Russia and America should unite against the Saudi-China alliance
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS - If the Central Intelligence Agency’s role is to discreetly promote
the economic and political interests of the United States, then there’s one
country that ought to be awfully disappointing to the agency right now: Saudi
Arabia. In fact, if there’s an issue on which America and Russia could
potentially agree, it would be the damage Saudi Arabia has recently wrought upon
the national and economic security of both nations.
Take Syria, for example. The CIA operation to train Syrian rebels goes by the
code name “Timber Sycamore,” according to the New York Times. As it turns out,
if a Timber Sycamore falls covertly on the president of Syria and no one is
supposed to see it, the resulting jihadists still make a sound.
It was supposed to be easy: Let the Saudis arm and fund some independent
contractors to take down Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The CIA covers the
training. Assad is driven out. A leader who’s friendlier to U.S., Saudi and
Qatari interests moves in. Russia loses its footing in the region.
Except it didn’t work out that way. Instead, Russia had to swoop in and clean up
the mess. This gives Russia more influence in the region and grants it
significant moral authority in helping to determine future Syrian leadership at
the diplomatic bargaining table.
“We believe that the Russian interference in Syria is very dangerous because it
exacerbates the conflict,” said Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir.
Actually, Saudi funding exacerbated the conflict. One could argue that without
it, the Islamic State would have sputtered out at the incubation phase.
You know what else exacerbates the conflict? The fact that Saudi Arabian
leadership hasn’t been nearly as generous as, say, German Chancellor Angela
Merkel in absorbing massive numbers of refugees from the conflict.
Meanwhile, Russia has long been angered by Saudi funding of Chechen terrorists
in Russia’s North Caucasus. A few months before the 2014 announcement of Chechen
terrorist leader Doku Umarov’s death in late 2013, a Russian intelligence source
confirmed that Umarov had been captured by Russian special forces and was
writing out a confession in which he had implicated “certain Persian Gulf
nations” in the funding of his terrorist activities. (And of course, let’s just
ignore the fact that 15 of the 19 terrorists who attacked the U.S. on September
11, 2001, were Saudis.)
The continued butting of heads between Russia and the U.S. over Saudi Arabia
stems from the fact that at the height of the Cold War, during the Ronald Reagan
administration, the U.S. viewed the Saudis as a means of containing the Soviet
threat. Reagan convinced the Saudis to flood the oil market, collapsing the
value of Russia’s oil exports. At the time, the Soviet Union had no rainy-day
sovereign funds from which to draw in case of a crash in oil prices.
The Saudis are now flooding the oil market again. But this time, both Russia and
America are suffering as a result, with Russian oil exports and the U.S. shale
oil industry taking a hit.
And who’s playing the role of Reagan now, convincing the Saudis to boost oil
production? China.
Saudi Arabia is enjoying a series of new Chinese investment deals — including a
$2.5 billion deal to host a nuclear facility — and has moved past Russia to
become China’s largest oil supplier. Meanwhile, the resulting crash in oil
prices is taking a toll on the U.S. and Russia. There have been significant job
losses in America’s oil and gas sector, and Russia has had to smash the glass on
its reserve funds in order to diversify its economy.
This sort of scenario was envisioned in a now-declassified CIA report from
January 1999 that emphasized China’s interest in Middle Eastern oil and the
resulting development of ties that “could create bilateral tensions” and
“increasingly challenge U.S. policy in regions in turmoil, such as the Middle
East.”
The Saudi-China alliance has the potential to undercut Russian and American
interests. Saudi Arabia effectively leads OPEC, and its lucrative business
dealings with China eliminate the incentive to increase oil prices.
Since China doesn’t like to be seen overtly interfering in the domestic affairs
of other nations, it’s unlikely that the Chinese will be using their newfound
leverage to rein in the Saudi terrorist-enabling shenanigans that we’ve seen
with the rise of the Islamic State. But what if China, like the U.S., eventually
decides to use Saudi Arabia as a Middle Eastern proxy to serve Chinese interests
in the region?
Are the U.S. and Russia really going to sit back and let the Saudi regime’s
alliance with China fuel troublesome economic and security crises? If there’s a
single issue on which the U.S. and Russia should urgently cooperate, it’s this
one.
COPYRIGHT 2016 RACHEL MARSDEN