Last Wednesday, Uzbek President, Shavkat Mirziyoyev, became the first leader from his country to visit Saudi Arabia in 30 years, the latest recipient of a Saudi diplomatic offensive that has included the United States, France, China and other powers.
Four years after the murder of dissident Saudi journalist, Jamal Khashoggi, in Istanbul left foreign leaders distancing themselves from the world’s largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia is taking advantage of the energy crisis sparked by the Ukraine war to rehabilitate and reposition itself with diplomatic partners.
In July, US President Joe Biden, who pledged during his election campaign to make his host an international pariah, met Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, who US intelligence agencies say was the likely mastermind behind the 2018 killing.
Media footage showed the two men bumping fists, prior to wide-ranging talks that included energy, Iran and opening Saudi skies to Israeli commercial jets.
In August, bin Salman met French President, Emmanuel Macron, in Paris, while Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, is reported likely to make Riyadh the destination of his first post-pandemic foreign trip. Other recent moves include meetings with Turkish and British leaders, rapprochement with long-term foe, Iran, and a joint football World Cup bid with Egypt.
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Saudi Arabia knows that it is in demand as the largest foreign oil supplier to both China and the United States, increased US energy self-sufficiency in recent years notwithstanding. Analysts expect US domestic crude output to fall off in the next few years, while Beijing wants to lock down supply to secure its economic growth.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine six months ago – and Western efforts to sanction Russia and wean Europe off Russian energy – has sent oil prices rocketing to levels not seen in more than a decade. OPEC energy suppliers, led by Saudi Arabia, are keen to keep them high, making only a tiny increase in production despite Biden’s pleas and now openly discussing cutting output.
The Ukraine war may show no sign of ending, but Saudi Arabia knows its window of opportunity is not limitless. Analysis by consulting firm, McKinsey, and other specialists suggests several centuries of rising global oil demand may peak in the next 3-5 years, undercut by the rise in electric and hybrid vehicles.
That may shift the balance of power to producers of natural gas, vital to both heating and electricity production – and handing advantage to nations like Russia, Canada and Saudi Arabia’s regional bugbear, Qatar, partially blockaded by Saudi and Gulf allies in 2017 over multiple issues including its support for the Muslim Brotherhood and alleged “terrorism”.
Geopolitical Opportunity
Rising US-China tensions, therefore, could scarcely have come at a better time for Riyadh, with the Biden administration blunt in its determination to prevent Saudi Arabia from drifting too far into Beijing’s autocratic sphere of influence.
Before his July visit, Biden pledged to “reorientate, not rupture” relations with the Kingdom, which he said had been a strategic partner of the United States for 80 years. Even before the Khashoggi killing and unravelling of relations, however, Saudi Arabia had been moving diplomatically and economically closer to Beijing.
That includes a 2016 “strategic partnership” tied to “stable, long-term energy cooperation”, and rising trade valued at $65.2 billion in 2020, compared to less than $20 billion with the US the same year. Both China and the United States sell Saudi Arabia arms – but there are reports Beijing is also helping Riyadh build its own ballistic missiles alongside other weapons deals.
European States, too, are in a hurry to win Saudi over. British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, made a high-profile visit to Saudi in March, shortly after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, seen as a relatively naked bid for energy supplies from both Riyadh and nearby Gulf States. Bin Salman’s visit to France follows several years of efforts by both nations to improve relations.
As the West woos Riyadh, Saudi appears itself to be putting effort into strengthening its own regional relationships. June saw bin Salman visit Turkiye for the first time since the Khashoggi killing, shaking hands with Turkish President, Tayyip Erdogan, as if the latter had never publicly accused “the highest levels of the Saudi government” of the murder.
Building Bridges, Eyeing Enemies
As with the visit of Uzbek leader, Mirziyoyev, the rapprochement in Turkish-Saudi relations has been fuelled by a mutual need of friends, partly by shifting domestic political drivers in both countries. Turkiye is battling inflation in excess of 80 per cent, ahead of elections next year.
In Uzbekistan, the initial 1991 visit of then President Islam Karimov to Saudi Arabia was followed by a dramatic worsening of relations after the Uzbek leader clamped down on the conservative Wahhabi school of Sunni Islam, dramatically souring tensions.
Uzbek media quoted officials there as saying Saudi Arabia had also changed, drawing particular attention to allowing women to have driving licences.
More complex are Saudi Arabia’s relations with Iran. Riyadh severed relations with Tehran in 2016 after an angry mob stormed and set fire to the Saudi embassy following the execution in Saudi Arabia of a Shia cleric, with the long-running war in nearby Yemen further souring relations as Saudi and Emirati forces battled Iran-allied Houthi fighters.
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Relations deteriorated further in 2019, with Houthi drone and missile strikes on targets in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. But they have since improved, with Kuwait and Abu Dhabi boosting trade and links in recent years and UAE returning its ambassador to Tehran this month.
That has prompted similar but slower steps from the Saudi government, although distrust remains. Relations with Qatar remain similarly tense, despite the end of the partial blockade last year.
The Biden administration is hoping its diplomatic outreach can further reduce regional tensions, including salvaging the nuclear deal with Iran. The US has also expended considerable diplomatic capital on building relations between Israel and Gulf States, starting with Bahrain and the UAE and with the opening of Saudi skies to Israel seen as a further step.
How far Saudi will really let that go remains an open question – although there seems little doubt it remains more worried by Tehran than Israel. If recent history is any judge, modern Saudi Arabia wishes to maintain freedom to hurt its enemies as much as it desires new friends.
(Author: Peter Apps)
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.
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