Patrick
Cockburn is one of the most dependable of MSM analysts
Mohammed
bin Salman's ill-advised ventures have weakened Saudi Arabia’s
position in the world
Other
states in the Middle East are coming to recognise that there are
winners and losers, and have no wish to be on the losing side
Patrick
Cockburn
15
December, 2017
Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) of Saudi Arabia is the undoubted
Middle East man of the year, but his great impact stems more from his
failures than his successes. He is accused of being Machiavellian in
clearing his way to the throne by the elimination of opponents inside
and outside the royal family. But, when it comes to Saudi Arabia’s
position in the world, his miscalculations remind one less of the
cunning manoeuvres of Machiavelli and more of the pratfalls of
Inspector Clouseau.
Again
and again, the impulsive and mercurial young prince has embarked on
ventures abroad that achieve the exact opposite of what he intended.
When his father became king in early 2015, he gave support to a rebel
offensive in Syria that achieved some success but provoked full-scale
Russian military intervention, which in turn led to the victory of
President Bashar al-Assad. At about the same time, MbS launched Saudi
armed intervention, mostly through airstrikes, in the civil war in
Yemen. The action was code-named Operation Decisive Storm, but two
and a half years later the war is still going on, has killed 10,000
people and brought at least seven million Yemenis close to
starvation.
The
Crown Prince is focusing Saudi foreign policy on aggressive
opposition to Iran and its regional allies, but the effect of his
policies has been to increase Iranian influence. The feud with Qatar,
in which Saudi Arabia and the UAE play the leading role, led to a
blockade being imposed five months ago which is still going on. The
offence of the Qataris was to have given support to al-Qaeda type
movements – an accusation that was true enough but could be
levelled equally at Saudi Arabia – and to having links with Iran.
The net result of the anti-Qatari campaign has been to drive the
small but fabulously wealthy state further into the Iranian embrace.
Saudi
relations with other countries used to be cautious, conservative and
aimed at preserving the status quo. But today its behaviour is zany,
unpredictable and often counterproductive: witness the bizarre
episode in November when the Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri was
summoned to Riyadh, not allowed to depart and forced to resign his
position. The objective of this ill-considered action on the part of
Saudi Arabia was apparently to weaken Hezbollah and Iran in Lebanon,
but has in practice empowered both of them.
What
all these Saudi actions have in common is that they are based on a
naïve presumption that “a best-case scenario” will inevitably be
achieved. There is no “Plan B” and not much of a “Plan A”:
Saudi Arabia is simply plugging into conflicts and confrontations it
has no idea how to bring to an end.
MbS
and his advisers may imagine that it does not matter what Yemenis,
Qataris or Lebanese think because President Donald Trump and Jared
Kushner, his son-in-law and chief Middle East adviser, are firmly in
their corner. “I have great confidence in King Salman and the Crown
Prince of Saudi Arabia, they know exactly what they are doing,”
tweeted Trump in early November after the round up and confinement of
some 200 members of the Saudi elite. “Some of those they are
harshly treating have been ‘milking’ their country for years!”
Earlier he had tweeted support for the attempt to isolate Qatar as a
supporter of “terrorism”.
But
Saudi Arabia is learning that support from the White House these days
brings fewer advantages than in the past. The attention span of
Donald Trump is notoriously short, and his preoccupation is with
domestic US politics: his approval does not necessarily mean the
approval of other parts of the US government. The State Department
and the Pentagon may disapprove of the latest Trump tweet and seek to
ignore or circumvent it. Despite his positive tweet, the US did not
back the Saudi confrontation with Qatar or the attempt to get Mr
Hariri to resign as prime minister of Lebanon.
Saudi
Arabia’s crown prince: Country will return to ‘moderate, open
Islam’
For
its part, the White House is finding out the limitations of Saudi
power. MbS was not able to get the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas
to agree to a US-sponsored peace plan that would have given Israel
very much and the Palestinians very little. The idea of a
Saudi-Israeli covert alliance against Iran may sound attractive to
some Washington think tanks, but does not make much sense on the
ground. The assumption that Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the
capital of Israel, and the promise to move the US embassy there,
would have no long-term effects on attitudes in the Middle East is
beginning to look shaky.
It
is Saudi Arabia – and not its rivals – that is becoming isolated.
The political balance of power in the region changed to its
disadvantage over the last two years. Some of this predates the
elevation of MbS: by 2015 it was becoming clear that a combination of
Sunni states led by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey was failing to
carry out regime change in Damascus. This powerful grouping has
fragmented, with Turkey and Qatar moving closer to the Russian-backed
Iranian-led axis, which is the dominant power in the northern tier of
the Middle East between Afghanistan and the Mediterranean.
If
the US and Saudi Arabia wanted to do anything about this new
alignment, they have left it too late. Other states in the Middle
East are coming to recognise that there are winners and losers, and
have no wish to be on the losing side. When President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan called a meeting this week in Istanbul of the Organisation of
Islamic Cooperation, to which 57 Muslim states belong, to reject and
condemn the US decision on Jerusalem, Saudi Arabia only sent a junior
representative to this normally moribund organisation. But other
state leaders like Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, King Abdullah of
Jordan and the emirs of Kuwait and Qatar, among many others, were
present. They recognised East Jerusalem as the Palestinian capital
and demanded the US reverse its decision.
MbS
is in the tradition of leaders all over the world who show
Machiavellian skills in securing power within their own countries.
But their success domestically gives them an exaggerated sense of
their own capacity in dealing with foreign affairs, and this can have
calamitous consequences. Saddam Hussein was very acute in seizing
power in Iraq but ruined his country by starting two wars he could
not win.
Mistakes
made by powerful leaders are often explained by their own egomania
and ignorance, supplemented by flattering but misleading advice from
their senior lieutenants. The first steps in foreign intervention are
often alluring because a leader can present himself as a national
standard bearer, justifying his monopoly of power at home. Such a
patriotic posture is a shortcut to popularity, but there is always a
political bill to pay if confrontations and wars end in frustration
and defeat. MbS has unwisely decided that Saudi Arabia should play a
more active and aggressive role at the very moment that its real
political and economic strength is ebbing. He is overplaying his hand
and making too many enemies
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