Afghanistan may be a bellwether for Saudi-Iranian rivalry
By James M. Dorsey
Boasting an almost 1,000-kilometer border with Iran
and a history of troubled relations between the Iranians and Sunni Muslim
militants, including the Taliban, Afghanistan could become a bellwether for the
future of the rivalry between the Islamic Republic and Saudi Arabia.
Had the United States withdrawn from Afghanistan several
years earlier, chances would have been that Saudi Arabia would have sought to
exploit military advances by the Taliban in far less subtle ways than it may do
now.
Saudi Arabia was still channelling funds in 2017 to
anti-Iranian, anti-Shiite militants in the
Iranian-Afghan-Pakistani border triangle and further south on the Pakistani
side of the frontier despite Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s efforts to
distance the kingdom from identification with austere interpretations of Islam
that shaped the country’s history and that it shared with the Taliban.
“The Taliban is a religious extremist
group which is no stranger to extremism and murder,
especially murdering Shias, and its hands are stained with the blood of our
diplomats," noted an Iranian cleric, referring to the 1998 killing of eight Iranian diplomats
and a journalist in Afghanistan.
Outgoing Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
outlined the potential tripwire Afghanistan constitutes for Iran.
“If Iran doesn’t play well and makes an enemy out of
the Taliban soon, I think some Arab countries in the Persian Gulf and the US
would attempt to finance and direct the Taliban to weaken Tehran
and divert its attention away from Iraq and other Arab countries. The biggest
threat for us would be the formation of an anti-Iran political system in
Afghanistan,” Mr. Zarif said.
Comparing the potential problems for Iran with an
Afghanistan controlled by the Taliban or a neighboring country at war with
itself to Saudi Arabia’s Houthi troubles in Yemen is tempting. Saudi Arabia was,
before the 2001 US invasion of Afghanistan one of only three countries to
recognize the Taliban’s control of the country. At the time, it saw virtue in
stirring the pot on Iran’s borders.
Much has changed not only in the last two decades but
also in the last few years since both Saudi Arabia and some Trump
administration officials like national security advisor John Bolton were toying
with the idea of attempting to spark ethnic
insurgencies inside Iran. And Afghanistan is neither
Yemen nor are the Taliban the Houthis.
The Taliban have sought in recent weeks to assure
Afghanistan’s neighbors that they seek cooperation and would not be supporting
militancy beyond their country’s borders. Iran last month hosted talks
between the Taliban and the Afghan government that ended with a joint statement
calling for a peaceful political settlement and declaring that “war is not the
solution.”
It has been war ever since.
From the Saudi perspective, it would not be the first time that the
Taliban have said one thing and done another, including
keeping an alleged promise prior to 9/11 that Osama Bin Laden would not be
allowed to plan and organize attacks from Afghan soil and subsequent refusal to
hand over the Saudi national.
All of this is not to say that Afghanistan could not
emerge as a venue for Middle Eastern rivalries involving not only Saudi Arabia
and Iran, but potentially also Turkey and Qatar. It probably will be albeit one
in which battles are likely to be fought less through proxies and more
economically and culturally and in which alliances will look significantly
different than in the past.
A crucial factor in how the rivalries play out will be
the Taliban’s attitude towards non-Pashtun ethnic and religious groups.
“If Afghanistan returns to the situation before
September 11, 2001, when the Taliban were at war with the Shia Hazara and the
Turkic Uzbeks, then Iran and Turkey will almost inevitably be drawn in on the
other side—especially if Saudi Arabia resumes support for the Taliban as a way of
attacking Iran… Ideally, a regional consensus could
successfully pressure the Taliban to respect the autonomy of minority areas,”
said Eurasia scholar Anatol Lieven.
Supporting the Taliban, a group that is identified
with violation of women’s rights, could prove tricky for Prince Mohammed as he
seeks to convince the international community that the kingdom has broken with
an ultra-conservative strand of Islam that inspired groups like the Afghan
militants.
It would also complicate the crown prince’s efforts to
project his country as a beacon of a moderate and tolerant form of the faith
and complicate relations with the United States.
Moreover, Prince Mohammed’s religious soft power
strategy may be working. In a sign of changing times, Western non-governmental
organizations like Germany’s Konrad Adenauer Foundation look to Saudi Arabia as
a model for the Taliban.
“The way Saudi Arabia has developed in the past 10, 20
years is remarkable. I have seen with my own eyes how much (they) have
reconciled modern life, women’s rights, women education, work-life, and still
guarding (their) Islamic values. This could be a certain role model for the Taliban,”
said Ellinor Zeino, the Foundation’s Afghanistan country director, in a webinar
hosted by the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies (KFCRI).
Saudi steps so far to moderate the Taliban and facilitate
a peaceful resolution of the Afghanistan conflict are however unlikely to have
ingratiated the kingdom with the Taliban. A Saudi-hosted Islamic Conference on the Declaration of Peace
in Afghanistan in the holy city of Mecca in June attended
by Afghan and Pakistani Islamic scholars and government officials condemned the
recent violence as having “no justification” and
asserting that “it could not be called jihad.”
Fuelling the
fire, Yusuf Bin Ahmed Al Uthaymeen, the secretary-general of the 57-nation,
Saudi-dominated Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), told the conference
that the Taliban-led violence amounted to “genocide
against Muslims.”
The rhetoric
notwithstanding, conservative Iran’s inclination to accommodate the Taliban as President-elect
Ebrahim Raisi takes office, in a twist of irony, could see the Islamic republic
and the kingdom both backing a group with a history of fire-breathing anti-Shiism
if it comes to power in Kabul.
Said Mehdi Jafari, an Afghan Shiite refugee in Belgium:
The Iranians “have much more to gain from the Taliban. Hazaras are a weak
player to choose in this war. Iran
is a country before it is a religious institution. They will first choose
things that benefit their country before they look at what benefits the
Shia."
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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