Middle Eastern states walk a tightrope that Ukraine spins ever tighter
By James M. Dorsey
Unlike
Israel, the Gulf states may feel that they have more flexibility than the
Jewish state that depends on the United States for its regional military
superiority and political support in an international community critical of its
54-year-long occupation of the West Bank.
That is, at
best, a long-term bet that could prove costly in the short-term and fails to consider
any number of potential gray and black swans.
Israel initially
sought to walk a fine line. It expressed support for Ukraine's territorial
integrity and sovereignty but did not mention Russia in its statements prior to Russian attack
on the East European country. Similarly, it has stopped Baltic states from
transferring Israeli-made weapons to Ukraine.
Israel fears
that criticism of Russia or material support of Ukraine could prompt Russia to
retaliate by intervening in Syria in ways that would prevent Israel from
striking against Iranian forces and Iranian-backed militias in the country.
Israeli
officials suggested that their juggling act is unsustainable and that Israel
will ultimately have to join the global chorus condemning Russia’s actions in
unequivocal terms.
They had
barely spoken when Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid
sharpened Israel’s tone. "The Russian attack on Ukraine
is a severe violation of international order. Israel condemns the attack and is
prepared to provide humanitarian assistance to the citizens of Ukraine. Israel
has long experience in wars, and war is not the way to resolve conflicts,"
Mr. Lapid said hour after the attack.
Prominent
Israeli journalist Anshel Pfeffer tweeted that the comments were “rather bland in comparison to that of
other governments but still a major departure from
Israel’s steadfastly neutral position throughout the Putin era.”
Israeli
concerns about Russian retaliation in Syria put Israel in an awkward position
as it potentially juxtaposes the interests of the Jewish
state with the potential plight of some 140,000 Jews in Ukraine, once home to the world's
third-largest Jewish community.
Israeli officials
suggest that they will help those Israelis and Jews who flee Ukraine and make
their way overland to Romania, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, or Moldova.
Israel and
the Gulf states appear to have adopted different strategies in responding to
the Ukraine crisis. While Israel has sought to avoid Russian ire by not
adopting anti-Russian measures and publicly beating around the bush, Gulf
states like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates seemed to reach out to
Russia and China in ways designed to signal both powers as well as the United
States.
The Saudi and
UAE moves appeared to respond not only to a desire to hedge bets but also to
public opinion in the region that in the decade since the 2011 popular Arab
revolts has become disillusioned with democracy and political change that
failed to produce economic development.
“The brief
flowering of pro-democracy passions and movements failed to produce durable
democratic governments. However, perhaps more importantly, it also failed to produce the kind of
economic change
that people across the Middle East desperately craved,” concluded Arab
Barometer pollsters Amaney A. Jamal and Michael Robbins in an analysis of their
surveys over the past decade.
As the United
States seemingly reduces its commitment to the Middle East, “the Chinese
economic and development model and, to a lesser extent, the Russian one, have
become more attractive to many Arabs… (These) systems, at least as viewed by
many in the Middle East, appear to avoid the political tumult of democracy and
offer the promise of stability and economic growth,” Ms. Jamal and Mr. Robbins
noted.
Much like
Israel, Saudi Arabia too has sought not to be seen acting against Russian
interests. In doing so, the kingdom could kill two birds with one stone: keep
the door open to Moscow and give US President Joe Biden some payback for his
refusal to engage with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Mr. Biden has snubbed
Mr. Bin Salman due to the 2018 killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
In a phone
call last month, Mr. Bin Salman’s father, King Salman, rejected Mr. Biden’s request for a
Saudi increase in oil production that would have depressed prices and reduced Russian
income as it massed its troops on the borders of Ukraine.
Oil and gas
sales have allowed Russia to amass a $600 billion war chest with which it could
buffer the initial impact of US and European sanctions that are likely to
tighten as Russian forces attack Ukraine.
What makes
the rebuff of Mr. Biden remarkable is that Saudi Arabia has long balanced global
supply and demand in ways that benefitted Western economies, even if it meant
less income for the kingdom.
Probably
coincidental in timing and unrelated to the Ukraine crisis, the UAE said this
week that it was acquiring 12 L-15 light attack planes from China, with the
option of purchasing 36 more. The sale is not likely to go down well in
Washington coming two months after the UAE suspended talks on acquiring
US-built F-35 jets, widely seen as the world's most advanced fighter aircraft.
The problem
for Saudi Arabia and the UAE, as for non-Arab Middle Eastern states like Israel
and Turkey, is that developments in Ukraine potentially open a Pandora’s Box in
which big powers on both sides of the divide could revert to former US George
W. Bush's post 9/11 maxim of "you are with us or against us."
US sanctions
that are extraterritorial in nature and force third countries to oblige or be
similarly penalized could accelerate that trend.
At the same
time, Russia may look like it has, for now, the upper hand in Ukraine, but that
could change if Russia gets sucked into a more protracted conflict that could
wear it down. It also remains unclear how much domestic public support there is
for Russian President Vladimir Putin's incursion into Ukraine.
The bottom
line is that neither Russia, certainly if it is bogged down in Ukraine, nor
China, is willing or able to replace the United States as the Gulf’s security
guarantor. As a result, hedging bets may be one thing; another is not acting
against Russian interests while acting against US interests.
In the end,
Middle Eastern states risk falling off a tightrope that is rapidly being spun
ever tighter.
To watch a video version of this story please
click here.
A podcast version is available on
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and Castbox.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar and a Senior Fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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