April 20, 2023
An Iranian
official says Iran’s navy obliged a US submarine to surface as it entered the
Gulf “violating its border” in the latest report of an apparent confrontation
between Iranian and US forces in the region.
“The US
submarine was approaching while submerged, but the Iranian submarine Fateh
detected it and carried out … manoeuvres to force it to surface as it went
through the Strait [of Hormuz]. It had also entered into our territorial waters
but … it corrected its course after being warned,” navy commander Shahram Irani
told state television on Thursday.
“This submarine
was doing its best, using all its capacities, to pass in total silence and
without being detected,” Irani said. “We will certainly reflect to
international bodies the fact that it had violated our border.”
Earlier this
month, the US Navy said the nuclear-powered submarine Florida, equipped with a
guided missile system, was operating in the Middle East in support of its Fifth
Fleet based in Bahrain.
There was no
immediate comment from the US military to Iran’s remarks.
In early April,
the Iranian navy said it identified and warned off a US reconnaissance plane
outside the mouth of the Gulf.
In 2021, US and
Iranian warships had a tense encounter in the Gulf waters when a ship commanded
by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) cut in front of the USCGC
Monomoy, causing the US Coast Guard vessel to come to an abrupt stop with its
engine smoking.
How to Tell if Saudi-Iran Rapprochement is Virtue Signaling or
Real
April
20, 2023
China’s
announcement last month that it had brokered a diplomatic rapprochement between
Iran and Saudi Arabia caught Washington by surprise. The goal was not the
problem. After all, this was reportedly why, two years ago, Director of Central
Intelligence Bill Burns had met with the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National
Security Council at a Baghdad iftar arranged for that purpose by Iraqi Foreign
Minister Fuad Hussein. Rather, it was not only China’s involvement but also its
success with a country that enjoyed a close U.S. security partnership dating
back to the Roosevelt administration that surprised Washington.
Biden
administration officials take the development in stride. Barbara Leaf, the
assistant secretary of State for Near East Affairs, put a positive spin on
China’s involvement. “Frankly, it's about time that it used whatever leverage
it has with Iran, to constrain Iranian destructive behavior,” she told the
Emirati newspaper The National. “We're not trying to counter, we are very
confident in the length, duration, scope, richness of our relations across the
region.” Critics, however, warned that Washington should be worried about
China, if not about Saudi-Iran relations.
On
April 8, 2023, China hosted Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian
and his Saudi counterpart Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud in Beijing, the
highest-level meeting between Iranian and Saudi officials in years. A couple
days later, a Saudi team visited both Tehran and a potential consulate site in
Mashhad and Iranian technical teams traveled to Riyadh and Jeddah to discuss
the establishment of embassies. It may seem that rapprochement is going forward
at a fast pace, but not everything in the Middle East is as it seems.
Iranian
authorities say they want their teams in place before the Hajj. Whether or not
the Saudis allow this will signal whether the rapprochement is real or simply
virtue signaling. Certainly, both countries might be sincere as they bury the
axe. They had relations from the early 1990s until an Iranian mob sacked the
Saudi embassy in Tehran in January 2016. Therefore, resuming ties might simply
mean going back to the status quo ante rather than truly moving forward.
So,
is Saudi Arabia’s participation in the China-led rapprochement with Iran
sincere? Or is it a way for Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman to show his
displeasure with President Joe Biden. Bin Salman deeply resents both Biden’s
gratuitous and personal attacks on him, Biden’s role in the progressive lynch
mob targeting Saudi Arabia, and the general lack of support Riyadh feels as
Iran advances its nuclear program.
When
embassies are exchanged matters. While trading embassies may seem
straight-forward, the Hajj is a third rail. In 1986, Mehdi Hashemi, an Iranian
intelligence officer who headed the predecessor to the Qods Force, sought to
infiltrate into Mecca saboteurs disguised as pilgrims. The following year,
Iranian agitators precipitated demonstrations and clashes with Saudi security
forces that culminated in the deaths of over 400 pilgrims. Iranian diplomats
may signal they can put aside the Islamic Republic’s ideology, but Iranian
intelligence and military operators may tolerate no such compunction. For Saudi
authorities, the size and scale of the Iranian mission will be a paramount
concern, as will limitations or freedoms Iranian diplomats enjoy inside the
Kingdom. After all, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps do not fall under the
authority of Abdollahian.
Presidents
Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Biden have each treated traditional allies
poorly, easily dispensing with them as convenience might dictate.
Unfortunately, disrespect for allies is now more the rule of American policy
than the exception. Saudi Arabia has reason to show anger. Should they allow
potential Iranian operators to enter the country with diplomatic immunity prior
to the Hajj, that would signal Saudi’s pivot to be real. It would mean they
actually trust Iranian intentions more than American ones.
A
more agile administration might recognize they still have time to right
relations before Saudi signals the passing of the point of no return. It is
unclear, however, if the White House and State Department are up to the task.
Now
a 1945 Contributing Editor, Dr. Michael Rubin is a Senior Fellow at the
American Enterprise Institute (AEI). Dr. Rubin is the author, coauthor, and
coeditor of several books exploring diplomacy, Iranian history, Arab culture,
Kurdish studies, and Shi’ite politics, including “Seven Pillars: What Really
Causes Instability in the Middle East?” (AEI Press, 2019); “Kurdistan Rising”
(AEI Press, 2016); “Dancing with the Devil: The Perils of Engaging Rogue
Regimes” (Encounter Books, 2014); and “Eternal Iran: Continuity and Chaos”
(Palgrave, 2005).
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