La foto de arriba muestra al monarca de Arabia Saudita Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud junto con el presidente de la Federación Rusa y líder del mundo libre, Vladimir Vladimírovich Putin, hace dos días en Moscú. La noticia fue mencionada como al paso por la prensa corporativa occidental, si bien los atentos lectores de Astroboy seguramente alzaron las cejas al ver los titulares. ¿De qué va todo esto? La nota que sigue intenta responder la pregunta; fue escrita por Andrew Korybko para el sitio web Oriental Review:
Título: Is Saudi
Arabia’s Grand Strategy Shifting?
Texto: Even in
this era of global paradigmatic changes, Saudi Arabia’s shifting grand strategy
is perhaps one of the most surprising developments to occur thus far, but the
fast-moving Russian-Saudi rapprochement is likely to provoke an Iranian
“zero-sum” reaction which could complicate Moscow’s multipolar efforts in
managing the “New Middle East”.
Most observers
were taken aback by what to many seemed to be the inexplicable visit of Saudi
King Salman to Moscow this week, wondering how and why the two long-standing
Great Power rivals were able to get so close to one another in such a short
period of time – and apparently without much public fanfare, too – in making
this historic event possible. The usual Alt-Media demagogues decried this as a
sellout of Russia’s fundamental national interests, with the most extreme
pundit-provocateurs even ranting that it amounts to President Putin siding with
“terrorists” such as Daesh and Al Qaeda, especially in light of Moscow’s
decision to sell the much-vaunted S-400 anti-air missile systems to Riyadh and
even set up a Kalashnikov production plant in the Kingdom.
Had the Saudi
Arabia of 2017 been the same country as it was half a decade ago, or even last
year for that matter as some could argue, then there might be some rhetorical
substance to this outlandish claim no matter how false it would still be, but
what most people don’t realize is that Saudi Arabia is in the process of
comprehensive changes to its foreign and domestic policies, and that there’s a
very high likelihood that it will moderate its traditional behavior in becoming
a more responsible actor in international (and especially regional) affairs. A
lot of this has happened away from the public eye, at least in the sense that
the developments weren’t “sexy” enough to draw widespread attention from most
media outlets and commentators, but these piecemeal changes have altogether
contributed to the formation of what looks to be a totally new grand strategy.
Russia’s
Rationale
Before getting
into the details of the drastic policy changes that Saudi Arabia has been up to
lately, it’s important to comment a bit on why Russia is embracing its
erstwhile nemesis. For starters, Russia’s foreign policy is driven nowadays by
the “progressive” faction of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which believes
that their country’s 21st-century grand strategic ambition should be to become
the supreme balancing force in the Eurasian supercontinent. To this end,
they’re diligently employing “military diplomacy” and “nuclear diplomacy”; the
first in selling arms to rival states in order to preserve the status quo
between them and prevent a hot war from transpiring (which is the opposite of
the US selling weapons in order to tip the balance in favor of its preferred
partner and spark the said conflict that Russia wants to avoid), and the second
in utilizing its global leadership in nuclear energy technology to make
important strategic inroads with non-traditional partners.
Multipolarity In
Action
Concerning Saudi
Arabia, this has seen Russia sign deals with it for the S-400 anti-air missile
system and Kalashnikov production plant (“military diplomacy”), and Rosatom’s
proposal to build Riyadh’s first-ever nuclear power plant (“nuclear
diplomacy”). Of course, there’s also traditional and energy diplomacy at play
here as well, the former as it relates to cooperation in uniting the Syrian
“opposition” as a prerequisite to resolving the War on Syria, and the latter
when it comes to both sides’ participation in the historic OPEC+ output deal
from last year and subsequent renewal earlier in 2017. Moreover, none of this
is occurring in a multipolar vacuum either, as Russia’s premier Chinese partner
has been making great strides with Saudi Arabia in the same timeframe,
including by inking two sets of deals totaling than $130 billion in the past
six months alone.
