Saudis’ Bahrain Intervention: Who Cares What Washington Thinks?

Because what’s Obama going to do, after all – impose sanctions and stop importing oil? Saudi Arabia’s decision to send troops to Bahrain to help the monarchs next door crush a democratic rebellion is a barely disguised slap in the face to the Obama Administration, and further evidence of Washington’s diminished influence over Middle East allies.

Not even Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has made a political career out of defying U.S. pressure to do the sensible thing, would have the chutzpah to snub Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates, as Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah has done this week, declining to meet with them ostensibly for reasons of his health. Nobody in Washington buys that excuse, according to the New York Times, which quotes U.S. officials as saying the Saudi leadership is no longer interested in hearing American ideas on how they should be responding to the pressure for democratic reforms. “They show little patience with American messages about embracing what Mr. Obama calls ‘universal values,’ including peaceful protests,” the Times reports, adding that that the Saudis were livid that President Obama ignored their demand that he support Egypt’s President Mubarak “even if he began shooting protesters”.

In a commentary in Foreign Policy Georgetown Arab Studies professor Jean Francois Seznec   unpacked the implications of the Saudi intervention.

On Saturday, March 12, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates visited Bahrain, where he called for real reforms to the country’s political system and criticized “baby steps,” which he said would be insufficient to defuse the crisis. The Saudis were called in within a few hours of Gates’s departure, however, showing their disdain for his efforts to reach a negotiated solution. By acting so soon after Gates’s visit, Saudi Arabia has made the United States look at best irrelevant to events in Bahrain, and from the Shiite opposition’s point of view, even complicit in the Saudi military intervention.

Seznec suggests that some may have hoped the Saudis’ arrival would scare the protesters to the negotiation table on the regime’s terms, but it appears, in fact, to be having the opposite effect. The most moderate of the Shi’ite parties, the Wefaq Party which seeks constitutional reforms, denounced the Saudi intervention as an “occupation”, and their presence make it impossible for the party to negotiate, giving the upper hand in the Shi’ite protest movement to more radical groups. But, he suggests, negotiations may not be the Saudis’ goal. While King Hamad bin Khalifa is said to favor negotiation and an approach more in line with U.S. counsel, the Prime Minister, Sheik Khalifa bin Khalifa is said to favor a harder line, which would be in line with the Saudis’ own thinking on how to respond to protesters demanding democratic reforms. Or, as the hardline Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef reportedly warned a group of Saudi dissidents, “what we won by the sword we will keep by the sword.”

The problem, of course, is that applying the sword to unarmed democracy protests is a surefire way to incubate radicalism. As the Financial Times warned in its editorial on Tuesday,

This is an escalation that pushes a mass reform movement into the arms of revolutionaries. It is also a failure of nerve and error of judgment that could sentence the Gulf to open-ended conflict, whatever the short-term outcome in Bahrain… It guarantees radicalisation, when reform is all most Bahraini and Gulf citizens want. And it invites Iran and its proxies such as Hizbollah, which barely have a toehold on the Arabian peninsula, to come charging in.

But looking across the region now from the debacle of Libya’s uprising to the fall of Mubarak, the failure of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, the collapse of the pro-Western government in Lebanon and the dominance of Iran’s allies in Iraq’s government, it’s clear that the Saudis ignoring Washington is but the latest instance of the passing of Pax Americana in the Middle East.

P.S. Further to the last point, we learn today that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was  also snubbed by the six youth groups that drove the Egyptian revolution. They refused an invitation to meet with her, they said, “based on her negative position from the beginning of the revolution and the position of the US administration in the Middle East.”

Related Topics: bahrain, Clinton, Gates, Khalifa, King Abdullah, Saudi Arabia, arab uprisings, Dictatorships, Middle East, Uncategorized
  • Latest on Global Spin

    Oded Balilty / Reuters

    Netanyahu’s New Government: Warming to Peace Talks with the Palestinians?

    A flurry of gestures toward the Palestinian leadership suggests that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in his new role as leader of a center-right government, is warming toward the resumption of peace talks — or at least giving the appearance of warming; call it a rosy glow rising from a pair of announcements on Monday. One was about Palestinian prisoners who had been carrying out a mass hunger strike for weeks inside Israeli prisons. With several prisoners near death, Netanyahu approved an agreement that improves prison conditions and permits visits by family members in the Gaza Strip, the heavily guarded enclave that Palestinians have been allowed out of only for medical emergencies. Greeted by Palestinians as a victory, the deal eased concerns that a prisoner’s death might combust what are usually routine protests planned for Tuesday’s commemoration of Nakba Day, the “catastrophe” of Israel’s 1948 victory over Arab forces trying to prevent the establishment of a Jewish state.

