Saudi-Israeli deal would be a gamechanger but not for the reasons discussed
By James M.
Dorsey
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A
Saudi-Israeli agreement to establish diplomatic relations involving enhanced US
commitments to Gulf security could be a game-changer for great power rivalry in
the Middle East.
To be sure,
US President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu face
formidable obstacles in paying the price tag Saudi Arabia puts on the
normalisation of relations with Israel.
In return
for relations, Saudi Arabia has demanded legally binding security commitments
from the United States, support for its nuclear programme, and unfettered
access to sophisticated weaponry – conditions that would be challenged in
Congress.
The kingdom
has also linked diplomatic relations to ambiguously defined progress in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict – a demand Mr. Netanyahu will have difficulty
meeting with his current coalition government, the most ultra-nationalist and
ultra-conservative in his country’s history.
Speaking to
Fox News, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman described the Palestinian
issue as “very important” and one that “we need to solve.”
Mr. Bin
Salman shied away from spelling out what a solution would entail beyond saying
he hoped it "will ease the life of the Palestinians.”
Within days
of the interview, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan told the United
Nations General Assembly and a webinar normalising relations with Israel would
require a plan to establish an independent Palestinian state.
On the first
visit to the West Bank by a senior Saudi official since the creation of the
Palestine Authority in 1994, Ambassador Nayef al-Sudairi, the kingdom’s first
envoy to the Palestinian entity, said Saudi Arabia was “working towards establishing a
Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.”
Palestinian
officials told their Saudi counterparts that as part of the kingdom’s agreement
to recognise the Jewish state, Israel would have to stop building new
settlements, expand Palestinian control over security and construction in the
West Bank, accept full Palestinian membership of the United Nations, and
consent to the opening of a Palestine Liberation Organisation office in
Washington and a US consulate in East Jerusalem.
Nevertheless,
senior Israeli officials asserted that Saudi Arabia was merely paying lip service to the Palestinian issue in talks
about Israel.
A senior
Palestinian official conceded “that what is being discussed includes elements that are less than
statehood. We’re
talking about a pathway to getting there.”
The
obstacles haven’t prevented Messrs. Bin Salman and Netanyahu from raising
heightened expectations recently by suggesting significant progress in agreeing
on the terms of a US-Saudi-Israeli deal.
Speaking to
Fox News, Mr. Bin Salman said his country and Israel were getting "closer" daily to establish formal relations. Mr. Netanyahu
was equally ebullient at the UN General Assembly.
Largely
overlooked in public discussions about a possible Saudi-Israeli normalisation
of relations is the fact that the Saudi demands signal that the kingdom, like
the United Arab Emirates, which is requesting an “ironclad” security arrangement with the United States, prefers the
US rather than China to be its security partner for the foreseeable future.
“Isn’t it
interesting? When you look at MbS’ asks from us, they start with he wants a
defense treaty with us… What that tells you is that at the end of the day, they don’t think there is anybody
else they can rely upon if they really stranded,” said Dennis Ross, a former US Middle East
peace negotiator. Mr. Ross was referring to Mr. Bin Salman by his initials.
Former US
National Security Council official Kirsten Fontenrose argued that Mr. Bin
Salman had created a situation where he could forcefully argue for a binding
security arrangement even if efforts to forge a deal with Israel failed.
“MbS looks
at this and says, ‘Right now, it looks like the sticking point is Israeli
politics. So, even if I don’t get this, I look like the good guy’,” Ms.
Fontenrose said.
I expect
there will be pressure from the Saudis moving forward, even if we don’t get
normalisation, to follow through… (saying), 'Well, we have arrived so closely
on some of these ideas on a US security pact, we’ve done so much work on
civilian nuclear cooperation, why don’t we just continue this?” Ms. Fontenrose added.
Even so, it
is hard to believe that Saudi Arabia and the UAE think they can retain the
freedom to hedge their bets and expand relations with China, as well as Russia,
particularly regarding the Ukraine war and Western sanctions, in ways that the
United States would see as threatening its national security and undermining
its policies.
While the
United States would likely not disrupt the Gulf states' economic and trade ties
with China, the Gulf’s largest trading partner, it would limit Saudi and UAE
cooperation with China on geopolitical issues, nuclear development, technology
collaboration, and arms acquisition.
“The
administration is asking for some things from the Saudis. They want them to
continue to peg oil to the dollar, there was some talk that they may allow the
Chinese to buy oil with the Chinese currency... What is being asked here is not
to stop their commercial relationship but to create boundaries in some of the
high-tech areas… It's a two-way street," Mr. Ross, the former US
negotiator, said.
The kingdom
“cannot have it both ways. If it wants that kind of commitment from the United
States, it has to line up with the United
States… If our
security relationship with Saudi Arabia is to be deepened because the Saudis
want it, then there are certain obligations that come with that,” said former
US diplomat and prominent analyst Martin Indyk.
Undoubtedly,
Saudi Arabia and the UAE will test how far they can push the envelope if they
come to a security understanding with the United States.
Ultimately,
however, they are likely also to find that a security arrangement would, at
least in the Middle East, shift the geopolitical US-China power balance in the
United States’ favour.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Honorary
Fellow at Singapore’s Middle East Institute-NUS, 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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