Doom & gloom within Arab regime circles about reports of a Biden win. They were hoping Trump would win.
Even if they don’t think Biden would actively be against them, they get how their detractors will have space & multiple advantages perhaps unprecedented in recent decades!
In 2016, it was a whole different world: Arab dictators and their circles were simply intoxicated with their love of the incoming Trump presidency. They saw historic opportunities, and they were right to a certain degree but not entirely.
These regimes will always have friends in DC but things, and they may think their puppets are doing a great job at placing op-eds or forming partnerships here & there; but there are parallel things happening both inside the US & when it comes to their detractors they can’t stop.
Yep. Turkey will turn this around, though. Money is that Biden will be very good for Ankara. The only country in the region that won’t do well with Biden is Saudi Arabia, the rest will be fine even if things aren’t ideal.
As Trump lost the election, #Egypt released prisoners. This may be a small sign, but mark my words: these regimes will realize how badly they played their cards in the past few years in the US. Yes Trump helped them tremendously but they’ll face new troubles they can’t roll back!
The best way to assess or forecast this would not to know whom Biden or Trump hates or likes, but to look at regional patterns (which regimes needs what, where the US is willing to entrench, and so on). So here are concrete examples:
Countries like the UAE *needed* a Trump type. They have big goals, but they need Trump to be all in with them, to amplify their small & limited capabilities, do their bidding & strongly push back against their rivals! Biden won’t be useful to them on the ground: they’ll OK on PR.
Countries like Turkey are the opposite example. What Turkey doesn’t want is a strong/proactive US president willing to stop it. Trump tried & failed. It marched on. A Biden presidency will be a golden opportunity for it, to do its own thing on the ground as rivals left vulnerable
Add to that: a Biden presidency will be somewhere between Obama & Trump in some ways. I don’t think they’ll pack up & leave in places like Syria, but they won’t be aggressive in demanding uniformity from allies. So Turkey has a huge advantage to assert itself & fill US vacuum..
Turkey’s rivals like Iran & Assad won’t be wholly relieved, but they won’t face the same incremental US pressure. Other rivals like the UAE & Saudi will continue to have allies in the US but not on the ground, especially against Turkey. Lots of vacuum for Turkey to fill.
So keep an eye for a continuing Turkey reach from Libya to Syria to Iraq, a policy that’ll flourish during Biden presidency. Also expect Turkey to be a key piece in the pushback against Russia. More Turkish presence in Syria & Iraq:
Right after Trump took office, I wrote about the Gulf excitement, despite Trump’s rhetoric & postures. These regimes knew the US priorities at home, but they saw alignment with their geopolitical world view. That was true: thenationalnews.com/opinion/how-th…
Now a whole different story 👆
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Two weeks before the anniversary of the killing of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdad, ISIS is releasing a new statement from the media outlet specializing in top leadership releases.
ISIS releases a statement by its spokesman Abu Hamza al-Qurashi titled "So recount the tales"
In the first 5 minutes, he speaks about the Salafist tenet "obedience to rulers" and attacks it as un-Islamic. He also talks about clerics that preach against rebelling against rulers.
[A key part of why jihadism is part of a theological revolution, just a violent version]
Until recently, the US, Iraq & the UN all thought the current leader (Hajji Abdullah or Abdullah Qardash) wasn't really a Quarashi, that he was a Turkoman, and that he was a 'placeholder' until ISIS would appoint an Arab of Qurashi origins per its ideology
In ~5 years, and don’t hold any of this against me:
• Israel will have its 1st base in the Gulf
• Turkey will control a zone from northern Iraq to northern Syria
• Turkey will expand Libya presence
• Egypt & Sudan will form something along the lines of a “Nile Confederation”
A military base in the Arab side of the Persian Gulf.
The normalization with tiny countries in the Gulf may indeed seem to be non-events. But, in that bubble, I think this process will produce interesting changes in the future. Normalization will have a snowball effect that’ll drag with it both Saudi Arabia & Qatar as party to it.
A groundbreaking detail buried deep in the lawsuit filed by former Saudi intelligence chief against the crown prince MBS in US courts:
MBS *encouraged* Vladmir Putin's military intervention in Syria in September 2015, which enraged then CIA chief John Brennan.
Truly amazing, those meetings happened at least two months before Russia's September 2015 intervention in Syria. At the time the US acted surprised by Moscow's decision to deploy forces to Syria, while Riyadh was supposedly helping the Syrian opposition:
Another crazy detail is that MBS was convinced that Aljabri was responsible for the CIA conclusion that MBS was directly responsible for the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.
One thing I’ll always be proud of is that we provided Husham with the platform & resources to publish his work almost weekly. We had big plans, ideas for longterm projects & to publish more regularly. Others only used him for quotes, and ignored his published work.
He had so much to produce, he truly deserved a whole team dedicated to his work. You can find his work here cgpolicy.org/articles/isis-…
Apart from the consistent scoop-based work @CGPdc published, the first major project he had submitted will be the first of its kind on Iraq. Watch this space.
Details I obtained about the jihadist infighting in northwestern Syria, and about Ansar al-Islam's leadership and members (that ancient pre-ISIS Iraqi jihadi group.)
I checked with a few knowledgeable sources in Syria, about the general story I'm going to only sum up.
All sides of this infighting have made claims & counter-claims, so I won't get to those -- there is a summary of that in this earlier thread, if you want to catch up: