Saudis’ Yemeni headache won’t go away if and when the guns fall silent
By James M. Dorsey
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Edited remarks at Stand with Yemen Symposium and
Exhibition 23 February 2019
These are tough times for Saudi Arabia.
The drama enveloping the killing of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi and the brutal way in which it was carried out have captured public
attention. In reality, however, Saudi Arabia’s real problems began earlier as a
result of its conduct of the Yemen war.
Saudi interference in Yemen that culminated in military
intervention predates the four-year-old war. Yemen has long been perceived by
Saudi Arabia as a threat. That threat went far beyond current Iranian support
for the Houthis. In fact, it was Saudi divide-and-rule tactics in Yemen,
changing Saudi attitudes towards the Houthis and Saudi Arabia’s global campaign
to promote anti-Shiite, anti-Iranian strands of ultra-conservative Sunni Muslim
Islam that helped pave the way for the current Yemen crisis.
It is only half a century ago that the Houthis were part of
a Saudi effort to confront Arab nationalism. As an aside, Saudis and Israelis
cooperated already then with Israeli military aircraft dropping weapons for the
Saudi-backed rebels that included the Houthis. The deterioration in Saudi-Houthi
relations accelerated just after the turn to this century when the Saudis
funded the opening of a Salafi centre on the outskirts of the Houthi capital of
Saada.
The centre constituted not only a challenge to the Houthis but
also to the power of the Houthi leadership. It successfully appealed to the
socially disadvantaged as well as youth who were attracted by Salafism’s
egalitarianism, resented the power of the older generation and saw puritan
Islam as a vehicle to challenge the traditional hierarchy. Fear of the Wahhabi/Salafi encroachment
fuelled the Houthi’s armed fight against the government of then President Ali
Abdullah Saleh, his Saudi-backed successor Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, and
ultimately the Saudis themselves, which led to the kingdom’s military
intervention in Yemen in March 2015.
To initially counter the threat, the leadership of the
Houthis, Zaidis who are Shiites with practices more akin to Sunni Muslim ritual,
turned to Iran for support in religious education, a development that further
angered the kingdom, and laid the groundwork for a war that has devastated a
country that already ranked as one of the world’s poorest.
The Saudi intervention was, however, about more than just
confronting an Iranian proxy on its doorstep. For one, if anything, it was the
intervention that really drove the Houthis and Iranians closer to one another.
Even so, the Houthis remain an opportunity in a far broader Saudi-Iranian
rivalry rather than a strategic target for the Iranians.
The Salmans, the king and his son, have since coming to
office and despite the emergence of Donald Trump, taken to new heights a far
more assertive foreign and military policy that was initially crafted by their
predecessors in response to the popular Arab revolts in 2011. Make however no
mistake, Saudi Arabia’s new assertiveness is not a declaration of independence
from the United States even if the kingdom is expanding its international
relations as is evident in Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s recent tour of Asia.
On the contrary, Prince Mohammed made that very clear in
multiple interviews. His goal was to force the United States to reengage in the
Middle East as the best guarantor for regional stability. The Saudis appear to
be operating on the basis of Karl Marx’s Verelendungs theory: things have to
get worse to get better. That is the part of the backdrop of the stalled
military intervention in Yemen. Dangling Iran as the real threat emanating from
Yemen serves the Saudis’ purpose.
In doing so Saudi Arabia, has proven to be driven. It is a drive
that is fuelled by a perception that Iran poses an existential threat to Saudi
Arabia. In fact, that may not be incorrect, certainly from the perception of
the monarchy and its ruling family.
Saudi Arabia dazzles with the billions of dollars gained
from oil exports that it is able to invest overseas and the investment
opportunities it creates in the kingdom itself. But the truth of the matter is
that long-term Saudi Arabia’s future is not that of a regional hegemon.
Saudi regional leadership, even if it has been tarnished in
Yemen in military and reputational terms, amounts to exploitation of a window
of opportunity rather than reliance on the assets and power needed to sustain
it. Saudi Arabia’s interest is to extend its window of opportunity for as long
as possible. That window of opportunity exists as long as the obvious regional
powers – Iran, Turkey and Egypt – are in various degrees of disrepair. For now,
punitive economic sanctions and international isolation take care of Iran.
