Soccer incidents call into question fundaments of Saudi-Iranian detente
By James M. Dorsey
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Two recent soccer incidents suggest that beyond optics
little has changed in the Saudi-Iranian rivalry since China
mediated the restoration of diplomatic relations between the two countries
a year ago.
Iran’s top security official Ali Shamkhani,
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, and Musaid Al Aiban, Saudi Arabia’s national
security adviser, posing for a photo after Iran and Saudi Arabia agreed in
Beijing to resume bilateral diplomatic ties China. Photo: Chinese Foreign Ministry/Anadolu
Agency via Getty Images
On the contrary, the Gaza war has highlighted the
potential threat Iran and its non-state allies pose to the kingdom, even if
both countries have toned down their rhetoric, are cautious not to provoke the
other, and have regular diplomatic contact.
The war has reinforced Iran’s positioning as a staunch
supporter of the Palestinians while Arab states struggle to end to the human
carnage in Gaza. The war has also made Iran a key player in determining whether
the Gaza conflict evolves into a regional military conflagration.
Even so, the war is not all good news for Iran.
If anything, the war has strengthened Saudi Arabia’s
conviction that its security is vested in a closer defense relationship with
the United States and formal relations with Israel, despite the kingdom’s
condemnation of the Gaza carnage and criticism of the US refusal to force an
immediate permanent ceasefire.
To be sure, the war has raised the bar for Saudi
recognition of Israel but has not changed the kingdom’s fundamental strategic
calculus.
Even so, that does not appear to have called into
question Iran or, for that matter, Saudi Arabia’s continued interest in
ensuring differences do not spin out of control.
Saudi Arabia fears that Hamas’ successful October 7
breach of Israeli defences could inspire Yemen’s Iranian-backed Houthi rebels
if the kingdom and the Houthis fail to conclude an agreement that would offer the
Saudis a face-saving end to its 2015 military intervention in Yemen.
U.S. Support for Saudi Military Operations in Yemen in 2015
intervention. Photo: Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images
Saudi threat perceptions have been reinforced by the
Houthis’ demonstrated ability
to impede shipping in the Gulf’s strategic waterways with missile and drone
attacks intended to disrupt shipping to and from Israeli ports in support of
the Palestinians.
The recent
arrest and questioning of Shiite Muslim soccer fans in Saudi Arabia
illustrates that the dialing down of Saudi-Iranian tensions has done little to
change fundamental Saudi attitudes towards Iran and the kingdom’s Shiite Muslim
minority. The kingdom has long seen Shiites as religious heretics and an
Iranian fifth wheels.
Saudi Arabia broke relations with Iran in 2016 after
Iranians stormed the kingdom’s diplomatic missions in the Islamic republic in
protest against the execution
of a prominent Saudi Shiite cleric.
Neither the Chinese-mediated restoration of relations nor
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s economic and social reforms and
subjugation of the country’s ultra-conservative religious establishment have
done much to tackle anti-Shiite bias.
Authorities earlier this month arrested 10 fans and summoned
150 other supporters of Saudi First Division club Al Safa FC for chanting
Shiite Muslim slogans and songs during a match against Al Bukayriyah FC in the
city of Safwa in the kingdom’s Shiite-majority Eastern Province.
Al Safa fans celebrate
during a local match. Photo: Twitter / @ESOHumanRightsE
Saudi authorities asserted that fans’ chants were
“sectarian.”
The sports ministry dissolved Al
Safa’s board immediately after the incident for failing to adhere to the
kingdom’s laws and regulations.
“The Ministry of Sports emphasises to everyone the need
to adhere to the rules and regulations for sports competitions,” the ministry
said.
In addition, the Saudi Football Federation’s Disciplinary
and Ethics Committee ordered Al Safa to pay a US$53,300 fine. It also banned
club fans from attending the team’s next five league matches.
The committee asserted that the fans had chanted slogans
and songs that “violated the provisions of the disciplinary and ethics
regulations.”
Iran targeted soccer fans at about the same time that
Saudi authorities cracked down on Shiite supporters but for different reasons.
A Norway-based Kurdish human rights group, the Hengaw
Organization for Human Rights, said ten Kurdish
teenagers had been arrested for celebrating Qatar’s recent defeat of Iran
in the AFC Asian Cup.
Hengaw said that Kurds in several predominantly Kurdish
cities in western Iran took to the streets to celebrate Iran’s loss.
The celebrations followed the sentencing
three days earlier of Sherko Hejazi,, the head of the Saqqez football
association in the the predominantly Kurdish city of Saqqez, to six years in
prison for “plotting to undermine domestic security” and membership in
opposition groups.
Sherko Hejazi, the head of the Saqqez Football Association
Photo: hengaw.net
The incidents, weeks before Iran’s March 1 parliamentary and
Assembly of Experts elections, reflected continued widespread discontent after
mass protests in 2022 and 2023 in the wake of the death in police custody of
Mahsa Amini, a Saqqez resident, for wearing her hijab “improperly.”
More than 500 people were killed by security forces
attempting to quell the protests.
In many ways a mirror image of Saudi Shiites, Iranian
Sunni Muslims played a prominent role in the protests.
However, unlike Saudi Arabia, Iran also faces a low-level
militant Sunni Muslim insurgency linked to the Islamic republic’s Baloch
minority.
Jaish al-Adl, a militant Sunni Muslim group operating across
the border in Pakistan, attacked
a police station in Rask in Iran’s Sistan-Baluchistan Province in December,
killing at least 12 officers.
In a rare
cross-border military operation, Iran targeted in January Jaish al-Adel
bases in Pakistan’s neighbouring Balochistan province. Two days later, Pakistan
struck at what it said were separatist militant Baloch hideouts in Iran.
This year’s election of the 88-member Assembly that appoints
Iran’s Supreme Leader comes as Iran gears up for a potential succession to
84-year-old Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
Several reformist and centrist candidates, including
former president Hassan Rouhani were disqualified
in advance of the election.
Many Iranians had hoped that the détente with Saudi
Arabia would provide relief for Iran’s economy hampered by harsh US sanctions.
Saudi Arabia has been careful not to violate sanctions.
As a result, turnout is likely to be seen as a barometer
of the Iranian public’s mood.
The government has claimed that voter enthusiasm is
increasing but has prevented the publication of opinion polls to back up its
assertion.
In a rare exception, a poll conducted in December by the
Iranian Students Polling Agency (ISPA) suggested that a mere 28
per cent of those surveyed would cast a vote.
A Netherlands-based Gamaan
Institute survey conducted in the first week of February concluded that
only 15 per cent of respondents intended to vote. Seventy-seven
per cent said they would not go to the polls, while eight per cent were
undecided.
Three quarters of those surveyed said they would vote
against an Islamic republic as their preferred governance system if given the
choice.
The soccer incidents, while different and unrelated, tell
a story of discontent among minorities in Saudi Arabia and Iran across ethnic
and sectarian divides.
They also tell a story of stepped-up repression of human
and minorities rights and freedom of religion in both countries that casts a
cloud over Saudi and Iranian efforts to manage their differences.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is 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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