Saudi
And Iranian Leaders Involve India In Regional Peace
Saeed Naqvi
Visits to New Delhi by leaders of Saudi Arabia, Iran in quick succession would seem to suggest something new is happening in West Asia to which Indian attention is required.
Some historic changes have already
placed the region on a path of hope: the election of President Hassan Rouhani,
his historic telephonic “hullo” with President Barack Obama, positive movement
of the Geneva process on Iran’s nuclear programme, etcetera.
Negative propaganda was not sticking on
Teheran which, with every passing week, looked more statesmanlike, above the
mess in the rest of the Middle East.
Well, the Saudis are on their way to
restoring the balance. When Saudi king Abdullah returned from hospital in
February 2011 and saw his friends Hosni Mubarak in Cairo and Zine El Abidine Ben
Ali in Tunis toppled, he swore to arrest the so called Arab Spring. The message
rang out of Riyadh: “No monarchies or Sheikhdoms will be allowed to fall.” They
were not allowed to fall. Libya was a different tragedy and it ended in a mess.
But we shall let that pass.
The unholy mess in Syria was dragged on
and on by multiple Salafist groups under the supervision of Saudi Intelligence
Chief Prince Bandar bin Sultan. He turned up in Moscow and told Vladimir Putin
that he could ensure incident-free Sochi Winter Olympics if only Moscow would
pull back from its support to President Bashar al Assad in Damascus. How would
he guarantee that, pray? He said he controlled the extremists in the Caucasus.
Putin said we have known for ten years you control the militants. It sounds
like a parody on outlandish diplomacy. All of this was actually leaked to the
Russian media.
Well, Prince Bandar has been relieved of
his duties to arm and fund Syrian rebels. The change holds promise of slow descent
of peace on the war torn country. The change also promises a return to smoother
relations between Riyadh and Washington. With Bandar’s theatrical diplomacy now
in the past, Riyadh can settle down to sketching a comprehensive agenda for the
visit next month of President Barack Obama. Bandar is being replaced by
Interior Minister Prince Muhammad bin Nayef. The world’s longest serving
Foreign Minister, Prince Saud al Faisal too is being asked to go. His slot will
be filled by the King’s son, Prince Mutaib bin Abdullah.
It is against this elaborate background
that the Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud’s visit to New Delhi
is being assessed.
Even though, Foreign Minister Salman
Khurshid’s one day visit to Kandahar had been arranged well in advance, he must
have taken into account the themes that his Saudi and Iranian guests will dwell
on.
US Deputy Secretary of State, William J
Burns has reiterated something that generally causes missed heartbeats in
Riyadh. He said “US is likely to overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s leading
oil producer in the next five years or so, and with the prospect of genuine
energy independence in the next twenty years or so, it’s also natural for
Americans to wonder if we really need to pay so much attention to the Middle
East.”
Therefore, these visits provide an
opportunity to New Delhi to become part of the mapping process for a new
architecture in the region and the Middle East. The Saudis will, in muted terms
echo Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s concerns about involvement of India in
Afghanistan. This is what the Saudi delegation will have picked up in
Islamabad. They would also have been acquainted with Pakistan’s query: “who
will foot the bill of about five billion annually for the Afghan Armed Forces?”
What role for the regional players in
Afghanistan to enable the US to withdraw by the end of the year? What chances
of Indo-Pak movement towards normalcy. Look, there is some movement even on the
Israeli-Palestinian track. Will Kashmir remain an eternal question mark?
In Lebanon, Saudis have scaled down
their demands and accommodated Hezbullah in the government. An explosive
situation with the Shia Huthis in Southern Saudi Arabia bordering Yemen has
been defused.
The Syrian situation is at an
interesting stage because Bashar al Assad’s presidency comes to an end in 2014
until new elections are held.
The Iranians, New Delhi will find are on
the same page. Indeed, some sort of a Teheran-Riyadh crawl towards an entente
is not unthinkable. Remember, former President Hashemi Rafsanjani was invited
for Haj by King Abdullah. He could not go. Rafsanjani has always maintained
that the ruling family in Riyadh are best bet for everybody. The alternative
could well mean more power to Salafi groups.
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