Ukraine: Middle Eastern states eye cost of hedging bets
By James M. Dorsey
Emiratis celebrated their failure to condemn the
Russian invasion of Ukraine in the United Nations Security Council as the end
of an era in which the Gulf state took its foreign policy cues from the United
States. However, the Emiratis may be celebrating prematurely.
As the UAE took over from Russia this month as
chairman of the Council, Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, a political scientist whose views
often reflect thinking in official Emirati circles, said the UAE’s abstention
in the UN votes "was consistent with the new UAE foreign policy activism,
which stems from being confident of its decisions and its approach to global
and regional politics."
Mr. Abdulla went on to say that "finally we are
independent enough, competent enough to take this kind of position, which is
consistent with our own way of doing things. Maybe
it doesn't resonate too well in Washington, but that's the way things are going
to be from now on."
Time will tell. It wouldn't be the first time that the
UAE has made risky geopolitical bets that have backfired, such as its
interventions in Yemen alongside Saudi Arabia and Libya. The interventions were
part of a broader regional effort to roll back the achievements of the 2011
popular Arab revolts that toppled four autocrats, and to counter Islamists.
The Ukraine crisis could force Middle Eastern
countries like the UAE to rethink their newly found positions in a twist of
irony. The crisis is likely to demonstrate that they can only hedge so much to
compensate for a perceived lessening of the United States’ commitment to their
security and because of their significant economic ties to China.
In a double whammy, the Ukraine crisis potentially could
spark tough security and alliance choices and another round of popular protest
in what would be the second decade of defiance and dissent, sparked in part by
grain shortages and rising food prices.
Even if protest in the UAE, one of the region’s
wealthiest countries, is unlikely, Middle Eastern autocrats could well discover
that like Ukrainians putting their lives on the line to stop the Russians,
Middle Easterners can only be intimidated that much.
Recent protests in
Jordan and Tunisia
and the fact that the 2010s were bookended by protest and the toppling of
leaders in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and Yemen in 2011 and Lebanon, Iraq, Algeria,
and Sudan in 2019/2020, illustrates the point.
Drought
and reduced agricultural output that persuaded people to move
from the countryside into cities is believed to be part of the fuel that drove
anti-government protests in Syria in 2011, which sucked the country into a
decade-long devastating and bloody war. Rising grain prices provoked riots in
Egypt as far back as 1977. The Ukraine crisis could
force Egypt to again risk a hike in bread prices.
Countries like Syria, Libya, Turkey, Lebanon, and
Egypt, the world's largest wheat buyer, rely on Russia and Ukraine for at least
half of their wheat imports. However, those imports have been jeopardized by
the closure of Ukrainian ports and the harsh sanctions imposed by the United
States, Europe, and others on Russia.
Wheat prices rose this week to their highest levels
since 2009. The hike came on the back of last year’s 27 per cent increase caused
by supply chain problems and poor weather that has hit domestic crops in Iran,
Syria, Turkey, and Egypt.
In contrast to the United States, the UAE and Russia
may see eye to eye on their perceived need to prevent or roll back popular
uprisings like the Arab revolts or colored revolutions in Ukraine and elsewhere
in the former communist world. Yet, that will not do much for the UAE's
regional security needs if the Gulf state and the United States increasingly go
different ways.
To be sure, strains in the US-UAE relationship have
been evident for some time. For example, the UAE in December suspended
talks on the acquisition of US-built F-35 jets, widely seen
as the world‘s most advanced fighter plane.
Last month, the UAE announced that it was buying a
dozen Chinese L15 training and light combat aircraft almost to the day that
Russian troops crossed into Ukraine.
As the United States and Europe tighten the noose
around Moscow’s neck, the UAE may find that diversifying economic relations is
one thing, diversifying alliances another.
If Russian armed forces emerged a winner from propping
up Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, they've already wasted that
reputation in Ukraine in less than a week of fighting. That is unlikely to
change irrespective of the outcome of a battle for the Ukrainian capital Kyiv,
particularly if Russia is dragged into fighting a long-drawn-out insurgency.
In addition, Russian military planning in Ukraine
miscalculated, and advances were bogged down not only by Ukrainian resistance
but also by equipment failures.
The UAE may pride itself on its courage to chart its
course. The question is whether it can afford to stray too far away from what
has become a problematic ally, the United States, given that the alternatives
are Russia, a poorly performing international pariah, or China, a reluctant
bear that is not yet up to the task of playing security guarantor and will
ultimately demand its pound of flesh.
"If there is this post-American world,
post-America Gulf, correspondingly there will be more of China. Less of America
probably translates into also more of China, in the region and throughout, by
the way,” said Mr. Abdulla, the political scientist.
Ultimately, he may be right. The UAE abstention in the
Security Council ensured that Russia did not veto the
extension of a Yemen arms embargo to include the Houthi rebels.
Even so, the issue of a rebalancing of global power is
an issue of timing, of when rather than if. It’s not today, that’s for sure. But
it's today that the UAE and other Middle Eastern states need to hedge their
bets in ways that help them fend off immediate threats.
To watch a video version of this story please
click here.
A podcast version is available on
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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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