    Bernat Armangue / AP

    Palestinians Mark Their Day of “Catastrophe”

    Protesters challenge Israeli troops in the West Bank while commemorating the Nakba, or “day of catastrophe” in Arabic, which marks the day when Israel declared its statehood in 1948—an act which forced thousands of Palestinians out of their homes and into a life of exile

    Christopher Furlong/ Getty Images

    Rebekah Brooks, Husband Charged in Phone-Hacking Scandal

    The convoluted saga of the British phone-hacking scandal seems to have been dragging on longer than a back-to-back performance of Wagner’s Ring Cycle. Yet despite the demise of Rupert Murdoch‘s News of the World, the launching of a public inquiry into British press standards, three police investigations and more than 40 arrests, the scandal has yet to draw real blood. The closest it has come was a report released this month by a Parliamentary committee, which accused Murdoch of turning a blind eye to the hacking at his paper and declared him “not a fit person” to run an international company — a damning conclusion that nonetheless seems to have had little immediate effect.

  • deconstructiva

    Because what’s Obama going to do, after all – impose sanctions and stop importing oil?
    .
    Why not? Well, ‘cause a lot of oil’s involved… yet …SA is only our third largest source of foreign oil: Mexico is #2 and Canada is #1. We can bring in a lot more from, say, Russia. No doubt they’d love to sell us more too. Of course, we really should someday develop our homegrown alternate resources (in the case of biofuels, literally homegrown, though that’s not an efficient source). Yes, many conservatives want more domestic drilling but that will take years to develop. We can sign new deals with Russia and others much faster. So why not hit Saudi Arabia back by purchasing less of their oil? Thoughts, Tony?

  • http://realeyesrealise.wordpress.com realeyesrealise

    Tony, although your proposal of buying Russian oil seems like a possible solution to rising oil prices, resulting from middle eastern turmoil that is ensuing, there are many other factors that are in play with the current oil market. Despite Saudi Arabia being the #3 largest supplier to the U.S, the ever increasing rate of oil consumption means that the U.S dependence for these suppliers grows and tightens daily. Especially now that depression of the global financial crisis is beginning to settle and employment figures are rising along with the economy; oil consumption will only further continue grow. Unfortunately for the United States they are in no position to boycott Saudi Arabian Oil. The implications on relationships as a result with other Middle Eastern nations could be catastrophic, on so many levels. The mere fact that this has not happened already is a clear indication of underlying problems with this idea. “Draw a picture of a helicopter and saying this will fly… is not designing anything”. Tony to truly appreciate the position of oil dependence one must understand all the implications involved. I recommend that you type some of your ideas into google and see what comes up? In my opinion, the United States will be placed over the figurative lap of Middle Eastern/ African oil supplies to be spanked by ongoing revolutions/riots that dictates oil production and prices until the United States decides to partake in a more hands on approach as seen in… Oh I don’t know maybe perhaps like the approach they took on Iraq.

    “U.S. and Russian relations have cooled recently as Moscow asserts its independence from Washington. The country’s leaders have distanced themselves from the Bush administration and become more aggressive creating political alliances with anti-U.S. states like Venezuela.

    So as Russia’s oil-fueled economic recovery puts the country on more solid footing. Will American companies and the government find themselves overly dependent on a Russia that is no longer a geopolitical ally?”

    “The transportation pipeline from the Middle East — from Saudi Arabia in particular — to the United States, involving supertankers that ship to refineries in the Gulf of Mexico, is much more established than anything between the United States and Russia. Because of this, it’s unlikely U.S. companies and importers will immediately become more dependent on Russian oil.

    “The logistics of getting Russian oil over to the U.S. are difficult because of infrastructure issues,” said John Parry, an oil analyst with John S. Herold. “In reality, because of the function of the market, oil finds it’s most economic destination. Russian oil is going to find a home in Eastern Europe first.”"

    http://abcnews.go.com/Business/IndustryInfo/story?id=2356757&page=1

  • Tony Karon

    Oil is a single world market with a single price — if the US stopped importing Saudi oil, they’d have no trouble selling it to China for the same price. In order to trouble Saudi Arabia’s economy, the US would have to stop importing oil altogether! Which, of course, isn’t going to happen.

