Politicians and pundits from Riyadh to Washington have castigated
recent American foreign policy in the Middle East for being unfocused,
misguided or harmful to national interests.
Contrary to these
accusations however, the Obama policy is none of the above: It is a
pragmatic approach that takes into account a progressive decline in the
political and economic importance of the Middle East.
This policy change is
currently making headlines in Syria where the United States, despite
accusations of hypocrisy and strategic blundering, remains skittish
about engaging in a conflict that is drawing in almost every other
regional player, many of whom are long time American allies.
This policy change is also
reflected in other recent developments in the region, such as Turkey’s
courting of CPMIEC, a Chinese weapons manufacturer under US sanction,
Saudi Arabia’s de-coupling from America’s intelligence networks and
renewed dialogue with Iran. These diplomatic changes already reflect a
very different Middle East than the one most politicians acknowledge.
Furthermore, there is a
simple explanation for this shift: The region no longer warrants the
same level of attention that it did when it was a nexus of global
conflict during the Cold War and the two decades that followed, when
Middle Eastern oil’s role in the global energy market allowed it to hold
the world economy hostage.
The results of the shale oil revolution, which is set to make America the world’s biggest oil producer by 2015,
and the United States’ shift towards oil reserves in the Western
Hemisphere are not the only factors in the decline of Middle East oil
fortunes.
Even China is
now jumping on the shale bandwagon, with a 5-year plan that is
predicted to produce 60-100 billion cubic meters of shale gas by 2020.
In the Middle East, Israel’s recent natural gas discoveries amount to
approximately 950 billion cubic meters of reserves.
Further complicating matters is the continued instability of the
region, which drives up the price of oil and makes alternatives more
attractive. The Saudi ruling coterie is clearly worried, as Prince
Alwaleed bin Talal demonstrated in an open letter to
the Kingdom’s government last spring. He warned that revenues from oil
form over 90% of the Saudi state budget, and the consequences of
producing below capacity could be devastating.
Former National Security
Agency specialist Paul D. Miller noted in his 2012 article “The Fading
Arab Oil Empire,” peak oil production in the Middle East is either soon
approaching or already behind us. Although oil production in the Middle
East has reached levels unseen in two decades, the IMF recently warned Arab oil producers that they will face deficits by 2016.
Last month, the Kingdom announced it
would no longer engage in the high level of intelligence sharing with
the United States that had marked the two countries combined efforts in
fighting terrorism in the region. In the same vein, the Saudis rejected a position on the UN Security Council that they had campaigned relentlessly to obtain. In a recent interview,
Saudi Arabia’s Turki Bin Faisal Al Saud questioned whether Obama, “gets
it” while condemning a “worldwide apathy—a criminally negligent
attitude toward the Syrian people.”
But the reality is much more
complicated than the picture Al Saud painted. In addition to a human
rights catastrophe, the situation in Syria represents perhaps the most
fundamental regional contest for power in decades.
The policies of the House of Saud and its allies, as well as those of
Assad and his supporters, are both fueling the carnage, with neither
side backing down. With so much at stake, longtime allies like the
Saudis find it surprising that America remains so uncommitted, while
America has every reason to abstain.
Domestically, boots on the
ground is a non-starter and other interventionist alternatives are
almost as unpopular. Just as importantly, the deference showed to Russia
and China reflects a more balanced approach to foreign policy.
From Obama’s perspective,
any marginal gains made by saving face on the Syria issue would be
sharply offset by serious diplomatic fallout with Russia and China, not
to mention Iran where a groundbreaking agreement was just inked.
Without the ability to use
oil as a diplomatic weapon, there is very little that Gulf countries can
do. The Russians and Chinese, on the other hand, wield far more
economic and diplomatic influence over not only the United States but
its European allies as well. For the time being, the primary
belligerents in this conflict are of Middle Eastern origins and America
would prefer to keep the conflagration localized.
If Saudi Arabia is so
concerned about the degeneration of human rights conditions, there is
little stopping them from taking a more interventionist role. Aside from
arming rebels, many of whom are hardline Islamists, Saudi Arabia has shown little willingness to engage Syria militarily.
