The Middle East Rush to Bury Hatchets: Is it sustainable?
By James M. Dorsey
How sustainable is Middle Eastern détente? That is the
$64,000 question. The answer is probably not.
It’s not for lack of trying. Gulf states and Egypt
have ended their debilitating 3.5-year-long economic and diplomatic boycott of
Qatar. The UAE has moved at lightning speed to establish formal ties with
Israel and repair relations with Iran and Turkey. Saudi Arabia is moving in the
same direction, albeit in a more plodding manner. Meanwhile, Turkey is also
seeking to repair its long-strained relations with Egypt and Israel.
Recently, Saudi Arabia granted visas to three Iranian
diplomats to represent the Islamic Republic at the Jeddah-based, 57-nation
Organization of Islamic Cooperation. In 2016, Saudi Arabia broke off diplomatic
relations with Iran after its embassy in Tehran was attacked in protest against
the execution of Saudi Shia activist and cleric Nimr al. Nimr. The recent granting
of visas is expected to be followed by visits by officials to the two countries' shuttered
embassies.
Despite this, Ali Shihabi, an analyst with close ties
to the Saudi leadership, said: “I understand that no real progress has been
made, so there’s no need to read too much into this. It was a goodwill Saudi gesture, particularly since the OIC is a multilateral organisation
and they will (be) accredited to OIC, not Saudi."
To be sure, Middle Eastern states need a dialling down
of tensions to be able to focus on reform, diversification, and growth of their
economies. To achieve that, they need to project an environment of regional
stability conducive to domestic and foreign investment.
Lack of confidence
An equally, if not more critical driver, is
uncertainty and fear about the United States’ future commitment to Middle East
security, with no obvious replacement for the region’s long-standing guarantor.
The uncertainty is compounded by a fundamentally unchanged regional insistence
on the need for a foreign security underwriter. The Gulf states lack confidence
in their own capabilities and fear that a strong military could threaten the
survival of dynastic regimes, giving countries like Turkey and Iran a strategic
advantage.
“Those regimes do not necessarily want very robust and very
capable armies and militaries that
become centres of power,” said Middle East scholar Yasmine Farouk.
If history is any indicator, Gulf uncertainty about US
intentions may be exaggerated. A review of the last 50 years suggests that the
Middle East has been there before, and nothing much has changed.
The US withdrawal from Afghanistan brings to mind the American
withdrawal from Vietnam, after which South-east Asia and the Middle East
fretted about the possibility of the United States walking away from its
commitments. Similarly, the toppling in 1979 of the Shah of Iran, an icon of
regional US power, caused heartburn in autocratic Gulf regimes - much like the
popular Arab revolts in 2011, which toppled US allies such as Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak as Washington kept its distance.
To be sure, that was then, and this is now.
When America was defeated in Vietnam, and the Shah was
overthrown, the Cold War had long settled in as a fact of life, unlike today's
US-China rivalry, which has yet to find its moorings and guardrails.
In some ways, what has changed is positive. During the
Cold War, the Soviet Union and China sought to weaken and undermine US allies
in the Middle East and supplant it as the dominant regional power. Today, they
seek cooperation and share the goal of lowering tensions and introducing some
degree of stability. The competition is economic, focussing on technology, arms
sales, oil, and investment. There is little interest - if any - in Beijing and
Moscow to go much beyond that.
Like the United States, neither China nor Russia wants
to see a nuclear arms race in the region. ‘"The only player who can be
effective and bring about progress in the Vienna debates is the only player we
do not hear his position on the Iranian issue, and that is China… China’s influence on Iran’s policy is probably the biggest influence a
foreign power has over Iran. At no
point in history did China (have the opportunity to) make such a contribution
to world stability as it has today in Vienna,” said Efraim Levy, the former head
of Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence service. He was referring to talks in
Vienna to revive the 2015 international agreement that curbed the Islamic
Republic’s nuclear programme.
Détente in the Middle East would be fortified in an
environment where the United States and China find common ground in their
regional approaches. “There is considerable divergence between Chinese and US
approaches to the Gulf, but the interests of the two powers are largely
compatible. Both want a stable region that supports their strategic and
economic concerns. Given their deep cooperation with the Gulf monarchies and
China's influence in Iran, there is an opening for Washington and Beijing to
coordinate their policies in working toward a less turbulent Gulf region,” said
China-Gulf scholar Jonathan Fulton, writing in Middle East Policy.
