The popular Arab uprisings and the concomitant sectarianization of the region’s geopolitical battles intensified the interplay between the domestic and regional levels in the making of Middle East international relations (IR). Material and ideational security threats were intertwined in particularly intense ways, as regimes scrambled to defend both their geopolitical interests and domestic political orders from a mix of local, regional, and transregional actors and ideologies. These patterns are not new, however. In fact, one of the most enduring legacies of what Hudson (Reference Hudson, Salloukh and Brynen2004) labeled “the Montréal school” of Arab politics was its emphasis on the overlap among domestic, transnational, and geopolitical material and immaterial factors in the making of Middle East IR (Brynen Reference Brynen1991; Gause Reference Gause1992, 2003/4; Korany, Noble, and Brynen Reference Korany, Noble and Brynen1993; Noble Reference Noble, Korany and Hillal Dessouki1991; Salloukh Reference Salloukh1996).
Long before the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) exploded into the regional scene, proponents of this school argued that IR theory could ill afford to ignore the overlap among these different factors and levels of analysis. Through a sustained critique of realism’s obsession with external material threats and underlying assumption of the state as a unitary rational actor, the Montréal School underscored the stubborn interplay between the domestic and regional levels in the making of Middle East IR. Montréal School theorists (Salloukh and Brynen Reference Salloukh and Brynen2004) identified a number of distinctive patterns of Middle Eastern IR rooted in the interplay among different levels: regimes advancing their geopolitical interests by exploiting the permeability of rival states; transnational movements operating across multiple arenas simultaneously; domestic actors aligning with regional powers to balance against their domestic opponents; and the “omnibalancing” (David Reference David1991) choices facing regime leaders, in which regime security and ideational threats drove foreign-policy choices and regional alliances. In short, there is a long tradition of theorizing how the interplay between the domestic and regional levels served the local agendas of domestic actors and the geopolitical and state-building objectives of many Arab regimes.
In short, there is a long tradition of theorizing how the interplay between the domestic and regional levels served the local agendas of domestic actors and the geopolitical and state-building objectives of many Arab regimes.
In his contribution to this symposium, Valbjørn (Reference Valbjørn2017) asks whether such insights from this long-enduring interplay in the making of Middle East IR contributed to theory-building in IR per se. This is less clear; indeed, a 2012 stock-taking of “Domestic Explanations of International Relations” (Mesquita and Smith Reference Mesquita and Smith2012) included only one reference to a work pertaining to Middle East IR! Footnote 1 This nonchalance toward theoretical insights generated from the study of the Middle East among general IR theory is a missed opportunity. The return of the weak Arab state after the popular uprisings, and the securitization of hitherto dormant sectarian identities as a result of the interplay between domestic and geopolitical battles, underscores the benefits of theoretical eclecticism in explaining IR in general and its Middle East subtype more specifically. Whether studying the foreign policy or alliance choices of regional actors, the behavior of non-state actors, or the regional system’s “persistent permeability” (Salloukh and Brynen Reference Salloukh and Brynen2004) and the use of transregional ideologies as a power resource, it is far more rewarding to travel between theories than to engage in theoretical sectarianism. After all, only a mix of realism’s balance of material power, regime-security considerations, and the constructivist emphasis on identity threats can explain puzzling but startling trends in contemporary Middle East IR.
