http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NI08Ak01.html

  Sep 8, 2012

Unspoken Israeli-Saudi alliance targets Iran
By Chris Zambelis 

The machinations surrounding Iran's nuclear program continue to dominate 
international headlines. A closer look at the atmospherics in play indicates 
the presence of a web of competing narratives that seek to delineate the 
threats Iran allegedly poses to its neighbors and global security. 

The boilerplate rhetoric out of Washington and US media regarding Iran is well 
known. But sorting through the cacophony of public threats of war, 
psychological operations, and propaganda broadcast by Israel and Saudi Arabia - 
Iran's primary regional adversaries - is equally crucial toward understanding 
the geopolitics surrounding the Iranian nuclear question and, in a broader 
sense, Iran's place in the region. 

Alongside the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia have taken the lead in articulating a 
litany of purported threats emanating from the Islamic Republic. On May 21, 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated the long-standing position 
held by Israel that views Iran as an existential threat: "Iran wants to destroy 
Israel and it is developing nuclear weapons to fulfill that goal." 

Relying on a sectarian discourse, Saudi Arabia has also defined its fears of 
Iran in existential terms. A special series published by the Saudi daily 
Al-Jazirah just days before the Kingdom dispatched its security forces to 
Bahrain to suppress democratic opposition protests led largely by Bahrain's 
oppressed Shi'ite majority reflects Riyadh's deep-seated antipathy for the 
Iran. The inflammatory title of the series, "Safavid Iran's plans for the 
destruction of the Gulf States", is of particular importance. The reference to 
Iran's Safavid legacy draws attention to the Persian Empire's adoption of 
Shi'ite Islam as its official religion. By highlighting Iran's Shi'ite 
character, Saudi Arabia is able to define the perceived threat from the 
republic in territorial as well as ideological and theological terms. 

Paradoxically, Israel and Saudi Arabia are officially enemies. Yet they appear 
to be acting in lockstep - almost in a perfect symbiosis - when it comes to 
undermining and attacking Iran and painting it as a threat to regional and 
world peace. A sampling of the collective responses of both countries to 
matters related to Iran and other areas of mutual concern, such as the course 
of the uprisings in the Arab world, suggests that the Israeli-Saudi interface 
represents more than a temporary pact of convenience. Indeed, the convergence 
of their interests over Iran constitutes an unspoken strategic alliance that 
runs deeper than either side cares to admit. 

Silence speaks volumes

Israel regularly lambastes Iran for supporting its nemeses Hezbollah in Lebanon 
and Hamas in Palestine. At the same time, it mutes any serious criticism of 
Saudi Arabia despite Riyadh's support for the militant Salafist and Wahhabist 
ideologies that serve as the intellectual and ideological infrastructure of 
al-Qaeda's brand of extremism. 

Keen to preserve its military superiority in the Middle East, Israel has 
historically expressed strong opposition to attempts by the US and other major 
arms producers to sell advanced weapons platforms and defense systems to its 
neighbors - friends and foes alike. Yet Israel has tempered its usual 
disapproval of the sales of tens of billions of dollars' worth of arms by the 
US to Saudi Arabia and its Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) allies over the past 
few years. In contrast to its reactions to similar deals concluded in the past, 
Israel has remained noticeably silent over the most recent of these sales, 
counted as among the largest arms-transfer agreements ever concluded by the US 
with foreign nations. 

The reasons behind Israel's quiet acquiescence to the arms sales are telling. 
On the surface, the timing of the latest sales was designed to bolster Saudi 
Arabia's deterrence posture in the face of growing Iranian influence in the 
Persian Gulf. They also signal Washington's commitment to Riyadh's defense amid 
intensifying tensions with Iran. 

An emboldened Saudi Arabia keeps Iran on the defensive and preoccupied with 
outmaneuvering its neighbors in the Gulf region. Consequently, this scenario 
indirectly strengthens Israel's position relative to Iran. These circumstances 
are amenable to Israel because it does not perceive Saudi Arabia and its GCC 
allies as threats. On the contrary, their shared interest in containing Iran 
make Israel and Saudi Arabia natural allies. 

Ever sensitive to the precariousness of Saudi Arabia's position when it comes 
to any hint of collaboration - both official and covert - with Israel, Israeli 
politicians are careful to play down the extent of their joint strategic 
interests with Riyadh. The geopolitics underlying the Israeli-Saudi 
relationship is not, however, lost by observers in Israel. Media and research 
institutes there often allude to the convergence of Israeli and Saudi interests 
when it comes to a range of topics involving Iran. An opinion piece published 
by the Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth in April 2011 titled "Our Saudi Arabian 
allies" illustrates this point. 

