The attacks on the country’s two biggest oil facilities last month represent an unprecedented humiliation for the Saudis and The kingdom feels disgraced, angry and injured. It also became clear that the Saudis are certain who was behind the attack. The attack fits into the ‘pressure against pressure’ strategy that Tehran has been taking against the U.S. since the spring.
But what, exactly, will be the consequence?
It was three months ago that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard shot down a $100-million American surveillance drone over the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf. Washington initially planned a retaliatory strike, but President Donald Trump called off the operation at the last minute, supposedly because too many Iranians would have died as a result. Instead, the U.S. military reacted with a cyber-attack against the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
The Middle East appears to be sliding into a war and it may even have already started. It is a new kind of war, a 21st century conflict for which there is no formal declaration of war, no clear fronts and a wide variety of battlefields. There are attacks the provenance of which may never be known, and while some of the fighting is conventional in nature, much of it is not and involves drones in the air and viruses in cyberspace. More than anything, it is a confusing war, in which nobody really has control, not even those who are ostensibly leading it.
A trio of leaders is in the process of setting the entire region on fire. It includes U.S. President Trump, whose aggressive and meandering policy has pushed the already fragile region into chaos. It also includes Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, or MBS for short, a young and unscrupulous leader who is involved in a gruesome war in Yemen. Finally, there is Iran’s revolutionary leader Ali Khamenei, a Shiite fundamentalist who has been toughened by the Islamic Republic’s four decades of battle against the ‘great Satan’ in Washington.
The full, 5,600 word very sobering analysis can be found here.
Ramesh Thakur is emeritus professor at the Australian National University and a former United Nations Assistant Secretary-General. Of Indian origin, he is a citizen of Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
Comments
One response to “DER SPIEGEL. Tension in the Middle East: The Groundwork Is Laid for a Vast New Conflict (25-9-19)”
The same regurgitation of the same Imperial talking points. The Yemenis couldn’t have done it because they’re too… primitive. These are the same Yemenis whose parents sent an Egyptian army home in a box. These are the same Yemenis who just routed three brigades of Saudi mercenaries and press-gang victims. There is a strong possibility they have had help from Hezbollah engineers in building their missiles and drones, but to assume they are mere proxies or Iran is an insult – it says more about the colonialist mentality of Der Spiegel than it does about the real situation on the ground. When the Houthis evict the Saudis from Mecca and Medina – as some are now speculating, or when the long-oppressed Shia population of eastern SA throw off the Wahabist chains, will that be down to Iran too?