Riyadh’s Reforms
Most of the Chinese-Saudi
agreements were signed in the framework of Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman’s
ambitious Vision 2030 project for diversifying away from his Kingdom’s present
oil-exporting dependency and towards a more “real-sector” economy. This can’t
happen unless crucial socio-cultural reforms are made in Saudi Arabia, and the
young prince – who’s far from a fundamentalist Wahhabi in real life and
therefore something like a “rock star” among his country’s majority
“moderate-prone” youth population (over half of which is under 25 years
old) – recently undertook the pivotal
decision to allow women to drive in the future, understanding that this a
necessary step to increasing their future participation in the economy. It can
be expected that more such reforms might follow in the future, such as the
possible reopening of movie theaters and maybe even one day lessening the
patriarchal legal restrictions placed on women’s freedom of movement.
Unipolar Pushback
Mohammed Bin
Salman’s reforms aren’t without controversy, however, as they’ve produced a lot
of resistance among the country’s ultra-fundamental clerical class, as was
explained in the author’s recent analysis about “Why Allowing Saudi Women To
Drive Is Very Dangerous”. The fact of the matter is that Saudi Arabia isn’t a
pure “monarchical dictatorship” in the structural-political sense, but a “dual
dictatorship” between the monarchy and the clergy, but the Crown Prince’s
socio-culturally modernizing reforms are being perceived of as an unprecedented
“power grab” which de-facto constitutes a “soft coup” by the monarchy against
the clergy. In turn, the most extreme clerics could become a pressing national
security risk if they rally their followers against the monarchy in fomenting
unrest, whether manifested through street protests, a royal coup, or terrorism.
It’s the fear of this happening which explains the Kingdom’s recent crackdown
and the author’s subsequent investigation into “Who’s Really Trying To
Overthrow Mohammed Bin Salman?”
As the aforementioned article concludes, the
only serious player with the clandestine competencies to pull this off is the
US, which is considering the “Balkanization” of the Kingdom into a collection
of emirates aided by the duplicitous connivance of its regional UAE ally. This
was elaborated on more in depth by the author in his work a couple of months
ago explaining “The Machiavellian Plot to Provoke Saudi Arabia and Qatar into a
‘Blood Border’ War”, but the overriding idea is that the US has had an interest
in betraying its decades-long ally ever since the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal was
agreed to, which the author predicted in his summer 2015 piece about a “Polar
Reorientation In The Mideast” that also described the strategic contours that
would eventually lead to the present-day Russian-Saudi rapprochement. It’s this
Great Power convergence between Moscow and Riyadh, as well as the latter and
Beijing, which is driving the US to wage an incipient but increasingly
multifaceted Hybrid War on Saudi Arabia.
Stopping The Saudi
“Deep State” Conspiracy
Mohammed Bin
Salman must masterfully manage to tame both the radical clerics and domestic
terrorists if he’s to have a chance at avoiding a US-backed royalist coup
against him. He already has the support of the majority-youthful masses who
could come out to the streets to support him in the event of a sudden coup,
just like they did for Turkish President Erdogan during last year’s failed
pro-US coup attempt, so this infers that he needs to win the backing of the
military-security services in order to preemptively suppress clerical-terrorist
destabilizations before countering the royalist conspiracy that’s taking form. However, Saudi forces are
embroiled in the bloody War on Yemen, which was one of the first decisions that
he made as Defense Minister and is therefore attributed entirely to him, but
would have probably happened regardless of whoever was in power at the time due
to the geopolitical dynamics involved.
In fact, the
author forecast that a forceful Saudi response could be expected to
developments in Yemen as early as September 2014 in his article about “Syria’s
Yemeni Opportunity and the Rise of the Shia Circle”, which deliberately
analyzed events from Riyadh’s sectarian perspective in an attempt to better
understand the Kingdom’s future response. Likewise, the follow-up piece in
January 2015 about “Yemen: The Saudi Coup That Totally Backfired” presciently
concluded that “the Saudis are expected to hit back as hard as they can against
the phantom ‘Iranian menace’ that they’re attributing their Yemeni failings
to”, and that “no matter which form it takes, it’s not going to be pretty.” In
any case, the only way for Mohammed Bin Salman to be confident in the support
of his military-security services is to downscale the disastrous War on Yemen
and eventually follow the Syrian peace format in resolving the conflict there
in as much of a “face-saving” way as possible.
That, however,
won’t necessarily endear him to any of the conspiratorial royals who are
plotting his ouster, many of whom are reportedly irreconcilably opposed to him
for his high-profile foreign policy failings in the aforementioned War on Yemen
and Qatar Crisis, which is why the young prince so urgently needed to make up
for them with a dramatic success elsewhere, ergo the reason why he decided to
commence his country’s now-successful rapprochement with Russia. Conversely,
it’s precisely because of his pivotal role in carrying out this game-changing
foreign policy rebalancing that the US wants him out, and Washington sent a
very clear message to Riyadh of its displeasure just the other day when it
announced that it will be halting some of its military exercises with “Gulf
countries” until the Qatar Crisis is resolved. Reading between the lines, this
is the Pentagon voicing its strong opposition to King Salman’s visit to Moscow
and Saudi Arabia’s S-400 deal with Russia, thereby signaling to its in-country
proxies that it’s time to commence their planned regime change operation.
All in all,
Mohammed Bin Salman is trying to compensate for his earlier errors of judgement
in “moderating” his country’s foreign policy to the most realistic extent
possible under the present circumstances, which in an historical comparison
amounts to an unprecedented pivot of sorts towards the Multipolar World
Order. This doesn’t just have
geopolitical implications, however, as there’s the very real possibility that
Saudi Arabia might de-dollarize new Vision 2030 and energy contracts with its
new non-Western partners, which would in effect equate to the death of the
“petrodollar”. The author predicted this in a late-September forecast after it
became abundantly clear that the country was no longer as solidly in the
American camp as most observers had considered it, especially following its
fast-moving rapprochement with Russia and the $130 billion’s worth of deals
that the Kingdom signed with China.
The combined
effect of these two multipolar realignments, as well as the likely downscaling
of the War on Yemen and the “Damocles’ Sword” potential that Saudi Arabia has
for dealing a deathblow to the dollar, are increasingly turning Mohammed Bin
Salman into the “Saudi Saddam”, in that he’s now being targeted for elimination
by the US because this one-time American subordinate was brave enough to chart
his country’s own sovereign path in the world. If he can successfully withstand
the US-encouraged “deep state” coup against him being waged through the Hybrid
War mechanisms of a rebelling clergy, a possible domestic terrorist insurgency
(as partial blowback from Saudi Arabia’s support for such groups abroad), and a
royalist plot, among whatever other means might soon make themselves available,
then it’s expected that the end result will be a considerable moderation of the
Kingdom’s destabilizing activities in the region.
Irate Iranians
Background
Concepts:
While the
welcoming of Saudi Arabia into the multipolar fold as a responsible member of
the international community would be celebrated by many because of the
far-reaching consequences that it could have in altering the entire course of
the New Cold War, there’s one multipolar party which would actually be
incredibly irate at this happening, and that’s Iran. The Islamic Republic is
caught in an intense security dilemma with the Kingdom, inspired partly by the
centuries-old but previously long-dormant Sunni-Shiite split, and also the US’
efforts since the 1979 Revolution and especially after 9/11 to exacerbate this
into taking on geopolitical dimensions all across the international Muslim
community (“Ummah”). Iran and Saudi Arabia both conceive of international
affairs as being a “zero-sum” game between them, and it’s very likely that
Riyadh and its media surrogates will intentionally misportray King Salman’s
visit to Russia as being against Tehran instead of epitomizing Moscow’s
skillful geopolitical balancing act.
It’s
understandable if Iran feels uncomfortable with these optics, though it should
recognize that Russia’s overall intent is truly apolitical and driven by
neutral Great Power considerations, not anything directed against it personally
no matter what the forthcoming Saudi psy-ops might infer.
