Saudi Arabia’s Yemen Offensive, Iran’s ‘Proxy’ Strategy, and
the Middle East’s New ‘Cold War’
By Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett
June 10, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Riyadh’s war in Yemen marks a dramatic escalation in its efforts to roll back
Iran’s rising influence in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia portrays its Yemen
campaign simply as a battle of “good” Arabs and Sunnis supporting Yemen’s
legitimate government against “evil” Iranians trying to overthrow it via local
Shi’a “proxies”—reiterating a generalized Saudi (and Israeli) narrative about
Iran’s use of proxy allies to consolidate regional “hegemony.” More considered
analysis shows that Iran’s “proxy” ties are part of an effective strategy to
expand political participation in contested regional venues. While Saudi Arabia
(like Israel) considers this a mortal threat, it is essential to effective
conflict resolution. Riyadh’s intensely sectarian response—including its Yemen
war—now fuels what some call a new Saudi-Iranian/Sunni’- Shi’a “Cold War” in the
Middle East.Riyadh’s increasingly destructive war in
Yemen has sparked overripe discussion in Western capitals about Iran’s use of
“proxies” to subvert otherwise “legitimate” Middle Eastern governments. Driving
such discussion is a self-serving narrative, promoted by Israel as well as by
Saudi Arabia, about Tehran’s purported quest to “destabilize” and, ultimately,
“take over” the region.
Assessments of this sort have, of course, been invoked to
justify—and elicit Western support for—Saudi intervention in Yemen. More
broadly, the Israeli-Saudi narrative about Iranian ambitions is framed to
prevent the United States from concluding a nuclear deal with Tehran—or, failing
that, to keep Washington from using a deal as a springboard for comprehensively
realigning U.S.-Iranian relations.
Determination to forestall Iran’s international normalization
by hyping its “hegemonic” regional agenda was on lurid display in Israeli Prime
Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s much-watched
March 3, 2015
address to the U.S. Congress. As Netanyahu warned his audience,
“Backed by Iran, Shiite militias are rampaging through Iraq.
Backed by Iran, Houthis are seizing Yemen, threatening the strategic straits at
the mouth of the Red Sea…Iran is busy gobbling up the Middle East.”
Two days after Netanyahu spoke in Washington, then-Saudi
Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal
offered Riyadh’s version of this narrative, stressing Iran’s “interference
in affairs of Arab countries.” With U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry beside
him, Saud recapitulated a reading of Tehran’s regional strategy regularly
expounded by Saudi elites:
“We are, of course, worried about atomic energy and atomic
bombs. But we’re equally concerned about nature of action and hegemonistic
tendencies that Iran has in the region. These elements are the elements of
instability in the region. We see Iran involved in Syria and Lebanon and Yemen
and Iraq…Iran is taking over [Iraq]… It promotes terrorism and occupies lands.
These are not the features of countries which want peace and seek to improve
relations with neighboring countries.”
Given all that is at stake in the Middle East, it is important
to look soberly at claims by Israel, Saudi Arabia, and their surrogates about
Iran “gobbling up” the region. Sober evaluation starts by thinking through, in
a fact-based way, how Iranian strategy—including its “proxy” component—actually
works. It also entails dispassionate examination of what really concerns Saudi
Arabia and some other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states about Iran’s
regional role.
Playing Defense
Since the 1979 revolution that ended monarchical rule in Iran
and created the Islamic Republic, Iranian strategy has been fundamentally
defensive. Unlike other Middle Eastern powers—or the United States, for that
matter—the Islamic Republic has never attacked another state or even threatened
to do so.
