By: Ali Fathollah-Nejad
Introduction: Exacerbated
post-2011 hegemonic rivalry
The Persian Gulf region’s major
powers, the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
(KSA), have, at least since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, been engaged in
a hegemonic rivalry over power and influence, marked by differences in
sectarianism, nationalism, revolutionary ideology, competition over regional
hegemony, oil prices, attitudes towards the U.S. military presence in the Gulf,
and towards the Hajj.
At the core of the rivalry stand
maximalist positions taken by both sides that are hardly reconcilable with each
other, barring a power-sharing arrangement constituting the only way out of
this seemingly unending hegemonic rivalry. The latter has been exacerbated by
(a) a post-2011 geopolitical environment marked by the Arab Uprisings (affecting
both countries’ alliances and alignments structures), collapsing state orders
(especially in Iraq and Syria), the relative retreat of U.S. power (especially
over Syria) and Russia’s entry into regional crises (especially in Syria). Iran
has been particularly successful in filling the vacuum left from failing and
failed states by political and military means, often creating quasi-parallel
state structures there; and (b) by the process of rapprochement between the IRI
and the KSA’s traditional Western allies culminating in the July 2015 JCPOA,
which deepened Riyadh’s strategic angst nurtured from its “Arab Spring”
experience of the U.S. abandoning its long-time ally Hosni Mubarak of Egypt
against the backdrop of a parallel process of a rehabilitation of Iran on the
international arena, thus putting an end to the demonization of Iran under
President Ahmadinejad that under the umbrella of rapprochement fuelled by
economic and geostrategic interests turned into an equally misleading
glorification of the IRI under President Rouhani and his Foreign Minister
Zarif. At the core of Saudi mistrust has been the Western, above all, European
tendency to extrapolate Tehran’s “constructive engagement” with the West on the
nuclear issue onto other foreign policy fields, above all Syria and Iraq, where
Iran has sought to maintain hegemony.
The hegemonic rivalry’s nature:
Geopolitical and ideational factors
During the Cold War, Iran and
Saudi Arabia formed the twin pillars of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East,
but this changed abruptly with the 1979 Iranian Revolution. Ever since, the IRI
has pursued a foreign policy independent from the West, which pitted Tehran
against the West, and the U.S. in particular, as well as with pro-Western
states in the region, including Saudi Arabia.
In the 1990s, Iranian President
Ali-Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani (1989–97) engaged in a bilateral process of
détente between KSA and IRI, which in 1997 took the form of rapprochement
during his successor Mohammad Khatami (1997–2005), before the rivalry
experienced a revival under the subsequent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad administration
(2005–13) – a development from ‘relative friendliness’ to a ‘state of enmity
and rivalry’ that can be traced back to changes in the IRI’s dominant state
identity during each of those periods as well as those in the geopolitics of
the region. The rivalry can be seen through the lens of Realism, i.e. inter-state
competition for survival or hegemony, but changes in the countries’ respective
state identities, especially in the official foreign-policy discourse, have
also assumed a significant role in shaping bilateral relations.[1]
The role of sectarianism
The Saudi–Iranian rivalry is not
sectarian in nature nor is it the continuation of a supposedly ancient enmity
between the Sunni and the Shiite branches of Islam. Rather, such interpretation
is an integral part of an imperial divide-and-rule policy that most recently
flourished during the first decade of the 2000s. The U.S.-led “regime change”
in Iraq in 2003 and the dismantling of Saddam Hussein’s Baathist state paved
the way for Iran’s rise in power, which peaked in the mid-2000s at a time when
the U.S. occupation found itself entrenched in a “quagmire”. Since then,
Iranian policy has arguably been marked by a degree of hubris, especially in
Iraq and Syria.
