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Gulf leaders find new partner in China, challenging US dominance

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Saudi Press Agency/Reuters
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Dec. 8, 2022.

The United States is no longer the sole superpower active in the Arab Gulf.

This was the message from a weekend summit in Saudi Arabia between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Arab leaders. Participants called it a 鈥渕ilestone,鈥 cementing political ties and paving the way for a larger Chinese role in Arab economies and security.聽

The Arab embrace of a more assertive China is a response both to criticism from U.S. President Biden鈥檚 administration and to Washington鈥檚 strategic pivot away from the Middle East toward Asia and Europe. More than that, what some observers are calling an 鈥淎rab-China renaissance鈥 represents a bid by Gulf leaders for something they say the United States is failing to provide: a reliable partnership that won鈥檛 waver with the political winds.

Why We Wrote This

For decades Washington has been the unquestioned patron and protector of its allies in the Gulf. Now the Gulf states want to diversify their ties: Enter China.

鈥淲ith China you know where you stand,鈥 says one Saudi official who preferred to remain anonymous. 鈥淣ot four years of being allies then four years of being called a pariah.鈥

Saudi Arabia鈥檚 very public welcome of President Xi, offering pomp, pageantry, and three regional summits, is likely to spark unease in Washington. Only last month, U.S. Undersecretary for Defense Colin Kahl warned in an address to regional policymakers that cooperation with China, 鈥渙nce it crosses a certain threshold 鈥 creates security threats for us.鈥

鈥淩aising the ceiling too much with Beijing will lower the ceiling with the U.S.,鈥 he cautioned at the Manama Dialogue conference in Bahrain, 鈥渘ot for punitive reasons but because of our interests.鈥澛

鈥淯nprecedented鈥 expansion of ties

In a sign of warming ties that have been years in the making, Saudi Arabia and China signed 34 agreements, including a 鈥渃omprehensive strategic partnership agreement,鈥 in which Beijing and Riyadh pledged support and solidarity for each other鈥檚 core national interests, opening the door to security cooperation.

Individually, Gulf states have been quietly building economic and diplomatic ties with China for the past two decades. China is Saudi Arabia鈥檚 largest trade partner and oil market, for example. But they have been careful not to upset their strategic balance with Washington.

Saudi Press Agency/Reuters
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman is pictured with leaders during the China-Arab summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Dec. 9, 2022.

Now, after enjoying a purely economic relationship, Saudi Arabia has accelerated strategic cooperation between China, the Gulf, and the wider Arab region, using its sway as the only country that can gather all Arab leaders on two weeks鈥 notice. 聽

Though the summits did not go so far as to replace the United States as the region鈥檚 strategic partner, nor exchange Arab leaders鈥 commitment to a U.S.-led international order for a Chinese one, 鈥渢his was an expansion of ties with China in every direction. It was unprecedented,鈥 says Mohammed Alyahya, a Saudi analyst at Harvard University鈥檚 Belfer Center.

Underlying the shift is a sense, gaining ground in Riyadh, that the United States is a 鈥渟ometimes partner,鈥 friendly only when it needs more oil or Saudi political support in a crisis.

China, with its one-party system and autocratic rule, seems to offer the kind of constancy and predictability that Gulf sheikhs prefer. It is a constancy, they feel, that stands in stark contrast to America鈥檚 shifting foreign policy over the past decade.

Gulf and Saudi officials point to Washington鈥檚 multiple 鈥減ivots鈥 away from the region 鈥 deepening a sense that America鈥檚 security umbrella is unreliable.

They also resent what they see as U.S. opportunism. Though Mr. Biden had said while campaigning for the presidency that he would make Saudi Arabia 鈥渁 pariah鈥 because of its human rights record, he sought to mend fences in the face of an energy crisis last summer. Gulf officials also point to the United States鈥 lack of interest in the threat of Iranian drones striking critical Saudi Arabian oil facilities in 2018, compared to American concern now with Russia鈥檚 use of Iranian drones in Ukraine.

More mutual understanding

Beyond investment deals, the weekend summits saw Beijing and Arab states converge on geopolitical issues, feeding a desire by Gulf states to be seen as more than oil spigots and arms markets.

A summit of 20 Arab leaders and Mr. Xi, hosted by the Saudi crown prince on Friday, which Mr. Xi called a 鈥渄efining event in the history of Chinese-Arab relations,鈥 agreed on a 24-point declaration of commitment to intensify Arab-Chinese cooperation on each other鈥檚 鈥渃ore interests.鈥

These included committing to 鈥渘on-interference鈥 in internal affairs, supporting China鈥檚 policies in Hong Kong, 鈥渟trengthen[ing] cooperation to ensure the peaceful nature of Iran鈥檚 nuclear program,鈥 ensuring Tehran adheres to 鈥渢he principles of good neighborliness,鈥 and 鈥渞eject[ing] of independence for Taiwan in all its forms鈥 from the Arab states.

The leaders also found common ground on an issue that divides Gulf states and the United States 鈥 human rights.

In their summit statement, China and Arab states insisted on 鈥渉uman rights based on equality and mutual respect鈥 and stressed their strong 鈥渞ejection of the politicization of human rights issues and their use as a tool to exercise pressure on countries and to interfere in their internal affairs.鈥

Policymakers in Washington have already flagged growing Chinese influence in the Arab Gulf as a security, cyber security, and surveillance threat to America鈥檚 military and defense; a deal between Saudi Arabia and Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei will deepen those concerns.

Amid U.S. worries, Saudi observers say Riyadh is determined to seize the opportunity of an assertive China鈥檚 interest in the region to cement long-term Chinese investment in Gulf infrastructure, robotics, and nuclear energy.

鈥淪audi Arabia and Arab states are trying to adapt and balance between these two superpowers and this will be no easy task,鈥 says Saudi political scientist Hesham Alghannam.

鈥淏ut, at the end of the day, you need to work with China. Needs on both sides are driving increased cooperation, and it is serious this time,鈥 he adds.

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