanistan up until 2005ment
Ted last such meeting that was
ordered to suspend them because
we wanted to put pressure on
them about nuclear weapons.
I argued with secretary rice
that was a bad decision and I
lost.
She was boss.
Anyway they remained fairly
supportive.
Very nervous about when we put
troops to their border.
But otherwise supportive.
They became belligerent
pushening to Afghans.
But now the kicker is that they
are very concerned about two
things.
Someone the growth of the
Islamic state presence in
Afghanistan.
And the other is the perception
that we're not going to hold up
our continued involvement in
Afghanistan.
And they can't -- the situation
is going to get worse.
So from their point of view ,
the greater danger between
Taliban and Islamic state is the
Islamic state.
If that means they need to warm
up their relations with the
Taliban this order to prepare
for the expected panic departure
of the U.S. and collapse of
Afghanistan, that's what they
are doing.
You have a warming of relations
between Iranians and the Taliban
as you have between the Russians
and the Taliban.
And in both cases it is premised
on the two perceptions Islamic
state is a bigger threat and I
can't trust Americans to hold up
their end in Afghanistan.
They are going to walk out and
leave chaos and I got to have
friends.
turning to humanitarian
issues.
How concerned should we be about
the human cost of sanction on
Iran for ordinary Iranian
civilians?
how much we should be or how
much are?
should be?
if you are looking at it from
a purely moral and ethical point
of view.
It's a little bit like our
sanctions on Iraq up to the 2003
war in which we frankly -- we
took a position that the
humanitarian crisis that we
created in Iraq it was fault of
Saddam Hugh sane and tried to
sell that domesticically.
I don't think we managed to sell
it.
If we try and sell the same
story in Iran, I don't think
it's going to be sold.
The human -- there was always
been a bit of humanitarian
crisis.
We've aggravated the
humanitarian crisis in Iran.
We with a few exceptions I think
the Iran government will do a
good job of convincing the
Iranian people it's the
American's fault.
That's an important point.
One the official U.S. position
is that we are not interested in
punishing the Iranian people.
We are interested in putting
pressure on the regime.
The reality is the opposite.
That in fact the weight of U.S.
sanctions is falling on the
common people.
And as Ron said earlier and my
wife used to lead tourist in
Iran, I told her to stop.
She said that the Americans on
her tours were always amazed
about the warmth Torre acception
that they got.
The fact that the common Iranian
people liked Americans.
And they liked America.
And they felt as though were it
not for the political
differences that they would be
able to have a good relationship
with us.
The risk that we run is that we
are changing that perception and
that we're building opposition.
We're building anger against the
United States among the Iranian
population.
And that's going to do two
things.
One is it's going to strengthen
the regime because it means the
as pat said the regime can say
it's not us, we're not the
reason that the economy is
collapsing.
We're not the reason that your
life is so difficult.
It's because of those Americans.
And the second thing is that
when the day comes and it will
come that we would like to
normalize the relationship with
Iran, that we would like to get
back to business with Iran, that
there is going to be popular
resistance within Iran to doing
that, that is going to make it
much harder to achieve our
objectives.
Let me add a comment on
sanctions.
Sanctions are an effective tool
if you outline cheerily behavior
that you want to change.
In the current long list of
sanks on Iran and I'm not an
expert on Iran, there is no
desired behavior that is
enunciated.
We don't have a clear policy of
what we want them to do other
than denuclearize generally F.
you outline the behavior.
Let me add another point N. fine
tuning, we're able to allow
exceptions and to allow certain
things to go through etc.
But the intent is really for the
behavior of a state to change.
The trump administration as I
just said has not enunciated
when it wants to achieve.
So the pressure felt,
politically it is played up
domesticically.
And the longer they run , the
harder they hit.
there is even.
I take the same point and
take it further.
The deepest lack of clarity and
this has been true for several
administrations.
Not just this one.
Is whether policy is about
change in behavior or regime
overthrow.
As long and we send mixed
signals.
As long as the belief a
possibility that what our policy
is ability is regime change,
then there is no reason to make
the concessions necessary
because you are just weakening
yourself, you are setting
yourself up for the next round.
The concessions which we say we
want in sanctions on behavior,
it really only makes sense even
if you wanted to have that
agreement if you believe that is
what the Americans are really
about.
It's not about regime change.
And the way we talk about leaves
you very uncertain of what the
policy is or what the policy
will be tomorrow.
Some sanctions are very
targeted.
When we sanctioned some Russians
in the context of cyber, it's
very targeted.
Like stop hitting us, we're
going to sanction and then we'll
use more offensive ways to cyber
come.
Any other questions?
last question.
between this and cocktail
time.
What is your at vice on how
students interested in Middle
East diplomacy can best prepare
to succeed?
With all of your years of
wisdom.
I tried the first which is
succeed at what you are doing
right now.
Come out of here, do well in
school.
And then just get to know as
much as you can about the Middle
East.
There are no magic formula.
It's a well educated person who
has educated himself on the
region, who has a real interest,
you need start developing a
visceral interest in the area.
And that's the best way to
prepare for itful?
did you choose it or stumble
into it?
I stumbled.
Most of my life I've stumbled
into things and I stumbled into
this.
this one I chose.
I had three months in
graduate school before I joined
the military.
I went to visit my parents in
Afghanistan and that's where I
began.
We could all pontificate for
hours up here and that would
really delay the cocktail.
You'll never be fully expert.
You have to recognize what a
colleague told me going to one
post, you will never understand
country as clearly as on the day
arrive.
Because you think you have a
perception, you get into the
details, you learn more and
more, it gets harder and harder
to make simple bottom line
judgments.
Recognize this is a lifetime
business.
Not to be discouraged.
Understand that you come out of
here with is a basis on which to
go forth and learn.
It is not a basis of knowledge
sufficient to already proclaim
how things ought to be.
So prepare yourself that the
history, these are countries
which have an enormous sense of
history.
And this is often impedestrian
Tom them.
It's really hard to go forward
when you spend a lot of time
looking backwards.
You need understand the history.
You need to understand where
people are copping from.
Then you go and learn to listen.
And my old boss the late
Saunders who was involved in
negotiations and other things
who really had an understanding
of the psychological dimensions
of negotiations as well.
And he had a saying which was
listen deeply enough to be
changed by what you hear.
And it's an enormously important
point of both scholarship and
diplomacy.
If you want to get other people
to do things your way and like
it, you have to know what their
way is.
As well as the history and
knowledge having a certain
amount of humility and learning
to listen and spend a lot of
time listening is a good thing
to learn.
very early on had to make a
choice between studying Russian
and Arabic.
And I realized if I was going to
study either of these languages
and spend next 15 to 25 years of
my life in that part of the
world, I like lamb better than I
like cabbage.
On that note.
I want to thank you and thank
the audience.
[applause]
outside we'll have a
reception.
I don't believe we're serving
cabbage.
There may be lamb.
One more round of thanks for
this wonderful panel.
[applause]