By Dr. Spyridon N. Litsas
For
the first time since the collapse of the Byzantine Empire, the Eastern
Mediterranean is in the midst of a tectonic shift.
The
region presents all the required attributes to function as a distinct
sub-regional system in the 21st century’s international environment. The
Eastern Mediterranean holds the interest of the great powers (the US, Russia,
and China); it contains resolute regional actors that influence the
sociopolitical orbit of the region (Israel, Egypt, and Turkey); and
international diplomacy may create firm ties between states that go far beyond
normative alliance arrangements and thus function as power maximizers for the
parties concerned (Greece and Cyprus). There are also two ongoing civil wars in
the region that offer a venue in which the great powers can sharpen their
claws, often by proxy (Syria and Libya). There are two major basins with
potential natural gas resources that can play a decisive role in the difficult
transition period from oil energy monopoly to alternative energy resources (the
Nile Delta Basin and the Levant Basin).
Today,
the Eastern Mediterranean has taken on the grim role the Balkans played in the
early 20th century. Political and economic volatility affects more or less
every state in the region. The cycle of violence, either in the form of open
civil war or in terms of domestic troubles, seems almost impossible to stop
solely through external institutional intervention or pleas deriving from
international law.
Regarding
the latter: events in the region prove that in Hobbesian geostrategic
conditions, the implementation of international law as the ultimate tool for
effective crisis resolution is utterly futile. The region has never before
witnessed such a profound period of high competition among major players – and
such a prolonged period of uncertainty and gloom regarding the sociopolitical
prospects of the states. This can be seen in qualitative and quantitative data
regarding local economies, social cohesion, happiness, and so on.
However,
not everything in the Eastern Mediterranean deserves to be approached through
so Stygian black a shade of analysis. Israel, for example, is gradually
becoming an IT superpower. The so-called Fourth Industrial Revolution has been
hastened on an international level by Israeli companies and academic
institutions that are actively researching and manufacturing. This might lead
the whole region into a “Hi-Tech Spring” that could generate wealth, open up
new jobs, tackle unemployment and radicalization among underprivileged youth,
and counter the negative aura of the “Arab Spring” that continues to torment
the region.
Cyprus,
too, has left the economic crisis behind and now has the potential to be a
reliable partner with the western world in transforming the Eastern
Mediterranean into a lake of technological advancement.
Last
but not least, the US has shown that it has returned to the region for good
after a short but critical period that will be labeled in the historical
analysis as one of cognitive denial – a period during which Russia took the
opportunity to reestablish itself in the region. Washington’s recent decision
to move the US Embassy to Jerusalem, the capital of the state of Israel since
King David’s reign, is a pivotal political move that may result in a
strengthening of the Realist side within the Palestinian
Authority
and, as a result, enable positive steps towards resolving the conundrum of the
Palestinian Question.
Quite
often in international politics, a bold decision is the only useful step with
which to achieve advancement. The Balfour Declaration and the embassy move are
excellent examples. Also, Washington’s decision to reactivate the Second Fleet
in order to bolster the US and NATO presence in the Atlantic means the role of
the Sixth Fleet becomes even more salient, a development that strengthens the
strategic triangle of Greece-Cyprus-Israel through the multidimensional
operational advancement of NATO’s infrastructure in Greece and through close
cooperation of the three states at the military level.
The
US is also now showing a clear interest in challenging Russian Sharp Power and
its consequences in the Eastern Mediterranean and in the Balkan states as well.
This may result not only in a strengthening of social awareness in general but
also in a more stable and effective domestic political apparatus.
After
a period of vigorous rejection, the US seems to be coming to terms with an
international reality in which the systemic balance of power is under the
influence of a firmly established multipolar reality. The recognition of this
political fact is making the US much more willing and prepared to make the
kinds of decisions that reinforce a western “smart” presence in the Eastern
Mediterranean and underpin the status of the regional western elements (Greece,
Cyprus, and Israel) as well.
Nevertheless,
this must not be seen as a panacea for the domestic problems that affect the
everyday functioning of those aforementioned states, particularly Greece. The
establishment of a multipolar international modus operandi means interstate
competition, and in some cases antagonism, will grow considerably, and soon.
Therefore, Greece, Cyprus, and Israel must be prepared not only to face the
music but to change the tune.
This
means their role in the politics of the Eastern Mediterranean must be more
active and constructive. This can be done only if the three states stop
thinking regionally in political terms and begin to formulate a more
extroverted strategy that will take into consideration the full international
picture.
The
future of the western world depends on the reinforcement of transatlantic
prospects. Effective cooperation between the two coasts of the Atlantic on
every level, and a deepening of the institutional modus vivendi between them,
is vitally important and will drastically affect the way the global economy,
technology, and diplomacy evolve in the decades to come.
The
elevation of the Eastern Mediterranean to the status of a distinct sub-system
requires that the region play a constructive role in the deepening of
transatlantic functioning. This offers Greece, Cyprus, and Israel the
opportunity to serve as regional pioneers of the transatlantic era and thereby
shape the future. Athens, Nicosia, and Jerusalem must internalize the ancient
Greek proverb that God helps those who help themselves. Whoever is not prepared
to exit his comfort zone will be left behind.
From
BESA Center