Risky Gulf Arab strategy tested by killing of Iran general
U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf have loudly pushed
for hawkish policies by Washington to pressure, isolate and cripple Iran, but
this high-stakes strategy is now being put to the test by the unexpected U.S.
strike that killed Iran’s most powerful military commander last week, thrusting
the region closer to full-blown conflict.
Even as Gulf Arab states — like Israel — lobbied
hard for tough U.S. sanctions and maximum pressure on Iran, Saudi Arabia and
the United Arab Emirates have wanted to avoid outright war.
Friday’s airstrike that killed the Revolutionary
Guard’s powerful Quds Force commander, Qassem Soleimani, appears to have caught
America’s Gulf allies off-guard. Now they are trying to make sure the major
escalation by President Donald Trump doesn’t drag them further into the
cross-hairs of rising tensions between Washington and Tehran.
Iran, which held an unprecedented multi-city funeral
procession for Soleimani that drew millions to the streets to mourn him,
retaliated early Wednesday by firing a series of ballistic missiles at two
military bases in Iraq where American troops are stationed.
Trump signaled he would not retaliate militarily,
but vowed to continue his campaign of maximum pressure and economic sanctions
on Iran.
As the region braces for what comes next, Saudi
Arabia and the UAE are calling for de-escalation.
Saudi Arabia dispatched Deputy Defense Minister
Prince Khalid bin Salman to Washington, where he met with Trump and the U.S.
president’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner at the White House on Monday.
The kingdom says he discussed “efforts to reduce tensions and avoid escalations
that could further destabilize the region in light of the Iranian regime’s
provocations and destabilizing activities.”
Qatar’s foreign minister, meanwhile, traveled to
Tehran the day after the killing of Soleimani and also called for
de-escalation.
“Nobody wants the outbreak of conventional war
because when conventional war happens there are no winners, there are just a
series of losers,” said Mohammed Alyahya, the Saudi editor-in-chief of the
Al-Arabiya English news website.
This latest round of tensions has pushed oil prices
up, with Brent crude trading around $70 a barrel. UAE Energy Minister Suhail
Al-Mazrouei said on Wednesday there is no risk at the moment to the movement of
oil in the region or any shortages in oil supply.
He noted, however, that Soleimani’s killing was
“definitely an escalation.”
“Iran is a neighbor. We are (geographically) very
close to Iran and the last thing we want is another tension in the Middle
East,” the energy minister said, reiterating calls for de-escalation.
The UAE and Saudi Arabia have long wanted the U.S.
to push back Tehran’s drive to spread influence and power across the region,
and Soleimani was central to Iran’s ambitions. Viewed by Sunni Muslims across
much of the region as a menacing figure, his role as Quds Force commander put
him in charge of lethal Shiite proxy militias in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen
fighting against Gulf Arab interests. In Iran, he’s hailed as a national hero
who defied U.S. pressure.
Even after Soleiman’s killing, there’s little
indication they’ve stopped skirting the dangerous line between maximum pressure
and war.
Alyahya said the pressure strategy is still needed
to stop Iran’s Quds Force but he acknowledged that “it is a very risky game,
and if it backfires, the consequences are grave.”
Robert Malley, who heads International Crisis Group
and served on Obama’s National Security Council, said Gulf countries are likely
satisfied that Soleimani was killed, but are also worried because Iran could
inflict serious damage on their economies.
“I think they are now sending the message to the
U.S. and to others: ‘Let’s not let this go too far because you’re living very
far away ... we’re going to be the ones who will pay the price and you won’t be
here to protect us’,” he said.
The Persian Gulf could be another target of Iranian
retaliation. It hosts more than 30,000 U.S. troops, including the Navy’s 5th
Fleet stationed in Bahrain, U.S. Army’s Central forward headquarters in Kuwait
and at the sprawling Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar. The U.S. also has hundreds of
troops in Saudi Arabia and advanced drones, F-35 fighter jets and several
thousand military personnel in Al-Dhafra Air Base in Abu Dhabi.
Already over the summer, a series of attacks on oil
tankers in the Persian Gulf and a major missile and drone attack on Saudi oil
facilities were blamed on Iran. Tehran denied responsibility, though it did
seize oil tankers around the crucial Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the
Persian Gulf, through which 20% of the world’s crude oil travels.
Over the weekend, the U.S. warned American citizens
in Saudi Arabia of a heightened risk of missile and drone strikes, particularly
near military bases, oil and gas facilities and other critical civilian
infrastructure.
Since the September attack on Saudi Arabia, which
temporarily halved its oil production, there appears to have been a quiet
effort at diplomacy between Iran and the kingdom to ease tensions. But there’s
no sign either side had inched closer to overcoming their rivalry.
Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi told lawmakers
in Baghdad on Sunday that he had been scheduled to meet Soleimani the morning
he was killed. He said Soleimani was carrying a message from Iran’s supreme
leader in response to a Saudi message relayed through Iraq to Iran about
“important agreements and breakthroughs in Iraq and the region.” Neither Iran
nor Saudi Arabia have confirmed Abdul-Mahdi’s comments.
Alyahya called Abdul-Mahdi’s account “an intricate
tall tale.” Echoing widespread Saudi sentiment, he said Soleimani was no dove
for peace.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Tuesday also
dismissed the notion as “propagandist” and suggested that the Saudis share his
view that Soleimani was not in Iraq on a peace mission.
Complicating the Gulf rulers’ calculations are
questions about whether Trump’s decision to order the strike on Soleimani was
made impulsively or is part of a longer-term strategy.
Gulf allies have been questioning Trump’s
reliability as a security partner. Though he has strengthened America’s
military presence in the Gulf amid rising tensions with Iran, Trump did not
step in to militarily defend Saudi interests after the attack on oil sites and
backed away from retaliation when Iran shot down a U.S. surveillance drone in
the Strait of Hormuz.
In remarks on Wednesday Trump stated: “We are
independent, and we do not need Middle East oil” and said he would ask NATO to
step up its involvement in the region.
“The constant thing about Trump is he’s
unpredictable,” Emirati political analyst Abdulkhaleq Abdullah said. “We didn’t
that he would do this. Now, we don’t know what he will do next.”
“Is America ready for revenge of a sort coming from
Iran? Is the region ready for a sharp escalation?” asked Abdullah.