Riyadh was fully aware the beheading
of respected Saudi Shi'ite cleric Nimr al-Nimr was a deliberate
provocation bound to elicit a rash Iranian response.
The Saudis calculated they could get away with it; after all
they employ the best American PR machine petrodollars can buy, and are
viscerally defended by the usual
gaggle of nasty
US neo-cons.
In
a post-Orwellian world "order" where war is peace and
"moderate" jihadis get a free pass, a House of Saud oil hacienda
cum beheading paradise — devoid of all civilized norms
of political mediation and civil society participation — heads the UN
Commission on Human Rights and fattens the US industrial-military complex
to the tune of billions of dollars while merrily exporting demented
Wahhabi/Salafi-jihadism from MENA (Middle East-Northern Africa)
to Europe and from the Caucasus to East Asia.
And yet major trouble looms. Erratic King Salman's move
of appointing his son, the supremely arrogant and supremely ignorant
Prince Mohammad bin Salman to number two in the line
of succession has been contested even among Wahhabi hardliners.
But
don't count on petrodollar-controlled Arab media to tell the story.
English-language TV network Al-Arabiyya, for instance, based
in the Emirates, long financed by House of Saud members, and
owned by the MBC conglomerate, was bought by none other
than Prince Mohammad himself, who will also buy MBC.
With oil at less than $40 a barrel, largely thanks to Saudi
-Arabia's oil waragainst both
Iran and Russia, Riyadh's conventional wars are taking a terrible toll. The
budget has collapsed and the House of Saud has been forced to raise
taxes.
The illegal war on Yemen, conducted with full US acquiescence,
led by — who else — Prince Mohammad, and largely carried out by
the proverbial band of mercenaries, has instead handsomely profited
al-Qaeda in the Arabic Peninsula (AQAP), just as the war
on Syria has profited mostly Jabhat al-Nusra, a.k.a. al-Qaeda in Syria.
Three months ago, Saudi ulemas called for a jihad not only
against Damascus but also Tehran and Moscow without the
"civilized" West batting an eyelid; after all the ulemas were
savvy enough to milk the "Russian aggression" bandwagon,
comparing the Russian intervention in Syria, agreed with Damascus,
with the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
US Think Tank-land revels in spinning that the beheading provocation
was a "signal" to Tehran that Riyadh will not tolerate Iranian
influence among Shi'ites living in predominantly Sunni states. And
yet Beltway cackle that Riyadh hoped to contain "domestic Shi'ite
tensions" by beheading al-Nimr does not even qualify as a lousy
propaganda script. To see why this is nonsense, let's take a quick tour
of Saudi Arabia's Eastern province.
All Eyes on Al Sharqiyya
Saudi Arabia is essentially a huge desert island. Even though the oil
hacienda is bordered by the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, the Saudis don't
control what matters: the key channels of communication/energy exporting
bottlenecks — the Bab el-Mandeb and the Straits of Hormuz, not
to mention the Suez canal.
Enter US "protection" as structured in a Mafia-style
"offer you can't refuse" arrangement; we guarantee safe passage
for the oil export flow through our naval patrols and you buy
from us, non-stop, a festival of weapons and host our naval bases
alongside other GCC minions. The "protection" used to be
provided by the former British empire. So Saudi Arabia — as well
as the GCC — remains essentially an Anglo-American
satrapy.
Al
Sharqiyya — the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia — holds only 4
million people, the overwhelming majority Shi'ites. And yet it produces no less
than 80% of Saudi oil.
The heart of the action is the provincial capital Al Qatif, where
Nimr al-Nimr was born. We're talking about the largest oil hub on the
planet, consisting of 12 crisscrossed pipelines that connect
to massive Gulf oil terminals such as Dhahran and Ras Tanura.
Enter the strategic importance of neighboring Bahrain.
Historically, all the lands from Basra in southern Iraq
to the peninsula of Musandam, in Oman — traditional trade
posts between Europe and India — were known as Bahrain
("between two seas").
Tehran could easily use neighboring Bahrain to infiltrate Al
Sharqiyya, detach it from Riyadh's control, and configure a "Greater
Bahrain" allied with Iran.
That's the crux of the narrative peddled
by petrodollar-controlled media, the proverbial Western
"experts", and incessantly parroted in the Beltway.
There's
no question Iranian hardliners cherish the possibility of a perpetual
Bahraini thorn on Riyadh's side. That would imply weaponizing a popular
revolution in Al Sharqiyya. But the fact is not even Nimr al-Nimr
was in favor of a secession of Al Sharqiyya.
And that's also the view of the Rouhani administration
in Tehran. Whether disgruntled youth across Al Sharqiyya will finally
have had enough with the beheading of al-Nimr it's another story; it
may open a Pandora's box that will not exactly displease the IRGC
in Tehran.
But
the heart of the matter is that Team Rouhani perfectly understands the
developing Southwest Asia chapter of the New Great Game, featuring the
re-emergence of Iran as a regional superpower; all of the House
of Saud's moves, from hopelessly inept to major strategic
blunder, betray utter desperation with the end of the old
order.
That
spans everything from an unwinnable war (Yemen) to a blatant
provocation (the beheading of al-Nimr) and a non sequitur such as the
new Islamic 34-nation anti-terror coalition which most alleged members didn't
even know they were a part of.
The supreme House of Saud obsession rules, drenched in fear and
loathing: the Iranian "threat".
Riyadh, which is clueless on how to play geopolitical chess —
or backgammon — will keep insisting on the oil war, as it cannot
even contemplate a military confrontation with Tehran.
And everything will be on hold, waiting for the next tenant
of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue; will he/she be tempted to pivot back to Southwest
Asia, and cling to the old order (not likely, as Washington relies
on becoming independent from Saudi oil)?
Or
will the House of Saud be left to its own — puny — devices
among the shark-infested waters of hardcore geopolitics?
Pepe Escobar is an analyst for
RT and TomDispatch, and a frequent contributor to websites and radio shows
ranging from the US to East Asia. Born in Brazil, he's been a foreign
correspondent since 1985, and has lived in London, Paris, Milan, Los Angeles,
Washington, Bangkok and Hong Kong.
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