The Star Malaysia

Gulf states seek to stop war from escalating

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Gulf states are pushing to stop a full-blown regional war after Iran’s unpreceden­ted retaliator­y strikes on Israel, sources in the region said, fearing new escalation could put them on front lines of a conflagrat­ion and ruin plans to reshape the region.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in particular may be well placed to triangulat­e between Iran, Israel and the United States after diplomatic advances in recent years that benefited all those countries.

Allies of Washington, Gulf monarchies have sought to stabilise ties with Iran and Israel to resolve longstandi­ng security concerns and allow them to focus on national projects.

The UAE and Bahrain signed a normalisat­ion deal with Israel in 2020 and Saudi Arabia was considerin­g a similar agreement also involving a US defence pact until the Gaza war torpedoed diplomacy. Riyadh also buried the hatchet with Iran last year after years of feuding.

However, the policy of detente now faces its greatest ever threat as the risk to wider regional peace raised by Israel’s conflict with Iran-backed Hamas in Gaza since Oct 7 comes to a head.

A direct war between Israel and Iran could swiftly expand to Gulf states whose air space lies between the pair, and which host several military bases of the United States, which has vowed to defend its ally Israel.

“Nobody wants an escalation. Everybody wants to contain the situation,” said a Gulf source close to government circles, adding that there was probably wide telephone diplomacy under way.

“The pressure is not on Iran alone. The pressure is now on Israel not to retaliate,” said the source, adding that the fallout of an Israeli attack on key Iranian sites “will affect all the region”.

Another Gulf source with knowledge of official thinking said Gulf states, Iraq and Jordan are pushing both Iran and Israel’s main backer the United States not to escalate. Washington was already pressing Israel to show restraint, both sources said.

At the same time, the United States was using Gulf countries to convey messages to Iran not to escalate any further, the source with knowledge of official thinking added.

“It is clear that America is using Gulf Arab allies to convey messages between Iran and the Americans. Saudi Arabia is maintainin­g contacts with Iran and there is an understand­ing to contain things,” the source said.

Still, both the sources as well as analysts in the Gulf believed the most dangerous moment may have passed.

“The Iranians took their shot,” said Abdulaziz al-sager, head of the Gulf Research Centre close to government circles, indicating that for Teheran, the escalatory phase was over, and adding that Washington did not want an escalation from Israel.

There have been many recent reminders of Gulf states’ vulnerabil­ity.

Iran on Saturday seized a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow stretch of water through which most Gulf energy exports pass, and has threatened to close shipping lanes there entirely.

Meanwhile, Yemen’s Iranbacked Houthi group, against which Saudi Arabia was fighting for years until moving towards a peace deal in December, has repeatedly attacked shipping and deployed drones towards Israel skirting Saudi airspace in recent months.

The Houthis had several times attacked key Saudi Arabian energy facilities in recent years before the peace talks gained momentum last year and retain the capacity to do so again.

In 2019, they hit key facilities in Saudi Arabia that process the vast majority of the country’s crude output and in 2022 they attacked three oil tanker trucks in the UAE.

“A conflagrat­ion will see the price of oil shooting up. The traffic of oil will be affected,” the source said, describing likely outcomes of a wider regional war.

The war in Gaza had already put policies of entente under strain.

The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain made peace with Israel in 2020 through the so-called ‘Abraham accords’.

 ?? AFP ?? Defensive might: A boy riding a donkey near one of the batteries of Israel’s Iron Dome missile system at a village in the Negev desert. —
AFP Defensive might: A boy riding a donkey near one of the batteries of Israel’s Iron Dome missile system at a village in the Negev desert. —

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