In this Stratfor article Friedman again returns to Iran and the shirting balance of power in its immediate neighborhood due to the American withdrawal from Iraq. In the article he concentrates on the importance of the events in Syria in determining just how far Iran might be able to extend its influence.
Put simply, if Assad manages to retain power in Syria then Iran should be able to extend its influence across a band of territory stretching from the Indian Ocean to the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. 
Friedman argues that the obvious blocking move, although it might be very difficult to achieve, would be for the Assad regime to be overthrown and Syria moved back into the Sunni camp. This would block Iran's westward reach and I think also put Hezbollah and Hamas both in precarious positions since they would be cut off from direct Iranian supply routes.
As an aside, and with the caveat that Friedman is a professional analyst while I am but a dilettante, I do wonder if he is overestimating the influence Iran would have over Iraq? Geo-politically Iran and Ira are natural and long time rivals. Surely the Iraqi government would realize that there was room, and profit, in using its position to play Iran against the U.S. and Saudis.
Regardless, the Hot Stratfor Babe proved to be a difficult choice this week. I ground through a number of Syrian actresses, but none of them were of much interest, so I ended up selecting the Egyptian model, actress and pop singer Roubi (sometimes called Ruby). I first ran across her when I read she had been banned from performing in Syria because of her skimpy costumes that were a bad influence on Islamic youth, etc., etc., etc.
If you doubt my dedication in choosing the finest in Hot Stratfor Babes, to pick the bonus video required me to listen to a large number of her pop songs. While her belly dance inspired dancing was, uh... interesting, let's just say the songs made me retract most of the bad things I've ever said about Lady Gaga's talent. 
At any rate the bonus video is her singing a somewhat tolerable song over scenes from some movie she was in. And yea, I can see why some bearded Moslem cleric who prefers his women dressed in head to toe garbage bags would be offended by her.  
Syria, Iran and the Balance of Power in the Middle East
By George Friedman, November 22,2011
U.S. troops are in the process of completing their withdrawal from Iraq  by the end-of-2011 deadline. We are now moving toward a reckoning with  the consequences. The reckoning concerns the potential for a massive  shift in the balance of power in the region, with Iran moving from a  fairly marginal power to potentially a dominant power. As the process  unfolds, the United States and Israel are making countermoves. We have  discussed all of this extensively. Questions remain whether these  countermoves will stabilize the region and whether or how far Iran will  go in its response.
 Iran has been preparing for the U.S. withdrawal. While it is unreasonable simply to say that Iran will dominate Iraq, it is fair to say Tehran will have tremendous influence in Baghdad  to the point of being able to block Iraqi initiatives Iran opposes.  This influence will increase as the U.S. withdrawal concludes and it  becomes clear there will be no sudden reversal in the withdrawal policy.  Iraqi politicians’ calculus must account for the nearness of Iranian  power and the increasing distance and irrelevance of American power.
Resisting Iran under these conditions likely would prove ineffective and dangerous. Some, like the Kurds, believe they have guarantees from the Americans  and that substantial investment in Kurdish oil by American companies  means those commitments will be honored. A look at the map, however,  shows how difficult it would be for the United States to do so. The  Baghdad regime has arrested Sunni leaders while the Shia, not all of  whom are pro-Iranian by any means, know the price of overenthusiastic  resistance.
Syria and Iran
The situation in Syria complicates all of this. The minority Alawite sect has dominated the Syrian government  since 1970, when the current president’s father — who headed the Syrian  air force — staged a coup. The Alawites are a heterodox Muslim sect  related to a Shiite offshoot and make up about 7 percent of the  country’s population, which is mostly Sunni. The new Alawite government  was Nasserite in nature, meaning it was secular, socialist and built  around the military. When Islam rose as a political force in the Arab  world, the Syrians — alienated from the Sadat regime in Egypt — saw Iran  as a bulwark. The Iranian Islamist regime gave the Syrian secular  regime immunity against Shiite fundamentalists in Lebanon. The Iranians  also gave Syria support in its external adventures in Lebanon, and more  important, in its suppression of Syria’s Sunni majority.
Syria and Iran were particularly aligned in Lebanon. In the early  1980s, after the Khomeini revolution, the Iranians sought to increase  their influence in the Islamic world by supporting radical Shiite  forces. Hezbollah was one of these. Syria had invaded Lebanon in 1975 on  behalf of the Christians and opposed the Palestine Liberation  Organization, to give you a sense of the complexity. Syria regarded  Lebanon as historically part of Syria, and sought to assert its  influence over it. Via Iran, Hezbollah became an instrument of Syrian  power in Lebanon.
