Neocons Defend Saudi Arabia
By Jim Lobe
January 07, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"LobeLog"-
Much of the West is
focused on the latest sectarian provocations by
Saudi Arabia, such as the execution of Shiite leader
Sheik Nimr Baqr al-Nimr followed by the formal
breaking of diplomatic relations with Iran in uber-retaliation
for the attack on the kingdom’s embassy in Tehran.
U.S. neoconservatives, however, are standing in
support of that wellspring of expansionist Wahhabism.
It’s
remarkable that just 14 years ago, neocons like
Richard Perle were calling for the Bush
administration
to include Riyadh among the capitals on
Washington’s post-9/11 target list. Now the Saud
family has again become their dearest friend. No
less remarkable is how those fearless defenders of
Western values and democratic governance are
rallying in defense of an absolute monarchy and the
undisputed and deep-pocketed leader of the
counter-revolution against the reformist movements
of the “Arab Spring.”
That
great champion of human rights and democracy,
Elliott Abrams, and the hard-line neocon’s most
influential print medium, the Wall Street
Journal’s editorial board, were quickest off
the mark in
attacking Iran and
defending the poor, abandoned Saudis,
respectively.
Bill Kristol’s
Foreign Policy Initiative (FPI), meanwhile, made
it clear which side should be favored
in a release posted on its website early Tuesday
afternoon. Its list of “resources” made clear that,
no matter the provocation, Iran should always be
considered “Public Enemy #1.” The administration’s
attempt to appear more-or-less even-handed in the
escalating crisis—or even a little critical of
Riyadh—was yet another deplorable example of Obama’s
weakness and appeasement. The clearest critique came
from Abrams’s fellow senior fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations,
Max Boot, in a Commentary Contentions post with
the
title “An American Ally of
Necessity.”
In
the lawless jungle that is the international
system, nations seldom have the luxury of
choosing good over evil. Usually, it is a matter
of choosing a lesser evil over a greater evil.
So it was in World War II, when we allied with
Stalin to stop Hitler, and so it is today in the
case of Saudi Arabia versus Iran. The two
countries are in a contest for power and
influence across the Middle East. Both are
human-rights violators, but we should make no
mistake that Iran is far worse from the American
perspective: not only morally but also
strategically.
The
American policy should be clear: We should stand
with the Saudis – and the Egyptians, and the
Jordanians, and the Emiratis, and the Turks, and
the Israels [sic], and all of our other allies –
to stop the new Persian Empire. But the Obama
administration, morally and strategically
confused, is instead coddling Iran in the vain
hope that it will somehow turn Tehran from enemy
into friend.
At least,
Boot doesn’t sugar-coat Riyadh. It’s merely Stalin
to Iran’s Hitler.
Krauthammer to the Rescue
But FPI’s
list isn’t comprehensive. Here’s
Charles Krauthammer who predictably
blames the Iran deal and Obama’s “complete
abandonment” of the poor Saudis for Nimr’s
execution:
Just last week the U.S. responded to the firing
of the missiles, illegal firing of the
nuclear-capable missiles by Iran by threatening
trivial sanctions and then actually canceling,
or postponing the sanctions, when the Iran
protested and said they would increase their
production of missiles. In other words, the U.S.
would not even respond to an open provocation on
the missile issue, and what they read is
complete abandonment. They are now on their own,
and then they’re not going to have to face the
Iranians and their allies on their own. And if
that means they have to execute a Shiite who is
an insurrectionist in their country, he’s got to
be executed.
Krauthammer
expresses deep sympathy for the Saudis, suggesting
that their nearly 10-month-old U.S.-backed military
intervention in Yemen, by far the Arab world’s
poorest country, should be seen as a strictly
defensive measure against Iranian aggression: “In
Yemen, which is, remember, right on the doorstep of
Saudi Arabia—it’s not removed the way Syria is—and
they see serious encirclement.” (Krauthammer
conveniently omits to mention either the notable
gains made by both Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
(AQAP) and the Islamic State (ISIS or IS) as a
result of the highly destructive Saudi-led military
campaign and naval blockade.)
Attacking Nimr
Other
neocon writers have argued that Nimr himself was
essentially an Iranian agent and his execution
justified. Here’s
David Pryce-Jones on The National Review
website:
A
man seemingly in his late fifties, Sheikh al-Nimr was
the unacknowledged leader of the Shiites in the
country. This meant that he had the support of
Iran, where Shiites are the majority. Since the
1979 revolution in Iran, the Shiites have been
pursuing imperial ambitions against the United
States and Israel, but above all against Sunnis.
To the Saudi regime in contrast, Sheikh al-Nimr was
nothing less than a heretic and a traitor.
…He
uses his sermonizing for exclusive political
purposes, raising his voice to rant about the
Saudi king and the royal family, calling for
their overthrow and delighting that the previous
king is in the grave. This style is practized
rather widely. …But what consequences could
Sheikh al-Nimr have expected? He was inviting
martyrdom quite as certainly as if he were a
suicide bomber.
According
to the inimitable
Lee Smith, writing in Kristol’s Weekly
Standard, the Obama administration, by
expressing concern about Nimr’s execution,
had effectively sided with Tehran. Worse, it had
also legimitized Iran’s alleged pretensions to
represent Shias around the world and thus delivered
a serious blow to the entire nation-state system.