While a similar set of dynamics is evident in Saudi Arabia's behavior toward 
Israel as it relates to Iran, Riyadh takes a different approach. It is quick to 
condemn Iran's nuclear program in public. Riyadh and some of its GCC partners 
have also gone as far as to threaten to initiate their own domestic 
nuclear-weapons programs in the event that Tehran were to achieve a nuclear 
capability. 

Saudi Arabia has also implored the US to take action against Iran. According to 
a US diplomatic cable drafted in April 2008 and exposed by WikiLeaks, Saudi 
Arabia's King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz is reported have called on the United 
States to "cut off the head of the snake" in dealing with Iran while affirming 
the kingdom's commitment to work with Washington to undermine Tehran. 

At the same time, Saudi Arabia is curiously reticent when it comes to any 
mention of Israel's nuclear arsenal. In addition to fielding one of the world's 
most technologically advanced and powerful conventional military forces, Israel 
boasts a nuclear-weapons inventory that may contain up to 400 warheads. Yet in 
contrast to its treatment of the Iranian nuclear program, Israel's nuclear 
arsenal does not constitute a Saudi concern. While the prospect of a 
nuclear-capable Iran may spur it to pursue its own nuclear capability, Saudi 
Arabia has never expressed any interest in matching Israel's nuclear arsenal 
with one of its own. 

Saudi Arabia's deference to its quiet Israeli partner extends beyond the Iran 
portfolio and is especially evident in its approach to Palestine. As a regime 
that derives its legitimacy from its status as the self-proclaimed guardian of 
Islam's two holiest places, Saudi Arabia must tread carefully in how it 
navigates its tacit relationship with Israel. 

Officially, the kingdom supports the Palestinian struggle for 
self-determination amid Israel's continued occupation of Palestinian land. But 
despite its formidable geopolitical and economic influence, it has been decades 
since Saudi Arabia has thrown its weight behind the Palestinian cause. This is 
the case despite widespread sympathy among Arabs and Muslims more broadly on 
Palestinian suffering. 

Saudi Arabia's relative inaction toward Palestine is important considering the 
kingdom's willingness to engage forcefully on other issues that resonate with 
Arabs and Muslims. For example, it was in the forefront of organizing a global 
consumer boycott of Danish products after the publication of inflammatory 
cartoons mocking the Prophet Muhammad in the Danish daily Jyllands-Posten in 
September 2005. Muslims around the globe applied a consumer boycott against 
Danish products, devastating that country's exports in a number of critical 
sectors. Saudi Arabia also recalled its ambassador to Denmark, hurting 
Copenhagen's diplomatic standing in the Middle East among the global Muslim 
community. 

Saudi Arabia's official clerical establishment and media helped shape a 
powerful narrative that resonated among a wide constituency while Saudi 
diplomacy paved the way for Muslims to direct their ire toward Denmark. Its 
behavior during the height of the cartoon controversy is illustrative of the 
kingdom's potential to shape global events in its favor relatively quickly. 

The vigor and unity of purpose displayed by Saudi institutions in the 
diplomatic, economic, ideological and media realms in the name of Islamic 
solidarity during the cartoon controversy and on matters related to Iran are 
noticeably absent when it comes to pressuring Israel to withdraw from 
Palestinian land or refrain from continued construction of settlements in the 
occupied territories. 

The US linchpin
The nature of the bond between Israel and Saudi Arabia should come as no 
surprise. The two countries constitute the pillars of an alliance network in 
the Middle East crafted and honed by the US for decades. In this regard, it 
would seem rational to conclude that Israeli and Saudi moves against Iran are 
sanctioned, encouraged, and actively facilitated by the United States. 

After all, the US and Iran have been adversaries since the Islamic Revolution 
ousted the Shah in 1979. Any efforts by the Israelis and Saudis to undercut 
Iran, by definition, should further US interests. 

Such a perspective would suggest that Israel and Saudi Arabia act as surrogates 
for advancing US interests related to Iran and other regional matters. To a 
great extent, this scenario applies. In a broad sense, the interests of Israel 
and Saudi Arabia appear to align with US interests in most respects over Iran. 
All three countries maintain an adversarial relationship with Iran and view it 
as a threat, in varying degrees, to their respective interests. 

