What to be Improved in the Arab World?
What to be
Improved in the Arab World?
Remarks by James
M. Dorsey, 30 November 2016
The short answer to the question framing this session is: where
does one start? If things in the Middle East and North Africa were not
complicated enough, answering the question has been made even more difficult by
the rise of Donald Trump, and the fact that no one, maybe not even he, has an
idea about what his policy towards the various crises in the Middle East and
North Africa will be, or what his attitude might be towards individual
countries in the region.
So, rather than speculate or get bogged down in the excruciating
detail of individual conflicts like those in Syria, Iraq, Libya or Yemen, what
I would like to do is look at fundamental issues that weave themselves like a
red thread through whatever conflict or crisis one looks at. These include the
ones named in the title of this session – Syria, Iraq, Libya and Yemen – as
well as the phenomenon of militant political Islam, the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, and the Saudi-Iranian struggle for regional dominance and global
hegemony in the Muslim world.
Many blame the disintegration of post-colonial nation states like
Syria, Iraq, Libya and Yemen, on the drawing of artificial borders by colonial
powers as symbolized by the Sykes Picot agreement. If that were true, we would
see a similar development across Africa. For much of the second half of the 20th
century, many feared that any secession would have a domino effect across the
continent. That was the concern with Biafra in the 1960s. Yet, the Organization
of African Unity’s recognition of the Frente Polisario, the Algerian-backed
liberation movement of the Western Sahara, in the 1980s, and the independence
of Eritrea in 1991 after a 27-year long guerrilla war remain isolated events.
Syria, Iraq, Libya and Yemen are falling apart not because they
are artificial constructs created by colonial powers but because they were
ruled by autocratic governments who were exclusive rather than inclusive. That
is to say, significant segments of the population often defined in religious or
ethnic terms had no real stake in society and the state. In fact, that is the
state of affairs across much of the Middle East and North Africa. Think of
Palestinians, Kurds, Shiites, Christians – just to name a few. Radicalisation
moreover is being fuelled by misguided foreign policies as well as repressive,
exclusionary domestic strategies that produce social marginalization, huge gaps
in income distribution, and dislocation of resources in corrupt autocracies
with youth bulges that populate a swath of land stretching from the Atlantic
coast of Africa to the Indian Ocean. If
this sounds familiar, widespread discontent in the Middle East and North Africa
is indeed part of a global trend, albeit perhaps its most brutal and violent
expression.
One reason for this is that the Middle East and North Africa are
populated by regimes that have a demonstrated willingness to defend the essence
of the status quo at whatever price. That price can be the destruction of whole
countries as in Syria and Yemen. These regimes see their survival in the
shaping of the region in their own mould and do not shy away from stoking
conflict and aiming for regime change when and where it suits their interest.
External powers like the Soviet Union in the past and Russia today as well as
the United States were actively or passively supported the policies of their
regional allies.
As a result, no Middle Eastern or North African state or external
power emerges from this smelling like a rose. In the days of the cold war it
was Soviet-backed revolutionary regimes like Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Libya and
Algeria versus primarily monarchical conservatives. Post-Soviet Union, ideology
has made place for pure power plays. The one exception to this rule is the 1979
Islamic revolution in Iran, one of the 20th centuries few truly
popular revolutions.
The Iranian revolution challenged the region’s existing order
before and after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. It represents an
existential threat to the conservatives, and particularly to Saudi Arabia’s
ruling Al Saud family. The challenge is multi-fold: a republic rather than a
monarchy established as the result of a truly popular revolt that toppled a
monarch and an icon of US power in the region. Adding fuel to the fire, Iran’s
republican version of an Islamic government is legitimized by an
institutionalized, albeit flawed, electoral process and a degree of popular
sovereignty, that pays lip service to revolutionary goals.
The Saudis were quick to recognize the existential challenge posed
by Iran’s Islamic revolution. They decided early on that they had no choice but
to confront it aggressively both regionally and globally. If any one conflict
has shaped the Middle East and North Africa, its various conflicts and multiple
crises as well as the fate of Muslim majority countries beyond the region and
Muslim minority communities elsewhere, it is the epic struggle between Saudi
Arabia and Iran for regional hegemony as well as dominance in the Muslim world.
This is not to deny the fact that national governments and
non-state actors were and are important actors in the Saudi soft power
ploy. The result of this confluence of
interests has been devastating. It includes wars like the one between Iraq and
Iran in the 1980s that left up to a million people dead; the devastation of
countries like Iraq, Syria and Pakistan that are wracked by violence in which
sectarian conflict was fuelled by both parties; and the spread of religious,
inward-looking, intolerant and supremacist ultra-conservatism that offers the
discontent and disenfranchised a refuge and creates an environment that in
given circumstances serves as a breeding ground for religiously-packaged
militancy.