Yet, there is sectarian dimension
to this rivalry – with (a) 1979 and (b) 2003 being the watershed moments. (a)
Despite the pan-Islamic nature of Ayatollah Khomeini’s “export of the
revolution” discourse, it has had a sectarian appeal.[2] Not only that it
reserved Iran – a predominately Shia country within a predominantly Sunni
Islamic-majority world – the central place within a newly to be established
pan-Islamic Middle East, its concomitant political message was clearly directed
at Iran’s neighbouring Arab Sunni rulers dubbed illegitimate and acting as
pawns of malign external forces (imperialism and Zionism), provoking Shia
uprisings there. As such, it was perceived by the Arab monarchies’ ruling
élites as implicit calls for “regime change.” Today, the IRI still engages in
such rhetoric, although at a weaker level than compared to the revolutionary
period, which GCC states view as threatening. More recently, at the 2016 IISS
Manama Dialogue, Bahrain’s Foreign Minister insisted that dialogue with Iran
would necessitate trust, which would lack given the persistence of the IRI’s
velâyat-e faqih state doctrine that would bound the loyalty of the region’s
Shia to Tehran rather than their respective home countries.[3] Indeed, the IRI
tries to exploit the situation of Shias in the GCC, a move facilitated by the
latter’s discrimination in some GCC states.
(b) The sectarian architecture of
post-Saddam Hussein Iraq introduced by the U.S. occupation created the
conditions for the establishment of a Shia-dominated central government in
Baghdad, supported by both Washington and Tehran, much to the distaste of the
KSA. In Iraq, Riyadh has long failed to exert political influence there; it was
only by January 2016 that it re-opened its embassy in Baghdad after a 25-year
hiatus.
Iran’s conventional view of Saudi
Arabia: From denigration to demonization
It is fair to say that in both
pre- and post-revolutionary Iran, a sense of civilizational superiority
characterized the Iranian view held towards KSA. Generally speaking, the
Arabian Peninsula’s petro-monarchies are seen in Tehran as superficial entities
created by colonial powers as part of their imperialist divide-et-impera
regional policies, which are not bound to survive long without their external
supporters. In this vein, the KSA is viewed as either facilitating or being
part and parcel of ‘imperialist–Zionist designs’ for the region. Iranian
officials have continuously used derogatory language for those Arab leaders.
Most recently, the IRI’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei called KSA leaders
“worthless, incompetent and mean” and “dairy cows” of the U.S., adding that “they
will surely witness destruction, downfall, disaster and decline.”[4]
More recently, IS(IL) has been
deemed by various factions of the IRI’s political élite as a creation of the
KSA and/or the U.S., aimed at containing the rise of ‘Iranian–Shia’ power in
Iraq and the Levant. Most recently, following the 7 June 2017 twin terrorist
attacks in Tehran, Iranian officials have put the blame on the KSA that,
according to them, acted via IS(IL) or the MKO (or MeK). The KSA has in recent
years publically expressed support for this foreign-based militant Iranian
opposition sect, confirming the IRI’s fears that the KSA is ready to support
its most hated nemesis.[5] Meanwhile Speaker of Parliament Ali Larijani labeled
the U.S. as an “international Daesh”, while Deputy Chief of Staff of the
Iranian Armed Forces Major General Mostafa Izadi claimed Iran had evidence of
U.S. support for IS(IL).[6]
Since the JCPOA, both Tehran
(that found itself in a process of rapprochement with the the West) and Riyadh
(that sought to defend its standing as the West’s prime partner in the wider
Gulf region as well as to safeguard the latter’s support against Iranian
regional power) engaged in a spat over who is the ‘West’s darling’ in the
region. This competition has been best illustrated in the 2016 op-ed spats
between Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad-Javad Zarif and his Saudi counterpart
Adel Al-Jubeir in the pages of U.S. élite newspapers, systematically trying to
portray the other as the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism in general
and gravest threat to U.S. interests in particular.[7]
Irreconcilable geopolitical
aspirations (1): Leader of the Islamic world
Iran’s claim since the 1980s to
constitute the nucleus – Umm al‐Qura, literally “the mother of all cities” – of
the entire Islamic world, as reflected in the Supreme Leader’s title “Commander
of the Faithful” (Amir‐ol‐mo’menin) or “Commander of the Affairs of the Muslims
of the World” (Vali Amr‐e Moslemin‐e
Jahân), colludes with the similar claim put forward by KSA, whose King since
1986 has been granted the title “Custodian of the Tow Holy Mosques” (Khâdim
al-arameyn ash-Sharifeyn), to be the leader of the Islamic world. This
competition plays out on a number of levels, ranging from regional geopolitical
alignments, their respective media engaging in sectarian propaganda, up to the
Hajj pilgrimage.
