19 Apr 2024
Tuesday 5 January 2016 - 09:50
Story Code : 195391

The Saudis' anti-Shia provocation has clear geopolitical goals

Riyadh's execution of Shia Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr was timed to coincide with the expected lifting of anti-Iranian sanctions and the rejuvenation of the Syrian peace process.

Saudi Arabia just beheaded a prominent anti-government activist and Shia cleric, Nimr al-Nimr, ontrumped-up charges of "terrorism", executing him alongsidesuspected al Qaeda fighters. The message Riyadh sent was simple enough Shia activists are equivalent toterrorists inthe Kingdom's calculus, and this predictably engendered outrage all acrossthe world, especially inmajority-Shia Iran. The resultant protests, some ofwhich regretfully turned violent and targeted Saudi diplomatic facilities, were cited as 'proof' ofIran's 'aggression' againstSaudi Arabia and became the publicly presentable reason forwhy Riyadh cut offall diplomatic and economic ties withTehran.

Suspicious Timing

Sanctions Removal

The timing ofthis provocation couldn't be more suspect, sinceit convincingly appears asthough the Saudis staged it atprecisely the moment when Iran was expected tobe reintegrated intothe global economy. The UNSC sanctions are widely expected tobe lifted bythe end ofthe month or early February, and it looks likeSaudi Arabia wants tospoil the event byprovoking an anti-Iranian maelstrom that puts pressure onthe EU toreconsider its planned energy and infrastructure investments inthe country.

Ultimately, France and Germany's economic engagement withIran will come downto whether or not the US gives them the approval toproceed attheir expected pace, and considering how successful Washington was inforcing Brussels tocut its preexisting and very profitable ties withMoscow, it can't be precluded that it could do the same inobstructing unestablished and still forthcoming deals withTehran. Of relevance, the US is prepping a new roundof unilateral sanctions againstIran due tothe latter's missile tests inOctober, indicating a shift instrategic attitude towardsthe country that strongly suggests a corresponding European reaction.
Syrian Talks

Another event that needs tobe brought upin the context ofSaudi Arabia's latest anti-Iranian stunt is that the next roundof the Syrian Reconciliation Dialogue is supposed tobegin bythe end ofthe month. Various terrorist groups (deemed "moderate rebels" bythe mainstream media) already convened inRiyadh inadvance ofthis forthcoming summit inorder toreceive consultations, so it's a given that the Saudis hold major influence overan array ofon-the-ground militants there.

Curiously, Turkish President Erdogan paid a visit tothe Kingdom right beforethe unannounced execution and shortly afterthe terrorist gathering, so connecting the anti-Syrian plot points, it looks likethe Turkey-Saudi-Qatari bloc ofdestabilizers plans toundermine both the Geneva intra-Syrian and Vienna extra-Syrian peace talks. As regards the former, they may now order their radical Islamist proxies intomaking unreasonable demands inorder tosabotage the dialogue process, and per the latter, they might threaten totemporarily suspend their participation if Iran isn't kicked out.

Hidden Motives

Yemen

The Saudis' War onYemen has been a dismal failure, yet their leadership is still obsessed withcontinuing the conflict. They hope that their recent anti-Iranian ruse can prompt the "anti-terror" coalition toincrease their supportive contribution tothe theater underthe guise of "countering Iran".

The reader should be reminded that it's less ofan "anti-terrorist" organization and more likea quasi-legitimized international mercenary marketplace, so what the Saudis really want is a semi-plausible reasoning forcontracting more fighters intothe field.

Additionally, the Ansarallah are Shia, and linking them, their sect, and Iran to "terrorism" inthe Sunni sectarian-manufactured mindset is also meant toexcuse any large-scale crackdown againstBahraini and Saudi Eastern Province protesters (both ofwhich are majority Shia) oncooked-up "anti-terrorist" grounds. The end effect ofall ofthis is totransform the "anti-terrorist" coalition intoan anti-Shia one and institutionalize militant Muslim sectarianism.

Russia

Saudi Arabia and its American "Lead From Behind" masters want toturn the heat upagainst Iran and punish it forits anti-terrorist cooperation withRussia. The unipolar world, especially the members that invested billions ofdollars inregime change terrorists, is angered beyondbelief bythe success that Russia has had inliterally blowing uptheir assets inSyria.