Why, for example, is the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood perceived as a threat by Saudi Arabia but not Qatar, despite both belonging to the same Sunni Gulf monarchical regime type? A material realist explanation offers little traction. By contrast, Riyadh’s behavior is driven by its own perceptions and prioritization of ideological threats. On this view, the Muslim Brotherhood’s populist brand of political participation threatens core Wahhabi ideological tenets—namely, the tradition of political quietism and absolute obedience to the ruler—on which the stability of the Saudi monarchy is anchored (Rubin Reference Rubin2015). Similarly, as Gause (Reference Gause2017) contends in this symposium, only a combination of regime security and ideational threats explains the curious case of regional underbalancing vis-à-vis Iran by its local opponents: neither realist-driven alliances—joining Saudi Arabia and Israel, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, Turkey and Israel, or Turkey and Egypt—nor a Sunni sectarian-driven alliance—gathering Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, and the other Gulf states—has emerged to balance Iran’s obvious geopolitical gains in the wake of the 2003 US invasion and occupation of Iraq. Finally, only the transnational reverberations driven by the ideational permeability of the Arab states system can explain the response of Arab regimes to the overlapping domestic and regional challenges unleashed by the popular uprisings (Lynch Reference Lynch2016). These are only a few post-uprisings puzzles for which a strictly materialist realist explanation would lead to a veritable cul-de-sac. By contrast, scholars of Middle East IR have long mastered the art of theoretical eclecticism, deploying any mix of realist, regime-security, and constructivist explanations in a “happy marriage” (Halliday Reference Halliday2005; Hinnebusch Reference Hinnebusch2015). It is time that IR theory does the same and, in the process, pays attention to more generalizable theoretical insights generated from the study of Middle East IR.
By contrast, scholars of Middle East IR have long mastered the art of theoretical eclecticism, deploying any mix of realist, regime-security, and constructivist explanations in a “happy marriage” (Halliday Reference Halliday2005; Hinnebusch Reference Hinnebusch2015).
THE RETURN OF THE WEAK STATE
The primacy of this type of theoretical eclecticism is best expressed today with the return of the weak Arab state. The US invasion and occupation of Iraq unleashed dynamics that restored the primacy of overlapping domestic and geopolitical battles in Middle East IR. Henceforth, the region became theater for a grand Saudi–Iranian confrontation fought not through classic realist state-to-state military battles but rather through proxy domestic and transnational actors and ideological competition in the domestic politics of a number of weak Arab states, including the perennial candidate Lebanon, the West Bank and Gaza Strip, postwar Iraq, and—to a lesser extent—Yemen and Bahrain (Salloukh Reference Salloukh2013). As Gause (2014, 8) carefully noted—for both Riyadh and Tehran, the two main protagonists in this confrontation, but also Qatar and Turkey—the objective “is not to defeat their regional rivals militarily on the battlefield. It is to promote the fortunes of their own clients in these weak-state domestic struggles and thus build up regional influence.” Yet, lest we deny them agency, domestic actors also possess their own calculations and interests. They invite, and bandwagon with, regional actors in a bid to balance the political influence of their domestic opponents and advance their own local political interests.
Hazbun’s (Reference Hazbun2017) contribution to this symposium uses Lebanon as a quintessential case for examining such patterns. Lebanon’s sectarian elite mastered the game of aligning with external actors against domestic opponents in overlapping domestic and regional struggles. Consequently, Lebanon served as a site for overlapping domestic and geopolitical contests since its creation. By 2006, state collapse and the pull of centrifugal forces in post-Saddam Iraq made the country look increasingly like Lebanon. Overlapping domestic and regional struggles also dominated the politics of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The popular uprisings intensified and complicated the contests unleashed by the US invasion of Iraq, exacerbating them in some places (e.g., Lebanon, Yemen, and the West Bank and Gaza Strip) and allowing them to spread to new sites—namely, Syria and Libya. As Gause (Reference Gause2017), Matthiesen (Reference Matthiesen, Narbone and Lestra2015), Rubin (Reference Rubin2014, Reference Rubin2015), and Ryan (Reference Ryan2015) admirably demonstrated, the concomitant collapse of some regimes or states and ascendance of old and new political actors with transnational ideologies—that is, the Muslim Brotherhood, ISIS, and a posse of Salafi or Shi‘a non-state actors—restored to center stage the regional system’s ideational balancing dynamics. Transnational sectarian identities re-emerged as a potent power resource shaping regime foreign policy and alliance choices, underscoring yet again realism’s inability to explain the behavior of Middle East states without recourse to constructivist assumptions (Barnett Reference Barnett1998) and overlapping domestic/geopolitical dynamics. The causality is important: as state authority breaks down, the importance of the elective affinity between co-sectarian state and non-state actors increases. Consequently, Shi‘a non-state actors in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen turn to Iran for help, whereas their Sunni counterparts turn to either Saudi Arabia, Turkey, or Qatar (Gause Reference Gause2017).