Irreconcilable geopolitical
aspirations (2): The wider Gulf region’s premier power
The Persian Gulf region is highly
militarized, counting Iran, the GCC and the U.S. (with its Navy’s Fifth Fleet
stationed in Bahrain) as its chief military powers. Over the last few years,
the UK and France have also established military bases there. Meanwhile, it is
widely held that Iran and the U.S. enjoy the greatest military prowess in the
Gulf.
The security situation in the
Gulf, where 40% of world oil exports pass through the Iranian-controlled Strait
of Hormuz, remains highly volatile. While the GCC countries on the southern
shore have assembled a huge military arsenal worth hundreds of billions of U.S.
dollars, Iran on the waterways’ northern shore, subjected to a Western arms
embargo practically since its 1979 revolution, has developed its own
military-industrial complex with an expanding ballistic missile arsenal. In
reaction to the latter, the GCC plans to purchase a missile defence system,[8]
thus continuing the cycle of militarization instead of engaging in
common-security efforts. Yet, the recent KSA/UAE-led confrontation on Qatar has
surfaced deep contradictions within the GCC, making the latter’s survival in
the current form an unlikely scenario. The crisis over Qatar has thus played
into Iran’s hands.
As the seemingly perennial
dispute over the designation of the waterway separating Iran and the Arabian
Peninsula illustrates, much of Tehran’s political élite sees the Persian Gulf
as a region with Iran as its natural hegemon, thus calling on Western powers to
abandon their military presence there. Since the 1979 revolution, Iran has seen
itself encircled by U.S. military bases, occasionally exacerbated by threats of
war, above all during the Bush/Cheney administration and its “regime change”
agenda.
Yet, an arrangement between the
littoral states of the Gulf might be feasible as an Iranian journalist working
for state media writes:
The presence of Western powers
such as the United Kingdom and the United States in and around the Persian Gulf
has not led to a stable security order in the area. In fact, in past and
present, their presence has been a source of conflict, aggression, and regional
turmoil. A viable security order in the Persian Gulf region cannot be imposed
from the outside and certainly not through perpetually feeding an arms race. It
will only come about organically from within, established as a mutually
beneficial pact by the littoral states and other immediate stakeholders.[9]
Iranian foreign-policy schools of
thought’s accounts of Saudi Arabia: Defensive vs. Offensive Realism
The geostrategic views held on
KSA vary starkly according to various Iranian foreign-policy schools of
thought, ranging from confrontation to accommodation.
When it comes to Iran’s regional
policies, distinction has been made between Defensive and Offensive
Realism.[10] On the one hand, Iranian behaviour towards reaching the nuclear
deal has been informed by a foreign-policy school of thought that can be
labelled ‘Defensive Realism.’ Here, Iran pursued the primary goal of
establishing good relations with the West based on a win–win rationale in the
conduct of foreign policy. This policy of engagement with Western great-powers
is directed by the Rouhani administration and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
(MFA) which was granted the authority to deal with the nuclear dossier during
the negotiations and which is headed by Iran’s former ambassador to the UN,
Javad Zarif.
On the other hand, Iran’s
policies in post-Saddam Hussein Iraq and in post-uprising Syria are informed by
another foreign-policy school of thought that can be labeled ‘Offensive
Realism.’ In Iraq, Iran has shown no interest in reversing the sectarian (and
highly corrupt) system set up by Washington and sustained by Tehran, which
favours the Shia majority over the Sunni minority. It continues to favour a
Shia-led central government in Baghdad that exerts control over the country’s
central and oil-rich, Shia-dominated southern regions. Tehran’s policies have
thus deepened the de facto fragmentation of Iraq into three parts: the
effectively autonomous northern part (Kurdish Regional Government), the Sunni
areas where IS(IL) could expand, and the above-mentioned Shia regions. Tehran
operates with Shia militias, which it has set up or which it supports, that
have engaged – as have their Sunni counterparts – in numerous massacres,
further alienating the Sunnis, many of whom started to consider IS(IL) as the
only effective force that could re-establish their interests in the face of
Iranian domination. Moreover, Iran also pursues a policy of economic
development in those Shia regions of Iraq.[11]
On the KSA, both schools differ.
