Saudi's anti-terror coalition challenges U.S. role in Middle East
(CNN)Voices
across the U.S. political spectrum have been urging Arab nations to do
more in the fight against ISIS, and Saudi Arabia seemed to answer the
call when it announced the creation of a 34-nation coalition to combat
the "disease" of Islamic extremism.
But the United States might be getting a lot less than it asked for.
Since
Saudi Arabia's announcement on December 16, questions have been raised
about the coalition's membership, its commitment to fighting terror and
its overall purpose.
Many see the move
as aimed at bolstering Saudi prestige and countering Iran more than
forming an effective fighting unit. And some critics suggest that Riyadh
is acting less as the result of American leadership and more because of
an American vacuum in the region.
"This
event is not seeking to work with the U.S. but is an independent Saudi
effort to bolster one of its crucial efforts: to be the leader of the
Islamic world," said Saudi Arabia expert Simon Henderson of the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
And it's far from clear just what the contours of that effort are.
The
Saudis have announced that the coalition will have a headquarters in
its capital of Riyadh, but have not detailed when that headquarters will
be set up, the amount of forces each nation will contribute or how they
would put those forces to work, Henderson told CNN.
In
fact, specifics related to the coalition are so scarce that some of the
nations listed as members, including Lebanon, reportedly said they
didn't know of their own involvement until after the announcement.
Lack of details on coalition
Saudi
Arabia hands said the lack of information detailing how this coalition
will organize or carry out any military action indicates the move is
most likely a symbolic bid to reaffirm Saudi leadership in the region
rather than a serious plan to go after terrorists.
"Frankly,
until I see evidence that proves otherwise, I assume it means ...
nothing," said David Weinberg, a senior fellow at the Foundation for
Defense of Democracies, adding that it is difficult to take the
announcement seriously when the Saudis have introduced similar
initiatives in the past and not delivered on them.
Specifically,
the Saudis have not yet followed through on significant
counterterrorism commitments they made last year in signing the Jeddah
Communique with the U.S. and other Arab nations, said Weinberg, a former
Democratic staff member on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
The
communiqué called for, among other things, stopping the flow of
financing to ISIS, repudiating ISIS' ideology, aiding humanitarian
relief and contributing to the reconstruction of communities devastated
by ISIS.
When pressed last week on the
specifics of how the new anti-extremist coalition would operate,
including whether it would include ground forces, Saudi Deputy Crown
Prince and Defense Minister Mohammed bin Salman answered: "Nothing is
off the table."
In an equally vague
response on how the group of nations plans to combat radical groups,
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said, "The decisions will be made
by individual countries in terms of what to contribute, and when to
contribute it, and in what form and shape they would like to make that
contribution."
In
addition to Saudi Arabia, the coalition is said to include Bahrain,
Bangladesh, Benin, Chad, Comoros, Ivory Coast, Djibouti, Egypt, Gabon,
Guinea, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali,
Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, the Palestinian Authority,
Pakistan, Qatar, Turkey, Togo, Tunisia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia,
Sudan, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
It
is no surprise that Saudi Arabia, a Sunni state, did not include
Shiite-led Iran, Iraq and Syria in the group, but Weinberg said the
omission of several other Sunni countries, including Oman, which works
with the Saudis as part of the Gulf Cooperation Council, raises
questions about whether the Saudis have the ability to effectively
influence other nations in the region to take action.
The
grouping of mostly Sunni-led nations also leads some observers to
believe that this coalition is an effort by the Saudis to shift focus to
countering Iran, the longtime enemy of Saudi Arabia, while the U.S. has
zeroed in on the fight against ISIS.
"Obama
has made the reintegration of Iran, on some international issues, a
major goal of his presidency. But many states in the region,
specifically Saudi Arabia, want to cut out Iran," said Michael Rubin, a
former Pentagon official during George W. Bush's administration. Sunni
states like Saudi Arabia "see Iran as the greater threat."
Their
concerns intensified after the U.S. signed a deal with Iran in July
that would limit Tehran's nuclear ability in exchange for lifting
several international oil and financial sanctions -- a move many Sunni
states see as paving the way for rapprochement between Tehran and
Washington.
Though the Obama
administration has denied having such grand ambitions, it has been
willing for the first time to include Iran in talks on ending the Syrian
civil war -- whose chaos ISIS thrives on -- and looking for other
places where Iran can help defeat the Sunni terror group.
Defining terrorism
Then
there is the issue of just what "terrorism" the Saudi coalition would
fight -- which could complicate any cooperative efforts with the
U.S.-led group already bombing ISIS in Iraq and Syria. For one thing,
several Sunni states want to go after groups beyond ISIS that are also a
threat to their governments, while the U.S. sees ISIS as the
organization to target.
