Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s heady days
By James M. Dorsey
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These are
heady days for Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
With King
Salman home after a week in hospital during which he had a colonoscopy, rumours
are rife that succession in the kingdom may not be far off.
Speculation
is not limited to a possible succession. Media reports suggest that US President Joe Biden may visit
Saudi Arabia next
month for a first meeting with the crown prince.
Mr. Biden called Saudi Arabia a pariah
state during his
presidential election campaign. He has since effectively boycotted Mr. Bin
Salman because of the crown prince's alleged involvement in the 2018 killing of
journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.
Mr. Bin
Salman has denied any involvement but said he accepted responsibility for the
killing as Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler.
Mr. Bin
Salman waited for his 86-year-old father to return from
the hospital before
travelling to Abu Dhabi to offer his condolences for the death of United Arab
Emirates President Khaled bin Zayed and congratulations to his successor,
Mohamed bin Zayed, the crown prince's one-time mentor.
Mr. Bin
Salman used the composition of his
delegation to underline his grip on Saudi Arabia's ruling family. In doing so, he was messaging the
international community at large, and particularly Mr. Biden, that he is in
control of the kingdom no matter what happens.
The
delegation was made up of representatives of different branches of the ruling
Al Saud family, including Prince Abdulaziz bin Ahmed, the eldest son of Prince
Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, the detained brother of King Salman.
Even though
he holds no official post, Mr. Abdulaziz’s name topped the Saudi state media's
list of delegates accompanying Mr. Bin Salman.
His father, Mr.
Ahmed, was one of three members of the Allegiance Council not to support Mr. Bin Salman’s appointment
as crown prince in
2017. The 34-member Council, populated by parts of the Al-Saud family, was
established by King Abdullah in 2009 to determine succession to the throne in Saudi
Arabia.
Mr. Bin
Salman has detained Mr. Ahmed as well as Prince Mohamed Bin Nayef, the two men
he considers his foremost rivals, partly because they are popular among US
officials.
Mr. Ahmed
was detained in 2020 but never charged, while Mr. Bin Nayef stands accused of
corruption. Mr. Ahmed returned to the kingdomn in 2018 from London, where he told
protesters against the war in Yemen to address those responsible, the king
and the crown prince.
Mr.
Abdulaziz’s inclusion in the Abu Dhabi delegation fits a pattern of Mr. Bin
Salman appointing to office younger relatives of people detained since his rise
in 2015. Many were arrested in a mass anti-corruption campaign that often
seemed to camouflage a power grab that replaced consultative government among
members of the ruling family with one-man rule.
Mr. Bin
Salman likely takes pleasure in driving the point home as Mr. Biden mulls a pilgrimage
to Riyadh to persuade the crown prince to drop his opposition to increasing the
kingdom’s oil production and convince him that the United States remains
committed to regional security.
The crown
prince not only rejected US requests to help lower oil prices and assist Europe
in reducing its dependency on Russian oil as part of the campaign to force Moscow
to end its invasion of Ukraine but also refused to take a phone call from Mr.
Biden.
Asked a
month later whether Mr. Biden may have misunderstood him, Mr. Bin Salman told
an interviewer: “Simply, I do not care.”
Striking a
less belligerent tone, Mohammed Khalid Alyahya, a Hudson Institute visiting
fellow and former editor-in-chief of Saudi-owned Al Arabiya English, noted this
month that "Saudi Arabia laments what it sees as America’s wilful dismantling of an
international order
that it established and led for the better part of a century.”
Mr. Alyahya
quoted a senior Saudi official as saying: "A strong, dependable America is
the greatest friend Saudi Arabia can have. It stands to reason, then, that US
weakness and confusion is a grave threat not just to America, but to us as
well."
The United
States has signalled that it is shifting its focus away from the Middle East to
Asia even though it has not rolled back its significant military presence.
Nonetheless,
Middle Eastern states read a reduced US commitment to their security into a US failure to respond robustly to
attacks by Iran and
Iranian-backed Arab militias against targets in Saudi Arabia and the UAE and
the Biden administration’s efforts to revive a moribund 2015 international
nuclear agreement
with Iran.
Several
senior US officials, including National Security Advisor Jake
Sullivan and CIA director Bill Burns, met with the crown prince during
trips to the kingdom last year. Separately, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin called
the crown prince.
In one
instance, Mr. Bin Salman reportedly shouted at Mr. Sullivan after he raised Mr. Khashoggi’s
killing. The crown prince was said to have told the US official that he never
wanted to discuss the matter again and that the US could forget about its
request to boost Saudi oil production.
Even so,
leverage in the US-Saudi relationship goes both ways.
Mr. Biden
may need Saudi Arabia's oil to break Russia's economic back. By the same token,
Saudi Arabia, despite massive weapon acquisitions from the United States and
Europe as well as arms from China that the United States is reluctant to sell,
needs the US as its security guarantor.
Mr. Bin
Salman knows that he has nowhere else to go. Russia has written itself out of
the equation, and China is neither capable nor willing to step into the United
States’ shoes any time soon.
Critics of
Mr. Biden’s apparent willingness to bury the hatchet with Mr. Bin Salman argue
that in the battle with Russia and China over a new 21st-century
world order, the United States needs to talk the principled talk and walk the
principled walk.
In an
editorial, The Washington Post, for whom Mr. Khashoggi was a columnist, noted
that “the contrast between professed US
principles and US policy would be stark and undeniable” if Mr. Biden reengages with Saudi
Arabia.
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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