The revolutionaries who ousted the last shah promised to
restore Iran’s real sovereignty after a century and a half of rule by puppet
regimes beholden to external powers. From the Islamic Republic’s founding, its
leaders have viewed the United States—the world’s superpower, whose ambitions to
consolidate a highly militarized, pro-American political and security order in
the Middle East condition it to oppose independent power centers there—as the
biggest threat to fulfilling this revolutionary commitment. After the United
States, Iranian policymakers have seen Israel—a U.S. ally with aspirations to
military dominance in its neighborhood—as a serious threat to the Islamic
Republic’s security and strategic position. Tehran has also been deeply
concerned about Saudi Arabia leveraging its ties to Washington to advance its
intensely anti-Iranian agenda—including the arming and funding of violently
anti-Shi’a groups like al-Qa’ida and the Taliban.
The Islamic Republic’s leaders have designed its foreign
policy and national security strategy to preserve Iran’s territorial and
political integrity in the face of these threats. The aim is not to establish
Iran’s regional hegemony; it is to prevent any other regional or extra-regional
power from attaining hegemony over Iran’s strategic environment. Even the U.S.
Defense Department acknowledges the defensive character of Iranian strategy; as
a recent Pentagon
report puts it, “Iran’s military doctrine is defensive. It is designed to
deter an attack, survive an initial strike, retaliate against an aggressor, and
force a diplomatic solution to hostilities while avoiding any concessions that
challenge its core interests.”
Leaving aside intentions, there is the more objective matter
of the Islamic Republic’s capabilities to perpetrate aggression in its regional
neighborhood. Simply put, Iran today has effectively no capacity to project
significant conventional military power beyond its borders.
To be sure, the revolutionaries who took power in 1979
inherited the last shah’s U.S.-built military. But Washington cut off
logistical and technical support shortly after the revolution—a debilitating
measure exacerbated by an embargo on military transfers from most other
countries as the fledgling Islamic Republic fought off, from 1980 to 1988, a
(U.S.-and Saudi-backed) war of aggression by Saddam Husayn’s Iraq. After the
war, Iran shifted resources from the military into reconstruction and
development, reducing its conventional military capabilities to marginal
levels. Today, the United States spends almost seventy times more on its
military than Iran does. Saudi Arabia, with one-quarter Iran’s population,
spends over five times as much; the GCC collectively spends eight times as much.
Cultivating “Proxies”
Given these realities, assertions that the Islamic Republic
poses an offensive threat to its neighbors are baseless; to borrow a phrase from
the U.S. Army, Iran won’t be parking its tanks in anybody’s front yard anytime
soon. To protect Iran’s territorial and political integrity, the Islamic
Republic has developed increasingly robust capabilities for asymmetric defense
and deterrence that it can credibly threaten to use in response to aggression
against it. Among these capabilities are ballistic missiles armed with
conventional explosives and a range of interrelated systems—anti-ship missiles,
submarines, mine-laying systems, and large numbers of small “fast attack”
boats—to disrupt Persian Gulf shipping, including both U.S. warships and vessels
transporting oil.
Even with such capabilities, threats to the Islamic Republic’s
security and independence are magnified by what military planners call “lack of
strategic depth.” Iran today has land, maritime, and littoral borders with
fifteen states. None is a natural ally; most have been hostile to the idea of
an Islamic republic in Iran. Many of the Islamic Republic’s neighbors and other
states in its regional environment are also susceptible to co-optation as
anti-Iranian platforms by America, Israel, and/or Saudi Arabia. To compensate,
Tehran has cultivated ties to sympathetic constituencies in other states open to
cooperation with the Islamic Republic.
The Islamic Republic has made a point of aligning with
constituencies systematically marginalized by their countries’ existing power
structures: Shi’a majorities in Iraq and Bahrain; Lebanon’s Shi’a plurality;
Shi’a and anti-Taliban Sunnis in Afghanistan; Zaidis in Yemen; Iraqi Kurds;
occupied Palestinians. By helping such communities organize to press their
grievances more effectively, Tehran creates options for influencing
on-the-ground developments in contested venues across the Islamic Republic’s
strategic environment.
