Saudi rushes to improve its image in advance of G20 and Biden
By James M.
Dorsey
Saudi Arabia
has taken multiple steps to polish its tarnished image in advance of this
weekend’s hosting of the virtual summit of the G20 that groups the world’s
foremost economies and in anticipation of an incoming Biden administration in
the United States that is expected to be critical of Riyadh and potentially
more conciliatory towards Iran and non-violent Islamists.
The
initiatives target US and European criticism of the five-year old war in Yemen
that has produced one of the world’s greatest humanitarian crises and concerns
the Biden administration may adopt less Saudi and United Arab Emirates-centric
policies than its predecessor headed by Donald J. Trump.
The steps
further seek to project Saudi Arabia as being helpful in normalizing relations
between Israel and the Muslim world even if it is not yet ready to do so itself
and build links with Democrats in Washington as they prepare to take office in
January.
Like other
countries that fear a Biden administration may be less friendly than its
predecessor, Saudi Arabia is looking for Washington PR and
lobbying firms that
can get it access to the president-elect and his entourage.
Saudi
officials and Saudis close to Crown Prince Mohmmed bin Salman are counting on
the fact that despite criticism US President-elect Joe Biden sees Saudi Arabia
in line with long-standing US policy as a crucial partner. “I am very confident
that will continue,” said Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan.
The kingdom,
betting that the Biden administration would accept that Saudi Arabia as the
custodian of Islam’s two holiest cities, Mecca and Medina, would recognize
Israel only once recognition was more widely accepted in the Muslim world, has
sought to curry favour by pressuring others to normalize relations with the
Jewish state.
Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan charged last week that the United
States and another unidentified country were pressing him to establish diplomatic
relations. Pakistani and Israeli media named Saudi Arabia as the unidentified
country. Representing the world’s third most populous Muslim nation, Pakistani
recognition, following in the footsteps of the UAE and Bahrain, would be
significant.
Missing from
the Saudi menu is any effort to fend off criticism of the kingdom’s problematic
human rights record. In fact, senior Saudi figures signalled that the kingdom
was unlikely to bow to demands for the release of detained activists, clerics,
and professionals and transparency on the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi in response to Mr. Biden’s insistence that he would restore human
rights as an important element of US foreign policy.
Former Saudi
intelligence chief and ambassador to London and Washington Prince Turki Al Faisal suggested that the absence of human
rights in the kingdom’s efforts was no coincidence.
Addressing an
American audience this week, Prince Turki said: “As far as human rights is
concerned, we admit that we have issues to improve and we’re working on that.
It is a work in progress. But respectfully, your country also has issues of
human rights to improve upon. Witness the turmoil during your elections and the
police shootings. We did not…invent waterboarding. Your issues are also a work
in progress… Your elections are a wonderful spectacle from which we can learn.
They also include elements which we will not learn.”
To drive the
point home, a Saudi human rights group asserted this week that Khaled al-Oudeh, a brother of prominent cleric
Salman al-Oudeh, who has been held in prison since 2017 and potentially faces the
death penalty, had been sentenced to five years in prison on charges of
"inciting sedition and destabilising security."
The Saudi
Council of Senior Scholars last week, in the first official statement
from the kingdom since Saudi Arabia and the UAE banned the group in 2014, labelled
the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization. The council said the group did
not represent Islam, seeks “to grab the reins of power,” wreaks havoc, and
commits “violence and terrorism.”
The
council’s statement came as France and Austria were cracking down on Islamist
groups, including the Brotherhood. The crackdown was in response to several
attacks in Europe, including the gruesome murder of a French schoolteacher.
The
statement, implicitly calling into question Saudi Arabia’s alliance in the
Yemen war with Al-Islah, a Yemeni party aligned with the Brotherhood, came as
the kingdom said it would honour a ceasefire if the Houthi rebels accepted a
buffer zone along the Saudi-Yemeni border. The offer was designed to show that
the kingdom was seeking a way out of the quagmire.
At the same
time, Saudi authorities have stopped just short of blaming the Brotherhood for
recent attacks on the French consulate in Jeddah, the Saudi embassy in The Hague and a French-sponsored World War One
commemoration at a cemetery in the Red Sea port city, the first attack with explosives in
years targeting foreigners in the kingdom.
The kingdom
and the UAE fear that “Democrats can (re)create an atmosphere that enables the
rise of the Brotherhood in the Sunni world like a decade ago. This is, in my
view, what they see as a threat similar to the threat from Iran, if not a
bigger one,” said Eran Segal, a research fellow at the Ezri
Center for Iran & Gulf States research at the University of Haifa.
Mr. Segal
was referring to former US President Barak Obama’s support for elections in
Egypt and Tunisia in 2012 in the wake of the 2011 popular revolt that toppled
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and his Tunisian counterpart, Zine El Abidine
Ben Ali, longstanding US allies, despite the likelihood of Brotherhood
electoral victories.
In Egypt, the
victor, Mohammed Morsi, a Brotherhood leader, was removed from the presidency a
year later in a UAE and Saudi-backed military coup that brought
general-turned-president Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi to power.
Saudi
Arabia’s G-20 presidency has sparked discussion on what the best approach to
the kingdom would be: criticism and boycott or engagement. It is a debate that
also confronts the incoming Biden administration.
The mayors
of London, New York, Los Angeles, and Paris boycotted in September a G20 summit
of urban leaders. Members of the European parliament and the US Congress have
called on European leaders and Mr. Trump to not participate in this weekend’s
summit.
It is an
approach that David Rundell a US foreign service officer who served half of his
30-year career in the kingdom argues is doomed to failure. “Saudi Arabia needs
encouragement for its economic reforms as well as in addressing its human
rights record,” Mr. Rundell said, advocating greater engagement with rather
than isolation of the kingdom.
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
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 and the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute
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