When Mr. Xi comes to town
By James M.
Dorsey
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Pomp and circumstance are important.
So are multiple agreements to be signed during Chinese President Xi
Jinping’s visit to Saudi Arabia this week, his first venture beyond East and Central Asia in three years.
No doubt, Mr. Xi's reception will be
on par with the welcoming of Donald J. Trump when he headed
to Saudi Arabia in 2017 on his first overseas trip as US president. At the same
time, it will contrast starkly with the more downbeat response to Joe Biden’s hat-in-hand pilgrimage to the kingdom
in July.
Mr. Xi Jinping and Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed Bin Salman’s timing is perfect.
In addition, Mr. Xi’s visit boosts the positioning of Mr. Bin Salman and
his kingdom as undisputed leaders of the Muslim world.
Like when Mr. Trump was in town five
years ago, Mr. Bin Salman has ensured that Mr. Xi's visit will involve
bilateral talks and multilateral gatherings with Gulf and Arab leaders.
Even though Mr. Xi and Gulf leaders
project the Chinese president’s visit as a milestone rather than the latest of
regular high-level gatherings, neither seeks to fundamentally alter the
region’s security architecture with the United States as its guarantor.
On the contrary.
Speaking three weeks before the
Chinese leader’s visit, Anwar
Gargash, the diplomatic adviser of United Arab Emirates President Mohammed bin
Zayed, insisted that “our primary strategic security relationship remains
unequivocally with the United States… Yet, it is vital that we find a way to ensure that we
can rely on this relationship for decades to come through clear, codified, and
unambivalent commitments.”
Mr. Xi has no
problem with that. On the contrary, China is not interested and perhaps
incapable of replacing the United States militarily in the Gulf. So while it
may want the United States out of East Asia, the same need not be valid for the
Middle East.
That allows
Mr. Xi and his Saudi and Arab counterparts to focus on the nuts and bolts of
their meetings.
High on Mr. Xi’s agenda is the export
of its model of authoritarianism, involving one-person rule, a surveillance
state, and the ringfencing of the Internet. It’s a model that appeals to men
like Mr. Bin Salman and UAE and Egyptian presidents Mr. Bin Zayed and Abdel
Fattah Al-Sisi.
The appeal remains, even if Mr. Xi’s
proposition has lost some of its shine as a result of his faltering
zero-tolerance Covid-19 policy that has slowed economic growth, hindered the
country's private sector that is also hobbled by punitive state interventions,
and sparked an anti-government protest that has forced the Chinese leader to
abandon core elements of his effort to control the pandemic.
Moreover, Middle Eastern leaders will
have noticed that China’s firewall failed to prevent Internet users from
discovering that a majority of spectators at World Cup matches in Qatar were unmasked. Nor were Chinese censors able to prevent an avalanche of video clips of
nationwide protests against strict Covid-19 rules from flooding the country’s
tightly policed social media.
In addition, Gulf efforts to
diversify their economies and reduce dependence on fossil fuel exports centre on
a free-market economy and a private sector driven by innovation and creativity rather
than the kind of state-controlled capitalism envisioned by Mr. Xi.
That has not prevented China from
advancing its control and governance systems with investments and partnerships in Middle Eastern telecoms, corporate
communication systems, cybersecurity, and smart cities in countries stretching from Morocco to the Gulf.
Chinese involvement runs the gamut
from building 5G systems and data centres to providing cloud services and
developing artificial intelligence systems.
Investments in technology and
knowledge transfers enable Arab autocracies to enhance their surveillance
capabilities and Internet control.
Furthermore, countries like Egypt,
Saudi Arabia, and the UAE have looked for inspiration in China’s restrictive cybersecurity legislation.
Days before Mr. Xi’s visit to Saudi
Arabia, China’s foreign ministry released a report on ‘Sino-Arab Cooperation in a New Era’ that, according to Chinese media, misleadingly asserted that China
“never seeks any geopolitical self-interest.”
China probably meant to say that it
is not seeking to challenge the US position in the Gulf any time soon but
intends to be the region’s major partner economically and in terms of
technology, a focal point of US-Chinese rivalry.
Speaking last month at a regional security
conference, senior Pentagon official Colin Kahl spelt out limits to Gulf-China technological Cooperation that the United States
would seek to impose.
“If our closest allies and partners
cooperate too deeply with China on the security side, it'll create security
risks for us. Getting into certain networks that create real cyber vulnerabilities
and risks for us. Infrastructure that generates real intelligence risks for us,
and networks that touch our military networks that create real risk for us, or
a presence in certain countries that allow surveillance of our forces and what we're
doing in ways that presents a threat to us,” Mr. Kahl said.
Although Chinese 5G projects in Saudi
Arabia, the UAE and elsewhere in the region have progressed despite US
objections, Mr. Kahl left unaddressed whether they threatened to cross his threshold.
The Chinese foreign ministry report
identified technology, agriculture, and investment as focal points of
Chinese-Arab economic cooperation.
During his visit, Mr. Xi was likely
to also angle for construction contracts for Mr. Bin Salman’s US$500 billion
futuristic Red Sea city of Neom, as well as involvement in developing a Saudi
defense and automotive industry.
For its part, Saudi Arabia will want
to attract Chinese investment in its mining sector. Khalid Al Mudaifer, the
kingdom’s deputy mining minister, said he is seeking US$170 billion by 2030.
In a bid to exploit strains in Saudi-
and potentially UAE-US relations and uncertainty about America's reliability as
a security partner, the Chinese report asserted that “China has always believed
that there is no such thing as a ‘power vacuum’ in the Middle East and that the
people of the Middle East are the masters of the future and destiny of the
region.”
Mr. Xi arrived in the kingdom as a US district court in Washington dismissed a lawsuit against Mr. Bin
Salman and 20 others for the 2028 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. The court
based its decision on a finding by the US government that Mr. Bin Salman
enjoyed sovereign immunity.
On another note, the Chinese report
predicted that China and the Arab world would continue to support each other’s
counterterrorism and deradicalisation policies.
In stressing counterterrorism and
deradicalisation, the report suggested that Gulf silence, and in the case of
Saudi Arabia, endorsement of Mr. Xi's brutal crackdown on Turkic Muslims in the
north-western Chinese province of Xinjiang, reflected a more complex balance of
power in the Chinese-Gulf relationship.
In other words, Gulf acquiescence is
more than simply wanting to ensure that the region stays on China's right side
or seeking to shield autocracy from criticism as the preferred political system
in both parts of the world.
Because the crackdown targets Islam
as a faith, not just Turkic Muslims as a minority, Gulf support offers China badly
needed Muslim endorsement, particularly from Saudi Arabia, the custodian of
Islam’s two holiest cities, Mecca and Medina. In doing so, the support enhances
Gulf leverage in relations with China.
At the same time, China’s framing of
the crackdown as a fight against extremism, terrorism, and separatism legitmises the clampdown by Saudi Arabia and the UAE on any expression
of political Islam.
For Mr. Gargash, the UAE diplomatic
advisor, the Gulf’s ties to the United States and China fit neatly into a box.
“Our trade relations increasingly look to the East, while our primary security
and investment relations are in the West,” Mr. Gargash said.
The official did not mention
increasingly close political ties to China, like in the case of Xinjiang or the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, and that is where things potentially get messy.
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Dr. James M. Dorsey is an
award-winning journalist and scholar, an 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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