A consideration of the history of US foreign policy toward the Middle East 
lends credence to this argument. During the Cold War, Israel and Saudi Arabia 
stood alongside the United States in checking the spread of Soviet influence in 
the Middle East and beyond and undermining Arab nationalism. 

Emergent divergences and smokescreens
It is worth highlighting that major gaps also exist between the US on the one 
hand and Israel and Saudi Arabia on the other when it comes to their unique 
perceptions of and approaches to Iran. This divergence of interests is most 
apparent when it comes to how each actor assesses the potential impact a 
nuclear Iran will have on its respective strategic posture. 

Despite the hardline rhetoric out of Washington, American planners may have 
already come around to reluctantly accepting the reality of a nuclear Iran 
somewhere down the line that will need to be engaged diplomatically. Even a 
limited rapprochement between the US and Iran would have a profound impact on 
the geopolitical map of the Middle East. 

The hope of improved US-Iranian relations would immediately help ease many of 
the most acute regional tensions that keep the Middle East on the brink of war 
and global energy prices at record and unsustainable highs. This possibility 
would also pave the way for the development of lucrative economic ties between 
Washington and Tehran in critical sectors such as oil and natural gas. In the 
long run, the relative importance of Israel and Saudi Arabia to the US would 
decline as a result of any kind of rapprochement between Washington and Tehran. 

In this context, Israel and Saudi Arabia not only have an interest in 
undercutting Iran; they are also heavily invested in the persistence of 
US-Iranian enmity. Israeli and Saudi planners are well aware that the US is 
powerful enough to recalibrate its strategic conception of the Middle East to 
account for major changes that include the normalization of relations with Iran 
all the while simultaneously maintaining constructive ties with Israel and 
Saudi Arabia. 

Alternatively, Israel's relentless threats and diatribes against Iran may have 
been conceived to achieve a different set of goals. For all its bluster, there 
is little evidence to indicate that Israel could successfully execute an attack 
against Iran's nuclear program and achieve any sort of military success. The 
scale of the regional conflagration and global economic catastrophe that would 
certainly follow an Israeli strike is also likely deterring Israel from 
following through with its threats. 

Nevertheless, drawing the world's attention to Iran enables Israel to divert 
the eyes of international public opinion away from its ongoing occupation of 
Palestinian land; doing so provides it with the cover it needs to consolidate 
its hold permanently over the lives of millions of Palestinians and their 
natural resources - water, oil and natural gas - in the West Bank, Gaza and 
East Jerusalem. Defined as illegal under international law, Israeli settlements 
in the occupied territories continue to be constructed at record pace, creating 
new facts on the ground. Meanwhile, Palestinians are left to inhabit 
disconnected and impoverished enclaves reminiscent of the South African-style 
Bantustans born out of the apartheid era. 

Conclusion
The unspoken alliance between Israel and Saudi Arabia remains in full force as 
popular Arab revolts against tyranny transform the region. Heavily invested in 
the old status quo, Israel and Saudi Arabia (and its GCC partners) are 
marshaling efforts to lead a counterrevolution to co-opt fledgling democracies 
in countries such as Egypt that are seeing previously suppressed demands for 
freedom, accountability, dignity and independence shape a new politics. 

Yet the interests of Israel and Saudi Arabia diverge greatly over events in 
Syria. On the surface, they should equally relish the possibility of Iran's 
most important ally crumbling. But only Saudi Arabia, a principal supporter of 
the political and violent militant factions making up the Syrian opposition, 
appears determined to destroy the Baathist regime. 

Israel stands to lose a great deal in the event that Syria's Baathist regime 
falls. The regime has largely ignored Israel's occupation of its Golan Heights 
and the thousands of Israeli settlers who inhabit Syrian territory. This has 
allowed Israel to devote its military resources to other theaters. A 
post-Baathist order in Syria that sees the rise of an Islamist-oriented regime 
or the country plunged into years of internecine strife might witness an 
attempt to recapture the territory based on the model of armed resistance 
employed by Hezbollah against Israeli forces in southern Lebanon. 

In spite of their differences over Syria, however, the course of regional 
events involving Iran and other matters provide fertile ground for continued 
strategic cooperation between Israel and Saudi Arabia. 

Chris Zambelis is an analyst and researcher specializing in Middle East affairs 
with Helios Global Inc, a risk-management group based in the Washington, DC, 
area. The opinions expressed here are the author's alone and do not necessarily 
reflect the position of Helios Global. 

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