Iran’s revolutionary zeal, despite the emergence of Hezbollah as a
potent trans-national Shiite militia force, past Iranian support of Hamas in
Gaza and the Islamic republic’s opportunistic alliance with the Houthis in
Yemen petered out in all but word in the first year of the revolution. The
Iraqi war against Iran funded largely by Saudi Arabia and to a lesser extent
smaller Gulf states gave rise to Iranian nationalism. Iran fought its proxy
battles with the Saudis primarily in the region itself. For Iran, it was a
battle about power and a struggle against an inherently discriminatory ideology
that targeted its interpretation of the faith.
For the Saudis, it was one that was ultimately existential and
about survival. It was not simply regional for the Al Sauds. It was global
given the kingdom’s claim to leadership of the Muslim world based on its
custody of the holy cities of Mecca and Medina and the Al Saud’s power sharing
arrangement with an ultra-conservative clergy ideologically committed to
spreading its interpretation of the faith.
The Saudi determination to counter the Iranian revolutionary
threat by defeating rather than containing it has ever since shaped Saudi
policy towards the Islamic republic and towards Shiites. To be sure, Iran
repeatedly took the bait with the creation of Hezbollah, political protests
during the haj in Mecca, the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia,
to name just a few of the incidents.
Saudi Arabia’s response to Iran’s revolutionary appeal was to make
an ultra-conservative worldview that emphasized denunciation of Muslim others
like the Shiites, Ahmadis and Sufis as well as a supremacist worldview and
arch-conservative family values an influential player in Muslim communities
across the globe. The Saudi effort produced the single largest dedicated public
diplomacy campaign in history.
Estimates of Saudi spending on the funding of Muslim cultural,
religious and educational institutions across the globe range from $75 to $100
billion. This figure does not include the cost of forging close ties to
non-Wahhabi Muslim religious and political leaders, militaries and intelligence
agencies in various Muslim nations in a bid to ensure that they bought into the
geopolitical elements of Saudi-backed ultra-conservatism, first and foremost
among which anti-Shiism. It also does not include expenditure on armed groups
in Syria, Iraq, Bosnia or Pakistan where Saudi Arabia has funded militant,
violent and rabidly anti-Shiite and anti-Ahmadi groups responsible for the
deaths of thousands It also does not take into account the financial cost of
Saudi-backing of the US-led anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan in the 1980s with
its devastating consequences for both Afghanistan and Pakistan.
On one level, the Saudi campaign has been phenomenally successful.
Saudi-backed ultra-conservatism in whatever form ranging from Wahhabism to
various strands of Salafism to Deobandism has been embedded in Muslim
communities across the world and is an influential political player in the
Middle East and North Africa as well as countries as far flung as Malaysia,
Indonesia, Pakistan, Mali and minority communities in Western Europe.
Let me illustrate this with an anecdote. The man who was until
recently deputy head of Indonesian intelligence and deputy head of Nahdlatul
Ulema, one of the world’s largest Islamic movements that professes to be
anti-Wahhabi, is a fluent Arabic speaker. He spent 12 years in the Middle East
representing the Indonesian intelligence service, eight of those in Saudi
Arabia. This man professes in the same breath his dislike of the Wahhabis and
at the same time warns that Shiites, who constitute 1.2 percent of the
Indonesian population and that includes the estimated 2 million Sunni converts
over the last 40 years, are one of the foremost domestic threats to Indonesian
national security. This man is not instinctively anti-Shiite, but sees Shiites
as an Iranian fifth wheel. The impact of Saudi funding is such that even
Nahdlatul Ulema is forced to adopt ultra-conservative language and concepts when
it comes to perceptions of the threat posed by Iran and Shiites.
Yet, 40 years since the Saudi soft power grab moved into full
gear, its success has become as much a liability as it is an asset with the
kingdom moving into the firing line against the backdrop of demands that it
live up to its responsibility for creating potential breeding grounds for
radicalism and devastating whole countries as with the Saudi military
intervention in Yemen. The problem is compounded by the fact that the Al Sauds
were not always in full control of the use of monies invested in the campaign.
As a result, they have let a genie out of the bottle that now leads an
independent life, has in part turned on the Saudis themselves, and that can’t
be put back into the bottle.