The myriad fallouts from the overlapping domestic, regional, and international “struggle for Syria” are examples of this process (Phillips Reference Phillips2016; Ryan Reference Ryan2012). Hafiz al-Assad’s once Hobbesian unitary state—which structured political participation and organized state–society relations along populist corporatist and neopatrimonial lines—is in shambles. The breakdown of state institutions and the torpedo of the onetime institutionally strong Syrian state gave way to the emergence of recently securitized sectarian and ethnic identities, which in the past had crosscut with more relevant class and regional divisions (Hinnebusch Reference Hinnebusch, Antoun and Quartet1991). This transformation of Syria from a Leviathan capable of waging sometimes domestically unpopular but realist geopolitical battles in defense of strategic security interests to a weak state penetrated by regional actors and their sectarian proxies—both transnational and domestic, Salafi–Jihadi or not—unleashed new dynamics that demonstrated the utility of a theoretically eclectic IR toolkit.
Ideological differences among regional states in what constitutes a threat to regime security obviated the emergence of an anti-ISIS balancing alliance in Syria—despite the latter’s present and future danger to the security interests of all concerned parties.
First, the once-unitary Syrian state has been replaced by a weak, penetrated state. A hitherto pivotal player in regional geopolitical battles now serves as a “playground” for these battles. Consequently, neither the unitary nature nor the institutional strength of the state can be taken for granted anymore. Ideological differences among regional states in what constitutes a threat to regime security obviated the emergence of an anti-ISIS balancing alliance in Syria—despite the latter’s present and future danger to the security interests of all concerned parties. When such an alliance emerges, it will be driven by domestic regime-security threats rather than strictly external geopolitical-power considerations. This does not mean that sectarianism explains more than realism, however. A pan-Sunni alliance among states or non-state actors against Bashar al-Assad’s regime also has proved elusive. Instead, different Sunni states sponsor different local Sunni non-state actors in Syria, sometimes with disastrous consequences for their own geopolitical interests. Finally—and despite Iran’s evident geopolitical interests in the survival of an allied regime in Syria—Stein (Reference Stein2017) contends in this symposium that neither geopolitical nor sectarian calculations alone can explain Iran’s intervention in support of the Assad regime. Instead, he suggests that this process is driven also by the “ideological codependency” between the two regimes, one that is meant to bind the Syrian regime to Tehran but also “reinforces the idea of a counterhegemonic regional security agenda,” thereby strengthening the position of the Iranian regime’s core hardline elements. All of this suggests the need to combine a mix of realist, regime-security, and constructivist approaches in any attempt to explain Middle East IR.
CONCLUSION
All of the articles in this symposium call for a recursive conversation between IR theory and Middle East IR. Of course, it would be wrong to assume that the latter has had no impact on mainstream IR theorizing. For example, the more nuanced and sophisticated realist approach assumed in Walt’s Taming American Power (2006) is a good example of how studying Middle East IR can have a positive impact on IR theory. The richer analysis undertaken in this book—which expands the arc of strategies available to threatened states to include balancing, balking, binding, blackmail, and delegitimization—is informed substantially by the overlapping domestic and regional consequences of the US invasion of Iraq, thereby broadening the utility and merit of Walt’s (Reference Walt1987) original balance-of-threat framework in The Origins of Alliances. Nevertheless, as the articles in this symposium make clear, the current dialogue between these two subdisciplines leaves more cross-fertilization to be desired.