Middle Eastern Countries Are Rebalancing Relations With the US and China
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The Wall Street Journal reported that the crown prince “expects that by playing major powers against each other, Saudi Arabia can eventually pressure Washington to concede to its demands for better access to U.S. weapons and nuclear technology.” While there is a semblance of credence to this assessment, it fails to appreciate that the Kingdom’s behavior might be a response to broader shifts in the very character of the global order. After all, it’s not just Saudi Arabia rebalancing its relations with major powers. Other Gulf states have responded likewise to this changing geopolitical landscape: long-standing strategic relationships with Western countries increasingly coexist with their growing economic and energy ties with Eurasian continental powers. Growing frustration with shifting U.S. priorities and inconsistencies in its engagement with the region has led many Arab states to embrace a more pragmatic national interest-oriented approach. Rather than seeking to align themselves with a single great power, they wish to simultaneously participate in the multilateral orders led by both Washington and Beijing. Arab countries have expressed their support for Chinese initiatives that advance a multipolar world in joint statements signed at events like the China-Arab States Summit and China-Gulf Summit in December 2022. These include the already well-established Belt and Road Initiative as well as the more nascent Global Security Initiative and Global Development Initiative. Yet despite some countries entertaining Beijing’s calls to create “a new security architecture in the Middle East,” none wishes to replace the U.S. security umbrella with a Chinese one. Nor does China necessarily wish to take on this role. At the same time, Chinese investment, infrastructure, technology, and the multilateral organizations created by Beijing have become an increasingly important component of many Arab states’ economic and political diversification strategies. This helps explain why the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Kuwait – all of whom list China as their largest trading partner and the United States as their strategic partner – have all applied to join the SCO as dialogue partners. Notably, BRICS, a grouping of major developing economies whose founding members include Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, has also piqued the interest of many Middle Eastern nations. Since China proposed the BRICS+ initiative in September 2021, Saudi Arabia, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Egypt, Turkey, and Bahrain have all indicated their desire to join the club. BRICS is not a formal free trade bloc. However, members often coordinate on trade matters and even established a policy bank, the New Development Bank, back in 2014 to coordinate infrastructure loans. What’s more, BRICS nations have recently declared they intend to create a new currency to diminish the U.S. dollar’s global reserve status – a move that was announced amid growing speculation that China and Saudi Arabia may create a petro-yuan to replace the petro-dollar. Some pundits have sounded the alarm, warning that these moves threaten to “usurp, or at least shake, the dollar’s place on the throne.” Meanwhile, others point out that such predictions are grossly overblown, amounting to nothing but noise. These developments may well serve to usher in a more multipolar currency system. Even so, such a system would likely remain dollar-centric, with select currencies orbiting around the dollar for transaction purposes.Enjoying this article? Click here to subscribe for full access. Just $5 a month.
Regardless of how these developments unfold, they reflect a growing discontent with a world in which one country calls the shots or sanctions those that fail to fall in line with its idea of how the world should operate. Many Middle Eastern countries have come to share these sentiments and are seeking ways to enhance their strategic autonomy. If the United States fails to find ways to rebuild trust and credibility among its regional partners, it may find itself sleepwalking into the end of Western hegemony in the Middle East. China’s leadership will be all too pleased with this outcome.