Saudi
Execution Sword Takes Swipe at Washington
By Finian
Cunningham
January 07,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"SCF"-
The Saudi execution of senior Shiite cleric Sheikh
Nimr al-Nimr is but the latest in a series of
provocations towards regional rival Iran. The
furious reaction from Shiite Iran to the beheading
of Nimr – a renowned Islamic scholar – and the
severance of diplomatic ties between the two
countries appears to be a calculated winding up of
tensions by the Sunni Saudi rulers. But the real
objective for Saudi Arabia is more likely to embroil
its political patron in Washington in a sharper
regional conflict – a conflict that would also lead
to a conflagration with Russia.
The
reaction of Washington to the execution of
Saudi-born cleric Nimr al-Nimr was one of
«surprise», according to the
New York Times. That suggests the Saudi rulers
went rogue on the move. The Times noted that the
Obama administration is worried that the cleric’s
death could «jeopardize diplomatic efforts in the
region» – which is probably exactly what the Saudi
regime wants.
Nimr was
executed at the weekend along with four other Shiite
activists and over 40 alleged members of the terror
group Al-Qaeda. It was the biggest mass execution in
the kingdom for over three decades. The state
killing of Nimr along with condemned Al-Qaeda
terrorists only adds to the insult towards Iranian
leaders who referred to the cleric as a «martyr» and
a man of peace.
Iranian
Supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei vowed that «God’s
vengeance would strike the Saudi rulers»;
Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah denounced the
sentence as «an assassination»; while Iraqi
Shiite leader Ayatollah Ali Sistani said that the
killing of 56-year-old Nimr was «an unjust
aggression».
Nimr had
become a household name among Shiite Muslims across
the world because of his courageous defiance of the
House of Saud, whom he lambasted as despots and
openly called for its overthrow. The cleric upheld
the democratic rights of Saudi’s minority Shiite
community which has long protested persecution under
the radical Sunni rulers. Nimr had peacefully
agitated during the 2011 Arab Spring revolt, but was
arrested by the Saudi authorities in 2012 and
convicted of a range of charges, including
terrorism, which carried the death sentence.
Supporters and international rights groups accused
the Saudi rulers of trumping up the charges and of
gross miscarriage of justice.
Iran was
particularly vocal in protesting the sentencing of
Nimr and when his appeal against execution was
rejected in October 2015, Tehran warned the Saudi
rulers then that there would be dire consequences if
they carried out the capital punishment.
That the
Saudis went ahead with the execution – in spite of
widespread protests – seems to be a calculated bid
to antagonize Iran. The next grim step to watch for
is whether the Saudis proceed
with the execution of Nimr’s nephew, Ali
Mohammed al-Nimr, who is also on death row, on
charges over his involvement in the 2011 street
protests in Saudi’s Shiite populated eastern
province. Again, that case has also drawn
international condemnation as a travesty of justice,
especially because the youth was only aged 17 years
when he was first incarcerated. Under the Saudi
judicial system, Ali Mohammed could be executed any
day, his particular sentence involving gruesome
crucifixion. That would be sure to really explode
regional tensions among Shiite Muslims as it would
be seen as another gratuitous political killing.
What we
have to appreciate is the wider context of
decades-long political rivalry between Saudi Arabia
and Iran, going back to the Islamic Revolution in
1979. The autocratic House of Saud has always viewed
the Islamic Republic of Iran as a subversive threat
in the region. Much of the Saudi fears are due to a
paranoid insecurity about their own precarious
political system, relying as it does on a dynastic
hold on power by one family – the Al Sauds – and
their draconian application of Sharia law under a
fundamentalist Wahhabi interpretation of Sunni
Islam.
The Arab
Spring protests in 2011 amplified Saudi fears of
instability. Iran was blamed for instigating
subversion in two countries that the Saudi rulers
consider to be their backyard: Bahrain and Yemen.
Saudi accusations against Iran were overblown in
both cases. There is no evidence that Iran was
fueling popular protests in either Bahrain or Yemen
against incumbent rulers patronized by Riyadh.
In
Yemen, when the mainly Shiite Houthi uprising
finally succeeded last year in overthrowing the
Saudi-backed regime, the Saudi rulers typically made
hysterical claims that Iran was fomenting trouble in
its Arab Peninsula southern neighbor. On that
unsubstantiated basis, the Saudis mobilized a
military coalition of other Sunni Arab countries to
launch a war on Yemen, beginning on March 26 last
year, which continues unabated. Both Washington and
London have supported the Saudi-led war on Yemen,
with supply of warplanes, munitions and logistics,
even though as the New York Times noted: «But
Western diplomats say the Saudis vastly overstated
the Iranian role, at least at the war’s start.
Nonetheless, a Saudi Arabia-led military coalition,
backed by the United States, has killed thousands of
civilians in airstrikes».
