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Saudi Proactive Shorter Path Overdue, to
Replace Current Reactive Policies
By Nicola Nasser
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 24, 2014 Writing in The Washington
Post on February 27, 2011, Rachel Bronson asked: “Could the next Mideast
uprising happen in Saudi Arabia?” Her answer was: “The notion of a
revolution in the Saudi kingdom seems unthinkable.” However, On
September 30 the next year, the senior foreign policy fellow at the Saban
Center for Middle East Policy Bruce Riedel concluded that the “revolution in
Saudi Arabia is no longer unthinkable.” To preempt such a
possibility, the kingdom in March 2011, in a “military” move to curb the
tide of the Arab popular uprisings which raged across the Arab world from
sweeping to its doorsteps, the kingdom sent troops to Bahrain to quell
similar popular protests. That rapid reactive Saudi military move
into Bahrain heralded a series of reactions that analysts describe as an
ongoing Saudi-led counterrevolution. Amid a continuing succession
process in Saudi Arabia, while major socioeconomic and political challenges
loom large regionally, the kingdom is looking for security as far away as
China, but blinded to the shortest way to its stability in its immediate
proximity, where regional understanding with its geopolitical Arab and
Muslim neighborhood would secure the kingdom and save it a wealth of assets
squandered on unguaranteed guarantees. In his quest to contain any
fallout from the “Arab Spring,” Saudi King Abdullah Ben Abdel-Aziz
selectively proposed inviting the kingdoms of Jordan and Morocco to join the
Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf, known as the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC), leading The Economist on May 19, 2011 to joke
that the organization should be renamed the “Gulf Counter-Revolutionary
Club.” For sure including Iraq and Yemen would be a much better addition if
better security was the goal. Ahead of US President Barak Obama’s
official visit to the kingdom by the end of this March, Saudi Arabia was
looking “forward to China as an international magnate with a great political
and economic weight to play a prominent role in achieving peace and security
in the region,” according to Defense Minister and Crown Prince Salman Bin
Abdulaziz Al Saud who was in Beijing from March 13 to 16 “to enhance
cooperation with China to protect peace, security and stability in the
region.” He was quoted by a statement
from the Saudi Press Agency. Prince Salman was in Japan from
18-21 last February, hopefully to deepen bilateral cooperation “in various
fields.” On February 26, India and Saudi Arabia signed an agreement to
strengthen co-operation in military training, logistics supplies and
exchange of defense-related information. On last January 23, Indonesia and
Saudi Arabia signed
a defense cooperation agreement, the first of its kind. While a
strong Saudi-Pakistan defense partnership has existed for long, it has been
upgraded recently. Princes Salman and Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal
arrived in Pakistan on February 15. Pakistani army chief General Raheel
Sharif was in Saudi Arabia earlier. Director of South Asia Studies Project
at the Middle East Media Research Institute, Washington DC, Tufail Ahmad,
wrote on this March 11 that “the upswing in the relationship marks a
qualitative change,” hinting that the kingdom could be seeking Pakistan’s
nuclear capabilities to “counter a nuclear-capable Iran” despite Islamabad’s
denial, which “is not reliable.” The kingdom is moving “to transform itself
as a regional military power,” Sharif wrote. On this March 14, the
Financial Times reported that Saudi Arabia has given $1.5 billion (Dh5.5
billion) to Pakistan. In February a senior Pakistani intelligence official
told the Financial Times that Saudi Arabia was seeking “a large number of
[Pakistani] troops to support its campaign along the Yemeni border and for
internal security.” The official confirmed that Pakistan’s agreement, during
Prince Salman’s visit, to support the establishment of a “transitional
governing body” in Syria was an important aspect of the deal. On
this March 5, the kingdom led two other members of the six-member GCC,
namely the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, to withdraw their ambassadors
from Qatar, risking the survival of the GCC. Hunting two French and
Lebanese birds with one shot, the kingdom early last January pledged a $3
billion royal grant, estimated to be two-time the entire military budget of
Lebanon, to buy French weapons for the Lebanese Army. The Saudi
multi-billion dollar support to the change of guards in Egypt early last
July and the kingdom’s subscription to Egypt’s make or break campaign
against the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) inside and outside the country following
the ouster of the MB’s former president Mohammed Morsi reveal a much more
important Saudi strategic and security unsigned accord with Egypt’s new
rulers. On the outset of the so-called “Arab Spring,” the kingdom
also bailed out Bahrain and the Sultanate of Omen with more multi-billion
