Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Posted: 2023-12-02T01:51:40Z | Updated: 2023-12-02T01:51:40Z

Four men in Washington shape Americas policy in the Middle East. Three are obvious: President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan. The fourth is less well-known, despite his huge sway over the other three and despite his determination to keep championing policies that many see as fueling bloodshed in Gaza and beyond.

His name is Brett McGurk. Hes the White House coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa, and hes one of the most powerful people in U.S. national security.

McGurk crafts the options that Biden considers on issues from negotiations with Israel to weapon sales for Saudi Arabia. He controls whether global affairs experts within the government including more experienced staff at the Pentagon and the State Department can have any impact, and he decides which outside voices have access to White House decision-making conversations. His knack for increasing his influence is the envy of other Beltway operators. And he has a clear vision of how he thinks American interests should be advanced, regarding human rights concerns as secondary at best, according to current and former colleagues and close observers.

Its tremendous power that is completely opaque and non-transparent and non-accountable, a former U.S. official told HuffPost.

Comparing McGurks extremely centralized approach in the Biden era to the more consultative way in which past administrations made decisions, a representative of a civil society group said McGurk is able to drive things with [Sullivan] and the president in a process that is not a process.

Its a stunning degree of authority for a 50-year-old operative with a deeply controversial career . One current U.S. official said McGurks dominance has rendered the top Middle East official at the State Department a former ambassador who, unlike McGurk, was confirmed to her post by the Senate merely a fig leaf.

The State Department essentially has no juice on [Israel-Palestine] because Brett is at the center of it, the official said.

Meanwhile, McGurks primary focus, a deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia, has come to dominate American diplomacy in the region. He consistently pushed for engagement with the Saudis and sought to put that relationship at the forefront of what were trying to do in the Middle East, the U.S. official said.

A State Department spokesperson declined to comment for this story. The agency has experienced internal uproar in recent weeks. On Thursday, a State Department official told HuffPost that staff have submitted at least six formal letters of dissent regarding Bidens Gaza policy to Blinken through a protected channel.

Amid the crisis that erupted Oct. 7, when the Gaza-based Palestinian militant group Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis and Israel responded by launching an ongoing offensive that has now killed more than 14,000 Palestinians, McGurk has maintained his importance. Hes deeply involved in the negotiations between Israel, Hamas and regional governments that have let more than 100 Israeli hostages come home and boosted the amount of humanitarian aid flowing into Gaza. His team is tightly managing what U.S. officials say about the conflict, and he is in regular contact with foreign officials who say Americas largely unrestrained support for Israel is spurring huge resentment worldwide.

Now theres growing concern that despite the shock of the Hamas attack and the sweeping Israeli response, McGurk will stand by priorities and tactics that many officials and analysts see as deeply unhelpful.

Bretts theory of the region is that its a source of instability but also resources, the former official said. Its a very old-school, colonialist mentality: People need strong rulers to control them, and we need to extract to our benefit what we need while minimizing the cost to ourselves and others we see as like us, in this case Israelis.

This approach always fails, the official continued, saying its short-sighted and forces the U.S. to reinvest in the Middle East every few years.

Heres a clear example before you: they wanted to bypass the Palestinians in Saudi-Israel normalization, the former official said.

Saudi Arabia, the wealthy spiritual hub of the Muslim world, has long said it will only establish ties with Israel if a Palestinian state is established. Many Palestinians and their supporters believe that if Israel cuts a deal with the Saudis without major concessions to Palestinians, that will take away a key incentive for Israeli leaders to reach a fair settlement with Palestine.

Some Palestinians basically lashed out, and the U.S. right now at a minimum has to pay $14 billion for it a reference to the aid package Congress is expected to soon pass, adding to Israels existing $3 billion in annual military assistance from the U.S. and incur great reputational harm, the former official said. And it may just cost the president the election.

A White House official told HuffPost that McGurk and the Biden administration prioritize Palestinian rights, including during talks about Saudi-Israel normalization. At those talks, the official said, Palestinians have been at the center.

But skeptics fear McGurks focus on so-called Saudi-Israel normalization will mean centering Americas Middle East strategy on a Saudi-Israel deal that lacks a settlement that satisfies Palestinians, sowing the seeds of future discord and that the deal would disregard U.S. values by, for instance, including huge arms sales and security commitments despite documented Saudi and Israeli misuse of American military assistance.

Critics also worry McGurk will keep concentrating policymaking among a handful of handpicked close aides, sidelining alternative views on global affairs from officials outside that circle.