The UAE: The Middle East’s Teflon Nation
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The United Arab Emirates resembles US
‘Teflon President’ Ronald Reagan.
Congresswoman
Pat Schroeder awarded Mr. Reagan the label because nothing stuck to him while
he was president in the 1980s – not the recession, not his interventions in
Lebanon that cost the lives of 241 US Marines, not his plunging job approval
rating.
UAE
President Mohammed bin Zayed doesn’t need to worry about performance ratings.
His Teflon quality is the lack of pushback he encounters as he charts an
independent course that sometimes puts him at odds with the United States, the
UAE’s long-standing ally and security guarantor.
The UAE’s
Teflon coating has long dampened the effect of allegations of loose money
laundering and sanction compliance controls and human rights abuses, and repeated
revelations about covert surveillance and monitoring operations beyond the
country’s borders.
However, the
Teflon shield, the product of one of the Middle East’s most successful nation
branding campaigns, may be fraying at the edges.
Recent leaks
involving a cache of 78,000 internal
documents illustrated how a Swiss company operated by a former intelligence
agent sought to destroy the reputations of some 1,000 people, including
activists, journalists, and politicians, and 400 organisations in 18 European
countries.
The targets were accused, often based
on flimsy evidence, of being Islamists or critics of the UAE.
In June, British parliamentarians launched a bipartisan inquiry into the UAE’s
treatment of foreign business executives
accused of breaking the law. The deputies took the UAE to task for the lack of
an independent judiciary and due process.
“There are shortcomings on many of
those fronts in the UAE,” said Baroness Helena Kennedy, a prominent barrister
and Labour Party member of the House of Lords, who chaired the inquiry.
In testimony, Meridith Morisson, head
of business intelligence at the Risk Advisory Group, described the UAE as “the
biggest latent business risk in the Middle East – because it’s the one that
goes below the radar.”
In an echo of
a 2006 debacle, when Dubai-owned DP World sought to acquire Peninsular and
Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O), US national security officials are
scrutinising UAE sovereign
investor Mubadala's US$3 billion takeover of New York-based Fortress Investment
Group.
Concerned
about handing management of six US ports to an Arab company, DP World was
forced to exclude the facilities from the acquisition.
This time,
the UAE's close ties to China are the focus of US concerns. A UAE agreement to purchase 5G infrastructure from
China’s Huawei telecommunications company has stymied Emirati efforts to buy US F-35 fighter
jets.
US
intelligence has since reported a resumption of construction at a
suspected Chinese military facility in Abu Dhabi’s Khalifa Port, a year after the UAE said it
had halted the project because of US concerns.
Mubadala
agreed in May to acquire a 70 per cent stake in Fortress, a private equity and
distressed debt investor, from Japan's SoftBank Group.
Fortress’ investment
portfolio consists of financial services, transportation, healthcare, energy,
and infrastructure companies.
Mubadala
hopes to salvage the deal by attracting American investors, including pension funds, who would reduce
its stake in Fortress.
The Fortress
deal scrutiny does not mean the UAE’s Teflon is irreparably damaged. On the
contrary.
The UAE
accounted in 2020 for about US$45 billion of foreign direct investment flows to
the United States, much of that from its sovereign wealth funds, including
Mubadala.
The United
States, alongside Germany, Italy, and Greece, have recently pressured the
Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an international anti-money laundering and
terrorism finance watchdog, to remove the UAE from its watchlist despite persistent indications that
the country is a hub for illicit transactions, involving, among others, Russia’s Wagner group and African gold smugglers.
The United
States has sanctioned several Emirati companies because of links to Wagner or circumventing
sanctions against Russia related to the Ukraine war.
In March,
the UAE’s central bank cancelled a license granted to
Russia’s MTS Bank
after the bank was sanctioned by the United States and Britain. The UAE has
also targeted Iranian entities for evading Ukraine-related sanctions against
Russia.
The FATF grey
listing dented the UAE's reputation as the Middle East's foremost financial
hub. Members of the committee monitoring Emirati progress in addressing FATF
concerns questioned the reliability of UAE submissions on steps it has taken to
address deficiencies in its measures to prevent sanctions evasion, smuggling, money
laundering, and terror finance.
Even so, a recent
FATF progress report on the UAE’s adoption of the
watchdog’s recommended fixes said the UAE was “now ‘compliant’ with 15 of the
forty FATF Recommendations, ‘largely compliant’ with 24 Recommendations and ‘partially
compliant’ with one Recommendation.”
US support
for giving the UAE a clean bill came as Emirati National Security Advisor Tahnoun
bin Zayed Al Nahyan, a brother of President Mohammed bin Zayed, visited
Washington in early June for the first time in several years.
Mr. Bin
Zayed's visit was intended to improve strained relations over Emirati
complaints that the United States had failed to respond forcefully to a 2022
attack on Abu Dhabi by Yemen’s Houthi rebels and UAE dealings with China and
Russia.
A statement
by Mr. Bin Zayed and Jake Sullivan, his US counterpart, said the two men had
discussed “the importance of building trusted technology
ecosystems.”
Officials
said Messrs. Bin Zayed and Sullivan had agreed on ways to address US concerns
about the UAE’s engagement with China. However, they provided no details.
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.
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