Saudi Arabia sees opportunity as Israel takes on Hezbollah and weighs retaliation against Iran
Mohammad Ali al-Husseini. Credit: WAM
By James M.
Dorsey
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Mohammad Ali al-Husseini personifies the complexity of escalating tensions tearing the Middle East apart.
A onetime
associate of Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader Israel killed, Mr.
Al-Husseini, a Lebanese Shiite cleric, has emerged as a controversial figure in
Saudi efforts to counter Iran and its allies by making inroads into non-Saudi
Shiite Muslim communities, particularly in Lebanon.
Mr.
Al-Husseini’s renewed Saudi media appearances suggest continued Saudi-Iranian
rivalry despite efforts by both countries to reduce tensions since they reestablished
diplomatic relations last year.
Saudi Arabia
broke off relations in 2016 after Iranian crowds ransacked the kingdom’s
diplomatic missions in protest against the execution of a prominent Shiite
cleric.
Meeting Gulf
leaders last week at a gathering in Doha of Asian nations, Iranian President
Masoud Pezeshkian said, “We consider Islamic countries, including Saudi Arabia,
as our brothers, and we emphasise the importance of setting
aside differences to
enhance cooperation.”
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian meets Saudi Foreign
Minister Faisal Bin Farhan in Doha. Credit: The National
With Gulf
leaders reassuring Iran of their neutrality in the Islamic Republic’s conflict
with Israel, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan responded, “We aim to
permanently close the chapter on our differences and focus on resolving issues,
developing relations as two friendly and brotherly countries.”
The two men
spoke amid fears that Iran could attack Gulf oil facilities if Israel strikes
at Iranian oil installations in retaliation for Iran’s firing last week of some
200 ballistic missiles at military and intelligence targets near Tel Aviv.
"The
Gulf states think it's unlikely that Iran will strike their oil facilities, but
the Iranians are dropping hints they might from unofficial sources. It's a tool
the Iranians have against the US and the global economy," said Ali
Shihabi, an analyst close to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
Mohammad Ali Husseini meets Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman. Source: X
Even so, Mr.
Al-Husseini attracted attention by predicting
on Saudi television that Israel would assassinate the Hezbollah leader days before he died last week in an
airstrike involving bunker-busting bombs. Mr. Al-Husseini advised Mr. Nasrallah
to draft his will.
Since then,
Mr. Al-Husseini has charged that Iran “sold” Mr. Nasrallah to Israel in an
apparent attempt to fuel anti-Iranian sentiment among some Hezbollah supporters who
accuse Iran of not coming to the group’s aid in its fight with Israel.
Mr. Al-Husseini
further predicted Israel’s ground offensive days before Israeli troops began
crossing the border into Lebanon, suggesting that they would attempt to create
a buffer zone.
Mr. Al-Husseini’s
predictions took on a life of their own, given that the Shiite cleric was
convicted more than a decade ago by a Lebanese court to five years in
prison for having had
contact with Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence service.
Mr.
Al-Husseini made his predictions as Hezbollah sought to identify how Israel had
penetrated the group, allowing it to disrupt the group’s communications and
target its political and military leaders and weapon depots.
Israel pounds Beirut. Credit: RFI
Mr.
Al-Husseini’s history and favorable attitude towards Israel are fodder for
conspiracy theories, even if it is unlikely that he would have retained access
to Hezbollah’s inner circle or the group’s sensitive operational information.
Released
early from prison as part of a domestic Lebanese political deal, Mr. Al-Husseini was granted Saudi
citizenship in 2021 under a scheme intended to ensure Saudi Arabia can compete
for foreign talent with the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Singapore;
Mr.
Al-Husseini projects his naturalization as evidence of Saudi pluralism and
tolerance.
“The glowing
truth that cannot be contested is that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is open to
everyone…and does not
look at dimensions of…a sectarian type," Mr. Al-Husseini said, ignoring
his new homeland’s history of discrimination of its Shiite Muslim minority.