The Saudi-Iranian battle is further accentuated by uncertainty
over US policy. That is certainly true with the rise of Trump who from an
Iranian perspective has made comments that spark concern in Tehran as well as
remarks that could hearten the Iranians. Saudi uncertainty predates the rise of
Trump. US officials for much of their country’s relationship with Saudi Arabia
have insisted that the two countries do not share common values, that their
relationship is based on common interests.
Underlying the now cooler relations between Washington and Riyadh
is the fact that those interests are diverging. The divergence became evident
with the eruption of popular revolts in 2011 and particularly US criticism of
the Saudi military intervention in Bahrain to squash a rebellion as well as hesitant
American support for the toppling of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. It is
also obvious in the nuclear agreement with Iran that is returning the Islamic
republic to the international fold despite deep-felt Saudi objections.
The result of all of this has been with the rise of the Salmans,
King Salman and his powerful son, deputy crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, a
far more assertive foreign and military policy. Make however no mistake, Saudi
Arabia’s new assertiveness is not a declaration of independence from the United
States. On the contrary, Mohammed Bin Salman has made that clear in various
interviews. It was designed, certainly in the era of Obama, to force the United
States to reengage in the Middle East in the belief that it will constitute a
return to the status ante quo: US support for the kingdom as the best guarantor
for regional stability. The Salmans were operating on the basis of Marx’s
Verelendungstheorie: things have to get worse to get better. It is a strategy
that may or may not work with Trump.
The Saudi strategy with its pervasive impact on the Middle East
and the Muslim world at large long made perfect sense. Saudi regional
leadership amounted to exploitation of a window of opportunity rather than
reliance on the assets and power needed to sustain it. Saudi Arabia’s interest
is and was 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. Punitive international
sanctions and international isolation long took care of Iran.
Ironically, Trump could extend that window if he adopts a hard
line towards Iran. That is for the Saudis nonetheless a double-edged sword.
Saudi policy makers have come to see restrictions on Iranian nuclear policy
even if they are for a period of 15 years at most as an asset. The problem for
the Saudis is that Trump at times has also suggested a harder US approach towards
the kingdom itself.
A concern for the Saudis that is more fundamental than uncertainty
over US policy in the era of Trump is that Iran despite not being an Arab
nation and maintaining a sense of Persian superiority has the assets Saud
Arabia lacks to secure its position on a level playing field as a regional
power rather than a second fiddle state. Those assets no matter how degraded
include a large population base, an industrial base, resources, 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, and certainly not with religious ultra-conservatism playing a key
influential role.
Saudi Arabia was shell shocked on September 11, 2001, when it
became evident that most of the perpetrators were Saudi nationals. Saudi
society was put under the kind of scrutiny the kingdom had never experienced
before. The same is happening again today with the rise of jihadism, the war in
Yemen and the kingdom’s role in Iraq, Syria and Pakistan.
Changing international attitudes towards Saudi sectarianism and
its proxy wars against Iran are evident in a quiet conclusion in Western
intelligence and policy circles that the crisis in Syria is in part a product
of the international community’s indulgence of Saudi propagation of
ultra-conservatism. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) director John Brennan
unsuccessfully tried in 2011 as peaceful anti-regime protests in Syria
descended into violence to persuade Saudi Arabia at a meeting in Washington of
Middle Eastern intelligence chiefs to stop supporting militant Sunni Muslim
Islamist fighters in Syria. An advisor to the Joint
Chiefs of Staff recounted that the Saudis ignored Brennan's request. They
"went back home and increased their efforts with the extremists and asked
us for more technical support. And we say OK, and so it turns out that we end
up reinforcing the extremists," the advisor said.
In sum, if inclusion rather than exclusion is the fundamental
answer to the Middle East and North Africa’s multiple conflicts, countering
Saudi-backed ultra-conservatism is one major key to breaking the vicious cycle.
That is obviously easier said than done and only part of any successful effort.
Islamic ultra-conservatism is often no longer dependent on Saudi funding and
has made such deep inroads into societies as well as governments as for example
in Pakistan that it would likely take a generation to turn around. Saudi
Arabia’s soft power campaign has also sprouted radical groups that see the
Saudis no longer as an inspiration but as corrupt deviants to a fundamentally
common interpretation of the faith. As a result, Saudi Arabia is both part of
the problem and part of the solution. All of this leaves me where I began my
remarks: Where does one start in assessing what can be improved in the Middle
East and North Africa. Saudi Arabia is not the only place, but it is certainly
one that together with Iran has its fingers in the region’s key pies.
Thank you.
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 the
author of The Turbulent World
of Middle East Soccer
blog, a recently published book with the same title, and also just published
Comparative Political Transitions
between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr. Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario.
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