  • http://thevividwriter.wordpress.com thevividwriter

    It is pivotal for American foreign ‘policy’ to stand by the democracy-hungry Bahraini people. Anything short of that is yet another token of U.S. hypocrisy. Merely expressing symbolic support is not enough, as was done in the case of Egypt and Tunisia – countries where U.S./Western-backed dictators were deposed and an entire sphere of influence was swept away. Call it a non-violent revolutionary tsunami. (see: http://thevividwriter.wordpress.com/2011/03/02/under-the-global-microscope-hypocrisy/)

    It seems there was a good reason Egyptians weren’t too keen on inviting nor expecting U.S. involvement. Bahraini’s will most likely perceive the Saudi invasion as a U.S.-green-lighted occupation.

  • http://thevividwriter.wordpress.com thevividwriter

    Spot on. It really makes one wonder just what an impact such a wise move would have on the threat of terrorism. With the U.S. being out of their faces in the Middle East, and once certain militarism-derived conflicts are disolved, there would be significant difficulties for terror-recruiters to bolster anti-U.S. sentiment. In fact, countries like Bahrain wouldn’t have an occupying force and the regime they are trying to topple would not perceive the U.S. nor the Saudis as having their back.

    All the U.S. would have left to deal with, are homegrown (would-be-)terrorists whose drive is more than less fueled by marginalisation derived from fearmongering and hightened, overly generalized Islamo-phobia.

    http://thevividwriter.wordpress.com/

  • http://philodoc.wordpress.com philodoc

    America, which led the global communication revolution seems unable to contemplate a global energy revolution in which oil becomes nothing more than a source of raw materials; why?
    Pax Americana is failing; again why?

    These two are interlinked. Disunity at home (eg. big oil versus a new strategic vision of the future); disunity abroad – America has failed to keep it’s allies on side, both in Europe and S. America. The USA has been sending mixed messages to the world for decades; supporting dictators yet espousing democracy; paying lip service to the UN yet vetoing UN policy when it sees fit (Israel/Iraq?) etc.

    Now we have the growing power of India and China and others who not only have larger numbers of people and hence greater potential economic muscle but ultimately greater military might. No wonder The Colonel can laugh all the way to the slaughter house; poor leadership and lack of strategic vision by The West is working in his favour.

  • http://avsecbostjan.wordpress.com avsecbostjan

    Obama is ready to act after country was already subjected to civil war and burned to the ground…after he implemented via United Nations prohibition of air space usage allowing use exclusively to Gaddafi’s air attacks and destruction of rebel army while at the same time prohibiting assistance from already liberated neighboring countries..and why !? Because rebel army didn’t tolerate Jewmerican corruption and therefore rebels needed to be destroyed to extend when those will seat at negotiation table with Jewmerica. LIBERATORS WILL ENSLAVE REBELS BY PUSHING FORWARD GREAT ISRAEL’S AGENDA AND OWN OIL $$

    Dear readers and those who of you who are supposedly journalists…reporters etc. While you are reading or reporting about petty shlt, real war is happening in front of your eyes and in our own country…this war which is already taking and is about to take even higher tall >> ON YOUR PERSONAL REAR<< is not something to ignore…or hesitate to inform as well others about it. Consider this to be your wake up call or face death.

    DICTATOR OBAMA = STALIN = BUSH — USA = USSR….LEARN WHO, WHY, AND HOW RUINED YOU…FROM 911 TO AUSTRALIAN FLOODS – WHITE AMERICAN REFUGEES — ARIZONA SHOOTING – WIKILEAKS is CIA — ESKIMO SARAH PALIN'S "BRIDGE TO NOWHERE" — LEARN ABOUT REAL HUMAN FLASH EATING MACHINE — BREAST FEEDING INSANITY — CIVIL RIOTS IN ARAB COUNTRIES — NEWS/MEDIA or simply BIG FAT WORLD OF LIES !!??? — NEW WORLD ORDER POLITICAL PARTIES(how, who, why or they are not there for you, but instead to seal your faith for their parliament pay$$$ scale !!!! ) http://avsecbostjan.wordpress.com/ or http://avsecbostjan.blogspot.com

blog comments powered by Disqus