If any good has come out of the Ukraine war for the Arab world, it is the diminished status and influence of the US in the Middle East. Washington is losing many of its traditional allies in the region, especially in the Gulf, and this trend looks like it will accelerate.
Four recent developments illustrate this.
First, Syrian President Bashar al-Asad’s visit to the UAE on Friday. The warm welcome laid on for him by its leaders was a slap in the face of the US administration, its strongly stated objections to the visit, and its sanctions aimed at de-legitimising the Syrian regime.
Secondly, the growing defiance of US hegemony by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, OPEC’s two largest oil producers. Most notable was their rejection of President Biden’s pleas to increase oil production in order to push down prices and provide extra supplies to enable the banning of Russian oil and gas imports.
Third, the failure of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s visit, on Washington’s behalf, to Abu Dhabi and Riyadh, where he conveyed veiled threats to the two countries should they fail to toe the Western line on Ukraine, join in imposing economic sanctions on Russia, and break their oil production agreements with it.
Fourth, Saudi Arabia invited China’s president for an official visit and considered pricing its oil sales to the country in yuan. This signals that the kingdom and possibly other Gulf states may be willing to join the new global financial system Russia and China are developing as an alternative to the Western one.
The reception accorded to Asad in Abu Dhabi and Dubai was the clearest sign of this Gulf rebellion against the US and its domination. Moreover, Saudi Arabia and the UAE have reportedly declined to receive US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, who wanted to make a follow-up visit to Johnson’s to try to succeed where he failed. More importantly, the UAE’s foreign minister Sheikh Ahmad Bin-Zayed visited Moscow for talks with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov. The public show of bonhomie they put on there was bound to rub salt into the American wound.
The timing of Asad’s trip — on the 11th anniversary of the start of the American-led war on Syria aimed at toppling its regime, and three weeks into the Russian invasion of Ukraine — and the UAE’s indifference of the angry US reaction, are further signs of the start of divorce proceedings with an abusive partner that fleeces and cheats on its allies.
Asad’s visit to the UAE provided important gains to both countries and their leaders. It broke Syria’s official isolation in the Arab world and heralds the breaking of the US embargo imposed on the country. This caps a broader process of Arab ‘normalisation’ which is set to see Damascus regain its membership of the Arab League and role in collective Arab decision making, and take part in the Arab summit to be held in Algiers in November.
This bold step also benefits the UAE also in many ways. It helps offset the hugely negative impact on its image that resulted from its signing of the so-called Abraham Accords and enthusiastic courtship of Israel’s enemy. Building bridges of trust and cooperation with the Axis of Resistance via Syria, Iran’s closest ally, could also help the UAE and Saudi Arabia find ways out of their quagmire in Yemen. It may be no coincidence that Riyadh is proposing to host an all-party Yemeni dialogue and has officially invited the Houthi Ansarullah movement to take part.
In short, what we are seeing today are manifestations of a revolt against US hegemony in the Arab world by the axis of Arab ‘moderation’ led by the Egyptian-Emirati-Saudi trio. It is open for other Gulf and Arab states such as Iraq, Algeria, and Sudan to join should they wish. This new axis may take a clearer shape at the Algiers summit.
The process of Arab normalisation with Israel is bound to slow down. It is the most grievous error the normalising countries — old and new — could have made and should be halted completely. But I’m optimistic in this regard, as turning against the US also implies turning against Israel.
Meanwhile, Asad’s presidential plane, which over the past decade has only flown to Moscow and Tehran, looks set to do a lot more travelling in the coming weeks and months. Its next destination after Abu Dhabi could be Riyadh or Cairo, despite the US’ best efforts to bar its way.