Academic and former Lebanese culture
minister and United Nations negotiator Ghassan Salameh argues that "America
cannot leave the Middle East only because it concentrates on China...
Paradoxically...you need to be in the Middle East if you want to concentrate
on China as a strategic rival, because if
you look at where oil and gas is going, it's going East."
Inevitable arms race
Nevertheless, Beijing’s efforts to moderate Iran’s
tougher negotiating stance since hardline President Ebrahim Raisi took office have
not stopped it from enabling a ballistic arms race in the Middle East, in what
Chinese scholars have described as a calibrated effort to maintain a regional
balance of power. Iran has rejected US, Saudi, and Israeli demands to expand
talks in Vienna to include ballistic missiles. US intelligence believes that
recent satellite images show Saudi Arabia manufacturing ballistic missiles at a
site constructed with the help of China.
Saudi officials said the Kingdom had built the manufacturing facility with
the assistance of the Chinese military's missile branch, the People's Liberation Army Rocket Force. China has
insisted that “cooperation in the field of military trade” did not violate
international law or involve the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.”
The United States has long refused to sell ballistic
missiles to Saudi Arabia.
Iran described the test-firing of 16 ballistic
missiles of different classes during a military exercise in late December as a
message to Israel. It was a response to Israeli threats to strike at Iranian
nuclear facilities if the Vienna talks fail or produce a result that Israel
deems sufficiently unsatisfactory to justify unilateral action. “Sixteen missiles aimed and annihilated the chosen
target. In this exercise, part of the
hundreds of Iranian missiles capable of destroying a country that dared to
attack Iran were deployed,” said armed forces chief of staff Major General
Mohammad Bagheri.
Beyond ballistic missiles, a breakdown in the Vienna
talks with Iran could also ignite a nuclear arms race. Already, Israel has
begun to imagine a Middle East inhabited by a nuclear Iran. “Even if global
powers manage to revive the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, diplomacy may only
delay the inevitable… Given how resilient the Islamic Republic has proven to
be, it seems that the world may eventually have to tolerate an Iranian
nuclear bomb, just as it has learned
to live with the Indian and Pakistani arsenals,” said former Israeli foreign
minister Shlomo Ben-Ami.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has left no doubt that the Kingdom would
develop a nuclear weapons capability
if Iran did the same. Media reports last year suggested that Saudi Arabia had
constructed, with the help of China, a facility for extracting uranium
yellowcake from uranium. Saudi Arabia denied the reports, but insisted that
mining its uranium reserves was part of its economic diversification strategy.
The Saudi energy ministry said it cooperated with China in unspecified aspects
of uranium exploration.
Cooperation on nuclear energy was one of 14 agreements
worth US$65 billion signed during Saudi King Salman’s 2017 visit to China. The
nuclear-related deals involved a feasibility study to construct
high-temperature gas-cooled (HTGR) nuclear power plants in Saudi Arabia, cooperation in intellectual property, and the
development of a domestic industrial supply chain for HTGRs to be built in the Kingdom.
Saudi Arabia has signed similar agreements with
France, the United States, Pakistan, Russia, South Korea, and Argentina.
To advance its pre-pandemic goal of constructing 16
nuclear reactors by 2030, Saudi Arabia established the King Abdullah Atomic and
Renewable Energy City, which is devoted to research and application of nuclear
technology.
Concern about Saudi intentions has been fuelled by Riyadh’s hesitancy in agreeing to US safeguards that would require it to sign the Additional Protocol of the Treaty
on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), even though it has not ruled
it out, among other things.
Meanwhile, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has insisted
that it is unacceptable that nuclear-armed countries are
preventing his nation from developing nuclear weapons.
The odds are stacked against avoiding a nuclear arms
race in the Middle East. To do so would require agreement on a regional
nuclear-free zone. For that to happen, Israel would have to acknowledge its
possession of nuclear weapons, something it has refused to do.
