The fallacy of a US withdrawal from the Middle East
By James M. Dorsey
To watch a video version of this story on YouTube
please click here.
A podcast version is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Spreaker, and Podbean.
America is in decline. Eclipsed by China’s rise, it is shifting
attention from the Middle East to the Indo-Pacific.
That is one refrain in the analysis of three seemingly
paradigm-challenging developments in the past month: a Chinese-mediated
restoration of diplomatic relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran, the
kingdom’s association
with the China-led, security-focused Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, and a
possible Russian-facilitated revival of
diplomatic ties between Saudi Arabia and Syria.
The geopolitical importance of these
developments is too early to tell. While significant in and of themselves, they
raise as many questions as they provide answers. Their
ultimate impact remains uncertain.
At the same time, these developments, although seemingly sidelining
the United States, have not changed facts on the ground.
Furthermore, they do not suggest tectonic plate shifting.
Geography is one immutable fact. There is no coherent
Indo-Pacific strategy that does not include the region’s Western approach: the
Arabian Sea with Oman, Yemen, Somalia, India, and Pakistan as littoral states.
In other words, a continued US commitment to security in the
Middle East or West Asia, however reconfigured, has to be part and parcel of
any Indo-Pacific strategy.
Mini-lateral alliances like I2U2 that brings
together the United States, India, the United Arab Emirates, and Israel with a
focus on economics and non-conventional security such as food production
testify to the importance of the Gulf and the Arabian Sea.
Moreover, the recent China and Russia-related developments did
not happen in a vacuum. They reflect a global rebalancing of power rather than
the eclipse of one power by another.
Initially, the rebalancing towards a multipolar world involves
the United States and China.
However, it is only a matter of time before India emerges as the
world's third-largest economy and claims its seat at the top table.
In that multipolar environment, middle powers like Saudi Arabia
determined not to be caught in a renewed Cold War in which they are forced to
align themselves with any one side of the divide, are accruing increased agency
and leverage as they play all sides against the middle.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman appeared to be flexing
his enhanced muscles when he
reportedly told associates late last year that he was no longer interested in
pleasing the US saying he wants something in return for anything he gives
Washington.
Meanwhile, depending on the outcome of the Ukraine war, Gulf
states may find that Russia is, at this point, a middle rather than a global
power even if that is not how it seeks to project itself.
A frigate armed with hypersonic cruise missile, the Admiral
Gorshkov, this week became the first
Russian warship to dock in Saudi Arabia in Russia’s latest projection of
itself as a global power. The vessel arrived after participating in exercises
off the coast of South Africa and together with China and Iran in the Arabian
Sea.
Even so, while Saudi Arabia and Iran may have had good reason to
opt for China as the sponsor of their improved relations, it is not clear why
the kingdom would need Moscow to restore its relations with Syria.
If Saudi Arabia and Syria reestablish relations and involve
Russia, it would likely be a gesture at a time when the country is sanctioned
by the United States, Europe, and some of their Asian allies rather than
because Moscow had a substantial contribution to make.
Earning Russian and Chinese brownie points makes complete sense.
Rattled by a decade of statements by US officials and actions
that cast doubt on America’s continued commitment to Gulf security, Middle
Eastern states seek to hedge their bets.
They do so as much based on perceptions as on facts. The role of
perceptions is magnified by the US's failure to clearly define its commitment
to Gulf security and communicate that effectively.
The US's failure to do so looms large as facts on the ground
don't bear out perceptions.
In a just
published study, Christopher K. Colley, a security expert at the
United Arab Emirates National Defence College, concluded that “America's
forward military presence (in the Middle East) is not declining, nor even
remaining stable, but in fact has increased over the past decade.”
Based on data from the International Institute for Strategic
Studies, Mr. Colley noted that from 2008 to 2022, the US military increased its
presence in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and Djibouti.
Nor has there been any significant shift in weapon sourcing by
Middle Eastern states, according to Mr. Colley.
Taking fighter jets as a measure, he calculated that upwards of
56 per cent of fighters in the air forces of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, and
Oman are US-made with France making up much of the remainder.
“The percentage of Russian and Chinese warplanes in those
countries is zero,” Mr. Colley said.
“With the United States supplying an estimated 75 percent of
Saudi weapons systems, which require spare parts, repairs, and upgrades, the
structural links between Washington and Riyadh are not only robust but create
powerful economic, political, and security lobbies with vested interests in
solving disagreements,” Mr. Colley added.
Mr. Colley concluded his study before the United States decided
in late March to deploy
ageing A-10 attack planes to the Middle East to replace more advanced combat
aircraft that will be shifted to the Pacific and Europe.
It’s not clear what impact the replacement may have on Gulf and
Chinese security considerations.
China is happy to let the United States shoulder security
responsibility in the Gulf as long as its military projection is reliable and
credible. Many Chinese analysts assume that the United States will maintain its
commitment for the foreseeable future.
The question is whether the replacement of warplanes reduces the
commitment’s credibility. For the moment, the replacement is unlikely to alter
Chinese calculations.
Nevertheless, with the rapid modernization of the People’s
Liberation Army (PLA) and its navy, China has increasingly acquired the
capability to deploy forces to the Middle East to secure its interests.
Still, Mr. Colley suggested that “we are a long way away from the
time when the Chinese military could directly take part in combat operations,
such as missile defense, to protect one of its ‘comprehensive strategic
partners’ from an attack.”
Even so, China’s deployment considerations are as much political as
they are military. With good relations on all sides of the region's divides,
China fears that an enhanced security posture could force it to disrupt its
carefully constructed balance if it is forced to take military action against
any one party in case of a serious threat.
It’s a very different picture when it comes to Russia. Even
without the growing cost of the Ukraine war and US and European sanctions,
Russia’s economy, far smaller than that of either the United States or China,
would struggle to shoulder the brunt of regional security in the Middle East.
In addition, the size of Russia’s navy limits the country’s
ability to create a security umbrella far from its shores. Nor does it have the
kind of air force that could provide cover on the open seas.
For now, this means that there is no real alternative to the US
security umbrella in the Gulf.
But that doesn’t stop Gulf states from diversifying
their military suppliers. In the last year, for example, the UAE signed
agreements to purchase substantial weapons systems from France, South Korea,
China, Indonesia, Turkey, and Israel. Except for China, its more recent
suppliers are all US allies or partners.
At the same time, the sustainability of the American umbrella is
less a question of US decline and more one of how the United States will define
its interests and role in the world -- rather than by its diminishing need for
Middle Eastern oil and gas
“A (US) pullout from the Middle East would essentially mean that
Washington has abandoned its role” as a superpower and systemic leader. So, “a
central question for the next 10 to 20 years is how much the United States will
benefit from its security umbrella in the region relative to the gains of other
states—primarily but not exclusively China,” Mr. Colley said.
Responsible
Statecraft published an earlier version of this story.
Thank you for joining me today. I
hope you enjoyed the newsletter and/or podcast. Diplomats, policymakers,
investors, executives, journalists and academics listen to my twice-weekly podcast
and/or read my syndicated newsletter that is republished by media across the
globe. Maintaining free distribution ensures that the podcast and newsletter
have maximum impact Paid subscribers help me cover the monthly cost of
producing the newsletter and podcast. Please consider becoming a paid
subscriber. You can do so by clicking on Substack on the subscription button at
www.jamesmdorsey.substack.com and choosing one of the subscription options or
support me on Patreon at www.patreon.com/mideastsoccer. Please
join me for my next podcast in the coming days. Thank you, take care and best
wishes.
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 podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
Comments
Post a Comment