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It’s Cool To Be Non-Aligned
A Blast From the Past: The Non-Aligned Movement
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: The
US Loses Another Policeman in Africa
This week’s
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) conference in Tehran brought nostalgic
memories of the Cold War and world-bestriding leaders like Nehru,
Nasser, Castro, Nkrumah, and Sukarno. However, most of them were
disasters for their nations, but they certainly were colorful and
interesting.
In spite of
intense efforts by the US and Israel to deter attendance at the
Tehran meeting – backed by a wave of western media attacks on the
conclave – over 150 nations and international bodies attended.
This big turnout
marked a major failure by Washington to further tighten its siege
of Iran. Of particular note was the presence of India’s prime minister,
Manmohan Singh. India refused to bow to US pressure to boycott the
event and announced future energy, trade and transport deals with
Tehran.
Iran plays
a key role in India’s plans to expand its influence over Afghanistan
and Central Asia. India is building a new, strategic rail line linking
the Iranian port of Chahbahar to western Afghanistan. Iran supplies
over 11% of India’s fast-growing demand for energy. Delhi increasingly
worries about the security of its Mideast energy imports.
As I wrote
a decade ago in my first book, War
at the Top of the World, the US and India may one day become
rivals for Mideast oil and gas resources – and, indeed, for control
of the Gulf. India’s refusal to go along with US policy further
underlines the gradual shift to Asia of the world’s center of strategic
and economic gravity.
To Washington’s
further annoyance, Egypt’s new president, Mohammed Morsi, shrugged
off threats of a cut in US aid and flew to Tehran. Under the 30-year
Mubarak dictatorship, Egypt had been a bulwark against Iran. But
no more. The increasingly assertive, independent Morsi made clear
that Egypt would follow its own foreign policy interests rather
than those of the US and Israel, as in the past.
Morsi has surprised
just about everyone. When he stumbled into power earlier this year
he was regarded as a plodding nobody, selected by the all-powerful
military to do its bidding and not make trouble. The Muslim Brotherhood
leader, a former space engineer, threw off his cloak of humility
and quickly proceeded to muzzle Egypt’s bullying US-backed military,
the key to US domination of Egypt for the past 40 years.
How Morsi pulled
this off without facing a military coup remains a mystery. But he
certainly had the backing of most Egyptians. It took Turkey’s Islamist
Lite government a decade to push the swaggering generals back to
their barracks and bring real democracy.
The Egyptian
leader stunned everyone by openly blasting the Syrian regime of
Bashar Assad, calling for its replacement by an elected, democratic
government. Egyptian intervention in the bloody Syrian conflict
may help pave a way to a peaceful settlement. It could also rekindle
ancient Egyptian-Syrian rivalry for leadership of the Arab world.
In spite of
issuing dulcet banalities about Egypt’s turn to democracy, Washington
is extremely unhappy with Egypt’s newly elected government. Egypt
will no longer be a discreet defender and ally of Israel, as under
Mubarak, but a rival power that genuinely demands a Palestinian
state and sees no reason to confront Iran or other US foes.
The US is responding
to Egypt’s newfound independence by muttering about cuts to its
annual $1.3 billion donations to Egypt’s military and millions more
in secret payments. However, the Saudis and Gulf Arabs are lending
cash-strapped Cairo $3 billion and the US-run IMF another $4.8 billion
in loans. Interestingly, President Morsi just visited China where
he received pledges of aid.
In
past years, most non-aligned conferences, whose objective was to
find a middle way between the West and Soviet Empire, produced only
hot air, often quite anti-American. As America’s world power declines
after the loss of two wars and deep recession, the NAM meeting in
Tehran maybe a step, albeit small, towards moving away from today’s
unipolar world towards a more balanced, equitable international
system.
Iran’s supreme
leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei loosed a Parthian Shaft at
the summit’s end. He called the United Nations Security Council
outdated, unbalanced, and an instrument of the western powers. Khamenei
called for a major reform of the world institution. Few delegates
disagreed with him.
September
1, 2012
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Eric Margolis
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