Saudi embrace of Assad sends strong signal to US
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[May 24, 2023]
By Samia Nakhoul and Aziz El Yaakoubi
(Reuters) - Once labelled a pariah, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman took centre stage as master of ceremonies last week when Arab
states readmitted Syria to the Arab League, signaling to Washington who
calls the regional shots.
His effusive greeting of President Bashar al-Assad at the Arab summit
with kissed cheeks and a warm embrace defied U.S. disapproval at Syria's
return to the fold and capped a turnabout in the prince's fortunes
spurred by geopolitical realities.
The prince, known as MbS, seeks to reassert Saudi Arabia as a regional
power by using his place atop an energy giant in an oil-dependent world
consumed by the war in Ukraine.
Shunned by Western states after the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi by a Saudi hit squad, the prince has now emerged as a player
whom Washington can neither disregard nor disavow, but must deal with on
a transactional basis.
Skeptical of U.S. promises on Saudi security and tired of its scolding
tone, MbS is instead building ties with other global powers and,
regardless of Washington's consternation, remaking his relations with
their shared foes.
His blithe confidence on the world stage was not only visible in his
reception of Assad. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy came to the
Jeddah meeting and MbS offered to mediate between Kyiv and fellow oil
producer Moscow.
To be sure Saudi Arabia still depends militarily on the United States,
which saved it from possible invasion by Saddam Hussein's Iraq in 1990,
monitors Iranian military activity in the Gulf and provides Riyadh with
most of its weapons.
Still, with Washington seemingly less engaged in the Middle East and
less receptive to Riyadh's anxieties, MbS is pursuing his own regional
policy with less apparent deference to the views of his most powerful
ally.
"This is a strong signal to America that 'we're reshaping and redrawing
our relations without you'," said Abdulaziz al-Sager, Chairman of the
Gulf Research Center, of the summit.
"He is not getting what he wants from the other side," Sager added,
saying Saudi Arabia's ententes with regional foes were based on Riyadh's
approach to regional security.
DIPLOMATIC OFFENSIVE
MbS' position strengthened last year when Western economies turned to
Saudi Arabia to help tame an oil market destabilized by the war in
Ukraine. It created the opportunity for MbS to launch a diplomatic
offensive that included high profile summit appearances.
That effort was aided when Washington declared MbS immune from
prosecution for Khashoggi's killing despite his being directly
implicated in it by U.S. intelligence.
A visit by U.S. President Joe Biden last July had already demonstrated
Riyadh's returning influence: The American leader left empty handed
while the prince enjoyed a public display of U.S. commitment to Saudi
security.
The Saudi pivot away from reliance on the United States was meanwhile
evident when China mediated this year a settlement between Riyadh and
its arch regional foe Iran after years of hostility.
The deal was not made from a position of Saudi strength: Iran's allies
had come out stronger than those of the kingdom in Iraq, Syria and
Lebanon, and held most of the populated territory in Yemen.
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Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman attends the Arab League summit, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, May
19, 2023. Bandar Algaloud/Courtesy of Saudi Royal Court/Handout via
REUTERS
Still, it showed Riyadh was able to cut its losses and work with
U.S. rivals and foes to shore up its regional interests such as
cooling the Yemen war where Saudi forces have been bogged down since
2015.
Meanwhile the prince has improved ties with Turkey and ended a
boycott of Qatar, a neighbour he considered invading in 2017
according to diplomats and Doha officials.
"Over the past three years, the hatchet was buried and relations
were repaired," said Saudi columnist Abdulrahman Al-Rashed in Asharq
Al-Awsat newspaper.
TRANSACTIONAL RELATIONSHIP
A Gulf official said the new, more directly transactional,
relationship with the United States had replaced the old oil-for-defence
model because of what Riyadh saw as a shakier security umbrella
after the Arab revolts of 2011.
A senior State Department official said the relationship is "an
important eight-decade one that spans generations, across
administrations in our own country and across leaders in Saudi
Arabia".
"We have multiple interests when it comes to our relationship with
Saudi Arabia...Our policy and engagement will seek to ensure that
our relationship remains sound and able to meet our shared
challenges of the future."
Riyadh thought Washington had abandoned old allies during the
revolts and might abandon the Al Saud dynasty too. At the same time
it believed the U.S. pursuit of a nuclear deal with Tehran had led
Washington to ignore the growing activity around the region of
Iranian proxies seen by Riyadh as a threat.
That impression has strengthened. A Saudi source close to the ruling
inner circle pointed to what he saw as lax enforcement of sanctions
on Iran and a drawdown in Syria, where a small U.S. contingent has
denied territory to Iran's allies.
"I think countries in the region, as a consequence, will do what is
best for them," he said.
Meanwhile, Riyadh was annoyed that the U.S. pulled its support for
Saudi operations in Yemen, launched after Washington repeatedly
urged the kingdom to take responsibility for its own security.
Without direct American intervention or support for its own military
efforts, Riyadh had little choice but to strike a deal with Iran
even if that annoyed Washington, the source said.
"This is a consequence of the U.S. action," he added.
Each side has a list of requests that the other is not willing to
grant, the Gulf official said.
However both sides may have little choice but to put aside their
grudges.
The kingdom may see the U.S. security umbrella as weakened, but
still views it as crucial to Saudi defence. Western states have
meanwhile remembered that Riyadh's influence in a volatile oil
market requires them to banish their qualms and deal with its de
facto ruler and future king.
(Writing by Samia Nakhoul; Editing by Angus McDowall)
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