Turkey,
Saudi Reap Machiavellian Whirlwind
By Finian
Cunningham
January
02, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "SCF"
-
The year ended, appropriately, with
Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan flying to
Riyadh to hold
a summit with Saudi King Salman. The meeting had
the air of two leaders closing ranks after a year of
setbacks. As the old adage puts it, misery needs
company. And there is much misery that the Turkish
and Saudi leadership have to console each other
about.
Both Ankara and Riyadh have seen
their military schemes in the region turn decidedly
sour. Russia’s military intervention in Syria over
the past three months has helped to stabilize the
government of President Bashar al-Assad, which was
targeted covertly by Turkey and Saudi Arabia for
regime change. Washington and other NATO powers were
to be sure part of the criminal plot. But it was
Turkey and Saudi Arabia that served as the «point
men».
Devastating losses inflicted by
Russia against jihadist mercenaries have turned the
tide on the dirty war co-sponsored by Ankara and
Riyadh, with even the United States recently admitting that
Russian President Vladimir Putin has succeeded in
his strategic goals of stabilizing the Syrian state
and long-time ally of Moscow.
Russia’s aerial bombardment of oil
smuggling and weapons routes used by the jihadist
proxy army have cut off supply lines that Turkey had
enabled the terror brigades with. Estimated to have
been earning the mercenaries millions of dollars per
day, thanks to the collusion of Erdogan’s regime in
Ankara, the decimation of oil contraband by Russian
bombing raids has plugged the cash and weapons fuel
for the terrorists waging war in Syria.
No wonder then that Erdogan was in
Riyadh on December 29-30 to discuss the formation of
a new «strategic cooperation council» with the House
of Saud. The Turks and Saudis now find themselves
with a serious funding problem for their
regime-change scheme in Syria.
Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir,
of course, did not mention Syria in public, and he
tried his best to sanitize proceedings, saying of
the summit: «The meeting produced a desire to set up
a high-level strategic cooperation council between
the two countries», in order to strengthen military,
economic and investment cooperation.
But reading between the lines, the
all-important, urgent backdrop for the summit is
Syria.
According to Syrian sources, the
Turk-Saudi arrangement for regime change in the
neighboring state worked as follows. The Turks
provided the logistical connections for weapons,
jihadist fighters and training camps across the
Syrian border, while the House of Saud was the main
funding source for the nefarious enterprise going
back to the origin of the conflict in March 2011.
The Saudis would also provide weapons from their
copious US-supplied arsenals, with tacit approval
from the American Central Intelligence Agency.
Erdogan’s renewed military campaign
against the breakaway Kurdish population in the
southeast of his country and in northern Iraq, plus
a general downturn in Turkey’s once-bustling economy
has meant that Ankara certainly does not have the
finances to fund its neo-Ottoman schemes. As already
noted, the Russian air assaults along the
Turk-Syrian border has put paid to illicit sources
of smuggling cash. Thus, cash-strapped Erdogan is in
a bind.
So too is Erdogan’s erstwhile
financier in Riyadh. The oil-rich kingdom ended the
year by posting a record budget deficit put at $98
billion – or 15 per cent of the country’s economy.
The Saudi rulers are now having to
embark on a previously unheard-of austerity drive to
rectify their awry finances. As the Financial
Times headlined: «Saudis unveil radical
austerity programme». The Saudi population is facing
price hikes in fuel, electricity and water, which is
an abrupt departure from the country’s «social
contract» whereby the autocratic rulers have up to
now always bought off discontent among «the
commoners» with lavish subsidies to ease the cost of
living.
This has implications for social
unrest in the authoritarian kingdom. Despite decades
of royal largesse, Saudi Arabia suffers from high
levels of chronic unemployment and poverty,
particularly among its youth. This reflects the rentier nature
of the Saudi economy, typical of the oil-rich Gulf
states. As much as one-third of the Saudi total
population of 27 million are foreign expatriate
workers, many of them from South Asia, providing
cheap slave-labor. This has resulted in large
sections of the Saudi native population being
unemployed, which has been kept docile up to now
through «hand-outs» from the Saudi oil coffers.
A major factor in Saudi Arabia’s
dwindling state finances is the crash in world
market oil prices. Only five years ago, the price of
oil was well over $100 per barrel. Today it is down
around $40, with a slump of 23 per cent this year
alone.
Some 80 per cent of the Saudi state
revenues depend on the sale of oil. That compares
with Russia’s dependence on oil at around 15 per
cent, owing to Russia’s much more industrially
diversified economic development.
And here is where the plot thickens.
Over-production of oil by the Saudis has contributed
to the saturated supply in world markets, which has
in turn driven down prices for the commodity.
Russia’s energy minister Alexander
Novak was in doubt who is to blame for the slump in
market prices. Novak told Rossiya 24 TV channel this
week: «Saudi Arabia has this year increased
production by 1.5 million barrels per day, thus
effectively destabilizing the situation on the
market.»
Some analysts have averred that Saudi
Arabia’s seemingly self-defeating policy has been
motivated by a bid to defend its market position as
the world’s second top oil producer along with
Russia by driving out weaker competitors. A more
mischievous explanation is that the Saudis were
aiding and abetting Washington’s agenda of trying to
damage Russia’s economy.
Either way, the upshot would seem to
be that the Saudis have ended up doing more damage
to their own interests by playing geopolitics with
oil.
Adding to Saudi woes is its ongoing
war in Yemen. Nine months of non-stop bombardment of
its southern neighbor has achieved nothing for the
House of Saud in terms of re-installing an ousted
puppet-regime. There seems to be no end in sight for
that war, which means the Saudis are set to pile up
more military expenses in the year ahead, just at a
time when the kingdom’s coffers are in arrears.
But as the Machiavellian schemes
backfire for both Turkey and Saudi Arabia, there is
perhaps a measure of good news for others. As
UN-sponsored peace talks get underway over the
coming weeks on the Syrian conflict, the setbacks
for Ankara and Riyadh will strengthen the hand of
Russia and its Syrian ally at the negotiating table.
It’s an ill-wind indeed that blows
no-one any good. And at least the whirlwind that the
Turks and Saudis are reaping from their own
Machiavellian plots might just bring a reprieve for
parties who are genuinely interested in seeking
peace in the region. |