海角大神

As U.S. steps back from Middle East, China steps in

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China Daily/Reuters
Wang Yi, China's top foreign policy official, with senior representatives of Iran and Saudi Arabia, at a ceremony to mark the two Mideast rivals' restoration of diplomatic ties, brokered by China, in Beijing, March 10, 2023.

Welcome to the post-American Middle East.

That鈥檚 the pointed message Iran, Saudi Arabia, and their eager mediator, China, wanted to send Washington with last Friday鈥檚 announcement of a rapprochement between the region鈥檚 rival Muslim powers.

But America鈥檚 retreat from its decades-long role as the preeminent outside actor in Mideast affairs has been a deliberate choice 鈥 spurred by a range of factors, not least the disastrous aftermath of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, which began two decades ago next week.

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The U.S. has long been the preeminent outside actor in the Middle East. Now China is asserting itself there, stealing Washington's diplomatic thunder. What does this portend?

And one irony of China鈥檚 Mideast diplomatic breakthrough is that it could dissuade the U.S. from further ceding the significant diplomatic and military weight it still has in the region.

That鈥檚 because the main importance of the deal isn鈥檛 what it will mean for Iranian-Saudi relations. It鈥檚 what the agreement says about the interests and motivations of each of the deal-makers, and the implications for longer-term U.S. interests, in the Middle East and beyond.

First, Iran. Closer than ever to being able to make a nuclear bomb, Tehran seems definitively to have abandoned any notion of a revived agreement with Washington to ease sanctions in return for reimposed nuclear limits. Iran鈥檚 leaders are throwing in their lot with China.

Next, Saudi Arabia. Though still dependent on the U.S. for security, the Saudis are positioning themselves as a major regional power increasingly independent of Washington. The trend has accelerated under the kingdom鈥檚 de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, amid U.S. criticism of Saudi human-rights violations. Riyadh has been cultivating closer ties with Moscow and now, far more broadly, with Beijing.

The linchpin, however, is China.

For President Xi Jinping, the Iran-Saudi deal is part of a grander political vision, and a nuts-and-bolts example of how he hopes to achieve it.

The vision is that China will ultimately displace the United States as the world鈥檚 leading power. The means to achieve it? Leveraging China鈥檚 economic clout to expand its financial, diplomatic, and military footprints worldwide.

The Mideast deal also underscores a key pillar of that approach. In explicit contrast to the United States, China is assuring its partners that 鈥渋nternal鈥 issues 鈥 such as human rights 鈥 are irrelevant to its outreach and alliances.

And while it鈥檚 still premature to speak of a 鈥減ost-American鈥 Middle East, Washington鈥檚 reduced sway, and Beijing鈥檚 increasing prominence, are evident.

Majid Asgaripour/WANA/Reuters
Iranian newspapers front-page their articles about Tehran's China-brokered restoration of diplomatic ties with rival Saudi Arabia, in Tehran, March 11, 2023.

Until earlier this century, America was indisputably the region鈥檚 key international power.

It retains strong political, diplomatic, and military ties: with Israel, above all, but also Egypt and Jordan. And, yes, Saudi Arabia and the other states across the Gulf from Iran.

But the U.S. role as mediator in the Arab-Israeli dispute has receded in importance, along with prospects for a two-state compromise to resolve Israel鈥檚 conflict with the Palestinians.

The Iraq War dented America鈥檚 appetite for direct military involvement. That was made inescapably clear during Syria鈥檚 civil war a decade later. President Barack Obama retreated from his 鈥渞ed line鈥 insistence that the U.S. would intervene if President Bashar al-Assad deployed chemical weapons, paving the way for Russian President Vladimir Putin to get involved.

Shale oil, meanwhile, helped free America from dependence on imports from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. And while still committed to safeguarding Gulf Arab security against Iran, the U.S. sought a diplomatic response to Tehran鈥檚 nuclear threat. The result was the nuclear deal, sealed despite deep reservations among U.S. partners in the region.

The overall message they took from the agreement was that Washington was not the engaged, reliable, ally it had long been. Instead, in line with what was being called a 鈥渢ilt to Asia,鈥 the U.S. was focused on China.

The problem Washington now faces is that China has been focusing on the Middle East.

As China extends its Belt and Road initiative to build infrastructure projects across the developing world, it has made countries like Iran and Saudi Arabia key partners. Where the Saudis once shipped their oil westward, their biggest customer today is China. The same goes for Iran, barred by sanctions from selling its crude elsewhere.

China clearly hopes these economic ties will pave the way for an eventual military presence: a Chinese-built port in Djibouti, at the gateway to Red Sea, became the site of a naval facility in 2017. Beijing has also been investing in port facilities in the Gulf Arab states of Oman and the United Arab Emirates.

The Chinese-brokered Mideast deal raises a policy question for Washington: How should it respond?

Early signs are that, while the U.S. won鈥檛 want to reduce its regional presence any further, it will focus more broadly on China鈥檚 challenge to the interests of America and its allies worldwide.

While officials publicly shrugged off any suggestion of concern over the Saudi-Iran deal, President Joe Biden joined the leaders of Britain and Australia Monday in publicly sealing the so-called AUKUS partnership to provide Australia with new nuclear-powered submarines as a counterweight to China鈥檚 increasingly assertive naval presence.

Where the Middle East is concerned, Mr. Biden will be keen to put some flesh on the bones of his unrealized mantra 鈥 that Washington and Beijing have to bring stability, even cooperation, to an unavoidably competitive relationship.

Washington鈥檚 hope will be that, with China now reliant on the Gulf for nearly half its oil imports, it, too, will want to avoid the instability and conflict likely if Iran goes fully nuclear.

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