Biden’s Middle East deal is a disaster
Saudi Arabia has
recognized Washington’s anxiety about losing its position to China and is
pressing for major concessions.
SEP 27, 2023
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/biden-deal-saudi-arabia-israel/
The Biden administration is currently considering going where no other president has gone before:
offering a formal security guarantee to Saudi Arabia and helping the kingdom
develop a civilian nuclear program in return for Riyadh normalizing relations
with Israel.
President Biden and his team argue that the United
States has a national security interest in brokering such a deal, even if that
means massive and unprecedented concessions to Riyadh.
Biden and his team are wrong. Entering into a mutual
security agreement with Saudi Arabia would represent a catastrophic miscalculation. A security guarantee for Saudi Arabia would entrap
Washington as Riyadh’s protector despite a fundamental disconnect between the
interests and values of the United States and the kingdom.
Saudi Arabia seeks increased security commitments in
return for formally normalizing relations with Israel, a country with which it
is already
strategically aligned. This
is part of a deliberate
strategy by Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) to exploit growing fears in Washington
that the United States is losing influence in the Middle East relative to other
actors such as Russia or China.
As the Wall Street Journal reported, “in private,
Saudi officials said, the crown prince has said he expects that by playing
major powers against each other, Saudi Arabia can eventually pressure
Washington to concede to its demands for better access to U.S. weapons and
nuclear technology.”
And yet, though Russia and China have expanded their
respective footprints in the Middle East, neither Moscow nor Beijing can fill an American void in
the Middle East, nor do they desire to. States within the region are aware of
the limitations facing Russia and China. Saudi Arabia and other U.S. regional
partners have cultivated Washington’s anxiety about losing its position
relative to Russia or China and are pressing for major policy concessions,
resulting in a type of “reverse leverage.”
The pinnacle of this reverse leverage strategy is the
peekaboo game MbS is playing with the United States over whether Saudi Arabia
will join the so-called Abraham Accords. Since the introduction of the Accords
in 2020 by President Donald Trump – which witnessed Israel formally normalize
relations with Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), later expanded to
also include Sudan and Morocco – U.S. and Israeli officials have been
determined to add Saudi Arabia to the mix.
The Abraham Accords have become the new “lodestar” of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East. Through
these series of normalization deals, the United States hopes to create a more
formal coalition through which it believes it can best advance its interests,
namely by maintaining its regional influence amid Russian and Chinese
“encroachment” while also allocating more attention to other global theaters
such as Eastern Europe and the Pacific.
However, regional actors are increasingly using the
Accords as a mechanism to keep the United States entangled in the region as the
continued guarantor of their security. The Arab states that joined the Abraham
Accords were granted considerable policy concessions for doing so without any
serious debate as to whether such tradeoffs served the interests of the United
States. They interpret the Accords as a mechanism for maintaining the regional
status quo – with more concrete and integrated U.S. security guarantees
undergirding it.
This is precisely the lens through which Riyadh views
its possible entry into the Abraham Accords: as a way to pressure the United
States into granting the kingdom sweeping concessions and guaranteeing
Washington remains its ultimate protector over the long term. Washington’s
ongoing support for actors like Saudi Arabia has resulted in a vicious cycle:
by committing itself to propping up the underlying sources of regional instability, the United States
repeatedly finds itself having to confront challenges that are largely the product
of its own presence, policies, and partners in the Middle East. Making things
even more obscene, Washington may be deepening its commitment to these
illiberal states at a time when it has become clear that the region
hardly matters to U.S. national security.
The United States must decide whether it will continue
underwriting actors such as Saudi Arabia and the artificial status quo in the
Middle East, or whether it will recognize the failures of its own policies and
limit its involvement to a level commensurate with U.S. interests.
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