John Wight writes:
The
deepening crisis between Saudi Arabia and Iran, following the controversial
execution of Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr by the Saudis, shows no evidence of
abating.
Direct military confrontation is now a distinct possibility.
For many experts, analysts, commentators, and people
familiar with the Middle East, the prospect of military conflict between the
Saudis and the Iranians will come as no surprise.
For some years both countries
have been engaged in a de facto Cold War as representatives of Sunni and Shia
Islam each seek to establish their legitimacy.
This dates back to the original
schism of 632AD, after Prophet Muhammad’s death.
In its modern incarnation, the fissure within Islam between
both branches and their respective legitimacy as representatives of the true
faith has taken on political and geopolitical dimensions, given the wider
strategic importance of the resource-rich Arab and Muslim world.
Relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran deteriorated
rapidly in the wake of the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran, which toppled the
US puppet regime led by the Shah.
The Saudis, worried about growing Shiite
influence in the region as a consequence, and regarding themselves as the
theological guardians of Sunni Islam, have worked to oppose any such influence
at every turn in the decades since.
The oppression of its own Shiite minority, along with the
repression of Shiite pro democracy movements in Bahrain and Yemen in recent
years, is evidence of Riyadh’s increasingly aggressive stance in the region,
proving a key factor in its destabilization in the wake of the so-called Arab
Spring of 2011.
This revolutionary surge swept through Tunisia and Egypt only
to conclude in a counter revolutionary backlash, wherein it was hijacked by
extremists who were fuelled by a literalist interpretation of Sunni Islam; one
almost indistinguishable from the Wahhabi religious doctrine that underpins the
Saudi state.
The role of the Saudis in supporting various groups
fighting in Syria is by now well known, which in conjunction with the upsurge
in beheadings and executions being carried out in the kingdom over the past two
years, suggests a regime consumed with insecurity over the dominance of Sunni
Islam as a political force.
The announcement on Monday that Sudan had decided
to cut diplomatic ties with Tehran, and with Bahrain also lining up alongside
Riyadh, merely confirms this.
Add to the mix the collapse of US leadership and
influence in the region and the prospect of the crisis lapsing into open conflict
is very real.
Saudi Arabia, despite its repeated and flagrant violations
of human rights both within and outside its borders, and despite the
destabilization it has helped wrought, enjoys the protection of its Western
allies.
Saudi Arabia has long been the biggest market for Western arms exports,
and in the process of its long and favored relations with the West, it has
perfected the art of saying one thing to the West and another to its own people
and adherents across the Muslim world.
However, there is no confusion when it
comes to its actions, which have charted a course of ever increasing
belligerency and extremism.
When it comes to Iran, we are talking about a country that
has been much maligned in the West for decades. It is painted as a rogue state
and a threat to security and stability.
Nobody forgets its inclusion in former
US President George W Bush’s ‘axis of evil’ along with North Korea and Iraq.
A
sworn enemy of Israel and Saudi Arabia, Iran existed under a strict sanctions
regimen for many years, and only recently was brought in from the cold by the
Obama administration in the wake of diplomatic talks to end the impasse over
Tehran’s nuclear program.
Obama’s peace overtures to the Iranians met with
consternation in Tel Aviv and Riyadh. The nuclear deal caused a rupture in
relations between Washington and its longstanding allies.
Add to this the
reluctance of Obama to commit to toppling Assad in Syria with sufficient force
and never has an administration been regarded so poorly in the region as the
Obama administration by the Israelis and the Saudis.
In truth, Iran has long been a pillar of stability in the
Middle East. It has no territorial ambitions and its non-sectarianism is
evidenced in its unwavering support for the overwhelmingly Sunni and long
suffering Palestinians.
The region is in the throes of an ever deepening and
intensifying crisis, triggered in the first instance by the disastrous US-led
war of aggression on Iraq in 2003 and continued by the West’s role in helping
to topple the Gaddafi government in Libya.
There was a failure to adequately
appreciate the threat posed by terrorism and extremism, both of which have
proliferated as a consequence of the West’s actions since 9/11.
Destroying the
village in order to save it has been the strategy of governments, which have
allowed regional allies such as Saudi Arabia to spread and propagate the poison
of sectarianism and barbarism unchecked.
We are talking about people who as
Oscar Wilde once quipped, “understand the price of everything and the value
of nothing.”
They are pushing the region into the most dangerous period it
has experienced since the end of the Cold War.
Albert Camus says: “A man
without ethics is a wild beast let loose upon this world.” The same
sentiment can be applied to states and governments.
Step forward, Saudi Arabia.
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