How Israeli/Saudi ‘Alliance’ Plays Trump
July 1, 2017 consortiumnews.com
By Alastair
Crooke
The Israeli web site Debka, though not always reliable in some respects, nonetheless, occasionally, can give useful glimpses into the Israeli calculus: Here it is expressing somewhat unusual enthusiasm, even open rapture, about a recent political event:
The Israeli web site Debka, though not always reliable in some respects, nonetheless, occasionally, can give useful glimpses into the Israeli calculus: Here it is expressing somewhat unusual enthusiasm, even open rapture, about a recent political event:
“The Saudi king’s decision to elevate his son
Mohammed bin Salman … is not merely the internal affair of the royal hierarchy,
but a game-changing international event. The king’s son is ready to step into
his allotted place in a new US-Arab-Israeli alliance established by President
Trump in May, along with the UAE, Egyptian and Israeli leaders that will seek
to dominate Middle East affairs. Israel will be accepted in a regional lineup
for the first time alongside the strongest Sunni Arab nations who all share
similar objectives, especially the aim to stop Iran” [emphasis added].
“A
game-changing international event”? Why exactly are these Israelis so excited;
why should the elevation of bin Salman, known by the initials MbS, be such a
game-changer? Is there here something new? And how come the dismissal of Prince
Nayef, whom MbS replaced as crown prince and who was a Western favorite, barely
ruffled a leaf in protest?
On the face
of it, not much has changed. Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s (and his
father’s) obsession with Iran is well known. The Israeli PM (like his father
before him) believes that Iran is the precursor to a new Jewish holocaust.
It was not
always like this however: the Ben Gurion doctrine of courting regional
minorities to Israel’s side (including Iran), was only “flipped” when the
Israeli Labour Party won parliamentary elections in 1992.
In short,
Iran’s subsequent identification with Satan by the Israeli government
effectively was a domestic Israeli political need of the electoral moment:
switching from the Arabs as “enemy” – in order for Rabin to make peace –
required, in public terms, that Iran become the “far enemy” – the new
existential threat to “plucky little” Israel’s survival, vice the now
peace-partnering Arabs.
Netanyahu
however, is a true “believer” (in Iran’s murderous intentions), and tried to
corner President Obama into destroying Iran, by threatening America that either
you do it (bomb Iran) – or, Israel shall (which effectively amounted to making
America “do it” anyway). Obama demurred, and avoided Bibi’s binary threat to
him of “war or war” by rather unenthusiastically negotiating a JCPOA with Iran
– and thus re-balancing the region.
A New
Strategic Situation
So what has
changed? Iran has just re-elected President Hassan Rouhani who upholds the
JCPOA and who actively engages with the West, and does not exude any clear and
present danger to Israel, or the region (ISIS and al-Qaeda apart). “Nothing to
see here”: aside from some jostling with U.S. partner forces for future
influence in Syria.
Clearly
however, Debka does espy something new in the strategic situation. And they may
be right. Ostensibly, on the surface, things may look the same, but two
dynamics seem to be conflating that may account for official Israel’s high
excitement. (It is not just Debka that is on a high – several senior
intelligence and security officials at the recent Herzaliyia security
conference, were also selling the imminent strategic change meme.)
One of the
two conflating dynamics which might help us understand the enigma of Israeli
satisfaction is this: a well-known Arab journalist wrote recently of a dinner
held some months ago in the Gulf (with prominent Gulf guests), at which an
unnamed former Arab Prime Minister was quizzed about MbS’ prospects of becoming
king. What he said shocked the gathering. Some expressed their incredulity.
He said
bluntly: if MbS wanted to come to the throne, he would need America’s
blessings. He would need to offer them something that no one had offered before
– that no one had dared to offer before. And what was that, the journalist
asked the former PM that MbS must offer: “He must recognize Israel. If he does
that, the U.S. will support him. They’ll even crown him themselves.”
In one of the
Sherlock Holmes detective stories, Holmes’s solution to a particular mystery
rested on “the dog did that did not bark in the night.” Holmes’s point was why
had the dog not barked when its nature is to bark.
It is common
knowledge that the U.S. has been firmly committed to Prince Nayef succeeding
King Salman. The authoritative Saudi insider and blogger Muhtahidd has tweeted
that the U.S. sent messages last year to MbS warning that he should not seek to
supplant Nayef. In July 2016,
Mujtahidd
tweeted that Secretary of State John Kerry had told MbS that Nayef continuing
as Crown Prince was a “red line” for the U.S.
Why then did the U.S. “dog” not bark on the night that MbS seized the succession, just before dawn? We have heard not one tiny growl on Nayef’s behalf. In fact, a trawl through Mutahhid’s early tweets lays it all bare … if one bothers to connect the dots.