petrodollars to buy the loyalty of their population. More
multi-billion petrodollars were squandered inside the country to bribe the
population against joining the sweeping popular Arab protests. Yet
still more billions were squandered on twenty percent of all arms transfers
to the region between 2009-2013 to make the kingdom the world’s fifth
largest importer of arms while more Saudi orders for arms are outstanding,
according to a new study released on this March 17 by the Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). While the United
States will continue to “guarantee Israel’s qualitative military edge” over
all the twenty two Arab nations plus Iran, Iran is developing its own
defense industries to defend itself against both the US and Israel,
rendering the Saudi arms procurement efforts obsolete. Had all of
those squandered billions of petrodollars spent more wisely they could have
created a revolution of development in the region. Not
Assured by US Assurances Ahead of Obama’s visit, the Saudi
message is self-evident. They are looking, on their own, for alternative
security guarantees, or at least additional ones. They don’t trust their
decades - long American security umbrella anymore. The US sellout of close
allies like the former presidents of Tunisia, Egypt and Yemen shed doubt on
any “assurances’ Washington would be trying to convey during Obama’s
upcoming visit. President Obama is scheduled to be in Riyadh by the
end of this March to assure Saudi Arabia of what his Deputy Secretary of
State Bill Burns on last February 19 told the Center for Strategic and
International Studies that the United States takes Saudi security concerns
“seriously,” “US-Saudi partnership is as important today as it ever was” and
that the “Security cooperation is at the heart of our agenda” with the GCC,
reminding his audience that his country still keeps about 35,000 members of
the US military at 12 bases in and around the Arabian Gulf. However,
“the Saudi voices I hear do not think that what they see as the current lack
of American resolve is merely a short-term feature of the Obama Presidency:
They spot a deeper trend of Western disengagement from their region,” Sir
Tom Phillips - British Ambassador to Saudi Arabia 2010-12 and an Associate
Fellow at the Chatham House Middle East and North Africa Programme - wrote
on last February 12. Obviously, the Saudis are not assured, neither
internally, regionally or at the international level because as Burns said
on the same occasion: “We don’t always see eye to eye” and it is natural
that Gulf states would “question our reliability as partners” given US
efforts to achieve energy independence and US warnings that traditional
power structures, such as the gulf monarchies, are “unsustainable.”
Obama’s upcoming visit to the kingdom has been described as a
“fence-mending” one. Saudi Foreign Minister
Prince Saud Al Faisal, at a joint press conference alongside visiting
US Secretary of State
John Kerry last November, hinted that fences might not be mended because
“a true relationship between friends is based on sincerity, candor, and
frankness rather than mere courtesy.” What Prince Al Faisal
described as “frankness” is still missing: His brother, prince Turki
al-Faisal, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal last December,
blasted the Obama administration for keeping his country in the dark on its
secret talks with Iran: "How can you build trust when you keep secrets from
what are supposed to be your closest allies?" “The Saudis have good
reasons to feel besieged and fearful,” Immanuel Wallerstein, director
emeritus of the Fernand Braudel Center at Binghamton University and senior
researcher at Yale University and Maison des Sciences de l’Homme in Paris,
was quoted as saying by AlJazeera America on this March 1. Senior
associate of Carnegie’s Middle East program Frederic Wehry on this March 10
wrote that, “There is a growing sense in Gulf capitals … led by Saudi
Arabia” that “the United States is a power in retreat that is ignoring the
interests of its steadfast partners, if not blithely betraying them.”
What Burns described as “tactical differences” with Saudi Arabia and its GCC
co-members, the Saudis are acting on the premise that those differences are
much more strategic than “tactical” and accordingly are overstretching their
search for alternative security guarantees worldwide because they seem to
disagree with Burns that “our Gulf partners know that no country or
collection of countries can do for the Gulf states what the United States
has done and continues to do.” Pressured between Two
‘Crescents’ Three threatening developments have led to
Saudi distrust in US security assurances. The first was the selling out of a
US ally like the former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, the second was the
Qatari, Turkish and US coordination with the Muslim Brotherhood regionally
and the third was the assumption to power of the MB in Egypt. The first
development set the precedent of selling out of a long regional US ally
against the fervent public advice of the kingdom. Mubarak’s ouster set the
red lights on in Riyadh of a possible similar scenario in Saudi Arabia.