That being said,
it’s very tempting to perceive of events through the aforementioned “zero-sum”
prism in seeing any betterment of Russian-Saudi relations as being to the
overall detriment of Russian-Iranian ones, which in turn might prompt an
asymmetrical response or set thereof from Tehran in countering what some of its
leadership might truly believe is Russia’s “unfriendly” and “humiliating”
gesture by hosting the Saudi King, selling him S-400 anti-air missiles and
state-of-the-art Kalashnikovs, and bidding to produce the Kingdom’s first-ever
nuclear power plant. This isn’t speculation either, as Iran already isn’t happy
with the de-facto alliance that Russia has struck with “Israel” in Syria, which
is explained in detail in the author’s earlier work rhetorically questioning
whether “Anyone Still Seriously Thinks That Russia And Israel Aren’t Allies?”
Phase 1: Syria
Moreover, Iran
doesn’t like how Saudi Arabia is the main reason why it hasn’t been invited to
join BRICS, and while the other four members are in a technical sense equally
responsible for this too, it’s only Russia which is courting Saudi Arabia in a
way which could make Iran uneasy given how impactful the latest rapprochement
will be for Syria. Therefore, even though Iran’s official media has been
largely silent on the implications of the Russian-Saudi rapprochement, it can’t
be ruled out that the millennia-experienced Iranian diplomats are preparing one
of their stereotypically asymmetrical responses to what’s happening, and that
it could most immediately have consequences for Syria. For example, Iran could
make the Astana talks more difficult by siding more closely with Damascus in
attempting to rebuff the joint Russian-Turkish efforts to get the Syrian
government to enter into certain political-administrative concessions (e.g. a
“phased leadership transition” and “federalization”) as part of a comprehensive
peace plan that would meet the interests of most external parties to the
conflict and therefore maximize Moscow’s geopolitical “balancing” capabilities.
Phase 2: Caucasus
Apart from that
and stepping its response up a notch, there’s also the possibility that Iran
could work with India to redirect the North-South Transport Corridor (NSTC)
from Azerbaijan and Russia to Armenia and Georgia instead, the latter route of
which was predicted in the Mideast chapter of the author’s book-length
analytical series about “The Chinese-Indian New Cold War” and would allow both
on-the-fence Great Powers to pioneer a trade route to the EU. This would be a
geopolitically troubling development for Russia and contribute to its
perception that Armenia has become an “obstructionist” actor vis-à-vis
Moscow-led Eurasian integration processes and has probably been totally taken
over by the powerful American-based diaspora lobby, though China’s latest
inroads in building its second-largest embassy in the post-Soviet space in Yerevan
might help to “balance” everything out in preventing this potential move from
being completely disastrous for multipolarity. Nevertheless, if Iran takes this
step in rerouting some or all of the NSTC to Armenia, Georgia, and the EU, then
it would probably mean that it’s also seriously considering expanding its
asymmetrical response to the third phase of operations in the Balkans.
Phase 3: Balkans
The third and
final escalatory phase of Iran’s most realistic responses to any perceived
“security dilemma” with Russia after Moscow’s rapprochement with Riyadh would
be if Tehran seeks to broaden its asymmetrical measures to include energy and
geopolitical dimensions in the Balkans. The author wrote about the future role
that post-sanctions Iranian energy exports to Europe could have in challenging
Russia’s present market dominance in certain regions, and while this might not
happen if the EU reimposes sanctions against the Islamic Republic in compliance
with American pressure, it still can’t be entirely discounted that Iranian LNG
exports to Croatia, Ukraine, Lithuania, and even Poland could be in the cards,
as well as its exit from the OPEC+ output agreement. However, the most
destabilizing consequence of Iran’s irritability with Russia could be if it decides
to return to its post-Yugoslav role in breaking up Bosnia, using the Serbs as
stand-ins for the Russians in a new proxy war. That’s the most extreme step
that Iran could take and there’s nothing right now which indicates that it will
happen, but it should nevertheless be included as the worst-case “dark
scenario” forecast.
