With the ascendance of the relatively young Mohammed bin
Salman as heir to the throne of Saudi Arabia the history of the Middle East has
turned more positive. Welcoming the American president to Riyadh and allying us with Sunni Arabs in the war against terrorism was a momentous event.
Since King Salman’s son, Mohammed was generally credited with the shift in
Saudi policy, his ascent was foretold.
You have doubtless read the stories in the American press,
both news reports and commentaries. To my mind those in the Wall Street Journal
were the best. Following after the convocation in Riyadh, the move was a constructive step, one that has
been welcomed by the Journal and the American administration.
For a slightly different take we turn to Debkafile, a
website run by Israeli intelligence officers. Being as its writers have skin in
the game and boots on the ground, their information is usually trustworthy. One
notes that the Debkafile analysis is consistent with views I have expressed
variously on this blog.
Regarding the naming of Mohammed bin Salman heir to the
Saudi throne, Debkafile opens:
debkafile’s
analysts see it as the outcome of a global and regional process initiated by
Donald Trump soon after he settled in the White House in January. With his
appointment as de facto ruler of the oil kingdom, the Saudi king’s son is ready
to step into his allotted place in a new US-Arab-Israeli alliance that will
seek to dominate Middle East affairs. Israel will be accepted in a regional
lineup for the first time alongside the strongest Sunni Arab nations who all
share similar objectives, especially the aim to stop Iran.
Trump’s
trip to Riyadh and Jerusalem in early May laid the cornerstone for the new
US-Sunni Arab bloc versus Iran’s Shiite grouping and also cemented Israel’s
co-option.
Surely, it is early for optimism, but the alliance between America
and Sunni Arab nations is beginning to form. Debkafile analysts add that the
new blog has been engaging with Israel:
This
bloc is in its infancy and has yet to display staying power and prove the
wisdom of its policies. But its contours have taken shape. US President Trump
is taking the lead role along with Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia,
Sheikh Mohammad bin Zayed Al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates, another crown
prince, Egypt’s President Abdul-Fatteh El-Sisi, and Israel’s Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu.
Three
of those leaders already maintain strong direct – albeit discreet - ties with
Israel’s prime minister, its security establishment, military and various
intelligence agencies.
And also:
In a
lecture on Tuesday, June 20, Israel’s chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Gady Eisenkott,
spoke of the covert relations between the IDF and certain Arab nations, which
he did not name. There is clearly a lot going on under the surface in various
political, economic, financial, intelligence and military fields.
Interestingly, President Trump has overruled cabinet
officials who are more hesitant about joining with the Saudis:
Recent
events in the region already point to President Trump acting on important
matters, such as the confrontation with Iran, the war on terror, the Syrian
conflict and US intervention in the Yemen conflict, on the advice of the two
Arab crown princes rather than Defense Secretary James Mattis and Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson.
And also:
This was
strikingly demonstrated when Trump overrode Tillerson’s recommendation to apply
diplomacy for resolving the dispute that led to four Arab nations boycotting
Qatar, with the Saudis in the lead, whereas the president then demanded strong
action to stop Qatar’s funding of terrorists. He therefore opted for the
aggressive Saudi and UAE stance against Qatar’s ruler, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
Al Thani.
Will this lead to a resolution of the Israeli/Palestinian
conflict? The best we can say is that without the influence of Saudi Arabia,
the UAE and Egypt, there will be no solution. Thus, current administration
optimism for the prospects for peace seem well-grounded:
The
evolving bonds between the US, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and Israel are the
source of President Trump’s optimism about the prospects of pulling off an
Israeli-Palestinian peace accord, a vision which eluded all his predecessors in
the White House, while knocking over the decades-old barriers between the
moderate Arab nations and the Jewish State.
How will this happen?
The
first steps towards this goal are in the making. They will include exposing
parts of their hidden interaction to the light of day, as well as such
important symbolic actions, as opening Arab skies to the passage of Israeli
commercial flights, or direct telephone links.
Debkafile concludes:
But the
process switched on by Trump in Riyadh took a large stride forward on June 21,
with the formalization by King Salman of his young son’s role as the top mover
and shaker in the Saudi kingdom. King Salman obtained the support of 31 out of
34 members of Saudi Arabia’s Allegiance Council for confirming Prince Muhammad
Bin Salman as crown prince as well as deputy prime minister and minister of
defense.
2 comments:
It is never too early for guarded optimism, but joy, of course, needs to wait. I concur with your assessment of Debkafile.
Meanwhile, the Progressive press navel-gazes about Flynn. They should take a refreshing Russian Golden Shower.
Trump doing good things! Film at...not gonna happen.
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