Yemen can
be considered as the first major provocation towards
Iran over the past year. It is noteworthy that the
Saudis launched the war one week before the signing
of the interim nuclear deal in Lausanne,
Switzerland, between Iran and Washington and other
world powers in the so-called P5 + 1 group. That
deal and the subsequent finalization of an accord in
Vienna in July has vexed the Saudi rulers intensely
as they fear that normalization of relations will
only bolster Iranian influence in the Middle East.
It is reasonable to assume that the Saudi-led
conflict in Yemen was aimed at derailing the P5+1
process and its ongoing fragile implementation.
Nine
months of non-stop Saudi-led bombardment of Yemen
have been interspersed with tendentious allegations
by Riyadh that Iran is agitating and arming the
Houthi rebels. There is no evidence for such
material support, although to be sure as a
Shiite-dominated power Tehran has openly voiced
diplomatic backing for the Houthis. Iran’s leader
Ayatollah Khamenei has frequently excoriated the
Saudi action in Yemen as «genocidal
crimes».
A second
major provocation came in September when more than
450 Iranians were killed in a stampede during the
Muslim Hajj pilgrimage near Medina in Saudi Arabia.
Although the tragedy appeared to be a monumental
accident, Tehran was furious at the way the Saudi
authorities reportedly showed disrespect towards the
Iranian crush victims by delaying the repatriation
of their corpses.
The
five-year war in Syria is another source of
Saudi-Iranian rivalry. The Saudi regime has backed
an array of insurgent networks, which have been
linked to terrorist jihadists in the Islamic State
group and the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra.
Washington and other Western powers, Britain and
France, are also implicated in this covert war for
regime change against the government of President
Bashar al-Assad. Iran has been a staunch ally of
Assad’s Syria as being part of the region’s
anti-imperialist resistance bloc, which also
includes Lebanon’s Hezbollah.
With
Russia’s dramatic military intervention since
September in support of its long-time strategic ally
in Syria, the war dynamic has been transformed in
favor of the Assad government and the Syrian Arab
Army. The foreign-backed insurgency is decidedly on
the retreat in large part because of Russian air
power and Iranian and Hezbollah troops fighting
alongside the Syrian army.
The losing
tide against the foreign-backed insurgency in Syria
has evidently shifted Washington’s calculations
towards a political process for pursuing its
objective of regime change. US Secretary of State
John Kerry has noticeably stepped up the diplomatic
efforts over the past three months, along with
Moscow, to convene peace talks on the Syrian
conflict. Those talks are to begin later this month
in Geneva. Remarkably, Washington and its British
and French allies have dropped their erstwhile
demand that Assad must quit power immediately. Thus,
the West appears to have moved towards Russia and
Iran’s position which is that any peace process in
Syria should not be conditioned on the political
future of Assad, whose fate, they say, depends on
the electoral choice of the Syrian people as a
matter of sovereign right.
The Western
powers, it can be averred, still want regime change
in Syria for their geopolitical ambitions in the
region, in particular for extending hegemonic power
and isolating both Russia and Iran. Nevertheless,
realizing that the covert military option of forcing
regime change in Syria is waning due to Russia and
Iran’s intervention, Washington, London and Paris
appear to be «giving peace a chance» in the
altogether cynical calculation that they might
achieve at the negotiating table what they failed to
achieve on the battle field.
Not so the
Saudis. Or, it can be added, the Turkish regime of
Recep Tayyip Erdogan. With their Salafist/Wahhabi
Islamist affiliations and deeper investment in the
insurgent mercenaries, both Riyadh and Ankara still
persist in demanding that the Syrian leader must
stand down as a precondition for any political
settlement.
From the
Saudi viewpoint, Washington appears to be giving too
many concessions to Syria and its arch-enemy Iran.
For the Saudi rulers, the peace talks due to begin
in Geneva are a vexing reminder of the P5+1 nuclear
accord that Washington signed up to with Iran.
Neither the
P5+1 nuclear deal nor the Geneva peace talks on
Syria may actually bear much fruit for Iranian
interests and those of its allies. But from the
House of Saud’s paranoid perspective – which sees
Iran as its nemesis – these developments, however
tentative, are absolutely anathema to Riyadh.
This
probably explains the provocative execution of the
cleric Nimr al-Nimr. It is but the latest in a
series of acts by Saudi Arabia aimed at goading Iran
and its regional Shiite allies into a more
inflammatory conflict. If Iran were to hit back
militarily at Saudi Arabia that would inevitably
draw in the United States as Riyadh’s primary
Western ally. The Saudis have been itching for
Washington to launch military strikes on Syria going
back to at least the suspicious chemical weapons
atrocity near Damascus in August 2013, when
President Obama reneged at the last minute – much to
Saudi ire back then.
If Saudi
Arabia can provoke an Iranian military response –
and the provocations have been unrelenting over
recent months – then the House of Saud stands to
kill several birds with one stone. It gets America
to go to war for regime change in Syria and against
Iran at the same time.
However,
what the reckless Saudi rulers don’t seem fazed by
is that such an escalation would inevitably lead to
an international conflagration with Russia.
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