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Extracted Text (OCR)
23
Article 6.
Guardian
Israel should be wary of celebrating the
"Shia crescent' setback
Jonathan Spyer
7 September 2011 -- Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's backing of the Syrian
regime during the recent upheaval has damaged his standing in the
Middle East. Photograph: Abedin Taherkenareh/EPA
In recent years, Israeli strategists have identified an Iran-led regional
alliance as representing the main strategic challenge to the Jewish
state. This alliance looks to be emerging as one of the net losers of
the Arab upheavals of 2011. This, however, should be cause for
neither satisfaction nor complacency for Israel. The forces moving in
to replace or compete with Iran and its allies are largely no less
hostile. The Iran-led regional alliance, sometimes called the
muqawama ("resistance") bloc, consisted of a coalition of states and
movements led by Tehran and committed to altering the US-led
dispensation that pertained since the end of the cold war.
It included, in addition to Iran itself, the Hezbollah movement in
Lebanon, the Sadrist movement and other Shia Islamist currents in
Iraq, Syria's Assad regime, and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad
organisation. It appeared in recent years also to be absorbing Hamas.
The muqawama bloc presented itself as the representative of
authentic Islamic currents in the Middle East, and as locked in
combat until the end with the west and its clients. These included
Saudi Arabia, Hosni Mubarak's Egypt, and above all, Israel.
However, the alliance always had a rather obvious flaw: while
presenting itself as an inclusive, representative camp, it was an almost
exclusively Shia Muslim club, in a largely Sunni Muslim Middle
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