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Dear Reader:
I appeared on French radio to discuss U.S. policy in the Middle East:
"La
politique americaine vis-à-vis le moyen orient." Radio Chalom
Nitsan, 21 November 2013.And on U.S. radio on the agreement with Tehran: "Assessing the Geneva Deal." Newsmax, 26 November 2013. Yours sincerely, Daniel Pipes Saudis Bristle at Obama's Outreach to Iran
If that was the mildest response, perhaps the most unbuttoned comment came from Alwaleed bin Talal, a Saudi prince who occasionally sends up trial balloons for the royal family: He called Iran "a huge threat" and noted that, historically speaking, "The Persian empire was always against the Muslim Arab empire, especially against the Sunnis. The threat is from Persia, not from Israel," a ground-breaking and memorable public statement.
Abdullah al-Askar, foreign affairs committee chairman of the kingdom's appointed Shura Council, elaborates: he worries "about giving Iran more space or a freer hand in the region. The government of Iran, month after month, has proven that it has an ugly agenda in the region, and in this regard no one in the region will sleep and assume things are going smoothly. … The people of the region … know that Iran will interfere in the politics of many countries." Saudi media reiterated this line of analysis. Al-Watan, a government newspaper, warned that the Iran regime, "which sends its tentacles into other regional countries, or tries to do so by all means necessary," will not be fettered by the accord. Another daily, Al-Sharq, editorialized about the fear that "Iran made concessions in the nuclear dossier in return for more freedom of action in the region." Some analysts, especially in the smaller Persian Gulf states, went further. Jaber Mohammad, a Bahraini analyst, predicted that "Iran and the West will now reach an accord on how to divide their influence in the Gulf." The Qatari government-owned Al-Quds Al-Arabi worried about "a U.S.-Iran alliance with Russian backing." Rumors of Obama wanting to visit Tehran only confirm these suspicions. The Saudi ambassador in London, Prince Mohammed bin Nawaf bin Abdulaziz, drew the most overt public conclusion, threatening that "We are not going to sit idly by and receive a threat there and not think seriously how we can best defend our country and our region." To put it mildly, this is not how Saudi diplomats normally speak about fellow Muslims. What does this unwonted rhetoric amount to? Iranian bellicosity and the Obama administration's pro-Iran policies have combined to end many decades of Saudi strategic reliance on Washington and to begin thinking how to protect themselves. This matters, because as Alwaleed rightly boasts, his country is leader of the Arabs, enjoying the most international, regional, cultural, and religious clout. The results of this new-found assertiveness – fighting against fellow Islamists, allying tacitly with Israel, perhaps acquiring Pakistani-made nuclear weapons, and even reaching out to Tehran – marks yet another consequence of Barack Obama's imploding foreign policy. Mr. Pipes (DanielPipes.org) is president of the Middle East Forum. © 2013 by Daniel Pipes. All rights reserved.
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Tuesday, December 3, 2013
#1301: "Saudis Bristle at Obama's Outreach to Iran" - Pipes in Wash. Times
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