"As long as
(the Saudi coalition) is fairly meaningless, they don't need to define
terrorism," Henderson said. "But if the U.S. and Europe are going to try
to help the Saudis create something more solid, they are going to have
come up with a terrorism definition, and that is going to be a
challenge."
The Saudis are not
necessarily obvious candidates for defining or combating terrorism,
given their own ideological leanings, according to the former senior
adviser for countering violent extremism in the Obama State Department,
William McCants.
The fact that ISIS
uses Saudi state text books in its schools shows that the Sunni radical
group shares ideological similarities with the hardline Saudi state
religion even if they differ over their political visions, said McCants,
now a fellow at the Brookings Institution's Center for Middle East
Policy.
Despite the Saudis' open
condemnation of "Islamic extremism" and stated desire to form a
coalition to fight it, they are "not serious about going after any links
between their own state ideology and affinities with these groups," he
said.
According to Henderson, the
Saudis also fundamentally believe that "there is no such thing as jihadi
terrorism" because "terrorism isn't in fact a Muslim behavior."
This
mindset differs greatly from those in the West who are part of a
conversation about terrorism that "regards the character of Islam as an
important part of why there is a problem," Henderson said.
The
spectrum of what is and is not considered terrorism also varies among
nations said to be included in the newly formed coalition, especially
those with larger Shiite populations, like Bahrain and Lebanon.
Even if the
members of this new coalition are able to come to a consensus on which
groups qualify as terrorists, former officials and experts said the
likelihood of it becoming the Muslim-led military force that President
Barack Obama and other Western leaders have been calling on to send
ground troops into Iraq and Syria and to fight ISIS is unlikely.
Saudi
Arabia and several other members of the new coalition are also
technically part of the U.S.-led group already striking ISIS and
offering assistance to local forces, but their involvement in that
campaign appears to already be drawing down.
Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are down to about one mission
against ISIS targets each month, a U.S. official told CNN on last week.
Bahrain stopped participating in the autumn.
The
U.S. and its Western partners continue to say the ground war against
groups like ISIS needs to be fought by Muslim troops on the ground. But,
according to Henderson, "this (new Saudi) declaration fails to fill the
gap which the U.S. has been looking for in terms of a Muslim military
alliance, which would be the best political way to go after ISIS."
"My fear is, big picture, is that this will merely be a fig (leaf)," he added.
However,
the U.S. maintains for now that the Saudi-led coalition is in line with
what it has been asking of its allies in the region.
"It
represents an effort to coalesce those states against terrorist threats
to include ISIS and that is what we've been wanting to see, an
intensification by everybody against this threat," State Department
spokesman John Kirby said on the day the coalition was announced, adding
that "there is still a lot more" the administration needs to know about
it.
Gulf states seek greater U.S. action
At
the same time, Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia and the UAE, have
also been asking the U.S. to take steps of its own, namely to broaden
the mandate of fighting terrorism to combat extremism in all its forms
rather than only ISIS.
Arab diplomats
have long warned that if the U.S. didn't take on this wider array of
threats, their countries would. An early example was the decision by
Egypt and the UAE to strike armed Islamist factions in Tripoli, Libya,
independently of the United States in August 2014. It's the kind of
military effort that might be undertaken by the new coalition should it
begin to act.
In the eyes of Rubin, the
former Pentagon official, the creation of the Saudi coalition sends a
signal to the Obama administration that the U.S. has abandoned the
playing field in the Middle East.
"No
one expects these states to do anything but issue declarations, but you
have to take it as symbolically important," Rubin said.
The
move signifies that the Saudis still want to be a major influencer in
the region, especially at a time where the sense is that the sectarian
crisis is nearing a tipping point and that the U.S. won't necessarily
keep that crisis in check, he said.
Rubin,
now with the American Enterprise Institute, said there are no signs
that the Saudis coordinated their coalition with the U.S., and that such
a surprise move would itself be an indication of the diminished role of
the U.S. in the region and the Obama administration's loss of
credibility on the world stage.
He called it a "symbolic slap in the face."
But
McCants, the former State Department official, defended the
administration and said the Saudis were stepping up in response to U.S.
and Western pressure that they do more.
The
Saudis may "feel they have some responsibility to bear for ideology
affinities between its state religion and ISIS," he said.
Either
way, Weinberg said the Saudi move could in the end help U.S. goals even
if that was not its intention or capability at present.
"The U.S. wants to see Saudis muster military power under the U.S. umbrella of what they are doing," Weinberg said.
Since
the Saudis have put themselves forward as a leader on this issue, he
said, it might make it easier for the U.S. "to make them put their money
where their mouth is."
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