While some Israelis have suggested that the reality of
a nuclear Iran could persuade Israel to change course, there is no indication that the government is
seriously considering doing so. A
nuclear-free zone would also demand a restructuring of security arrangements in
the Middle East to include a security pact that would include all parties, as
well as an arms control regime. So far, that looks more like wishful thinking
than anything parties would be willing to contemplate genuinely.
More likely, countries like Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and
Tukey will continue developing their domestic defence
industries briskly. Moreover, any revival of the Iran nuclear accord would
likely lift the ban on Iran's acquisition of conventional weapons, which in
turn would accelerate the arms race as the Islamic Republic rushes to modernise
and upgrade its military capabilities, which harsh sanctions have long
hampered.
Analysts and policymakers have so far focused on Gulf
states’ efforts to diversify their sources for arms acquisition, but largely
overlooked their endeavour to expand the number of countries with bases in the
region. So far, that has been limited to French, British, and Turkish bases,
and a Chinese facility in Djibouti.
In a potential setback, Sudan’s military chief, General
Mohamed Othman al-Hussein, has said his country was reviewing an agreement to host a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast. Meanwhile, various Gulf states are
quietly looking at Asian countries like India, South Korea, and Japan to establish
a more active presence in the region.
Some analysts suggest that a
rapprochement between Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Iran could alter the dynamic
of a Middle East in which Israel has diplomatic relations with the Gulf and
other Arab states. These analysts argue that Israel may see the détente as a
threat to its emerging role as an anti-Iranian bulwark that would allow it to
expand military and intelligence operations in countries from which it was
either barred or limited in the deployment of its capabilities.
"While (former Israeli Prime
Minister Binyamin) Netanyahu used the notion of 'containing Iran' as a primary
justification for the Abraham Accords, the simultaneous warming of ties between
Iran and Gulf states will ultimately dilute Israel's role,
undermining its argument that Iran is a rogue state and regional destabiliser,"
said scholars Mahjoub Zweiri and Lakshmi Venugopal Menon.
Walking a tightrope
The UAE has sought to counter the
potential threat of Iran disrupting the Emirates' rapprochement with Israel by pledging that it would not allow the Jewish state to build
security-related installations on its territory.
The Emirati pledge, in a suggestion
that some elements of Middle East détente may be more sustainable than others,
did not stop UAE air force commander General Ibrahim Nasser
al-Alawi from visiting Israel, or the
Emirati navy from participating in a joint naval exercise with Israeli, Bahraini, and US vessels.
Similarly, speaking at a conference
in November 2021, Major General Amikam Norkin, the commander of the Israeli Air
Force, suggested, in reference to the UAE and Bahrain, the possibility of
cooperation in anti-drone and ballistic missile defence. Israel could
"become a key player and asset for the countries that are under threat of
Iranian drones, along with developing needed strategic depth in the continuing
campaign against Iran," Major-General Norkin said. He appeared to be proposing the deployment of Israeli detection systems in the
Gulf that would also work against ballistic
missiles.
Also, the UAE pledge did not disrupt
UAE-Israeli cooperation to counter alleged Iranian hacking. ClearSky, a
cybersecurity company, reported that a cyber group operated by Hezbollah, the
Iranian-backed militia in Lebanon, had hacked the Emirates' Etisalat telecommunications company, as
well as companies in Israel, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, the United
States, and Britain.
Nevertheless, Emirati nationalists and surrogates for the government
painted the UAE’s suspension of talks to acquire the F-35, America’s most
advanced fighter jet, because of conditions the Biden Administration wants to
impose on the sale as evidence of their country’s newly-gained clout and an
assertion of sovereignty.
Buried under the bravado was
the fact that close relations with Israel apparently did not exempt the UAE
from a US-Israeli understanding to maintain the Jewish state’s qualitative
military edge. The administration’s conditions reflected Israeli suggestions designed to prevent the sale from putting the Jewish state’s edge at risk.
At the same time, closer ties with Israel potentially complicate not only
the UAE’s burgeoning improved relations with Iran but also its long-standing
partnership with Saudi Arabia. The Kingdom fears that the relationship could
give the UAE an edge and a degree of greater independence from Saudi Arabia and
enhance its ability to play one off against the other.