The second development put the kingdom on alert against the emerging MB,
Turkey, Qatar and the US axis that would have encircled Saudi Arabia had the
kingdom allowed this axis to hand the power over to the Brotherhood in Syria
in the north and in Egypt in the west. The MB is influential in Jordan, the
kingdom’s northern neighbor, and in Yemen, its southern neighbor. The Hamas’
affiliation to the MB in the Palestinian Gaza Strip would complete what a
Saudi analyst called the “Brotherhood crescent” in the north, west and
south, to squeeze the kingdom between the rock of this “Brotherhood
crescent” and the hard place of the Islamic Republic of Iran in the east.
The third development surrendered the western strategic backyard of the
kingdom to the MB, which has become untrustworthy politically in view of its
membership in the emerging US-led ““Brotherhood crescent” after decades of
sponsoring the MB leaders who found in the kingdom a safe haven from their
suppression in Syria and Egypt and using them against the pan-Arab regimes
in both countries and against the pan-Arab and communist political
movements. Unmercifully pressured between the “Brotherhood crescent”
and what King Abdullah II of Jordan once described as the “Shiite crescent”
extending from Iran through Iraq and Syria to Hezbullah in Lebanon, let
alone the al-Qaeda offshoots, which have deep roots inside the kingdom and
in its immediate surroundings and have emerged as a major threat to regional
as well as to internal stability, in addition to what the Saudis perceive as
the withdrawal or at least the rebalancing of the US power out of the
region, the kingdom seems poised to find an answer to the question which
Bruce Riedel asked on September 30, 2012 about whether or not the
“revolution in Saudi Arabia is no longer unthinkable.” The Saudi
answer so far has been reactive more than proactive. “It is difficult to
avoid the impression that Saudi policy is more
re-active than pro-active,” Sir Tom Phillips - British Ambassador to
Saudi Arabia 2010-12 and an Associate Fellow at the Chatham House Middle
East and North Africa Programme - wrote on last February 12.
Proactive Shorter Path Overdue Following the lead of the
United States and Europe who have come to deal with the fait accompli that
Iran as a pivotal regional power is there to stay for the foreseeable
future, a more Saudi proactive regional policy that would engage Iran and
Syria would be a much shorter and cheaper route to internal security as well
as to regional stability, instead of reacting to their alliance by engaging
in a lost and costly battle for a “regime change” in both countries.
Or much better, the kingdom could follow the lead of the Sultanate of Oman,
which risked to break away from the GCC should they go along with the Saudi
proposal late in 2011 for transforming their “council” into an anti-Iran
military “union.” Regardless of what regime rules in Tehran and since the
time of the Shah, Oman has been dealing with Iran as a strategic partner and
promoting an Iranian-GCC regional partnership. Qatar takes a middle ground
between the Saudi and Omani positions vis-à-vis Iran. On this March 17, the
Qatar-Iran joint political committee convened in Tehran. Feeling
isolated, besieged and threatened by being left in the cold as a result of
what it perceives as a withdrawing US security umbrella, the kingdom’s new
experience of trying to cope on its own is indulging the country in
counterproductive external policies in the turmoil of the aftermath of the
shock waves of the Arab popular uprisings, which have raged across the
Arab world since 2011, but its tide has stopped at the Damascus gate of the
Iranian – Syrian alliance, which is backed internationally by the emerging
Russian and Chinese world powers. At the end of the day, the
kingdom’s recent historical experience indicates that the Saudi dynasty
lived its most safe and secure era during the Saudi-Egyptian-Syrian
trilateral understanding, which was developed as a regional axis of
stability, as the backbone of the Arab League regional system and was
reinforced by the trilateral coordination in the 1973 Arab – Israeli war.
The revival of the Saudi coordination with Egypt in the post-Morsi
presidency was a crucial first step that would lead nowhere unless it is
completed by an overdue Saudi political U-turn on Syria that would revive
the old trilateral axis to defend Arabs against Israel. A partnership with
Iran would be a surplus; otherwise the revival of the trilateral
coordination would at least serve as a better Saudi defense against Iran as
well. However such a Saudi U-turn would require of course a
strategic decision that would renege on the kingdom’s US-inspired and
ill-advised policy of dealing with Syria and Iran as “the enemy,” while
dealing with Israel, which still occupies Palestinian, Syrian and Lebanese
territories, as a possible “peace partner” and a co-member of an anti-Iran
and Syria “front of moderates,” which the successive US administrations have
been promoting. It would first require as well a change of foreign
policy decision-makers in Riyadh, but such a change will continue to be
wishful thinking until a man of an historic stature holds the wheel at the
driving seat at the helm of the Saudi hierarchy. Until that happens, it
might be too late.
Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in
Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
[email protected]
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