Concluding
Thoughts
Royal Pivot:
Saudi Arabia’s
grand strategy is shifting away from its former Western-/unipolar-centric focus
to a more diversified one of “multi-alignment’ with multipolar leaders such as
Russia and China, motivated in part by the US’ hostile energy and geopolitical
actions against it. On the domestic front, Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman is
modernizing his country’s socio-cultural situation by enacting belated reforms
that will complement his ambitious Vision 2030 project of multisectoral
economic diversification away from its present dependency on oil exports. Taken
together, the international and domestic dimensions of Saudi Arabia’s grand
strategic shifts are expected to have game-changing implications in altering
the global dynamics of the New Cold War, to say nothing of what would happen if
the Kingdom de-dollarizes its future Vision 2030 and energy deals with its new
non-Western partners, hence why the initiator of all of this, Mohammed Bin
Salman, is now the “Saudi Saddam” in the sense of being targeted for
elimination.
Iranian Reaction:
That’s not all
that there is to it, however, since even in the event that the young prince is
successful in thwarting his myriad Hybrid War adversaries and the wide variety
of weaponized threats that they’re poised to utilize against him, it’s unlikely
that this will result in multipolar stability in the Mideast, owing mostly to
the fact that Iran is expected to be incredibly irate at its hated rival being
feted as a privileged partner by Russia and China. The difference between the
two Eurasian Great Powers, however, is that Moscow’s outreaches to Riyadh are
having direct consequences for Syria, particularly as it relates to possibly
“counterbalancing” or even “rolling back” Iran’s intended post-Daesh influence
in the Arab Republic, or so it may seem, which is why Tehran looks much more
suspiciously at Moscow than it does at Beijing. The problem, though, is that
Russia isn’t doing any of this “against Iran”, but in the “larger multipolar
interests” of becoming the supreme “balancing” force in the Eurasian
supercontinent, which in and of itself necessitate having excellent relations
with Saudi Arabia.
Scenario
Forecasts:
If the Iranian
leadership is misled into viewing Russia’s ties with Saudi Arabia as part of a
“zero-sum” game and not the “win-win” strategy that it’s actually intended (key
word) to be, then it’s very likely that the Islamic Republic will resort to one
of its stereotypically asymmetrical responses honed by millennia of diplomatic
experience in making its silent disagreements well known. This would be an
unfortunate development because it would mean that Russia’s sincere efforts to
balance and then mediate the Saudi-Iranian/Sunni-Shiite rivalry would be for
naught, and that the US’ unstated goal of redirecting Iranian attention away
from Saudi Arabia and towards Russia would have been partially successful.
Nevertheless, should this happen, then it’s expected that the three-phase tier
of escalatory responses could see Iran create “complications” in the Astana
peace process; redirect the North-South Transport Corridor away from Azerbaijan
and Russia and towards Armenia, Georgia, and the EU; and begin actively
competing with Russia for part of the European energy market. At the worst, it
might even try to restore its destabilizing influence in Bosnia and spark a
proxy war against Russia’s Serbian partners there.
American Backup
Plan:
None of Iran’s
forecasted responses are certain, or even that it will negatively appraise the
fast-moving Russian-Saudi rapprochement in the first place, but in the possible
event that it does, then it would inadvertently be playing into the US’
intended strategy of indirectly using Iran as a backup plan for replacing Saudi
Arabia in countering Russian interests in the Mideast, Caucasus, and the
Balkans. In addition, Riyadh’s reversal from the unipolar camp to the
multipolar one would leave the US without a regular source of jihadi recruits,
thereby necessitating that it scout elsewhere in such countries as Sudan,
India, Bangladesh, and Indonesia. The most likely scenario to happen in the
near future is that Iran’s suspicions of the Russian-Saudi rapprochement
manifest themselves subtly in Syria, at least at first, while the US begins
looking to non-Mideast “Global South” countries for mercenaries while
concurrently commencing its regime change operation in Saudi Arabia.
The best outcome
would be if Russia’s multidimensional diplomatic efforts could bring Saudi
Arabia and Iran together in a “New Détente” like how Iraq’s Muqtada al-Sadr
unsuccessfully tried to do, all the while assisting both of them in warding off
the US’ Hybrid War threats, but the most likely result is that this wishful
thinking eventuality is still a far way’s off, if it ever happens at all, since
the US is well known for flexibly adapting its unipolar grand strategy to
accommodate for any multipolar contingency such as this one.
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