Considering the active and supporting roles that Iran has played onRussia and Syria's side, most prominently throughthe use ofmilitary advisors and allowing cruise missile strikes throughits airspace, there should have been no doubt that some type ofconsequences would ensue.

It becomes apparent inhindsight that the US and Saudi Arabia were taking their time inplotting their response, which asis visibly being demonstrated, is a dramatic escalation ofthe New Cold War. In the full spirit ofthese tense and exclusionary times, a concentrated effort is being made to 'isolate' Iran fromthe rest ofthe international Muslim community, most ofwhich is part ofthe Saudi-led "anti-terrorist" coalition and thus underits organizational influence.

Coup Fears

The last main reason why Saudi Arabia chose this specific time toexacerbate tensions withIran was tostrengthen the role ofthe Defense Ministry and counter any fears ofa royal coup. To explain a bit more, King Salman is largely seen asa ceremonial figurehead that's physically incapable ofgoverning the country, withthe real power resting inthe hands ofthe Minister ofInterior and his son, the Minister ofDefense. Respectively, these are the Crown Prince and the Deputy Crown Prince, both ofwhich are only intheir current positions because ofa surprise shake-up inthe royal succession a few months afterKing Abdullah's death.

Many Saudi royals were unhappy aboutthis decision, and 30-year-old Mohammad bin Salman's reckless War onYemen angered them even more. Rumors began toswirl that some ofthe royals were serious inplotting a coup, and they reached such a fever pitch that The Guardian even reported inlate September ona mysterious unnamed prince that was atthe forefront ofthe regime change movement. However thought-out the plot may have been, it's probably largely sidelined now that tensions have been purposefully ratcheted upwith Iran. In the interests of 'national security', the pervasive mood is such that no 'patriotic' Saudi royal would dare rock the country's stability ata time when ties withTehran have never been worse, essentially quelling the internal revolt foras long asthe crisis carries onfor (and which probably won't dissipate forquite some time anyhow).

Global Perspective

Wrapping everything up, the tactics ofstaged provocations and multilateral 'isolation' being played againstIran atthe moment closely mirror those that were earlier used againstRussia. To remind everyone, the US-organized Color Revolution inUkraine and subsequent nationalist violence created the conditions where Crimea's residents felt unsafe and opted toreunify withthe Russian Federation.

The patriotic uprising inDonbass sprung upalmost concurrent withthat, and the followingCivil War (all ofwhich was American-provoked) was used asthe excuse forthe West tosanction Russia. Worse still, NATO exploited this 'opportunity' toillegally deepen its presence inEastern Europe incontravention tothe 1997 NATO-Russia Founding Act. Multilaterally and inconjunction withthe EU sanctioning Russia and NATO marching ever more determined tothe east, the entirety ofCentral and Eastern Europe aside fromBelarus, Serbia, and the Republic ofMacedonia united inpresenting a singular front againstRussia.

At the beginning of2016, almost the exact same thing is now happening toIran. Saudi Arabia chose tosavagely behead Sheikh al-Nimr inorder tocreate the 'Ukrainian-like' chain ofdestabilizing excuses to 'justify' a preplanned multilateral response againstIran. Just asNATO and the EU teamed upagainst Russia, it now looks likethe Saudis' "anti-terrorist" coalition and other Riyadh-dominated Mideast institutions will do the same againstIran. Altogether, the general strategy is tocreate 'containment' coalitions acrossEurasia ina desperate bit tohem inthe most active multipolar forces inthe supercontinent, be it Russia inEastern Europe or Iran inthe Mideast.

Accordingly, it follows that China will be next, and the preconditioning necessary forthe next preplanned provocative action is already being practiced inthe South China Sea. If some members ofASEAN such asVietnam and the Philippines formally team upwith the US and Japan to 'contain' China, then the three multipolar Great Powers will only have the shared space ofCentral Asia betweenthem toexercise strategic maneuverability. As a result, the Eurasian Heartland would become ground zero forthe next regional destabilization, be it a 'Central Asian Spring' or an ISIl-like terrorist invasion, albeit one which has the potential tooffset all three multipolar leaders inone fell swoop.

By Sputnik

 
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