Defensive Realists, on the one hand, highlight the importance of the KSA due to
its role in global energy markets and its much more advanced standing in an
international system that they see is still dominated by the West. Hence, they
argue for the necessity of good relations with Riyadh, which can strengthen
their overall objective of re-integrate into that international system.
Offensive Realists, on the other hand, view the KSA more as a challenger for
the IRI’s regional status which needs to be confronted on the basis of a
zero-sum game rationale.
Despite its Defensive Realist
credentials, the Rouhani administration has failed to realize the objective of
improved ties with the KSA. While the latter’s rather uncompromising attitude
has not facilitated any Iranian–Saudi détente, the Rouhani administration
itself has failed to meaningfully engage with its GCC neighbours, despite such
declarations at its beginning. Again, after his re-election on 19 May 2017,
administration officials have stressed the priority to mend regional geopolitical
tensions. Yet, the escalating tensions between the IRI and the KSA in late
May/early June 2017 (Trump’s Riyadh visit and the Tehran attacks) have again,
at least for the time being, shelved the prospect of an Iranian regional
initiative towards détente.[12]
New configurations in post-ISIS
West Asia: The Saudi–Iraqi rapprochement
Over the summer and into the
fall, a new set of developments emerged that will impact the future course of
Iranian–Saudi rivalry, above all the Qatar blockade, the territorial defat of
ISIS in Syria and Iraq; , and Saudi–Iraqi rapprochement; the Qatar blockade;
and the prospect of a new war between Israel and Hezbollah.
In June, a blockade was imposed
on Qatar by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Egypt and Bahrain,
kicking off the most serious crisis of the GCC to date. Although some have
suggested the campaign against Qatar, primarily driven by the UAE in concert
with Saudi-Arabia and prepared weeks in advance, was mainly due to its
reluctance to fully align with Riyadh’s anti-Iran posture (as one of the
demands put forward against Doha was to cut its ties with Tehran), the crisis’
underlying causes arguably lie elsewhere: in particular, in Qatar’s differing
geopolitical preferences during and its support of the “Arab Spring”, putting
it at odds with those of Saudi Arabia; and in general, in its decidedly
independent foreign policy, embracing multi-alignment as is the case with other
successful city-states. The intra-GCC discord has put a question mark over the
very future of the Council, thereby potentially boosting Iran’s hand in the
geopolitical rivalry across the Persian Gulf.
At least one month before the
outbreak of the Qatar crisis, an e-mail leak revealed that Mohammed bin Salman
(MbS), the heir to the Saudi throne, told two former U.S. officials that he
“wants out” of the two-year war in Yemen that he himself had initially
spearheaded but whose lack of success has become a liability for the Kingdom.
Moreover, MbS also asked Iraq to mediate between the KSA and the IRI, while
saying he was “okay” with Washington engaging with Tehran.[13] This has been
widely interpreted as MbS being far more pragmatic than Saudi official rhetoric
might have otherwise suggested.
By July and August, the
territorial (and not necessarily the ideological) defeat of the self-proclaimed
caliphate of the Islamic State (IS) in Iraq and Syria exacerbated concerns over
the nature of Iran’s expanding influence under such circumstances,[14] leading
some prominent observers to expect an escalation in the Saudi–Iranian
rivalry.[15] Iran has been seen to engage in efforts to carve out an “arc of
influence” consisting of land corridors across Iraq and Syria into Lebanon.[16]
Earlier in the year, it has been reported that Iran was engaging in population
swaps in lands freed from Sunni or IS control, repopulating them with Shia
Muslims.[17] On 22 September, President Rouhani’s address at the UN General
Assembly appeared to address these concerns, stating “Iran does not seek to
restore its ancient empire, impose its official religion on others, or export
its revolution through the force of arms. We are so confident in the depth of
our culture, the truth of our face, and tenacity and longevity of our
revolution that we will never seek to export any of them in the way
neocolonialists do with the heavy boots of soldiers.”[18] Yet, given the fact
that other power centres other than the presidency and the foreign ministry run
Iran’s regional policies, it has to be doubted whether Iran’s neighbours have
seen much credibility in his appeasing statements.
