Saudi oil attacks put US commitments to the test
By James M.
Dorsey
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Patreon, Podbean and Castbox.
Neither
Saudi Arabia nor the United States is rushing to retaliate for a brazen,
allegedly Iranian attack that severely damaged two of the kingdom’s key oil
facilities.
That is not
to say that Saudi Arabia and/or the United States will not retaliate in what
could prove to be a game changer in the geopolitics of the Middle East.
Yet, reading
the tea leaves of various US and Saudi statements lifts the veil on the
constituent elements that could change the region’s dynamics.
They also
shine a spotlight on the pressures on both countries and shifts in the US-Saudi
relationship that could have long lasting consequences.
With US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visiting the kingdom to coordinate what his
office described as efforts to combat "Iranian aggression in the region,"
Saudi Arabia and the United States will be seeking to resolve multiple issues.
These
include collecting sufficient evidence to convincingly apportion blame;
calibrating a response that would be appropriate but not drag the United States
and the Middle East into a war that few want; deciding who takes the lead in
any military response and managing the long-term impact of that decision on Saudi-US relations and the US
commitment to the region.
A careful
reading of Saudi and US responses to the attacks so far suggests subtle
differences between the two. They mask fundamental issues that have emerged in
the aftermath of the attacks.
For
starters, Mr.
Pompeo and President Donald J. Trump have explicitly pointed the finger at Iran
as being directly responsible, while Saudi Arabia stopped short of blaming
the Islamic republic, saying that its preliminary
findings show that Iranian weapons were used in the attack. Iran
has denied any involvement.
The
discrepancy in the initial apportioning of blame raises the question whether
Saudi Arabia is seeking to avoid being manoeuvred into a situation in which it would
be forced to take the lead in retaliating against the Islamic republic with
strikes against targets in Iran rather than Yemen.
Political
scientist Austin Carson suggests that Saudi Arabia may have an interest in at
least partially playing along with Iranian insistence that it was not
responsible. “Allowing
Iran’s role to remain ambiguous could reduce Saudi leaders’ need to appear
strong… The Saudis are reportedly
unconvinced by shared US intelligence that attempts to link the attacks to
Iran’s territory. Some
experts suggest this may reflect a more cautious approach to escalation,”
Mr. Carson wrote in The Washington Post.
Saudi
Arabia’s initial reluctance to unambiguously blame Iran may have a lot to do
with Mr. Trump’s America First-driven response to the attacks that appeared to
contradict the Carter Doctrine proclaimed in 1980 by President Jimmy Carter.
The doctrine,
a cornerstone of the Saudi-US relationship, stated that the United States would
use military force, if necessary, to defend its national interests in the Gulf.
Mr. Trump’s
apparent weakening of the United States’ commitment to the defense of the
kingdom, encapsuled in the doctrine, risks fundamentally altering the
relationship, already troubled by Saudi conduct of the more than four-year long
war in Yemen and last year’s killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi
consulate in Istanbul.
Signalling a
break with the Carter doctrine, Mr. Trump was quick to point out that the
attacks were on Saudi Arabia, not on the United States, and suggested that it
was for the Saudis to respond.
“I haven’t
promised Saudis that. We have to sit down with the Saudis and work something
out. That was an attack on Saudi Arabia, and that
wasn’t an attack on us. But we would certainly help them,” Mr. Trump said
without identifying what kind of support the US would be willing to provide.
Despite
blustering that the United States was “locked and loaded,” Mr. Trump insisted
that “we have a lot of options but I’m not looking at options right now.”
Mr. Trump’s
response to a tweet by US Senator Lindsey Graham, a friend of the president who
favours a US military strike against Iran, that "the measured response by
President @realDonaldTrump…was clearly seen by the Iranian regime as a sign of
weakness" was equally telling.
"No
Lindsey, it was a sign of strength that some people just don't
understand." Mr. Trump said.
Mr. Trump
further called
into question the nature of the US-Saudi defense relationship by declaring
that “If we decide to do something, they’ll be very much involved, and that
includes payment. And they understand that fully.”
The Saudi
foreign ministry maintained, with the attacks casting doubt on the Saudi
military’s ability to defend the kingdom’s oil assets and Mr. Trump seemingly
putting the onus of a response on Saudi Arabia, that “the kingdom is capable of
defending its land and people and responding forcefully to those attacks.”
Only
indisputable evidence that the drones were launched from Iranian territory
would incontrovertibly point the finger at Iran.
So far, the
Saudis have stopped short of that while US officials have suggested that the
drones were launched either from Iran or by
pro-Iranian militias in southern Iraq.
Holding Iran
responsible for the actions of a militia, whether in Iraq or Yemen, could prove
more tricky given long-standing questions about the degree of control that Iran
has over various groups that it supports, and particularly regarding the
Houthis.
The argument
could turn out to be a slippery slope given that by the same logic, the United
States would be responsible for massive human casualties in the Yemen war
resulting from Saudi use of American weaponry.
Military
retaliation may not be immediate even if the United States and Saudi Arabia can
produce convincing evidence that Iran was directly responsible.
"No
knee jerk reactions to this - it's very systematic - what happens with
patience is it prevents stupid moves," a US official said.
The United
States is likely to attempt to first leverage that evidence in meetings on the
sidelines of next week’s United Nations General Assembly to convince the
international community, and particularly the Europeans, to drop opposition to
last year’s US withdrawal from the international nuclear accord with Iran and
the harsh economic sanctions that the Trump administration has since imposed on
Iran.
Both the
United States and Saudi Arabia will also want to use the opportunity of the UN
gathering to try to ensure that the fallout of any military response is limited
and does not escalate into a full-fledged war that could change the
geopolitical map of the Middle East.
Said foreign
policy analyst Steven A. Cook: “How the Trump administration responds will
indicate whether U.S. elites still consider energy resources a core national
interest and whether
the United States truly is on its way out of the Middle East entirely, as
so many in the region suspect.”
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, an adjunct senior research fellow
at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director
of the University of Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture
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