JMD in SCMP Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman must walk geopolitical tightrope during Asian tour
·
Saudi Arabia has sought to strengthen
ties with Pakistan with one eye on neighbouring Iran
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However, Saudi investment in Pakistan
could complicate attempts to forge closer ties with India
Updated: Monday, 18 Feb, 2019 10:34am
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Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman’s three-nation tour of Asia is as much about demonstrating
he stands tall – despite Western criticism of the murder of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi and the war in Yemen – as it is about exploiting geopolitical and economic
opportunity.
Prince Mohammed is
betting on the optics of his visit to Pakistan, India, and China offsetting
talk in the US and Europe about arms embargoes and sanctions.
Prince Mohammed
changed his itinerary at the last minute, delaying by a day his arrival in
Pakistan and postponing visits to Malaysia and Indonesia. The stakes are
nonetheless high.
Saudi Arabia has
sought to strengthen ties with Pakistan with one eye on neighbouring Iran. The
crown prince’s visit coincides with Pakistan becoming increasingly dependent on
Saudi Arabia while relations with China, its closest ally, have become
strained.
Saudi financial
support for Pakistan is designed to counter expanding ties with Iran. That
support includes a US$3 billion deposit into Pakistan’s central bank to bolster
the country’s balance of payments and another US$3 billion in deferred oil
import payments coupled with an expected US$10 billion investment in the
troubled province of Balochistan, which borders Iran.
Prince Mohammed
could also seize upon Pakistani criticism of China’s “Belt and Road Initiative”
and efforts to refocus the US$45 billion plus China Pakistan Economic Corridor
(CPEC) on job creation, agriculture and industry.
Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman and Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan. Photo: AFP
However, Saudi
investment in Pakistan could complicate Prince Mohammed’s attempts to forge
closer economic and security ties with India, in light of the recent attack in
Kashmir that killed at least 42 Indian military personnel, blamed on Pakistan.
India has vowed to isolate Pakistan internationally, including seeking
Pakistan’s blacklisting by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), with
monitors financing of terrorism.
Managing the
India-Pakistan minefield will test Prince Mohammed’s diplomatic skills. Iran’s
India-backed, Arabian Sea deep-sea port of Chabahar is viewed by Saudi Arabia
as encroaching on the kingdom’s national security and economic interests.
A study published
in late 2017 by the Riyadh-based and government-backed International Institute
for Iranian Studies identified Chabahar as a “direct threat to the Arab Gulf
states”. The study warned Chabahar would enable Iran to increase oil exports to
India at the expense of Saudi Arabia and raise foreign investment in Iran.
The study’s author,
Mohammed Hassan Husseinbor, noted the expanse of Iran’s Sistan and Baluchestan
province.
“It would be a
formidable challenge, if not impossible, for the Iranian government to protect
such long distances and secure Chabahar in the face of widespread Baluch
opposition, particularly if this opposition is supported by Iran’s regional
adversaries and world powers,” Husseinbor wrote.
Iran has blamed a
series of recent attacks in Sistan and Baluchestan on Pakistan-based militants
allegedly supported by Saudi Arabia, the US and Israel.
Saudi Arabia’s
economic and geopolitical investment in Pakistan will be on the agenda for the
crown prince’s talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Saudi Arabia is a
cesspool of constant rivalry among the princes Mohamad Sabu,
Malaysian defence minister
China rejected
Pakistan’s initial plan to incorporate into CPEC Saudi investment in a refinery
in Gwadar, a crown jewel of the “Belt and Road Initiative” a mere 70km up the
coast from Chabahar, and a gold and copper mine on the Iranian border.
Nonetheless, China
has benefited from Saudi engagement in Pakistan despite concerns about the
kingdom’s intentions. Financial support from Saudi Arabia and UAE has made a
Pakistani request for a bailout by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) less
urgent. That has in turn shielded China from potentially embarrassing
disclosures of the financial terms of CPEC-related projects the IMF was
demanding as part of a Pakistani bailout.
While the crown
prince gave no reason for the postponement of his visit to Malaysia, it is unlikely
money and investment would have been enough to fix Saudi Arabia’s problems with
the Southeast Asian nation.
Relations since
Mahathir Mohamad’s upset electoral victory last year have been strained by
Saudi efforts to protect Najib Razak while he was prime minister. Deposed by
Mahathir, the former prime minister has since been charged with corruption.
Mahathir’s election victory also brought to office Mohamad Sabu, a defence
minister with a track record of criticising the kingdom.
“Malaysia should
not be too close to a country whose internal politics are getting toxic,” Sabu
warned in a commentary. “For the lack of a better word, Saudi Arabia is a
cesspool of constant rivalry among the princes. By this token, it is also a
vortex that could suck any country into its black hole if one is not careful.”
Sabu has since
withdrawn Malaysian troops from the Saudi Arabia-based 41-nation,
Saudi-sponsored Islamic Military Counter Terrorism Coalition. He has also
closed a Saudi-funded anti-terrorism centre, the King Salman Centre for
International Peace, which was allocated 16 hectares of land in Putrajaya,
close to the prime minister’s complex, by the Razak government. The centre was
inaugurated in 2017 by Prince Mohammed’s father, King Salman.
Prince Mohammed may
emerge from his tour reassured, having been feted – certainly he would be less
welcome in Washington or Western European capitals. The ultimate measure,
however, will be his ability to manoeuvre and master a minefield of conflicting
geopolitical interests, something he has not yet shown he can do.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at Singapore’s
S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies and co-director of the University
of Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture.
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