Saudi Arabia unsuccessfully sought the cancellation of
a UAE-brokered energy and water deal between Israel and Jordan, the largest cooperation agreement between the two
countries since they signed a peace treaty in 1994, last November. Riyadh wanted
to replace the deal with one that would include it while excluding Israel.
Defiance and dissent
A burgeoning arms race and concerns that a failure by
the United States, Europe, China, Russia, and Iran to agree in Vienna could
significantly heighten regional tensions and provoke a military conflagration
are just two of the powder kegs that could make Middle Eastern détente falter.
In a review of 2021, Middle East scholar Ross Harrison
noted that wars in Syria, Libya, and Yemen have created “security
dilemmas and conflict traps that made the hurdles to getting to cooperation
insuperable, even for actors who
might be predisposed to cooperate… Transitioning from where Syria is today to a
more stable, inclusive, and de-militarised country free of outside actors seems
years, if not decades, away." Mr. Harrison noted that two decades after
ripping itself apart, Lebanon risked slipping back into civil war.
The years from 2011 to 2021 and the civil strife they
witnessed were shaped by revolution and counterrevolution. Leaders of eight of
the Arab League’s 22 member states – Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Algeria,
Lebanon, Iraq, and Sudan – were toppled by popular uprisings. Possible
political change was reversed or stymied in most if not all of the initially
successful revolts by counter-revolutions.
The counter-revolutions were often supported by the
United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt after general-turned-president Abdel
Fattah al-Sisi came to power in a military coup in 2013 backed by the two Gulf
states. While the bloody civil wars in Syria, Libya, and Yemen were the most
extreme consequence, there is no suggestion that détente in the coming decade would
give the counter-revolution pause.
Add to that Palestine's grey swan. Israel may believe
that it has successfully pushed the resolution of the Palestinian problem to
the margins with the help of the UAE and Bahrain. But the question is not
whether but when Palestinian aspirations will come to haunt Israel and push
themselves higher up the Arab and Muslim agenda.
The question is how Israel will deal with the facts
that occupation is unsustainable, demographics are certain to threaten the
Jewish character of the state, and civil unrest stretching beyond the West Bank
into pre-1967 borders remain a constant possibility. How Israel responds to
these issues is likely to influence Arab and Muslim public opinion. So far,
public opinion has been one reason for Saudi Arabia and others not to follow the
UAE in recognising Israel, even if the public expression of critical sentiments
is severely curtailed, if not harshly repressed.
Nevertheless, the
quest for detente has not prevented countries that do not have diplomatic
relations from being more overt in their contacts with Israel. Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman held talks in Neom, his US$500
billion pet project for a futuristic city, with Mr Netanyahu when he was still prime minister despite the Kingdom’s
refusal to recognise Israel.
Qatar, which already helps Israel fund public salaries and
relief operations in the blockaded Gaza Strip, concluded a diamond trade
agreement with the Jewish state. The deal enables Qatar to join a select group
of countries authorised to trade in diamonds. In return, it will allow Israeli
diamond merchants to travel to the Gulf state even though the two countries
have no formal relations.
The deal took on added significance because of UAE
acquiescence. The Emirates have cooperated with Israel on diamonds for several
years, and long opposed Qatari attempts
to join the exclusive gemstone club.
Meanwhile, differences in attitude towards popular
revolts, the Muslim Brotherhood, and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is widely
held responsible for war crimes that cost half a million lives, lie just under
the surface despite the lifting in January 2021 of a 3.5-year-long economic and
diplomatic boycott of Qatar. Doha has
quietly asked members of the Brotherhood who live there to relocate, but has
not further tweaked its support for Islamists.
A potential watershed could occur when the ageing Egyptian
Islamic scholar Yusuf al-Qaradawi, who is based in Qatar, passes on. Mr. Al-Qaradawi,
95, has been a major influence in shaping Qatari policies since the country's
independence in 1971, including the advocacy of greater rights for others that
are not necessarily recognised at home. An autocracy, Qatar has supported the
aspirations of protesters across the Middle East and North Africa and opposed
the return of President Al-Assad to the Arab fold in the hope that it would
encourage Russia to help roll back Iranian influence in the country. Syria was
suspended from the Arab League in 2011 at a time that Qatar, the UAE, and Saudi
Arabia all funded groups opposed to the Syrian regime.