Moqtada al-Sadr goes Saudi
Arabia: A watershed moment in Iraqi Shia geopolitical orientation
Yet, the most important
development over the past months is the deepening rapprochement between Baghdad
and Riyadh, which has already altered the geopolitical configuration according
to which Iran has been the undisputedly dominant foreign force in Iraq. On 30
July, for the first time since 2006, Moqtada al-Sadr, the leader of the Sadrist
movement, officially visited Saudi Arabia for three days, meeting Saudi
Arabia’s new Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman in Jeddah. Prior to that, Saudi
and Iraqi senior officials exchanged visits in an effort to boost bilateral
ties. Perhaps most importantly, Saudi Foreign Minister al-Jubeir visited
Baghdad in February, marking the highest Saudi official visit since 2004. In
contrast to his earlier stances, Sadr this time around chose not to address
Saudi domestic politics, above all its treatment of Shias, as well as regional
policies, but instead to focus on Iraqi national issues alone. This was
interpreted as Sadr, who has a broad popular base in Iraq, pursuing a non-sectarian
stance in Iraqi politics, thereby trying to alleviate the sectarian tensions
that threaten to tear up the country. Although Shia circles from Iran to
Lebanon have criticized Sadr’s new stance,[19] the latter’s move needs to be
seen against growing Iraqi Shia frustration over Iranian dominance in
post-Sadddam Hussein Iraq.
For both Riyadh and Sadr, the
recent Saudi–Iraqi rapprochement provides benefits. On one hand, Saudi Arabia
undertook a foray into some Shia quarters so far mainly under Iranian influence.
Part of this new strategy has been the opening of a new Saudi consulate in the
Iraqi Shia stronghold of Najaf.[20] Beyond an additional $10 million from
Riyadh to be paid to Baghdad to help with Iraq’s reconstruction,[21] Sadr after
his visit ordered his followers to remove anti-Saudi posters all across his
country.[22] On the other, Sadr effectively sent a signal to Tehran that he
disposes of wider geopolitical options. In the same vein, two weeks later, Sadr
travelled to the UAE where he met Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahayan, the
Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and deputy commander of the UAE armed forces.[23]
Thus, some Iraqi Shia circles seem to be interested in diversifying their
foreign relations (when it comes to support as well as resources) in order to
counterbalance Iranian dominance in their country. In other words, the Saudi
rapprochement with the Sadrists also prompts a rethinking of sectarianism in
the region and its explanatory power for analyzing regional geopolitics, for
thus far the idea has been dominant that the region’s Shias exercise almost
exclusive loyalty to Iran. The same phenomenon applies to Sunni ties with Saudi
Arabia.
The Saudi–Iraqi rapprochement is
also in line with stepped-up efforts by Riyadh to diversify its foreign relations
in order to reduce its geopoliticaldependency from Washington as well as to
adjust to new geopolitical realities in its region where Russia has developed
into an important player as the Syrian case has demonstrated. Thus, King
Salman’s 4–7 October visit to Moscow, the first Saudi monarch to do so
officially, must be seen in this vein. Saudi Arabia tries to establish a
‘gentlemen’s agreement’with Russia over Syria, who has been a de facto victor
of the Syrian battleground and whose influence in Syria, for Riyadh, is
preferable to that of Iran.[24] This comes against the backdrop of emerging
differences between Russia and Iran over post-IS Syria, which had been buried
under their joint campaign in favour of the Bashar al-Assad regime.[25]
Saudi–Iraqi rapprochement at its
peak: Saudi Arabia–Iraq Coordination Council
The Saudi–Iraqi rapprochement
reached its peak in the wake of President Donald Trump’s October 13th
“decertification” of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA, or the Iran
nuclear deal) and his announcement of a new Iran strategy.[26] Washington has
in fact put its weight behind this rapprochement, as part of his own new
strategy to contain Iranian power in the region. On his recent Middle East
tour, , U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson helped convene the inaugural
meeting of the Saudi Arabia–Iraq Coordination Council on the 22nd of October in
Riyadh with the attendance of Saudi Arabia’s King Salman and Iraq’s Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi who has also entertained good ties with Tehran. This
new joint ministerial-level Saudi–Iraqi body officially aims to coordinate the
fight against IS and to rebuild parts of Iraq destroyed by war. According to
Tillerson, the Council would contribute to reforms geared towards building
Iraq’s private sector and attract foreign investment. Enhanced Saudi
investments, above all in Iraq’s agricultural and petrochemical sectors, are
envisaged. Over that weekend, for the first time after 27 years (i.e. after
Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990), Saudi companies took part in an
international business fair held in the Iraqi capital and commercial flights
between the two were resumed.[27] In August, both countries said they planned
to open the Arar land border crossing for trade, which was closed in 1990.