Iran and Syria, therefore, entered a long-term if not altogether stable alliance  that has lasted to this day. In the current unrest in Syria, the Saudis  and Turks in addition to the Americans all have been hostile to the  regime of President Bashar al Assad. Iran is the one country that on the  whole has remained supportive of the current Syrian government.
There is good reason for this. Prior to the uprising, the precise  relationship between Syria and Iran was variable. Syria was able to act  autonomously in its dealings with Iran and Iran’s proxies in Lebanon.  While an important backer of groups like Hezbollah, the al Assad regime  in many ways checked Hezbollah’s power in Lebanon, with the Syrians  playing the dominant role there. The Syrian uprising has put the al  Assad regime on the defensive, however, making it more interested in a  firm, stable relationship with Iran. Damascus finds itself isolated in  the Sunni world, with Turkey and the Arab League against it. Iran — and  intriguingly, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki — have constituted al  Assad’s exterior support.
Thus far al Assad has resisted his enemies. Though some mid- to  low-ranking Sunnis have defected, his military remains largely intact;  this is because the Alawites control key units. Events in Libya  drove home to an embattled Syrian leadership — and even to some of its  adversaries within the military — the consequences of losing. The  military has held together, and an unarmed or poorly armed populace, no  matter how large, cannot defeat an intact military force. The key for  those who would see al Assad fall is to divide the military.
If al Assad survives — and at the moment, wishful thinking by  outsiders aside, he is surviving — Iran will be the big winner. If Iraq  falls under substantial Iranian influence, and the al Assad regime —  isolated from most countries but supported by Tehran — survives in  Syria, then Iran could emerge with a sphere of influence stretching from  western Afghanistan to the Mediterranean (the latter via Hezbollah).  Achieving this would not require deploying Iranian conventional forces —  al Assad’s survival alone would suffice. However, the prospect of a  Syrian regime beholden to Iran would open up the possibility of the  westward deployment of Iranian forces, and that possibility alone would  have significant repercussions.
 
  
Consider the map were this sphere of influence to exist. The northern  borders of Saudi Arabia and Jordan would abut this sphere, as would  Turkey’s southern border. It remains unclear, of course, just how well  Iran could manage this sphere, e.g., what type of force it could project  into it. Maps alone will not provide an understanding of the problem.  But they do point to the problem. And the problem is the potential — not  certain — creation of a block under Iranian influence that would cut  through a huge swath of strategic territory.
It should be remembered that in addition to Iran’s covert network of  militant proxies, Iran’s conventional forces are substantial. While they  could not confront U.S. armored divisions and survive, there are no  U.S. armored divisions on the ground between Iran and Lebanon. Iran’s  ability to bring sufficient force to bear in such a sphere increases the risks to the Saudis  in particular. Iran’s goal is to increase the risk such that Saudi  Arabia would calculate that accommodation is more prudent than  resistance. Changing the map can help achieve this. [continued after the jump]
It follows that those frightened by this prospect — the United  States, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Turkey — would seek to stymie it. At  present, the place to block it no longer is Iraq, where Iran already has  the upper hand. Instead, it is Syria. And the key move in Syria is to  do everything possible to bring about al Assad’s overthrow.
In the last week, the Syrian unrest appeared to take on a new  dimension. Until recently, the most significant opposition activity  appeared to be outside of Syria, with much of the resistance reported in  the media coming from externally based opposition groups. The degree of  effective opposition was never clear. Certainly, the Sunni majority  opposes and hates the al Assad regime. But opposition and emotion do not  bring down a regime consisting of men fighting for their lives. And it  wasn’t clear that the resistance was as strong as the outside propaganda  claimed.
Last week, however, the Free Syrian Army — a group of Sunni defectors  operating out of Turkey and Lebanon — claimed defectors carried out  organized attacks on government facilities, ranging from an air force  intelligence facility (a particularly sensitive point given the history  of the regime) to Baath Party buildings in the greater Damascus area.  These were not the first attacks claimed by the FSA, but they were  heavily propagandized in the past week. Most significant about the  attacks is that, while small-scale and likely exaggerated, they revealed  that at least some defectors were willing to fight instead of defecting  and staying in Turkey or Lebanon.