For more than three decades, Tehran’s proxy partnerships have
helped it push back against hostile initiatives—e.g., U.S. military intervention
in Lebanon, Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon, Saudi-backed expansion of
Taliban control in Afghanistan, Saddam’s antagonism toward the Islamic Republic,
U.S. occupation of Iraq—that threatened Iran’s strategic position. They have
also enabled Tehran to reduce the chances that nearby states—Lebanon,
Afghanistan, post-Saddam Iraq, Bahrain (where America’s Fifth Fleet is
based)—will again be used as platforms to attack the Islamic Republic or
otherwise undermine its security and independence.
Over time, these payoffs from the proxy component of the
Islamic Republic’s regional strategy are amplified by Iranian allies’ political
gains. Given the chance, Iran’s partners have repeatedly shown themselves
capable of winning elections in their local settings, and winning them for the
right reasons: because they represent unavoidable constituencies with
legitimate grievances. Tehran doesn’t manufacture its partners by paying people
as mercenaries. It didn’t create Iraq’s Shi’a majority, or Bahrain’s; it didn’t
create Lebanon’s Shi’a plurality, occupied Palestinians, or the Zaidis in
Yemen. But Iranian support for these communities means that any expansion in
political participation in their countries empowers Tehran’s allies.
Stoking a New Middle Eastern “Cold War”
It is this aspect of Iranian strategy that most alarms Saudi
Arabia, some other GCC states, and Israel. Today, neither Saudi Arabia nor
Israel truly represents most of those it governs. Neither can endorse more
participatory politics in the region; neither can endorse proliferation of
regional states genuinely committed to foreign policy independence. This also
means that neither can exercise positive political influence to facilitate
conflict resolution in contested regional arenas; on their own, Israel and Saudi
Arabia can only make things worse.
This is why, when U.S. forces invaded Iraq and overthrew
Saddam in 2003, Saudi Arabia played a critical role in funding and organizing
Sunni insurgents there, in an ultimately unsuccessful effort to forestall a more
representative political order which Iraq’s Shi’a majority would inevitably
dominate. This is also why Riyadh viewed the outbreak of the Arab Awakening in
late 2010—which Tehran welcomed—as a mortal threat. The Saudi response has
been:
–to undermine Sunni movements, like the Muslim Brotherhood,
prepared to compete for power in elections;
–to build up violent jihadi groups, including groups that have
aligned with al-Qa’ida and coalesced into the Islamic State, as alternatives to
the Brotherhood; and
–to co-opt popular demands for reform by coercively
intervening—including through jihadi proxies—in Libya, Syria, and now Yemen,
with disastrous humanitarian and political consequences.
As it has done these things, Riyadh has reframed political
struggles around the region in starkly sectarian, anti-Iranian/anti-Shi’a
terms. This is especially striking vis-à-vis the Syrian conflict. Saudi
intervention in Syria ensured that jihadis — many non-Syrian—dominate opposition
ranks, killing any potential Brotherhood role in leading anti-Assad forces. It
also turned what began as indigenous protests over particular grievances into a
heavily militarized (and illegal) campaign against a UN member state’s
recognized government—but with
a popular base too small either to bring down that government or
to negotiate a settlement with it.
In the process, Saudi Arabia has exploited Tehran’s support
for Syria’s government to swing the balance of opinion in Sunni publics—which
had increasingly seen the Islamic Republic as championing more participatory
politics and resistance to U.S. and Israeli hegemony—against Iran. The turn in
Sunni attitudes gives Riyadh political cover to double down on supporting
violent jihadis—as
with Saudi backing for a new “Conflict Army,” organized around the
al-Qa’ida-affiliated Jabhat an-Nusra, that
recently captured a major Syrian city.