There is no indication that those hopes have any base in
reality. Iranian ground forces in Syria, together with Hezbollah fighters and
Foreign Legion-type units populated by Pakistani and Afghan Shiites, have
ensured that the Russian intervention has so far been possible without
inserting large numbers of regular troops.
It has made the Russian intervention relatively risk-free and low cost.
For now, détente in the Middle East appears to have shifted
rather than removed the battlefield on which regional rivalries play out. The
UAE, widely seen as a leader in reducing tensions, has adopted a selective
approach towards rapprochement.
The UAE’s diplomatic initiatives focused on Iran, Turkey,
and Syria targets countries with which
the risk of escalation outstrips the cost of reconciliation. Yet, plans by Emirati companies to invest in energy
projects in Iran and Syria threaten
to violate US sanctions. Detente has not persuaded the UAE to stop supporting
insurgents in Yemen, surrogates in Libya, or supplying arms to Ethiopia in its
war against Tigray.
Shaky ground
The long and short of it is that the rush to dial down
tensions in the Middle East and North Africa rests on shaky ground. Except for
Iran, which sees the frenzy of diplomatic and economic outreach as reaffirming
its position as a major regional power, Middle Eastern states like Saudi Arabia
and the UAE are driven by uncertainty and fear. Their moves are efforts to buy
time to put their house in order and be prepared for a potential next round of
differences not an attempt to craft a baseline standard
for a shared vision of the region's future.
The moves are also aimed at keeping the United States
engaged, and an attempt at navigating the risky waters of big-power competition
that is necessarily ad hoc and short-term and risks turbocharging a regional
arms race with no underlying realistic long-term strategy. Saudi Arabia and the
UAE see detente as a hedge to limit the fallout of a potential failure of the
Vienna talks and a possible military confrontation between Iran and/or Israel
and the United States.
Gulf hedging reflects a failure to recognise that perceptions
of the US commitment rested on a misreading of the 1980 Carter Doctrine
that successive US administrations opportunistically allowed to fester. The
doctrine committed the US to defending the region against attack by an external
power, read the Soviet Union. That threat fell by the wayside with the demise
of the Soviet Union. In the minds of several Gulf states, post-revolutionary
Iran replaced the Soviet Union as an existential threat. The perception was
reinforced by mounting hostility between the US and the Islamic Republic; US,
Israeli, and Gulf opposition to Iran’s nuclear programme; and Israel's changing
threat perception, which viewed Iran rather than the Palestinians and the Arabs
as its foremost existential challenge.
The current situation is also a result of the US’
failure to couple its security presence with policies
to address the issues faced by the region’s population - education, income
distribution, public health, climate change, and basic rights. The frenzy to
reduce tension offers the United States a second chance to broaden its security
and stability outreach to address issues that concern broad swaths of Middle
Eastern populations and have forced themselves onto the agenda in recent years.
Is the US getting it right?
Summing up the US policy dilemma in the Middle East in
the words of the English punk band, The Clash - "if I stay there will be
trouble, if I go there will be double" - Middle East scholar Jon Alterman
suggested that the United States' failure to ensure that the Gulf States had
realistic expectations and did not misread the Carter Doctrine encouraged them to
act more aggressively and take bigger risks in the false belief that Washington
would have their backs.
The misperceptions persuaded the Gulf states to misread
the Carter Doctrine as a guarantee that the United States would ensure the
survival of their regimes and protect them against Iran unconditionally. Multiple
US actions, or lack thereof, put paid to this interpretation, rattled the Gulf
states, and persuaded them to become reckless at times.
The US’ refusal in 2011 to prevent the toppling of
Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak; secret negotiations that led to the 2015 international
Iranian nuclear agreement; President Barack Obama's notion of a Middle East
that Saudi Arabia and Iran would share as hegemons; and the failure of the US
to respond in 2019 to Iranian attacks on shipping in the UAE and oil facilities
in Saudi Arabia, were among the markers that were laid down. President Donald
Trump's description of the 2019 strike against Abqaiq’s oil facilities as
"an attack on Saudi Arabia and (not) an attack on us" constituted a
wake-up call.
Many analysts suggest that the Biden administration’s
refusal to spell out an unambiguous Middle East policy has had a positive effect.
