Pakistan-Saudi Spat: Hitting the Kingdom Where It Hurts
by James
M. Dorsey
A rift
between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia throws into sharp relief deepening fissures
in the Muslim world. Coupled with the establishment of diplomatic relations
between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, and a myriad of other conflicts in
the Middle East, the dispute poses serious challenges to Saudi Arabia’s quest
for geopolitical and religious leadership of the Muslim world.
Pakistani
Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureishi has stirred a regional hornet’s
nest by challenging Saudi leadership of the Muslim world.
Complaining
about lack of support of the Saudi-dominated Organization of Islamic
Cooperation (OIC) that groups 57 Muslim-majority nations for Pakistan in its
conflict with India over Kashmir, Mr. Qureishi suggested that his country would
seek to rally support beyond the realm of the kingdom.
In doing so,
Mr. Qureishi was hitting Saudi Arabia where it hurts most and at a particularly
sensitive moment in the kingdom’s quest for religious and regional hegemony.
Saudi
Arabia, together with the United Arab Emirates (UAE), is seeking to counter
Turkish and Iranian quests for dominance.
Mr. Qureishi
threw down his gauntlet eight months after Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan
withdrew under Saudi pressure from participation in an Islamic summit in Kuala
Lumpur convened by the kingdom’s rivals, including Qatar, Turkey, and Iran.
Adding
insult to injury, the Pakistani-Saudi spat evolved as the kingdom was coming
under pressure to follow the UAE in recognizing Israel and forging diplomatic
relations with the Jewish state.
President
Donald J. Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who stage
managed the UAE-Israeli move, insisted shortly after the announcement of the
diplomatic move that “it is an inevitability that Saudi Arabia and Israel will
have fully normalized relations.”
The UAE-Israel agreement may
not have taken Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu’s plans to annex parts
of the West Bank de jure off the table but could do so de facto.
Mr.
Netanyahu has insisted that his plans, suspended as part of Israel’s deal with
the UAE, would only be implemented with US endorsement. A UAE threat to rupture
diplomatic relations if Israel were to move ahead would likely prevent the US
from giving a green light.
Saudi
Arabia, however, is certain to want a de jure rather than a de facto end to any
prospect of annexation – a demand that is key to Palestinian re-engagement in
efforts to end the conflict with Israel.
In a twist
of irony, Arab News,
the kingdom’s foremost English-language newspaper, this week celebrated
Muhammad Asad, a Jewish convert to Islam, as “the pioneer in the establishment
of friendly relations between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.”
Perceptions
of that relationship have clearly changed over time.
“Pakistani
elites have a bad habit of taking Saudi support for granted given what Saudi
has done for Pakistan over the decades. Well the party is over, and Pakistan
needs to deliver value to this relationship. It’s no longer a free lunch or a
one-way street,” tweeted Ali Shihabi, a former banker and analyst who frequently
echoes the kingdom’s view.
Following in
the UAE’s footsteps without some resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
that is supported by Palestinians could magnify the challenge to Saudi
leadership posed by its regional distractors.
Saudi Arabia
fears that any challenge to its leadership could fuel demands that the kingdom
sign over custodianship of Mecca and Medina to a pan-Islamic body.
The
custodianship and Saudi Arabia’s image as a leader of the Muslim world is what
persuaded Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) in the first place to reach
out to Israel primarily to use that as well as his embrace of dialogue with
Jewish and Christian groups to bolster his tarnished image in Washington and
other Western capitals.
Pakistani
persistence in its challenge of the kingdom is likely to persuade the UAE to
come to Saudi Arabia’s aid by increasing pressure on the South Asian state.
Like the kingdom, the UAE was quick to help ease Pakistan’s financial crisis
shortly after Mr. Khan’s 2018 electoral victory
The UAE
response would be driven less by solidarity with Saudi Arabia and more by its
own geopolitical and religious soft power rivalry with Turkey and Iran, two
countries that reacted vehemently to the Emirates’ recognition of Israel.
The
criticism came as supporters of the move encouraged the UAE public to report
critics to the public prosecutor’s office.
“If you see
anyone (inside the UAE, citizens or expats) violating Emirati moral regulations
such as promoting #antisemitism, disrespecting the UAE decisions or its
leadership on social media – REPORT to Attorney General Office via official👇App of @UAE_PP,” tweeted Emirati businessman Hassan
Sajwani (The tweet has been deleted since).
Prince
Mohammed is likely to see Mr. Qureshi’s challenge as an attempt to exploit
domestic Saudi sensitivities. For all his efforts to shift legitimization of
the ruling family from religious to nationalist endorsement, he still feels
that he needs clerical support for his at times controversial actions.
Saad Al-Jabri, a former Saudi
intelligence operative who fled to Canada, charged in a recent lawsuit in a
Washington court, that MbS had sought a fatwa or Islamic ruling justifying his
assassination by a squad that included agents suspected of killing journalist
Jamal Khashoggi in 2018 in Istanbul.
Saudi Arabia
has denied the allegation,
suggesting Mr. Al-Jabri had fled the kingdom to duck allegations of corruption.
Analysts
believe that Mr. Al-Jabri was referring to an opinion issued weeks before Mr.
Khashoggi’s killing by Saleh Al-Fawzan, one of the kingdom’s most
prominent Salafi scholars known for his anti-Shiite views. The fatwa allegedly
justified the killing of those who disobeyed the Saudi ruler but made no
mention of Mr. Al-Jabri.
Subtle
clerical resistance to the government’s handling of the pandemic highlights the
sensitivity of Mr. Qureshi’s questioning of Saudi Arabia’s religious
leadership.
The
government has cracked down on religious figures who failed to toe the line of
overall clerical support for its efforts to combat the coronavirus pandemic.
Authorities
reportedly arrested in March Sheikh Abdullah al-Saad, an Islamic
scholar, after he posted online an audio clip criticizing the government for
banning Friday prayers. Mr. Al-Saad argued that worshippers should be able to
ask God for mercy.
An imam in Mecca was fired at about
the same time after he expressed concern about the spread of the virus in Saudi
prisons.
Mr. Al-Saad
and the fired imam were believed to reflect a broader sentiment in Saudi
Arabia’s religious establishment that has largely been cowed into acquiescence
and submission.
Scholars
Genevieve Abdo and Nourhan Elnahla reported that the kingdom’s Council of
Senior Clerics had initially drafted a fatwa describing the closing of mosques
as a violation of Islamic principles. They said that government pressure had
persuaded the council not to issue the opinion.
By targeting
one of the Saudi Crown Prince’s greatest sensitivities, Mr. Qureshi hoped to
persuade him that supporting Pakistan was in the kingdom’s interest.
Mr.
Qureshi’s challenge may not do the trick, but it did get MbS’ attention.
Last week,
the Saudi Crown Prince sent a plane to Pakistan to pick up Maulana Tahir
Ashrafi and his family for a visit to the kingdom, according to well-placed
Pakistani sources.
A prominent
Pakistani cleric with close ties to the kingdom, Mr. Ashrafi arranged for a
fence-mending trip to the kingdom by General Qamar Javed Bajwa, Pakistan’s
powerful military commander.
The measure
of General Bajwa’s success may be expressed in dollars and cents rather than in
an official statement. Financially-strapped Pakistan has so far waited in vain
for a response to a request for a delay on payments for Saudi oil imports.
This
story was first published by Inside
Arabia
A podcast
version of this story is available on
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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 a 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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