Following this trilateral
meeting, Tillerson and his Saudi counterpart Al-Jubeir made a joint press
conference where the Saudi desire to rebuild its ties with Iraq as well as
their common anti-Iran agenda were highlighted. “The natural tendency of the
two countries and people”, Al-Jubeir said, “is to be very close to each other
as they have been for centuries. It was interrupted for a number of decades.
We’re trying now to make up for lost ground.” Meanwhile Tillerson stated:
“Iranian militias that are in Iraq, now that the fight against Daesh and ISIS
is coming to a close, those militias need to go home. The foreign fighters in
Iraq need to go home and allow the Iraqi people to regain control.” According
to a U.S. senior official, the reference was made to the Qods Force, the IRGC’s
foreign arm, as well as the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) that receive
funding and training from Iran. The PMF was formed in 2014 when tens of
thousands of Iraqis mobilized after IS had seized a third of their country’s
territory, and it later became part of
Iraq’s official security apparatus.
The Trump administration’s
intention to designate Iran’s IRGC as a terrorist organization plays into this
context. At the same press conference, Tillerson also said: “Both of our countries
believe that those who conduct business with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard,
any of their entities – European companies or other companies around the globe
– really do so at great risk.”[28] Hence, not only will Iran’s, and for most
parts the IRGC’s, military and political standing in Iraq be challenged but
also its economic clout with the Saudis entering the field. It has to be seen
in how far such a potential terrorist designation of the IRGC will affect the
latter’s operations in Iraq and the Baghdad governments dealings with it
against the backdrop of assertive U.S. and Saudi positions.
In an apparent sign of
frustration over this new Saudi–Iraqi rapprochement, Iran’s Foreign Minister
Zarif tweeted on the same day: “Exactly what country is it that Iraqis who rose
up to defend their homes against ISIS return to? Shameful US FP [foreign
policy], dictated by [Saudi] petrodollars.”[29] The day after Trump’s
announcement of a new Iran strategy, he had responded by tweeting: “Today,
Iranians – boys, girls, men, women – are ALL IRGC; standing firm with those who
defend us & the region against aggression & terror.”[30] This, together
with President Rouhani’s similar statement, in fact, is a sign that despite
differing preferences among Iran’s above-discussed foreign policy schools of
thought, there is indeed a great degree of unity.
Although the Saudi–Iraqi
rapprochement will fall short of eradicating
Iranian influence from Iraq, it can indeed be a positive development for
Iraq itself which can now diversify its economic and political relations away
from Iranian dominance. But despite Saudi and U.S. efforts to align Iraq into
their emerging containment policy towards Iran, this cannot be taken for
granted as Iran entertains a network of power and influence in the country
established since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.
These regional dynamics although
all important in and of themselves, will not result in either Riyadh or Tehran
taking the upper-hand in their continuing regional rivalry. While Iran seems be
the beneficiary of the Qatar blockade and post-IS Iraq and Syria, Riyadh has
signaled a pragmatic turn, forging closer ties with both Iraq and Russia in
order to challenge Iran’s standing in post-IS West Asia. In the latter theatre
of conflict, Iranian and Russian differences have now come to the fore in the
wake of the territorial defeat of IS and the ensuing reconstruction of
Syria.[31] Moreover, while the potential breakdown of the JCPOA will be
detrimental to Iranian interests, a new war pitting Israel against Hezbollah
(who last year openly admitted it is financed by Tehran) would result in
unpredictable ramifications for the entire region.
The Iranian–Saudi hegemonic
rivalry is unlikely to vanish over night, for its driving forces, especially
their irreconcilably geopolitical aspirations, continue to exist. Only when the
costs should raise to a level that either side might see as threatening its
regional or domestic standing, might there be a noticeable reduction of
tensions.
