“Either we unite or we fight”: kaleidoscopic coalitions and enmities are one of the Middle East’s most distinctive political features, recognized by locals and clear to analysts. This extreme political volatility results from the tribal ethos. Until tribalism dies out, Middle Eastern politics will continue to be characterized by amorality, fluidity, temporariness, inconsistency, and contradiction.
Consider the following three episodes, which occurred over the course of a century:
- In March 2019, the Syrian jihadi groups Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and the National Liberation Front clashed, leading to about 75 deaths. Two months later, they joined forces to fight Syria’s central government. By October, they were fighting each other again.
- In 1987, Saddam Hussein and Hafez Assad, the respective dictators of Iraq and Syria, were mortal enemies. When they met at an Arab League summit, they “were seen walking together and joking.”
- Armenians and Azeris fought each other during World War I. Then, in what historian Tadeusz Swietochowski calls a “switch from killing to embraces. … Remarkably, in the midst of the intercommunal fighting, there began to circulate the idea of Transcaucasian federalism, the regional union of Georgians, Armenians, and Azerbaijanis” that evolved into the Transcaucasian Federation of 1921-22.
As these examples suggest, kaleidoscopic coalitions and enmities are one of the Middle East’s most distinctive political features. Only full-time specialists can keep track of the civil wars in Libya, Yemen, and Syria, and they rely on complex tools to do so.
This pattern of fighting and hugging is well known to Middle Easterners. The PLO’s Khalid Hassan called it the “Arab nature,” explaining that “Arab history has never known a final estrangement. It is full of agreements and differences. When we differ and then grow tired of differing, we agree. When we grow tired of agreeing, we differ.” Faruq Qaddumi, another PLO leader, found that “Attitudes in the Arab region change like desert sands in the wind — building up and then swiftly disappearing.” Hussein Sumaida, a refugee from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, used the same analogy: “There are no such things as allies in the Middle East. There are only shifting sands.”
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Abd Hamid Zaydani, an Islamist leader in Yemen, put it succinctly: “Either we unite or we fight.” Barzan Ibrahim Takriti, Saddam Hussein’s brother, agreed: “Either we have full unity, or a general destructive war will be the only alternative.” The usual political relationship, he said, “begins with hugs and kisses and ends up in disputes and war.”
Two primary patterns stand out: Palestinian politics, and enemies joining together against a common foe and then falling out again.
In 1967, Ahmad Shuqayri pledged to lead an army into Amman “to take no account of Hussein” — that is, to overthrow the king of Jordan. Shortly thereafter, he needed the king and recognized him as “head of the Palestinians.” Yasser Arafat and Jordan’s King Hussein fought in 1970, cooperated in 1982, fell out in 1983, allied in 1985, broke relations in 1986, and made up again in 1988. Syrian intellectual Sadiq Azm noted how one day “the PLO’s leadership would denounce [King Hussein] and demand his overthrow; the next, Arafat would kiss him at a banquet.” Kuwait’s Foreign Minister Sabah Ahmad Sabah recalled that Arafat’s treacherous behavior during the Iraqi invasion of 1990-91 meant “The Kuwaiti people don’t want him in Kuwait. … God forbid that he should come to Kuwait because the whole country would rise up against him.” But, Sabah went on, “As officials, we meet him within the framework of the Arab League or other forums and we exchange embraces.”
In mid-1992, Arafat’s and George Habash’s militias fought each other in Lebanon — but when the two leaders met in Amman in October 1992, they embraced one another. The Palestinian Authority (PA) sometimes cooperates with Israel on security matters and at other times resorts to incitement and murder. Such reversals particularly affected Arafat: In Barry Rubin’s description, he “always remembered that the Arab leader who shot at him one day might become the one he kissed another day, and the reverse as well.”
Islamists who had once fought Saddam Hussein supported him after his 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Likewise, Tehran had been at war with him just two years earlier but made common cause with him against a shared common enemy, the US. Hamas and the Palestinian Authority repeatedly alternated between killing each other (especially when Hamas violently expelled the PA from Gaza in 2007) and trying to combine their forces against Israel. Turkey’s leader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, insults former allies with abandon, including the leaders of France, Germany, Syria, and Iran. Should Iranian aggression cease, this logic could suddenly abort the Abraham Accords.
What explains this extreme political volatility? As brilliantly explained by Philip Salzman, it results from the tribal ethos summed up by the well-known adage, “I against my brother, I and my brothers against my cousins, I and my brothers and my cousins against the world.” This pre-modern mentality encourages abrupt changes. Until tribalism dies out, Middle Eastern politics will continue to be characterized by amorality, fluidity, temporariness, inconsistency, and contradiction.
Daniel Pipes (DanielPipes.org) is president of the Middle East Forum. A version of this article was originally published by The BESA Center.
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