This is not for wont of
weapons: America has granted the Kingdom an enormous amount of military
support since 1950, with the Saudi Armed Forces absorbing huge amounts
of armaments to keep the Gulf free of Soviet influence. Arms sales exploded again in the wake of the Islamic Revolution. After 9/11, arms sales received another shot in the arm.
Turkey has expressed its
discontent with the U.S. and the West through a variety of moves.
Announcements concerning the planned purchase of a $3.4 billion
high-altitude missile defense system from China have already raised the ire of NATO’s leadership.
Erdoğan has also successfully drawn Turkey closer to the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), stating that
the organization shares Turkey’s values and gaining observer status
earlier this year. Ankara has also expressed interest in joining the
Eurasian Union, an economic block being formed between former Soviet
states.
In spite of its aggressive signaling however, Turkish policies seem
to have had no real impact on America’s regional shift. NATO officials
maintain that any Chinese missile systems will not be compatible with
the organization’s defenses, leaving Turkey with very little room to
negotiate.
During the Cold War, Turkey
was a valuable ally and it remains a key strategic state. In the current
climate, however, the former ally is no longer able to command the same
attention and must make threats to go elsewhere in search of economic
and military alliances.
The erosion of American
support has reduced Turkey’s ability to wield influence in the region.
Two of its major projects, Syria and Egypt, have both ended poorly,
alienating the Erdogan regime and damaging Turkey’s ability to act as a
regional leader. It is clear now that Turkey engaged in the Syrian
conflict with the expectation of far more Western support that it
received.
With an 822 kilometer shared
border with Syria and a refugee crisis on his hands, Erdogan has
everything to gain from an intervention and has repeatedly lobbied
Turkey’s allies for one. Yet without Western support beyond defensive
Patriot missile batteries, Turkey finds itself saddled with a
humanitarian crisis and uncomfortably close to a perturbed and resilient
Assad.
The unwillingness of the
United States to condemn the recent coup in Egypt is another
illustration of this divergence. Ever since they came to power in Egypt,
Erdogan closely aligned himself with the Muslim Brotherhood. When Morsi
was ousted, Erdogan saw the West’s compliance as a personal and
ideological betrayal. Just as importantly, Washington’s response showed
that it was more interested in maintaining the status quo than defending
Erdogan’s allies.
The status quo of the last
half century was predicated on American interventionism, which is
dwindling. Under the new circumstances, states in the region will do
well to follow a path of increased cooperation and compromise.
The current feud between
Turkey and Israel over the death of Turkish activists on board the Mavi
Marmara is dividing countries that would benefit from an improvement in
relations. The Saudis, for their part, will need to either look
elsewhere for allies against Iran, or opt for a peaceful resolution. And
as the sectarian conflict rages on in Syria, those chances are
dwindling.
In a classic 1973 Foreign Affairs article, “The Oil Crisis: This Time
the Wolf is Here,” U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia James E. Akins
bemoaned the inability of the global economy to break itself free from
Middle Eastern oil, and pined for the day when America’s shale oil
reserves, alongside supplies from the emerging field of renewable
energy, would allow the U.S. to reduce oil imports.
Four decades later, Akins’
dreams of an American foreign policy no longer held hostage to the
international oil market is coming into focus. After a decade of heavy
investment, renewable energy supplied almost 15% of U.S. demand in the first half of 2013, and the United States has pushed aside Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world’s top oil producer.
The first half of the
20st century demonstrated that oil has the ability to alter regional and
global power balances, placing the Middle East at the center of the
world stage. But the dawn of a new century has brought with it new
geopolitical realities, including America’s new surge in domestic energy
production, allowing Washington to begin its ‘pivot towards Asia’ while
avoiding becoming mired in an increasingly unstable and unpredictable
Middle East.
LUKE RODEHEFFER AND LEWIS KING, KOÇ UNIVERSITY
Luke Rodeheffer is
a graduate student in Istanbul as well as a researcher at Wikistrat. He
has previously written for a variety of publications, including The
Diplomat, Open Democracy, The Interpreter, and New Eastern Europe.
Lewis
King is a graduate student studying International Relations in
Istanbul. He has previously worked for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and
is an expert on geopolitics in the Middle East.
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