Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 08/2009

Middle East Perspectives: Conference Proceedings from Gstaad, Switzerland

David Aaron, Shahram Chubin, Shai Feldman, Abdulaziz Sager

September 2008

The Geneva Centre for Security Policy

Abstract

The Middle East and its security remains a vital ingredient in international security. The region’s tensions, conflicts and stability are of fundamental concern to a wide range of actors, whose interests or proximity make it a priority. The novelty today is the increasing inter-relations of these conflicts and instability and the limitations of outside power influence. This, together with the appearance of new actors in the region, namely India and China, seems likely to transform diplomacy in the future. Regional dynamics, which are increasingly resistant to outside power influence or control, continue to shape the strategic environment. These dynamic forces, ranging from terrorism, sectarianism, and on-going conflicts, intersect and add to the region’s instability and fragmentation. The conflict zone (from the Levant to Iran) overlaps the “energy ellipse” (in the Gulf), that is, the dependence of much of the world on this region for energy supplies.