Manawatu Standard

The gambler prince who would be king of Saudi Arabia

- GWYNNE DYER WORLD VIEW

By the end of 2015 the BND, the German foreign intelligen­ce service, had grown so concerned that it warned the government about Saudi Arabia’s new Deputy Crown Prince and defence minister, 30-year-old Muhammad bin Salman.

‘‘The previous cautious diplomatic stance of older leading members of the royal family,’’ it wrote, ‘‘is being replaced by an impulsive policy of interventi­on’’.

At that point, Prince bin Salman had been defence minister for just one year, but he had already launched a major military interventi­on in the civil war in Yemen and committed Saudi Arabia to open support for the rebels in the Syrian civil war.

He had also taken the bold decision to let oil production rip and the oil price crash.

No wonder the BND characteri­sed Prince bin Salman as ‘‘a political gambler who is destabilis­ing the Arab world through proxy wars in Yemen and Syria’’. Not just a gambler, but one who was betting on the wrong horses.

The first bet to fail was his interventi­on in the Yemeni civil war, with an aerial bombing campaign that has killed at least 10,000 Yemenis (around half of them civilians) and cost Saudi Arabia tens of billions of dollars.

Prince Muhammad bin Salman (or MBS, as he is known in diplomatic circles) sold the war as a short, sharp interventi­on that would defeat the Houthi rebels in Yemen and put Saudi Arabia’s own choice for the presidency, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, back in power.

It has turned into a long, exhausting war of attrition. The Houthis still control the capital, Sana’a, and Hadi will not be going home any time soon.

Then the Deputy Crown Prince’s second big bet, an open commitment to support the Syrian rebels, failed when the Syrian army, with Russian and Iranian help, reconquere­d eastern Aleppo last December.

Not one of Syria’s big cities is now under rebel control, and Saudi Arabia will have to live with a victorious and vengeful Assad regime.

MBS’S biggest gamble was his plan to restore the Saudi kingdom’s dominance in global oil markets by driving the new competitio­n, the American producers who get oil out of shale rock by fracking, into bankruptcy.

The frackers had doubled American oil production in eight years, but the extra US production was creating an over-supply in the market and depressing the price of oil. Then the prince decided to make matters worse.

He reckoned that the frackers were high-cost producers who would go broke if the price of oil stayed low enough for long enough.

So Saudi Arabia kept its own oil production high and persuaded its partners in the Organisati­on of Petroleum-exporting Countries (OPEC) to do the same.

At several points in the past two years the oil price fell below $30 per barrel, compared to a peak of $114 in 2014, but the strategy didn’t work as MBS had planned.

The US frackers shut down their less profitable operations temporaril­y and some smaller players went bankrupt, but the survivors are ready to ramp production up again as soon as the oil price improves.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has been burning through $100 billion a year in cash reserves to keep government services and subsidies going.

Last November, the prince admitted defeat. Saudi Arabia and its OPEC partners agreed to cut production by 1.2 million barrels per day, and Russia and Kazakhstan chipped in with another half million barrels.

The oil price is up to $55 per barrel, Saudi Arabia’s cash flow has improved and the political stresses at home due to wage and subsidy cuts have eased off.

But many people are asking: ‘‘What was all that about, then?’’

The prince is not a fool. He should have known that foreign interventi­ons in Yemen rarely succeed, that the Russian interventi­on in the Syrian civil war meant that Assad was likely to win, and that the American frackers could probably wait him out. In fact, he probably did know. The problem is that Muhammad bin Salman is in a hurry to produce some positive results.

His prominence at such an early age owes everything to the support of his father, King Salman, who ascended to the throne just two years ago.

But the king is 81 and in poor health (suffering from mild dementia, according to some) and his son is not his obvious successor.

Normally, the successor to the Saudi throne is not the current king’s son, but a senior prince chosen by his peers as best fitted to rule.

The current Crown Prince is 57-year-old Prince Muhammad bin Nayef. Even the title of Deputy Crown Prince is new and MBS owes it entirely to his father.

So to have any hope of succeeding to the throne when King Salman dies, Prince Muhammad bin Salman must prove his worth quickly.

That’s why he was open to such high-stakes, long-odds gambles. One big success could do the trick for him.

He is probably still up for another roll of the dice.

Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

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