Saudi Arabia rolls the dice with bid for Newcastle United
By James M.
Dorsey
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Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman has rolled the dice with a US$ 374 million bid to acquire
storied British soccer club Newcastle United.
If approved
by Britain’s Premier League that nominally maintains a high bar for the qualification
of aspiring club owners, Prince Mohammed would have demonstrated that he has
put behind him an image tarnished by Saudi conduct of a five-year long war in
Yemen, the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, systematic abuse of
human rights and, more recently, the kingdom’s badly-timed oil price war with
Russia.
A successful
acquisition would send a message that the kingdom retains the kind of financial
muscle that allows it to acquire trophies that enable it to project itself in a
different light and garner soft power rather than financial gain at a time of a
pandemic and global economic collapse.
The planned
acquisition comes as Saudi Arabia is reportedly seeking to raise US$7 billion
with an international bond sale to compensate for sharply reduced oil revenues.
Aramco, the
Saudi national oil company, was reported to be talking to banks about a US$10 billion
loan to help finance its acquisition of a 70% stake in Saudi Basic Industries
Corp (SABIC). The deal would pour money into the Public Investment Fund (PIF),
the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund.
The
acquisition would mimic the 2017 purchase of celebrated soccer star Neymar by
Qatar-owned Paris St. Germain for US$277 million intended to demonstrate that
the Gulf state was unaffected by the then several months-old Saudi-UAE-led
economic and diplomatic boycott.
By the same
token, a decision by the Premier League to reject the acquisition of Newcastle would
be perceived as yet another of Prince Mohammed’s self-inflicted public
relations fiascos that include multiple failed attempts to position the kingdom
as a powerhouse in international soccer governance.
Prince
Mohammed’s emphasis on soccer, symbolized by his presence at the kick-off of
the 2018 World Cup in which Russia handily defeated Saudi Arabia, has as much
to do with projection of the kingdom internationally as it is a pillar of his
effort to develop the entertainment and sports sectors in his country and boost
his attempt to position nationalism rather than religion as a core element of
Saudi identity.
Prince
Mohammed is betting that the Premier League at a time of economic crisis and
with Britain needing to forge new trade relationships in the wake of its
departure from the European Union may not want to slam the door on a wealthy
investor and/or jeopardize British relations with the kingdom.
That could
prove to be a relatively safe bet.
Premier
League and British officials will have taken note that Prince Mohammed does not
take kindly to criticism and rejection.
Saudi Arabia
responded in 2018 to Canadian criticism of the kingdom’s human rights record by
withdrawing its ambassador and freezing all new trade and investment
transactions.
German
criticism of a failed Saudi attempt to force the resignation of Lebanon’s prime
minister led that same year to a de facto downgrading of diplomatic relations
and reduced trade.
Reports that
Yasir al-Rumayyan, a close associate of Prince
Mohammed and governor of the PIF, will become chairman of Newcastle raise the
stakes for both Prince Mohammed and the Premier League.
The PIF will
reportedly put up 80 percent of the funds needed for the acquisition through an
investment vehicle created by a British financier even though a document filed
with Companies House, Britain’s registrar of companies, made no mention of the
fund.
The Premier
League, nonetheless, may find itself, albeit only momentarily, in an
uncomfortable position.
The League
has tightened its criteria to test potential club
owners on their integrity and reputation. The criteria include ensuring that
a potential owner has not committed an act in a foreign jurisdiction that would
be a criminal offence in Britain, even if not illegal in their own country.
That could put
the Premier League in the position of, at least by implication, passing
judgement on whether Prince Mohammed was implicated in any of a number of
events that may have violated British law.
Supporters
of the acquisition argue that it bolsters Prince Mohammed’s reforms in a
soccer-crazy country and reaffirms his push to break with the kingdom’s
austere, inward-looking past. They reason further that it will bolster
investment in Newcastle and surroundings at a time of impending economic
hardship.
Supporters
only need to look at Manchester where the United Arab Emirates’ acquisition of
Manchester City more than a decade ago has benefitted not only the club but the
city too.
Like fans in
Manchester who have manifested little interest in the UAE’s record of human
rights abuse, supporters of Newcastle are likely to welcome the financial
injection and departure of the club’s unpopular current owner, Mike Ashley, and
ignore condemnation of the deal by human rights activists, including Amnesty International, as “sportswashing, plain and simple.”
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore. He is also 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 in Germany.
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