And that is what bites. Iran may not be Arab and maintains a
sense of Persian superiority, but it has like Turkey and Egypt assets Saudi Arabia lacks: a large population base, an industrial base, a huge domestic
market, a battle-hardened military, a deep-rooted culture, a history of empire
and a geography that makes it a crossroads. Mecca and money will not be able to
compete.
Add to all of this two factors. The Islamic regime came to
power in a revolution that preceded the 2011 Arab revolts by 32 years. Moreover,
the Iranian revolution toppled a monarch not a president and an icon of US
power in the Middle East.
Perhaps, more importantly, if one disregards the sanctioning
of Iran, it is Iran rather than Saudi Arabia that is likely to shape the future
energy architecture of Eurasia. Oil, in terms of demand is a diminishing
commodity. If the long-term future is renewables, the medium term will be
shaped by gas. Iran has gas, Saudi Arabia does not, at least not the kind of
gas it can export. In fact, Iran, has the world’s second largest gas reserves.
Again, disregarding the sanctions, Iran would have in the next five years 24.6
billion cubic metres available for annual piped exports beyond its current
supply commitments.
If, indeed, Iran poses an existential threat to the rule of
the Al Saud family that it cannot eliminate and at best contain with the
support of the United States, the question is what Saudi Arabia’s goal in Yemen
is as well as in its broader rivalry with Iran. There are those who coherently
argue that Saudi Arabia’s goal in Yemen may have initially been the roll-back
of Houthi advances with their occupation of the Yemeni capital Sana’s and large
parts of Yemen, destruction of Houthi power and forcing them into a situation
in which they would have had to accept a Saudi-dictated end to the war.
Four years into the war, that is not a realistic goal. Short
of that, the question is how sincere Saudi and for that matter UAE interest is
in finding a way out of the war. It is conceivable that short of outright
victory, Saudi Arabia would want to keep Yemen weak and the Houthis militarily
on the defensive.
That is at best only sustainable in the short term. Fact of
the matter is that the reputational damage Saudi Arabia has suffered is
starting to hurt witness measures taken by the US Congress and Germany’s
decision to halt arms sales to the kingdom. Conflicts are only ended, if not
resolved if the pain of continuing the conflict is greater than the pain of
ending it. In Yemen, Saudi Arabia could well be nearing the inflection point.
The problem is that even if the United Nations mediated
peace talks ultimately produce an end to the war, Yemen, if anything, will pose
in the post-war era an even greater and more real threat. Yemen for much of
post-World War Two history has been an after thought in the international
community if it sparked a thought at all. Yet, what a post-war Yemen will
represent is a devastated country that largely needs to be rebuilt from
scratch, a country whose traumatized population has suffered one the world’s
worst humanitarian disasters and will need all the after-care that goes with
that.
Beyond the taking care of the most immediate humanitarian
issues, there is little reason to believe that investors and governments with
massive aid packages and offers of reconstruction will be knocking on Yemen’s
doors. Like in Syria and Libya, the risk is of the emergence of a generation
that has nothing to look forward to and nothing to lose. In Yemen, that generation
is likely to deeply resent what it perceives Saudi Arabia has done to their
country. If Saudi Arabia, long saw Yemen as the Gulf’s most populous nation
with a battle-hardened military that needed to be managed, that new generation
is likely to put flesh on the skeleton.
Its not a pretty picture to look forward to. And it is one
in which the damage has already been done. Having said that, its never too late
to try to limit the damage, if not reverse affairs. That however would take the
kind of courage and vision that Prince Mohammed and others in power elsewhere
in the Middle East have yet to demonstrate.
Dr.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture,
and co-host of the New Books in Middle Eastern Studies podcast.
James is the author of The Turbulent World
of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with the same title and a co-authored
volume, Comparative Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and
the Middle East and North Africa as well as Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
and recently published China
and the Middle East: Venturing into the Maelstrom
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