Mr.
Al-Husseini's association with Saudi Arabia, coupled with his promotion of
Saudi efforts to engage with Jewish communities and his advocacy of relations
with Israel as a way of countering Iran's regional influence, has done little
to enhance his credibility in a broad swath of Shiite public opinion in Lebanon
and Iraq.
Saudi Arabia,
together with the United Arab Emirates, has maintained its designation of
Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation, depite a statement by the Arab League
that groups the Middle East and North Africa’s Arab states that it no longer would label the Lebanese
militia as terrorists.
Mohammad Ali al-Husseini (left) and Hassan Nasrallah (right).
Source: YouTube
Mr.
Al-Husseini has sought to deflate the controversy by emphasizing his history as
a co-founder of Hezbollah, posting on social media pictures of himself with Mr.
Nasrallah, and asserting that he had “liberated the South together” with the late Hezbollah leader.
The cleric
was referring to Israel’s withdrawal from southern Lebanon in 2000 after 18
years of occupation. Hezbollah is widely seen as having forced Israel to
withdraw.
Mr.
Al-Husseini’s maneuvers are an attempt to capitalise on broader efforts to
exploit Hezbollah’s perceived weakness.
With many Lebanese
accusing Hezbollah of dragging their
country into a war
that is not theirs, Hezbollah seems eager to prevent its popular base from
eroding. It has signaled its willingness to break Lebanon’s two
year-long political stalemate
that blocked the appointment of a new president.
Parliament
Speaker Nabih Berri, a veteran Shiite Muslim politician empowered by Hezbollah
to negotiate on its behalf, opened the door to a resolution by telling acting
Prime Minister Najib Mikati he supported the election of a president who
doesn't represent "a challenge" to anyone. Hezbollah’s insistence
that Lebanon’s next president should be a Christian ally of the group was one
reason the appointment of a new head of state has stalled.
US officials
suggested Mr. Berri’s offer reflected Hezbollah’s weakened
position as a result
of Israeli body blows, including Mr. Nasrallah’s killing.
"We have
made clear for some time that we think the Lebanese government needs to overcome the dysfunction
in the system — one
of the primary instigators of that dysfunction being the Hezbollah veto over
who the next president would be — and elect a president,” said US State
Department spokesperson Matthew Miller.
At the same
time, a 2023 video resurfaced on social media featuring
Hashem Safieddine, one of Mr. Nasrallah’s potential successors whom Israel attempted to kill in recent days, warning Christians
that Hezbollah would not wait indefinitely for them to put forward an
acceptable presidential candidate.
“What is
being proposed to some Lebanese now, if they don’t grasp it quickly, the time
will come when they won’t be able to secure the offer being presented today.
It’s better if you hurry; delaying is not in your interest because you lack the
leverage…you imagine you have but no longer possess,” Mr. Safieddine said a
year into the political deadlock.
Mr.
Safieddine was referring to Lebanon’s demography, which had
evolved since 1932
when Christians accounted for 53 per cent of the population and Shiite Muslims
for 19.7 per cent. In 2022, the CIA put Shiite Muslims and Christians at roughly one-third
each, with the Maronites constituting the majority among Lebanon’s minority Christians.
The 1932
census constituted the basis for an unwritten 1943 national pact that reserved
the presidency for a Maronite, the position of prime minister for a Sunni
Muslim, and the parliament speaker’s job for a Shiite Muslim.
Neither
Israel nor Hezbollah have commented on Mr. Safieddine’s fate.
However, Gulf
media, including Saudi Arabia’s Al Hadath TV, cited Israeli security sources as saying he had been
killed in the bombing
of Beirut’s southern suburbs.
Al Hadath
quoted sources as saying the bombing’s intensity left "no possibility of
survival."
A Lebanese
security source said Mr. Safieddine has been out of contact
since Friday.
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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