_____________________
[1] Adel Al Toraifi
(2012)Understanding the Role of State Identity in Foreign Policy
Decision-Making: The Rise of Saudi–Iranian Rapprochement (1997–2009), PhD
thesis, The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
[2] Vali Nasr (2006) The Shia
Revival: How Conflicts Within Islam Will Shape the Future, New York &
London: W.W. Norton & Company, pp. 143–144; Geneive Abdo (2017) The New
Sectarianism: The Arab Uprisings and the Rebirth of the Shi'a–Sunni Divide, New
York: Oxford University Press, p. 147.
[3] Ali Fathollah-Nejad, Brief
aus Manama [Letter from Manama], impressions from the IISS (International
Institute for Strategic Studies) Manama Dialogue 2016, WeltTrends: Das
außenpolitische Journal, No. 125 (March 2017), pp. 19–21.
[4] “In the world of Islam, some
worthless, incompetent and mean individuals have taken the fate of Islamic
societies in their hands. For example, the governments that you witness – the
Saudis and the like – are like this. This is because of drifting away from the
Holy Quran. This is because of unfamiliarity with Quranic truths. Part of this
originates from unfamiliarity and part of it is because of lack of faith. Of
course, they believe in the Holy Quran on the face of it. […]They are friendly
with and interested in kufar and they give them money out of their nations'
property. […] These idiots think that they can win the love of the enemies of
Islam by giving them money and by helping them and the like. This is while
there is no love. As they themselves have said, they are like dairy cows. They
milk them and when the milking is over, they slaughter them. This is today's
condition of the world of Islam. They treat the enemies like that, but they
treat the people of Yemen and the people of Bahrain like this. They behave
towards them in an anti-religious manner. Of course, they will be destroyed.
When you look at appearances, you should not be deceived by them. They will be
gone. They are destructible and perishable: ‘For falsehood is by its nature
bound to perish’ [The Holy Quran, 17: 81]. They are examples of falsehood and
they will surely witness destruction, downfall, disaster and decline. There is
no doubt about this. Of course, this might be done a little while sooner or
later. This depends on the performance of believers and the believing
community. If they act correctly, this will be done sooner, but if they do not
act correctly, this will be done at a later time, but it will surely be done.
Both they and those on whom they have pinned their hopes will be destroyed.”
Officials of the Country Should Be Outspoken When Expressing Islamic
Principles: Ayatollah Khamenei, speech at the annual Ramadhan Quranic
recitation held on the first day of the month of Ramadan, khamenei.ir, 27 May
2017.
[5] Arash Karami, Saudi prince's
endorsement of MEK angers Iranian officials, Al-Monitor, 11 July 2016.
[6] Speaker: We are facing two types of Daesh
terrorists in region, world, IRNA, 9 June 2017; Commander: Iran Has Proof of US
Direct Support for ISIL Terrorist Group, Fars News Agency, 11 June 2017.
[7] See e.g. Zarif, Riyadh’s
Reckless Sectarianism, New York Times, 11 Jan. 2016, p. A23 (New York edn.);
Al-Jubeir, Why Iran Is Still Dangerous, New York Times, 20 Jan. 2016, p. A25
(New York edn.); Zarif, Rid the World of Wahhabism, New York Times, 4 Sep.
2016, p. A27 (New York edn.); Al-Jubeir, Iran Can’t Whitewash Its Record of
Terror, Wall Street Journal, 18 Sep. 2016; Zarif, Arms Deals Won’t Bring Peace,
New York Times, 26 May 2017, p. A27 (New York edn.).
[8]Missile-Defence Cooperation in
the Gulf, London: The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS),
2016.
[9] Javad Heiran-Nia, A New
Security Order Needed in the Persian Gulf, LobeLog, 8 Feb. 2017.
[10] See Farhi, Farideh &
Lotfian, Saideh [Faculty of Law and Political Sciences, University of Tehran]
(2012) ‘Iran’s Post‐Revolution Foreign Policy Puzzle’, in: Nau, Henry R. &
Ollapally, Deepa M. (eds.) Worldviews of Aspiring Powers: Domestic Foreign
Policy Debates in China, India, Iran, Japan, and Russia, New York: Oxford
University Press, pp. 114–145.
