Biden’s US-Saudi Recalibration
Mar 18, 2021BERNARD HAYKEL
Former US President Donald Trump often publicly humiliated the Saudi
leadership, benefiting neither America nor the Kingdom. His successor Joe
Biden’s softer approach, based on mutual interests, will prove more salutary
and enduring.
PRINCETON – US President Joe Biden’s administration has refused to impose
sanctions directly on Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, despite
the recently released CIA assessment that he
“approved an operation […] to capture or kill” Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul in 2018. By
not punishing MBS, as the Kingdom’s de facto ruler is widely known, Biden has
disappointed many. But he correctly put one of America’s most important foreign
relationships first.
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US Secretary of State Antony Blinken summed up the administration’s stance
well, saying that, while
America wants to “recalibrate” US-Saudi ties, the bilateral relationship “is
bigger than any one person.” Blinken’s statement, which could apply equally to
the murdered Khashoggi as to MBS, underscores an important fact. Biden, like
every other US president since Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s, realizes that
Saudi Arabia is vital to maintaining American strategic interests in both the
Middle East and the rest of the world, and has chosen not to risk rupturing the
relationship by antagonizing the Kingdom’s next monarch.
Many Democrats are disturbed by the gap between Biden’s rhetoric toward
Saudi Arabia during the election campaign, during which he declared that he
would “make them in fact the pariah that they are,” and the reality of
compromise in managing America’s foreign-policy interests. Biden’s critics
wanted to see MBS punished, if not removed from the Saudi line of royal
succession, and regard the decision not to sanction the crown prince as a
betrayal of the values-based foreign policy that the president promised to
pursue.
But the reason for Biden’s stance is in plain view – and it is not
potential US weapons sales to the Kingdom, the rationale that motivated US
policy under former President Donald Trump, with his crude transactional
outlook. Rather, the US-Saudi relationship is built on many mutual strategic
interests that do not depend on who is in power in Riyadh or Washington.
For example, the two countries have a shared interest in the stability of
global energy and financial markets, as well as the supremacy of the US dollar
as the world’s reserve currency. All Saudi oil is traded in dollars, an
arrangement that neither side has an interest in changing.
America and Saudi Arabia also agree on the need to stabilize the Middle
East, fight global jihadist groups, contain Iran, and end the war in Yemen and
rebuild the country – and for Arab states to normalize relations with Israel.
Even controlling the COVID-19 pandemic requires Saudi Arabia’s assistance,
given that the annual pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca, which will likely
resume this year, has historically been the mother of all global super-spreader
events.
For all these reasons, the bilateral relationship must remain solid, and
the Kingdom must remain stable. Targeting MBS for punishment would amount to
unprecedented US interference in the Al Saud line of succession and risk
upending the country.
Trump dealt with the Saudis in a highly personalized way, mostly through
his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who maintained a close direct connection with
MBS. This approach encouraged risky behavior by both sides, such as MBS’s 2017
decision to boycott Qatar or Trump’s readiness to allow Iran to bomb Saudi oil
shipping and installations with impunity through the summer and fall of 2019.
More important, Trump’s tactics also undermined the institutional ties that
have long been central to the US-Saudi relationship, such as those between the
two countries’ foreign ministries, intelligence services, militaries, finance
and energy ministries, and central banks. Biden’s “recalibration” is mostly
about re-establishing these institutional connections while reducing the
emphasis on high-level personal exchanges.
Biden’s presence has already had a restraining effect on the Saudi
leadership, which has signaled a change in policy on a number of fronts. In
doing so, it has tacitly admitted the failure of its strategy vis-à-vis both
Yemen and Qatar, as well as to excessive repression of dissent at home.
For example, the Saudis have attempted – so far without success – to
resolve the conflict with Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels, and have ended the
boycott of Qatar. Domestically, the Saudi authorities have released a few
political dissidents and reformers, most notably Loujain al-Hathloul, a
courageous female activist.
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The United States can build on these positive developments by discreetly
encouraging more change – such as an end to the war in Yemen, given the
Kingdom’s influence over the conflict’s various parties. Other Saudi actions
might include direct talks with Iran and the release of more political
prisoners.
In his loud and bombastic manner, Trump often publicly humiliated the Saudi
leadership, benefiting neither America nor the Kingdom. Biden’s softer
approach, based on mutual interests, will prove more salutary and enduring, and
may help a young soon-to-be monarch find his footing.
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Writing for PS since 2008
15 Commentaries
Bernard
Haykel, Professor of Near Eastern Studies and Director of the Institute for the
Transregional Study of the Contemporary Middle East, North Africa, and Central
Asia at Princeton University, is co-editor (with Thomas Hegghammer and Stéphane
Lacroix) of Saudi Arabia in Transition.
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