It is interesting that an apparent increase in activity from armed  activists — or the introduction of new forces — occurred at the same  time relations between Iran on one side and the United States and Israel  on the other were deteriorating. The deterioration began with charges  that an Iranian covert operation to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the United States  had been uncovered, followed by allegations by the Bahraini government  of Iranian operatives organizing attacks in Bahrain. It proceeded to an  International Atomic Energy Agency report on Iran’s progress toward a  nuclear device, followed by the Nov. 19 explosion at an Iranian missile  facility that the Israelis have not-so-quietly hinted was their work.  Whether any of these are true, the psychological pressure on Iran is  building and appears to be orchestrated.
Of all the players in this game, Israel’s position is the most  complex. Israel has had a decent, albeit covert, working relationship  with the Syrians going back to their mutual hostility toward Yasser  Arafat. For Israel, Syria has been the devil they know. The idea of a  Sunni government controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood on their  northeastern frontier was frightening; they preferred al Assad. But  given the shift in the regional balance of power, the Israeli view is  also changing. The Sunni Islamist threat has weakened in the past decade  relative to the Iranian Shiite threat. Playing things forward, the  threat of a hostile Sunni force in Syria is less worrisome than an  emboldened Iranian presence on Israel’s northern frontier. This explains  why the architects of Israel’s foreign policy, such as Defense Minister  Ehud Barak, have been saying that we are seeing an “acceleration toward  the end of the regime.” Regardless of its preferred outcome, Israel  cannot influence events inside Syria. Instead, Israel is adjusting to a  reality where the threat of Iran reshaping the politics of the region  has become paramount.
Iran is, of course, used to psychological campaigns. We continue to  believe that while Iran might be close to a nuclear device that could  explode underground under carefully controlled conditions, its ability  to create a stable, robust nuclear weapon that could function outside a  laboratory setting (which is what an underground test is)  is a ways off. This includes being able to load a fragile experimental  system on a delivery vehicle and expecting it to explode. It might. It  might not. It might even be intercepted and create a casus belli for a  counterstrike.
The main Iranian threat is not nuclear. It might become so, but even without nuclear weapons, Iran remains a threat.  The current escalation originated in the American decision to withdraw  from Iraq and was intensified by events in Syria. If Iran abandoned its  nuclear program tomorrow, the situation would remain as complex. Iran  has the upper hand, and the United States, Israel, Turkey and Saudi  Arabia all are looking at how to turn the tables.
At this point, they appear to be following a two-pronged strategy:  Increase pressure on Iran to make it recalculate its vulnerability, and  bring down the Syrian government to limit the consequences of Iranian  influence in Iraq. Whether the Syrian regime can be brought down is  problematic. Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi would have survived if NATO hadn’t  intervened. NATO could intervene in Syria, but Syria is more complex  than Libya. Moreover, a second NATO attack on an Arab state designed to  change its government would have unintended consequences, no matter how  much the Arabs fear the Iranians at the moment. Wars are unpredictable;  they are not the first option.
Therefore the likely solution is covert support for the Sunni  opposition funneled through Lebanon and possibly Turkey and Jordan. It  will be interesting to see if the Turks participate. Far more  interesting will be seeing whether this works. Syrian intelligence has  penetrated its Sunni opposition effectively for decades. Mounting a  secret campaign against the regime would be difficult, and its success  by no means assured. Still, that is the next move.
But it is not the last move. To put Iran back into its box, something  must be done about the Iraqi political situation. Given the U.S.  withdrawal, Washington has little influence there. All of the  relationships the United States built were predicated on American power  protecting the relationships. With the Americans gone, the foundation of  those relationships dissolves. And even with Syria, the balance of  power is shifting.
The United States has three choices. Accept the evolution and try to  live with what emerges. Attempt to make a deal with Iran — a very  painful and costly one. Or go to war. The first assumes Washington can  live with what emerges. The second depends on whether Iran is interested  in dealing with the United States. The third depends on having enough  power to wage a war and to absorb Iran’s retaliatory strikes,  particularly in the Strait of Hormuz. All are dubious, so toppling al  Assad is critical. It changes the game and the momentum. But even that  is enormously difficult and laden with risks.
We are now in the final act of Iraq, and it is even more painful than imagined. Laying this alongside the European crisis makes the idea of a systemic crisis in the global system very real.
Syria, Iran and the Balance of Power in the Middle East is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

 
 
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