The potential dark side of the militarization of Gulf societies
By James M.
Dorsey
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The coronavirus pandemic’s economic fallout calls into
question Gulf states’ ability to fund a brewing, costly regional arms race. That in turn could not only reshape their geopolitical posture but also
efforts to make the military a pillar of a new national identity at a time that
they are forced to renegotiate outdated social contracts.
A significant drop in revenues, as a
result of the collapse of oil and gas prices and vastly reduced global demand, raises
the question whether countries like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and
Qatar, can maintain huge military expenditures that rank them among the world’s
foremost arms buyers.
Saudi and UAE expenditure was driven
by a perceived need to counter Iranian advances in the development of ballistic
missiles and drones as well as a potential nuclear military capability and
Iranian-backed Arab proxies. Qatar joined the race more recently in response to
the three-year-old, Saudi-UAE-led economic and diplomatic boycott of the Gulf
state.
The expenditure positioned the
military as a driver of an identity grounded in nationalism rather than
religion or tribal heritage and was intended to help lay the groundwork for eventual,
potentially painful, transitions to more diversified and streamlined post-oil
economies.
Male conscription introduced in the
UAE, Qatar and Kuwait and a Saudi decision to open volunteering for military
service to women over the last decade served that purpose as well as government
efforts to expand citizen participation in the workforce at the expense of
migrant and expatriate labour, including in the armed forces.
The moves constituted a break with a
past in which Arab rulers largely distrusted their militaries and employed multiple ways to shield themselves against feared
military-backed attempts to remove them from power.
Saudi and Emirati rulers expected that
their military intervention in Yemen and the UAE’s involvement in the Libyan
war would boost the military’s prestige with quick and decisive victories.
Five years later, the ill-conceived
intervention in Yemen has produced at best mixed results. So has the more
recent effort to topple the internationally recognized, Islamist Libyan
Government of National Accord.
The UAE, dubbed Little Sparta by former US defense secretary Jim Mattis, withdrew partially from Yemen in a
bid to cut its losses. UAE forces, moreover, suffered the deaths of tens of
Emirati citizens, a high number for a population of only 1.4 million nationals.
As a result, the UAE relies increasingly on proxies and mercenaries.
Nonetheless, the UAE may have fared
better than the Saudi military whose image, at least internationally, has been
severely tarnished.
Recently, the kingdom appears to
implicitly acknowledge that it cannot win the Yemen war militarily. Media reports suggested that the Saudi government was cutting back on funding of the
internationally recognized, largely Saudi-based Yemeni government headed by Abd
Rabbuh Mansur Hadi.
Saudi conduct of the war has involved
multiple attacks on civilian targets, devastated the country’s economic and
civilian infrastructure and turned it into one of the world’s greatest
humanitarian catastrophes.
Similarly, UAE-backed Libyan rebels
led by self-appointed Field Marshall Khalifa Haftar have suffered a similar
fate. Mr. Haftar’s promise more than a year ago to launch a blitz conquest of
the Libyan capital Tripoli has not only proven to be an illusion.
Turkish-backed government troops have put his rebels on the defensive.
Saudi and UAE rulers are betting that
their emphasis on values associated with nationalism and armed forces such as
patriotism, sacrifice, discipline, duty and concepts of heroic model citizens will
reinforce public appreciation of the military despite its chequered track
record. For now, that appears to be a winning bet.
Saudi Arabia has successfully
garnered popular support for the armed forces and the Yemen war, despite
widespread international criticism, by eulogizing patriotic sacrifices of Saudi
military casualties, generously compensating families of permanently disabled
or fallen soldiers and creating multiple institutions to ensure veterans’
rights. The UAE has institutionalized the honouring of military martyrs.
Ultimately, however, the Saudi and
UAE military’s mixed track record raises questions about the degree to which
they can be unqualified standard bearers of new national identities.
It also begs the question whether populations
in countries such as Saudi Arabia that were forced to introduce painful social
spending cutbacks with no indication that elites are sharing the burden will
continue to endorse massive military expenditure at a time of austerity.
If social media are anything to go
by, many Saudis praise the government for ensuring the return to the kingdom of
Saudi nationals abroad at the beginning of the pandemic, funding their
quarantining to prevent the coronavirus from spreading, and subsidizing private
sector salaries impacted by a lockdown for up to 60 percent.
A fair number, however, expressed
concern that the middle and lower classes would shoulder the brunt of the
economic fallout of the pandemic and questioned continued investment in
trophies like English soccer club Newcastle United by the Public Investment
Fund, the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund. Military expenditure has so far not
been called into question.
Potentially complicating issues is
the fact that a majority of Emirati and Saudi casualties in Yemen hailed from less privileged emirates in the UAE and
provinces in the kingdom, some of
which are home to religious minorities with
a history of feeling disadvantaged, As a result, it remains to be seen whether
military service will ultimately narrow or broaden social gaps.
“Militarization bolsters regime
security, thereby serving national security twice over… However, rising
nationalist feelings are likely to enhance regional polarization,” warned Gulf
scholar Eleonora Ardemagni.
Ms. Ardemagni’s caution focused on
the risk of militarization entrenching differences among Gulf states. The
question is whether militarization’s so far successful boosting of domestic
cohesion could have a flip side that in more dire circumstances polarizes
rather than unites.
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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