November
9, 2023
The
forthcoming first visit by Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi to Saudi Arabia on
November 13 marks a milestone in the rapprochement between the two countries
mediated by China in March. The relationship is fast acquiring a qualitatively
new level of solidarity in the context of the Palestine-Israel conflict.
Palestinians work in the debris of buildings targeted by Israeli airstrikes in Jabalia refugee camp, northern Gaza, Nov 1, 2023
This
marks a shift in the tectonic plates in regional politics, which has long been
dominated by the United States but no longer so. The latest China-UAE
initiative on Monday to promote a ceasefire in Gaza was rounded off with an
extraordinary spectacle of diplomacy at the UN headquarters in New York as the
two countries’ envoys read out together a joint statement to the media. The US
was nowhere to be seen.
The
events since October 7 make it abundantly clear that the US attempts to
integrate Israel into its Muslim neighbourhood in its terms is a pipe dream —
ie., unless and until Israel is willing to turn its sword into plowshares. The
ferocity of the Israeli revenge attacks on the people of Gaza — “animals”
— smacks of racism and genocide.
Iran
knew all along the bestiality of the Zionist regime. Saudi Arabia too must be
in a chastened mood following the wake-up call that it must first and foremost
learn to live in its region.
Raisi
is heading for Saudi Arabia against the backdrop of a historic shift in the
power dynamic. King Salman invited Raisi to speak on Israel’s crimes against
the Palestinians in Gaza at a special summit of Arab states, which he is
hosting in Riyadh. This signifies a profound Saudi realisation that even its
willingness to be involved in the Abraham Accords under American persuasion has
alienated the Arab public.
There
is a fallacy in the western discourse about a Russia-China-Iran axis in West
Asia. This is a nonsensical misinterpretation. A consistent three-fold foreign
policy principle that Iran pursued right from the Islamic Revolution in 1979 is
that, one, its strategic autonomy is sacred; two, the countries of the region
must take their destiny into their own hands and solve regional issues
themselves without involving extra-regional powers, and, three, foster Muslim
unity howsoever long and winding that road might seem.
This
principle had severe limitations due to force of circumstances — principally,
in the conditions engendered by the colonial policy of divide and rule pursued
by the US. Circumstances were even deliberately engineered, such as the
Iraq-Iran war, where the US encouraged the regional states to collaborate with
Saddam Hussein to launch an aggression against Iran to stymie the Islamic
revolution in its infancy.
Another
painful episode was the Syrian conflict. There, again, the US actively
canvassed among regional states for a regime change in Damascus with the
ultimate objective of targeting Iran by using the terrorist groups that
Washington incubated in Occupied Iraq.
In
Syria, the US brilliantly succeeded in pitting the regional states against each
other and the result is plain to see in the ruins of what used to be the
throbbing heart of Islamic civilisation . At the peak of the conflict, several
western intelligence agencies were freely operating in Syria assisting the
terrorist groups to rampage the country whose cardinal sin was that, like Iran,
it too consistently put primacy on its strategic autonomy and independent
foreign policies through the cold war and post-cold war eras alike.
Suffice
to say, the US and Israel met with great success in fragmenting Muslim Middle
East by exaggerating the threat perceptions and convincing several Gulf Arab
states that they faced direct threats or even attacks by Iranian proxies, as
well as alleged Iranian support for dissident movements.
Of
course, the US capitalised on it by selling huge volumes of weapons and more
importantly, to finesse the petrodollar as a key pillar of the western banking
system. As for Israel, it directly benefitted from demonising Iran in order to
draw attention away from the Palestine issue, which has all along been the core
issue in the Middle East crisis.
Suffice
to say, the rollout of the Iran-Saudi-China agreement has reduced the hostility
that existed between Riyadh and Tehran for the better part of the recent
decades. Both countries sought to build on the momentum generated by the
success of the secret Beijing talks with regard to their commitment to
non-interference. It must be noted, however, that the relations between Gulf
Arab countries and Iran had already improved significantly over the last two
years.
What
western analysts miss is that the wealthy Gulf states are fed up with their
subaltern life as sidekicks of the US. They want to prioritise their national
life in directions they choose and with partners who respect them, eschewing
any zero-sum mindset, unlike in the Cold War era, for reasons of ideology or
power dynamic.
That
is why, the Biden Administration cannot accept that the Saudis today work with
Russia on the OPEC+ platform to fulfil their commitment to extra voluntary oil
supply cuts, while also negotiating with the US on nuclear technology, and at
the same time moving on the diplomatic track with Beijing to douse the fire set
ablaze in the Levant a month ago from spreading to the rest of the West Asian
region.
Evidently,
the Saudis are no longer rolling with pleasure at the prospect of a US-Iran
confrontation. On the other hand, Saudis and Iranians have a shared concern
that their new thinking with primacy on development will dissipate unless there
is regional stability and security.
Thus,
it is sheer naïveté on the part of Washington to bracket Hezbollah, Hamas and
Iran as one grouping — as Blinken did during his latest visit to Tel Aviv on
Monday — and juxtapose it with the rest of the region. The canard that
Hezbollah and Hamas are “terrorist” movements is about to be exposed. Truth be
told, how are they any different from Sinn Féin, which was historically
associated with the IRA?
Such
naïveté underlines the absurd US-Israeli-Indian venture to create a West Asian
QUAD 2 (“I2U2”), which today looks laughable — or the quixotic plot hatched in
New Delhi recently during the G20 summit to get the Saudis on board the
India-Middle East-Europe Corridor project, with the fond hope that it
“integrates” Israel and creates business for Haifa Port, isolates Iran and
Turkey, rubbishes Russia-led International North-South Corridor and shows the
middle finger to Beijing’s Belt and Road. Whereas, life is real.
Taking
all things into account, it is the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s
regional tour to Israel and his summit with a select group of Arab states in
Amman over the last weekend that has turned into a defining moment in the Gaza
crisis.
The
Arab foreign ministers point blank refused to buy into any of the invidious
proposals put forward by Blinken with malicious intentions to preserve Jewish
interests — “humanitarian pause” instead
of ceasefire; refugee camps for the people from Gaza escaping from Israel’s
horrific, brutal attacks that would be funded with Arab money but would
eventually lead to Jewish settlements in Gaza; contours of a post-war
arrangement for Gaza that will leave the debris to be handled by the
Palestinian Authority and reconstruction to be financed by the Gulf states
while Israel continues to dominate it in the all-important security sphere;
preventing Iran from going to the rescue of Hezbollah and Hamas as they are put
into Israeli meat grinders of American make.
It
was rank hypocrisy. The Arab foreign ministers spoke up in one voice to
articulate their counter proposal to Blinken’s — immediate ceasefire. President
Biden seems to see the writing on the wall, finally — although, intrinsically, he continues to be the world’s
number one Zionist, as someone once called him, and his motivations are largely
borne out of his own political survival as the 2024 election draws closer.
Be
that as it may, the high probability is that it is now a matter of time before
the global community insists on stopping the Israeli apartheid state on its
tracks. For, when Muslim countries unite, they call the shots in the emerging
multipolar world order. Their demand that a settlement of the Palestine problem
brooks no further delay has gained resonance, including in the Western
Hemisphere.
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