[11] Ali Fathollah-Nejad,
German–Iranian Relations after the Nuclear Deal: Geopolitical and Economic
Dimensions, Insight Turkey, Vol. 18, No. 1 (Winter 2016), pp. 59–75.
[12] See e.g. the 27 May 2017
phone call between Rohani and the Qatari Emir: President in a phone call with
Qatari Emir: Continuing cooperation with Persian Gulf neighbours one of Iran’s
basic policies/We call for atmosphere of moderation, rationality among
countries, president.ir (President Rouhani’s official website) 27 May 2017.
[13] Clayton Swisher & David
Hearst, EXCLUSIVE: Saudi crown prince wants out of Yemen war, email leak
reveals, Middle East Eye, 14 August 2017 (updated on 16 August).
[14] For a months-long report on
Iranian regional policies, see Borzou Daragahi, Inside Iran’s Mission to
Dominate the Middle East, BuzzFeed, 30 July 2017.
[15] For instance, Germany former
Foreign Minister (1998–2005) Joschka Fischer, The Middle East’s Next War,
Project Syndicate, 21 July 2017.
[16] See e.g. Martin Chulov, From
Tehran to Beirut: Shia militias aim to firm up Iran's arc of influence, The
Guardian, 16 June 2017.
[17] Martin Chulov, Iran
repopulates Syria with Shia Muslims to help tighten regime's control, 14
January 2017. See also Bernedetta Berti, Reconstruction in Syria: The Next
Battleground, Qantara.de: Dialogue with the Islamic World, 4 October 2017.
[18] Cited in FULL TEXT: Iran's
Hassan Rohani's Address to UN General Assembly, Haaretz (online), 22 September
2017. Watch Rouhani’s address at the 72nd Session of the General Assembly of
the UN here.
[19] Hamdi Malik, What's behind
controversial Iraqi cleric's visit to Saudi Arabia?, Al-Monitor, 11 August
2017.
[20] See also the comment by
Mohammed al-Sulami, the head of the Arabian Gulf Center for Iranian Studies
(AGCIS) in Saudi Arabia, who on 30 July said: “We put all the Shiites under one
category and said that they follow Iran. We should re-examine the Shiites again
and revive the Shiite Arab authority in Najaf and Karbala, not in Qom.” (cited
in Malik, op. cit.)
[21] Robert Cusack, Saudi Arabia
pays Iraqi Shia cleric Sadr $10 million to set up consulate in Najaf, The New
Arab, 2 August 2017.
[22]Iraqi Shia cleric orders
removal of anti-Saudi posters in his country, Middle East Monitor, 5 August
2017.
[23]UAE pushes for better ties
with Sadr amid efforts to contain Iran, Middle East Monitor, 14 August 2017.
[24] See also Saudi Prince Turki
Faisal Al Saud interviewed by Sputnik and the Russian television channel
NTV:EXCLUSIVE: Saudi Prince Turki al-Faisal on Cooperation Between Moscow and
Riyadh, Sputnik, 2 October 2017.
[25] See also Orkhan Sattarov,
Ali Fathollah-Nejad: »One can speak only about tactical partnership of Russia,
Iran and Turkey«, Vestnik Kavkaza, 19 July 2017.
[26] For the latter, see The
White House, President Donald J. Trump's New Strategy on Iran, Office of the
Press Secretary, 13 October 2017.
[27] See Stephen Kalin &
Jonathan Landay, Go home, Tillerson
tells Iranian-backed militias in Iraq, Reuters, 22 October 2017; Tillerson
Urges Europe to Avoid Iranian Markets, New York Times, 23 October, p. A7 (New
York edn.); Nick Wadhams, Tillerson Warns Against Doing Business With Iran’s
Revolutionary Guards, Bloomberg, 23 October 2017.
[28]Ibid.
[29]https://twitter.com/JZarif/status/922185189538910208,
22 October 2017, 9:37 pm.
[30]https://twitter.com/JZarif/status/919213092197814272,
14 October 2017, 4:47 pm.
[31] On the latter, see Joseph
Daher, Militias and crony capitalism to hamper Syria reconstruction, openDemocracy,
5 September 2017.