It produced the rush to dial down regional tensions. "From an
administration standpoint, this is a sign that US strategy is actually
working," Mr. Alterman said.
That may be true in the short term. However, the
United States will have to spell out an unambiguous, clearly articulated policy
that outlines what commitments it envisions sooner rather than later. A clear
policy could help Middle Eastern rivals manage their differences and focus on
economic cooperation and trade. While the debate over US policy continues to
rage in Washington, common ground is starting to emerge between proponents of
the current US military posture and advocates of a withdrawal from the region.
In the words of Hussein Ibish, a
senior fellow with the Arab Gulf States in Washington (AGSIW) think tank, this
common ground involves a "rethink (of) the distribution of (US) assets to
make them more effective and, where
appropriate, smaller, leaner and more flexible, while at the same time
recognising that long-term deployments of US forces in the Gulf region remain
essential to the interests of the United States, and those of its regional and global partners, and for
regional security and stability."
Placing a bet
Mitigating in favour of détente in the Middle East is
the fact that it was not just uncertainty about the US commitment that prompted
Saudi Arabia and the UAE to adopt a more conciliatory approach. The fact of the
matter is that assertiveness, with few exceptions, such as the 2013 coup in
Egypt, backfired. The UAE was forced to recognise that its ability to project
military power beyond its borders was limited.
A cost-benefit analysis produced a clear verdict. Saudi
Arabia, and to a lesser extent the UAE, are trapped in a disastrous war in
Yemen that has dragged on for almost seven years. Syria’s Mr. Al-Assad has the
upper hand in a decade-long brutal civil war. Iran is encountering headwinds in
Iraq, but remains a force there. The same is true for its ally in Lebanon,
Hezbollah.
Moreover, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon have
demonstrated Iran’s ability to achieve its objectives militarily rather than
diplomatically with the help of non-state actors, despite international
isolation and harsh US sanctions.
There is also a question mark over the sustainability
of efforts to reduce tensions, since Saudi Arabia and the UAE are the weaker
parties in negotiations with Iran. Perceptions of US unreliability and
suspicions that Washington may turn its back on the Middle East further weaken
their position. This is compounded by the fact that Saudi and Emirati officials
fundamentally do not believe that real accommodation with Iran is possible,
"There's a keen sense in the Gulf that the Iran problem never goes away.
It's not about the Islamic Republic; it's about Iran," Mr. Alterman said.
Furthermore, dialogue has yet to produce more than a
temporary lull at best, especially between Saudi Arabia and Iran. "This
pattern of dialogue has been underway for two years, or we've been leading up
to it for two years. And yet it has not created anything meaningful in terms of
outcome," said Iran scholar Sanim Vakil. "The underlying and
fundamental tensions between Iran and the Gulf Arab states, and that between
Iran and its external actors in the region, remain unresolved."
The Saudi and UAE strategy amounts to a bet that
detente, against the backdrop of sustained social unrest in Iran driven by
economic hardship, will spark a policy change in Tehran. They are also hoping
that Iran will accept that regime survival cannot be ensured via stepped-up security
and repression x exclusively.
"What we're hoping for is regime
moderation...where we're dealing with Iran as another state that we can deal
with, and through which they can benefit from. So, if they need leverage,
they can get leverage, but it doesn't have to be through the military
aspects... That's the type of change that has not been explored a lot,"
said Mohammed Baharoon, Director-General of b’huth, a public policy research
centre..
Conclusion
Efforts by Middle Eastern rivals to
dial down tensions and manage rather than resolve conflicts are fragile at
best. Moreover, they raise the question of what the end goal is. For now, that
appears to be primarily an endeavour to buy time, put their own houses in
order, diversify their economies, and ensure that they remain competitive in
the 21st century.
The sustainability of détente in the Middle East will ultimately depend on support from the United States and other major powers, including China, Russia, Europe, India, Japan, and South Korea. It will also be contingent on economic cooperation and trade, raising the cost of a return to conflict to the point that it outstrips the benefits of confrontation.
A version of this article was published by the Middle East Institute of the National University of Singapore
A video version of this story is on my YouTube channel
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon, and Castbox.
Nicely explain. Thanks a lot.
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