Why then did the U.S. “dog” not bark on the night that MbS seized the succession, just before dawn? We have heard not one tiny growl on Nayef’s behalf. In fact, a trawl through Mutahhid’s early tweets lays it all bare … if one bothers to connect the dots.
A Kingmaker
The main
actor in this drama is Mohammad bin Zayed (MbZ), the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi,
who according to Mutjtahidd recognized MbS’ ambition from early on, and saw in
him an instrument by which MbZ could gain personal influence through becoming
kingmaker in Saudi Arabia. From the outset MbZ apparently urged MbS to obtain
America’s support for him becoming king – via the channel of Israeli full
support.
In tweets
from May 2, 2016, Mujtahhid describes MbZ’s advice to bin Salman: first, seize
the succession to the throne before King Salman dies; second, gain U.S. favor
by moving the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia away from religious values – away from
values that reinforce an Islamic identity, and third, expand ties with Israel.
Mujtahidd
developed the third element in his tweets – ties to Israel – by saying that it
began “shyly” as a lead-in to direct contacts. Senior Saudis were to be
encouraged to participate in debates with Israelis (i.e. appearing on Israeli
TV channels), while highlighting a common interest in combatting Iran and
fighting “terrorism.”
MbZ was also
reported by Mujtahidd as advising MbS to please Israel by supporting President
Sisi of Egypt (with whom the Israelis have a close relationship) – and finally,
Mujtahidd reports MbS (again in July last) that Netanyahu had met with MbS at
Aqaba, three months earlier.
All of
Mujtahidd’s points made over a year or more have been borne out in practice:
The Saudi succession has been seized before the king has died; MbS has paraded
his “opposition to religion” and Vision 2030 has emphasized a more secular,
liberal economic identity for Saudi Arabia; Sisi has been supported (in spite
of political differences); and Saudi ties to Israel have become incrementally
more visible.
Mujtahidd is
clear: There is no “big bang” shock recognition of Israel planned, but a
continuing incrementalism (Israeli use of Saudi airspace, institution of
telephone links, etc.).
On the one
hand, Israel may be seeing the ambition and opportunism of two young men (MbZ
and Mbs), but what “bakes the cake” for Israel, is the background, long-term
dynamic of the declining legitimacy the Gulf “system” of monarchical,
non-representational rule — a vulnerability exacerbated by financial
tightening: an austerity that promises to limit Saudi ability to buy out
popular disaffection.
This – the
declining standing of Sunni authority and the leadership of Islam which the
Saudis claim to be theirs and theirs alone – is what MbS and MbZ wish to
reverse. Qatar was the first victim of their insistence on complete obedience.
Crosscurrents
of Change
It was the
“Arab Awakening” that initially fanned secular alienation with the absolute
nature of the monarchial system, but then the Muslim Brotherhood doctrine of
the Umma (the whole community of Muslims bound together by ties of religion) as
sovereign, undermined it further, but from the Islamic stance. A left and a
right punch. Also, the revisionist history of the first Islamic State, presented
by ISIS, shreds Saudi’s religious credentials completely.
This is the
combination that may be provoking such Israeli excitement: The ambition and
opportunism of two young crown princes, coupled by their desire to restore
Sunni authority (and the obedience of subordinate states) by mobilizing the
Sunni world in a “jihad” against Iran and “terrorism,” must be music to some
Israeli ears.
And this is
the rabbit hole down which President Trump has fallen. It matters little
whether the primary motive for Trump’s Riyadh fiesta was pecuniary, or whether
it was triggered by son-in-law Jared Kushner’s ambitions. Either way, Trump has
embraced pushback against Iran (and seemingly, regime change, as Rex Tillerson
has implied). In fact, Trump seems to be surrounding himself more and more with
anti-Iranian advisers. He seems to like the notion of leading an alliance of
the U.S., Israel and the two Crown Princes pushing back against Iran and its
“terrorism.”
The Shi’a —
pilloried by the Sunni Establishment as discontents, rejectionists and
revolutionaries — have over a thousand-year history. Language changes, but the
Shi’a as (false) innovators, apostates, heretics – and now “terrorists” – are
as old as Islam. Terrible persecutions have ensued over the centuries. And
Shi’a Islam is no insignificant 10 percent minority — in the Arab heartland, it
is more like 60-40 percent. In the northern crescent, it is some 100 million
Shi’i to 30 million Sunnis. And Sh’ism is undergoing a profound revival.
What interest
of America will be served by intruding into these ancient animosities? MbS, MbZ
and Netanyahu may be American “allies,” but their interests are not America’s.
The former might be happy for America to spill its blood in fighting their fights.
But why should Trump want to do that?
Alastair
Crooke is a former British diplomat who was a senior figure in British
intelligence and in European Union diplomacy. He is the founder and director of
the Conflicts Forum.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario