Ukraine may force Middle Eastern rivals to upgrade their toolkit
By James M. Dorsey
Struggling to remain on the sidelines of the 21st
century’s watershed war in Ukraine, Middle Eastern nations are discovering that
they may be fighting their battles with an outdated toolkit.
As a result, the Ukraine war could saw off the legs
from under the table of Middle
Eastern détente that already are built on shaky ground.
For the past 18 months, Middle Eastern rivals – Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Turkey, Iran, and Israel – have sought
to hedge their bets by diversifying their relationships with major powers, the
United States, China, and/or Russia.
Increasingly, the rivals are finding out that the
Ukraine conflict threatens to narrow their ability to hedge. The conflict has,
irrespective of the outcome of the war, reduced not only big power competition
to a two- rather than three-horse race but also opened the door to a Cold
War-style international relations based on the principle of ‘you are with us or
against us.’
Even if portraying the Ukraine conflict as a showdown
in a titanic battle between democracy and autocracy may be misleading and/or
overstated, it does not distract from the fact that the war has shaken, if not
undermined, a major pillar of autocracy, Russia.
Even so, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Israel may
privately welcome potential
Russian sabotage of negotiations in Vienna to revive the 2015
Iranian nuclear agreement, given that they view it as deeply flawed. Middle
Eastern states may also find that the sabotage is one of Moscow’s last hurrahs
as it is hit by harsh Western sanctions and drawn into what is likely to be an
all-consuming quagmire.
As fears grew of a Russian monkey wrench, Iranian
Spiritual Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei defended Iran’s support of militias in
various Arab countries, including the Houthis in Yemen who have been firing
missiles and drones at targets in the two countries. On
Thursday, a Houthi
drone attacked a refinery in Riyadh, causing a
small fire.
“Our presence
in regional issues is our strategic depth… (It’s) a
means of power,” Mr. Khamenei told Iran’s Council of Experts that includes the
country’s most powerful clerics.
Turkey
and Israel have so far been able to package their hedge by
exploiting their close ties to both Russia and Ukraine to play the role of
mediator even if mediation at this stage of the war has little if any chance of
success.
By contrast, Saudi Arabia and the UAE find themselves
far more exposed and in the ironic position of sharing a boat with their
nemeses, Iran
and its Lebanese ally, Hezbollah, as they maneuver in a
geopolitical minefield. Like the conservative Gulf states, Iran too has sought
to remain on the sidelines of the Ukraine conflict.
More fundamentally, the conflict could upset the house
of cards on which Middle Eastern détente is built. The driving principle of
that détente is to kick the can down the road on significant disagreements over
issues, including political Islam and Palestine in favour of closer economic,
and in the case of Israel, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and potentially Qatar, closer
security
cooperation.
This week, Israel Defense Forces chief Aviv Kohavi reportedly
discussed
military cooperation with his Qatari counterpart, Salem bin
Hamad bin Mohammed bin Aqeel Al-Nabi, during an official visit to Bahrain.
Unlike Bahrain and the UAE, Qatar has refused to formalize its informal
relations with Israel as long as there is no settlement of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine resonates among the
Gulf’s smaller states, three of which know first-hand what bullying by larger
neighbours in violation of international law means. Iran has occupied three
Emirati islands in the Gulf since 1971. Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990 while fears
of a military intervention accompanied a 3.5 year-long Saudi-UAE-led economic
and diplomatic boycott of Qatar.
This week, Washington Post columnist Farid Zakaria
argued that the Ukraine conflict has ushered in a
new era “marked by the
triumph of politics over economics. For the past three decades, most countries have acted with
one lodestar in mind: economic growth. They have embraced trade, technology,
and domestic reforms, all to produce more growth. Those kinds of choices are
possible in an atmosphere in which one does not have to worry that much about
the core issue of national security.”
That could be
as true for the Middle East as it is for much of the world, particularly if sitting
on the fence becomes less of an option and fault lines sharpen if the Vienna
talks fail.
Already, the
crown princes of Saudi Arabia and the UAE, Mohammed bin Salman and Mohammed bin
Zayed, may find that they overplayed their cards when they allegedly refused to take a phone
call from US President Joe Biden to discuss cooperation in increasing
oil production to reduce prices.
Mr. Biden ultimately spoke to King
Salman, with Mr. Bin Salman listening in although not participating. Mr. Biden had earlier offered
to talk with Mr. Bin Salman, breaking a boycott of the crown prince because of
his alleged involvement in the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Mr. Bin
Zayed is proving to be the most overexposed. The UAE has already begun to
dither on the oil production with its powerful ambassador in Washington, Yusuf al-Otaiba, suggesting that the Emirates was
considering a hike, only for Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei to reiterate the
country’s commitment to current OPEC+ production levels.
Emirati
officials insisted that the two statements were not contradictory. They said
the UAE favoured a production increase but was bound by OPEC+ agreements. OPEC+
is scheduled to meet on March 31.
The manoeuvre
was partly an Emirati effort to cover the
country's flank and partly a demonstration of the UAE’s ability to help reduce prices. Oil prices
dropped 13 per cent after Mr. Al-Otaiba’s remarks.
The influx of Russians looking for places to safely park
their money and assets; leaks about real estate holding of oligarchs in Dubai,
including ones belonging to now sanctioned individuals; stepped-up private
aircraft traffic between Moscow and Dubai, and the sighting of Russian-owned
superyachts off the UAE coast could not come at a worse time.
Earlier this
month, the Financial Action Task Force, a Paris-based international anti-money
laundering and anti-terrorism finance watchdog, grey listed the UAE for lagging in identifying illicit
funds flowing into the country. The listing that groups the UAE alongside 22
others, including Pakistan, Syria, South Sudan, Yemen, and Myanmar, dealt a
blow to the country’s image as a go-to global financial hub
“What
separates Dubai from other traditional havens for dirty money is the amazing
secrecy. As a fugitive in Dubai, you can snatch up property, stash your yachts
and set up bank accounts with very few obstacles. It’s also one of the few autocracies
that’s a destination
— rather than a transit location — for illicit flows," said Jodi Vittori,
who co-authored a study of Dubai's financial flows.
To watch a video version of this story please click here.
A podcast version 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 scholar, a Senior
Fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and
Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam
School of International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and
blog, The Turbulent World of
Middle East Soccer.
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