Arab pundits, writers, and politicians have a deeply ingrained default position: blame Iran.
It almost always works and has the added benefit of being regularly justified. To spice things up, some occasionally blame the United States and Israel, too.
But the ease with which the blame is apportioned has led to a lazy, one-dimensional view of history, the emanation of evil, and the cause of our problems.
We now attribute all our misfortune to post-revolutionary Iran. Is that accurate? Is the Arab world entirely blameless?
Is it simply a victim of circumstance, despite its best endeavours to the contrary?
Those same pundits, writers, and politicians should ask themselves why Iran and others were able to inflict such harm on us and why were we so unable to defend ourselves.
There is usually a formula for victory. Is there a formula for misfortune?
Circumventing threats
Since the fall of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iran has diligently worked to circumvent two significant threats.
The first is the prospect of conflict with the US or Israel on its soil, and the second is the emergence of a neighbouring power that could launch another prolonged and destructive war against Iran, such as Hussein did in 1980.
The Iran-Iraq War lasted eight years, killed hundreds of thousands on both sides, cost up to $1tn, and achieved absolutely nothing.
Avoiding something similar is probably a good idea.