Deconstructing the Yemen War
These dynamics are fueling a new Saudi-Iranian/Sunni-Shi’a
“Cold War” in the Middle East; Saudi military action has made Yemen an important
battleground in this wider contest. In Yemen, Tehran has followed its
established strategic template of helping an unavoidable constituency with
legitimate grievances—the Houthis and Ansar Allah, based in the country’s
non-Sunni Zaidi community—organize to press for a meaningful share of power.
And the roots of Riyadh’s current campaign against the Houthis go back to the
Arab Awakening’s early days.
Following the ouster of Tunisian’s Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in
January 2011, peaceful mass protests calling for the removal of Yemeni President
Ali Abdullah Saleh broke out in Sana’a and other Yemeni cities. Ansar
Allah—which had been prosecuting a relatively successful revolt in north Yemen
against Saleh’s rule before agreeing to a ceasefire in 2010—endorsed the
demonstrations; it also joined other anti-Saleh groups in a so-called National
Dialogue, set up to lay the foundations for a more representative and regionally
federalized political order.
As pressure for change mounted, Saudi Arabia—determined to
perpetuate the Zaidis’ marginalization—set out to thwart Yemenis’ manifest
desire to replace Saleh’s autocracy with more representative and participatory
political structures. In particular, Riyadh worked to block implementation of
the National Dialogue agenda by engineering Saleh’s replacement by his then-vice
president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi. To this end, the Saudis upped financial
support to intensely sectarian Sunni salafi groups while undercutting the more
moderate, Muslim Brotherhood-related Islah party—including by designating Islah
as a terrorist group. These steps ensured that no Sunni party was empowered to
work with Ansar Allah and the Houthis to stand up a new, more representative
political order; in the end, Hadi was the only candidate on the ballot for
Yemen’s February 2012 presidential election. Riyadh also worked to exclude Iran
from the group of regional states ostensibly set up to help Yemen chart its
political future.
Faced with these provocations, Ansar Allah and the Houthis
renewed their military campaign against the central government in late 2011;
their military gains accelerated over the next two and a half years. Hadi’s
provisional term expired in 2014, two years after his February 2012 election.
By that point, support for Hadi had crumbled—in no small part because of popular
perceptions that he was a U.S. puppet collaborating with America’s ongoing
“counter-terrorism” campaign in Yemen, including high-profile drone strikes
killing large numbers of civilians. In early 2015, Hadi fled to Saudi Arabia.
Left with no political options for imposing its preferences on Yemen, Riyadh
launched military operations in March 2015, appealing not only to its Western
backers for support but also to Sunni publics to back its leadership of a
millennial holy war against infidel Shi’a.
Defusing Crises
Ansar Allah says it wants to realize the vision of the
National Dialogue, but lacks sufficient support across Yemen to do this on its
own. Tehran, for its part, has long recognized that there ultimately has to be
a political solution in Yemen, based on a negotiated settlement among the
country’s disparate regional, tribal, and sectarian elements. Since the start
of the Saudi military campaign, the Islamic Republic has stressed the need for a
negotiated resolution to the conflict—just as it has consistently held that a
political settlement is the only way to end the conflict in Syria. It is Riyadh
that rejects negotiation—regarding Yemen or Syria—unless it can, in effect,
dictate outcomes in advance. In Yemen, as in Syria, Saudi actions are now
enabling al-Qa’ida to
make territorial gains.
Looking ahead, creating a genuinely more stable Middle East
will require wider recognition of how dangerous the Saudi-stoked “Cold War”
really is, and how much more damage it could do to an already severely stressed
region. It will also require deeper appreciation of Iran’s regional importance,
and of the indispensability of its influence to putting the Middle East on a
more positive long-term trajectory.
Flynt Leverett is a professor at Pennsylvania State
University’s School of International Affairs and is a Visiting Scholar at Peking
University’s School of International Studies.
http://goingtotehran.com/
Hillary Mann Leverett is a Visiting Scholar at Georgetown
University, a Senior Fellow at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at
Renmin University of China, and a Visiting Scholar at Peking University.
http://goingtotehran.com/