Saudi
Arabia, US and the Middle East
S P
SETH
The backdrop to the Saudi King Salman’s recent US visit was largely
a pervasive fear of Iranian regional ambitions, augmented due to the US nuclear
deal with Iran. Which meant, as far as Riyadh was concerned, that the US was
wavering in its absolute commitment to contain, prevent and stop Tehran from
destabilizing the region to establish its own regional primacy. Until the nuclear
deal, which envisages withdrawal of international economic sanctions against
Iran in return for serious curbs on its nuclear ambitions, Iran was
increasingly becoming an economic basket case with not much capacity to play a
serious regional role, though it still managed to scare some of its Arab
neighbours. And that is how Saudi Arabia, its Gulf allies and Israel, for its
own reasons, wanted things to continue, hoping that, over time, this will
seriously weaken Iran’s clerical regime and/or bring it down, thus ensuring the
stability of the Saudi-led and overseen conservative political order in the
Middle East. Having failed to prevent the US-Iran nuclear deal, Riyadh sought
to show its displeasure in all sorts of ways, including an earlier absence by
King Salman at an Obama-hosted Gulf summit in the US designed to assure its Middle
Eastern allies that its regional strategy remained essentially unchanged despite
the nuclear deal with Iran. Which is that they will have virtual US defence
umbrella, including all sorts of advanced weaponry the US would continue to
sell to refurbish their defence.
What sort of threat(s) Iran poses is generally left vague apart from
a general sense that Iran is somehow a malevolent regional force out to
destabilize/destroy its Sunni Arab neighbours. And its evil designs are seen in
Syria, its support and arming of Hezbollah and in Yemen where Saudi and its
allied forces are bombing the Houthis, said to be establishing their control
over the country with Iranian support. And, of course, Iran is also supposed to
exercise influence and control over Iraq’s Shia regime. In all these places,
though, the so-called Iranian proxies are in a precarious situation, with the
US largely working against them.
The one possible area of strategic convergence between Iran and the
US is the expanding IS control in parts of Iraq and Syria. The US regards IS as
a greater danger ideologically, politically and strategically than other
scattered jihadi elements in the region. Its appeal to many disaffected Muslim
youth, particularly in the west, is quite fetching as seen in their recruitment
to the cause at home and on the ground in the region. And so far, despite
massive US aerial targeting of IS assets in Iraq and Syria and the engagement
of the US-trained and equipped Iraqi army against the enemy, IS seems to be
doing pretty well. The US objective to degrade, destroy and ultimately
annihilate IS doesn’t appear to have made much headway, if at all. In the midst
of it, Iranian trained and equipped Shia militias seem to be the only effective
counterforce with real potential to push back IS. And the US is quite
supportive, if not encouraging, of Iranian role. Which makes the Saudis jittery
about the future strategic evolution of the region where Iran might come to
have an influence on US regional policy.
Even though the Saudis recognize at some level that IS also has
Saudi monarchy as its target, as seen in a series of recent explosions in the
kingdom, they tend to gloss over it by regarding Iran as a bigger threat. During
his recent US visit, King Salman seems to have been reassured, to the extent
possible; that the United States doesn’t have any short or medium term plans to
make Iran into a strategic friend/ally. And it is showing this by selling huge
amounts of weaponry to Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies. In 2014 alone, Saudi Arabia,
now the world’s biggest arms buyer, reportedly spent $80 billion on arms
purchases, much of it from the United States. And the UAE spent $23 billion on
arms purchases. The Gulf States are awash with sophisticated foreign arms, most
of them from the United States with trainers, consultants and any number of
experts and handlers hired to do the job if and when necessary.
With almost no real strategic road map to bring about stability and
security to the region, such seemingly ad hoc deployment of military resources
is a further invitation to disaster in a region that is already on the brink in
more than one way. And Riyadh still feels threatened and worried about some perceived
change in the US Middle East policy. Bruce Riedel, a US strategic analyst at
the Brookings Institution, has this to say of Saudi bombing of Yemen, where
they fear the Houthis are engaged in a proxy war for Iran: “What the Saudis
really want from Obama is unquestioning and complete political support for
their war and its enormous carnage. [And] They have it—and the Yemeni people
are paying for the Iran nuclear deal.” The US needs to go out of its way to
assure the Saudis that its overall Middle Eastern strategy of supporting their
friends and allies remains uncompromised by the US-Iran nuclear deal.
And this in a way might encourage Saudi Arabia to further push the
limits of its regional primacy. As Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi
reportedly told reporters in Washington in April 2015, “The dangerous thing is,
we don’t know what the Saudis want to do [after Yemen]. Is Iraq within their
radar? That’s very, very dangerous—the idea that you intervene in another
state, unprovoked, just for regional ambition is wrong.” He added, “Saddam did
it before—see what it has done to the country.”
In other words, the Middle Eastern situation is becoming messier and
messier with not much thought, if any, being paid to exploring political
solutions. And an important reason for this is the proliferation and easy
access to weapons all around for state actors from the United States and other
external powers, and to Jihadis of all sorts from their regional benefactors
and promoters. And IS helps itself to these weapons and treasures by raiding
and capturing such a vast array of weapons all around. No wonder that there is
no prospect anywhere in sight of any sort of political solution. And here we
haven’t even dealt with the increasingly dangerous situation in Syria, and
Turkey’s no-holds barred offensive against the Kurds.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au
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