[W]hy
does [the administration] perceive the action of
a sovereign state regarding one of its own
citizens to be so “provocative” that it was
likely to compel another sovereign state to take
violent action? It is because the White House
understands that Tehran regarded and still
regards Nimr as an Iranian asset. With Nimr
alive and free, the Iranians saw him as a
potential agent of Saudi destabilization. With
Nimr imprisoned and now dead, Iran gets to claim
him as one of its own and wave the Shiite
banner. In acknowledging Nimr as an Iranian
protégé, the White House is backing Tehran’s
campaign as final interlocutor on all matters
Shiite, regardless of state sovereignty.
Smith also
notes that Riyadh may be a problematic ally at
times, but nonetheless insists that an attack on
Saudi’s diplomatic offices should be seen as an
attack on “us.”
There is no doubt that Riyadh is, to say the
least, a very difficult ally in many ways.
However, it is part of the American order of the
Middle East and has been so for 70 years. Iran
sees it this way as well. Therefore, an attack
on Saudi diplomatic facilities is an attack on
our side, our order, us. They see other
traditional U.S. regional partners—like Jordan,
Turkey, and Israel—in the same way.
The sacking
of Riyadh’s embassy in Tehran, rather than Nimr’s
execution, was of great concern for Abrams, who
served as assistant secretary of state for human
rights in the Reagan administration and as deputy
national security advisor for global democracy
strategy (among other posts) under George W. Bush.
He cited it as
another piece of evidence that Iran refuses to
live by the rules of civilized diplomatic
practice, and that its behavior has gotten worse
not better since the signing of the nuclear
deal–whose “outreach” was supposed to change
Iran’s conduct. Next time someone suggests
opening a U.S. embassy in Tehran as part of the
improvement in our relations, remember today’s
incident. The Islamic Republic still sees the
invasion of embassies as an acceptable political
tool.
Target: Iran
Meanwhile,
the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board has gone
on a veritable jihad against Iran and Obama’s policy
and in defense of the Saudi kingdom. Its lead
editorial Monday “Who
Lost the Saudis?” suggested that both Iran and
Russia may be trying to overthrow the House of Saud
during the final year of Obama’s presidency. Among
other assertions, the column noted that Nimr “led a
Shiite uprising in 2011”—a rather tendentious word
to apply to overwhelmingly peaceful street protests
that took place in the country’s Eastern Province
during the Arab Spring. The column continues:
Iran already has ample reason to want to topple
the Saudis, who are its main antagonist in the
Shiite vs. Sunni conflict that has swept the
region amid America’s retreat. The two are
fighting a proxy war in Yemen, after a Saudi-led
coalition intervened to stop a takeover by
Iran’s Houthi allies. The Saudis are also the
leading supporter of the non-Islamic
State Sunnis who are fighting Syria’s
ally Bashar Assad. [Emphasis added to suggest
that perhaps the non-Islamic State Sunnis may
include Jabhat al-Nusra, Al Qaeda’s Syrian
affiliate.]
The
conclusion:
The
Saudis are often difficult allies, especially
the support by rich Wahhabi sheikhs for radical
Islamist mosques and schools around the world.
But in a Middle East wracked by civil wars,
political upheaval and Iranian imperialism, the
Saudis are the best friend we have in the
Arabian peninsula. The U.S. should make clear to
Iran and Russia that it will defend the Kingdom
from Iranian attempts to destabilize or invade.
But the
Journal was hardly finished. On Tuesday, it
celebrated what it called
“Sunni Arab solidarity”—a reference to what it
initially called the decision by Bahrain and the
United Arab Emirates (UAE) to follow Saudi Arabia
“in severing ties with Iran.” It later corrected
that version, noting that UAE did not break
diplomatic relations with Tehran. The editorial
writers also apparently decided against mentioning
Sudan among those who bravely cut ties to Tehran.
After all the Bush administration—and Abrams—had
called Sudan genocidal and Riyadh had coaxed the
country into participating in its Yemen campaign.
The
Journal then picked up the refrain that Obama’s
“retreat” from the region has resulted not only in a
loss in U.S. influence there, but also in the larger
Sunni-Shia conflict:
The
U.S. didn’t listen to Saudi Arabia about the
Iran nuclear deal, which it believes signals a
U.S. strategic tilt toward Iran and its Shiite
allies in the Middle East. They see the
Administration backing down on sanctions against
Iran for testing ballistic missiles that can
reach Riyadh long before they get to New York.
They feel under threat from an Iran liberated
from sanctions, and they don’t believe President
Obama will defend them in a conflict. Why should
they heed the U.S. now?
A
Middle East dividing into Sunni and Shiite blocs
is the predictable consequence of Mr. Obama’s
strategy of retreat from the region. As
elsewhere, U.S. allies in the Middle East will
do what they feel they must to survive, never
mind American disapproval.
Of course,
what the editorial failed to note was the fact that
the creation of so-called Sunni and Shiite blocs in
the region preceded Obama’s alleged “strategy of
retreat” and actually began (in its most recent
incarnation) with the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the
empowerment of the Shia majority there, and the
subsequent “de-Baathification” of the country. The
neocons (including the Journal’s editorial
board) not only supported this strategy but
also conceived and actively promoted it
(alongside their favorite Iraqi exile, the late
Ahmad Chalabi). At the highest level, our Saudi
friends (as well as the U.S. intelligence community)
back then
publicly warned the Bush administration about
the possible regional consequences of an invasion.
But Bush and the neocons, including the
Journal’s editorial board, didn’t listen. How
things have changed.
Jim Lobe
served for some 30 years as the Washington DC bureau
chief for Inter Press Service and is best known for
his coverage of U.S. foreign policy and the
influence of the neoconservative movement. |