The Iranian-Saudi Summit: A Microcosm of Middle Eastern Contradictions
Mark A. Heller
On March 3, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad paid his first official visit to Saudi Arabia. Those who anticipated
some dramatic outcome were disappointed. Not only were no concrete agreements announced; the summit with King Abdullah
did not even produce the kind of anodyne communiqué that normally follows such meetings.
That should not have been surprising. After all, while Iran and Saudi Arabia may share certain near-term interests, they
embody fundamentally conflicting forces and ideas that potentially feed a Middle Eastern clash of civilizations. The
former is an overwhelmingly Shi’ite and Persian-dominated republic ruled by a revolutionary Islamic regime bent on
subverting the regional order, defying the United States, and challenging the existence of Israel; the latter is an
overwhelmingly Sunni and Arab monarchy ruled by a conservative Islamic regime bent on preserving the regional order,
cooperating with the United States, and encouraging some Arab accommodation with Israel. So while the leaders of Iran
and Saudi Arabia may pay lip service to the notion of rejecting sectarian strife and promoting coexistence throughout
the region, they view the sources and nature of threats to their interests through entirely different prisms, shaped by
diametrically opposed ideologies and divergent if not mutually exclusive identities. These differences were not resolved
in a one-day summit and they are unlikely to be resolved in the future unless one or the other of these states is
totally transformed.
This was clear in the post-summit “spin” by the two parties. Iranian spokesmen gave enthusiastic accounts of the meeting
and focused on the need for Muslim unity to frustrate plots to sow discord among Muslims; Saudi-oriented media were
considerably more reserved and placed the onus for change on Iran because, as one newspaper wrote, “the sense of danger
is posed by Iranian conduct in the region and the ensuing American escalation against Iran [my emphasis].” Similarly,
Iranian spokesmen reacted to a report by the Saudi Press Agency that Iran had endorsed the Saudi peace initiative by
claiming that the issue had not been raised in the discussions.
These differing interpretations of what took place reflect a more profound contradiction between the two leading states
in the Gulf, which now also embody the two main identity groups in the Islamic world. Indeed, the Iranian-Saudi summit
and its murky aftermath encapsulate all the main political trends in the contemporary Middle East.
For centuries, the Sunni-Shi’ite fault line coincided with frontier between the Ottoman and Persian Empires. After the
collapse of the Ottoman Empire, Iraq (dominated by Sunnis although the majority of the population was Shi’ite) assumed
the role of Sunni front-line state. As such, it enjoyed the support of most Sunni Arab states, especially Saudi Arabia,
during its almost decade-long war against post-revolutionary Iran.
Iraq battled Iran to a standstill and preserved the confessional status quo in the 1980s. But after the American-led
coalition destroyed Saddam Hussein’s regime in 2003, the Sunni-Shi’ite fault line shifted westward into Iraq itself
(just as it had shifted eastward two years before into western Afghanistan). These changes, together with rising Shi’ite
self-assertion in Bahrain, Hizbullah’s increasingly aggressive challenge to the Lebanese government, and particularly
Iran’s undisguised quest for nuclear capabilities, combined to produce a palpable fear throughout the Sunni-Arab world
of Shi’ite empowerment and Iranian hegemony. King Abdullah of Jordan expressed this fear when he warned about the
dangers of a “Shi’ite crescent” in the Levant, and Egyptian President Husni Mubarak voiced a similar concern when he
accused Iraqi Shi’ites of being more loyal to Iran than to their own country. Perhaps the most noteworthy manifestation
of this mood came in the summer of 2006, when the immediate reaction of the Jordanian, Egyptian and Saudi governments to
the outbreak of fighting in Lebanon took the form, not of ritualistic denunciations of Israel, but rather of criticism
of Hizbullah for its irresponsible behavior and, by implication, for acting in the service of Iranian interests.
In another era, the lead in responding to the perceived Iranian/Shi’ite challenge would have been taken by Egypt,
traditionally the “big brother” of the Arab world. But Egypt’s preoccupation with domestic concerns and its declining
regional and international weight, together with Saudi Arabia’s orthodox Sunni centrality, economic clout, and
geographic location have all thrust the latter into a more prominent role. In fact, Saudi Arabia has become the pivotal
player in efforts to block the growth of Iranian/Shi’ite power and influence that threaten Sunni Arab interests,
American and other western positions in the region, and Israel. As one defender of Saudi policy put it, “Lebanon cannot
be left as a hotbed of political gangs that carry out assassinations and seek to control the country’s resources only to
thrust the country into the fire of civil war. Riyadh can neither allow Palestine to be a commodity in Iran’s hands nor
allow the breeze to blow through Baghdad only from Tehran.”
These objectives explain Saudi actions to shore up the Lebanese government, to support Sunni and semi-independent
Shi’ite factions in Iraq and oppose a premature American withdrawal, and to virtually dictate an agreement on a
Palestinian national unity government that potentially serves the dual purpose of extracting Hamas from the Iranian
sphere of influence and reducing Arab public sympathy for the self-proclaimed Iranian champions of the Palestinian
cause. They even explain the high-level direct contacts with Israel reportedly initiated by senior Saudi personalities
like National Security Adviser Prince Bandar bin Sultan.
Saudi Arabia has not been alone in recognizing the primacy of the Iranian/Shi’ite challenge. The United States, which
shares the Saudi perception, has invested considerable effort in promoting a “coalition of moderate states” to meet that
challenge, and since Saudi Arabia and Egypt are critical members of any such coalition, American policymakers have
essentially abandoned the campaign for “democratization” that occupied center stage in the Bush Administration’s Middle
Eastern policy immediately after September 11. Israel, too, sees Iran and its Hizbullah client in Lebanon as the most
serious threats to its security and has therefore recently adopted a more favorable, though still qualified, attitude to
the Saudi peace initiative. But while that may be enough to maintain lines of communication with Saudi leaders, more
effective regional and international cooperation against Iran will require more decisive action, if not to resolve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, then at least to lower its profile in Arab public opinion.
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