The Pak Banker

Saudi Arabia still needs the US

- Dov S. Zakheim

China has just announced that foreign visitors no longer will be subject to its previously strict COVID-driven quarantine requiremen­ts. It was not that long ago that Xi Jingping, fresh from his third coronation as the country's president, made an overseas trip of his own, to Saudi Arabia.

There, the Chinese leader met with his Saudi counterpar­ts and signed a series of agreements that underscore­d the growing relationsh­ip between the two countries.

Many observers have seen Xi's two-day visit to Riyadh just over two weeks ago as a "snub" to Washington, especially after President Biden's visit to the Kingdom in July accomplish­ed virtually nothing.

Xi and King Salman signed what they termed "a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p agreement," which the Chinese president posited constitute­d a "new era" in the ties between the two countries. Again, in contrast to the outcome of the Biden visit, Xi and the king agreed to hold future summit meetings every two years.

Xi's visit also was the occasion for Chinese and Saudi companies to sign 34 agreements, worth anywhere from $29 billion to $50 billion, depending on which report one chooses to believe. The agreements cover the gamut of economic activity, including tourism, green energy, transporta­tion, logistics, the medical industry, informatio­n technology, genetics, mining and constructi­on.

The two countries also signed an agreement to "harmonize" Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ambitious Vision 2030, which seeks to transform his country's economy, and China's Belt and Road Initiative, which has sputtered in recent years.

If the tone and tenor of the Xi love-fest in the Kingdom's capital were not enough to disconcert Washington, his visit also occasioned the signing of an expansive memorandum with Huawei, China's hi-tech giant. In a policy that has wide bipartisan support, Washington has sought to prevent Huawei's worldwide

expansion on the grounds that it is a critical cog in Beijing's internatio­nal espionage campaigns, including spying on American military communicat­ions. The memorandum therefore underscore­s the increasing­ly cold relationsh­ip between the United States and its long-standing ally.

China's increasing economic involvemen­t in Saudi Arabia does not necessaril­y translate into a security relationsh­ip, however. China may indeed be "an all-weather friend," as a former Pakistani prime minister once told me, but whatever the weather, that friendship has its strict limits. In particular, China has demonstrat­ed a reluctance to provide any country with security guarantees. Indeed, despite its joint proclamati­on with Russia just prior to the invasion of Ukraine, stating that "friendship between the two States has no limits, there are no 'forbidden' areas of cooperatio­n," Beijing has not felt compelled by its strategic partnershi­p to bolster Moscow's urgent need for military materiel.

Moreover, China's policy is to remain aloof from regional rivalries while spreading its influence throughout the Middle East. In that regard, Beijing is party to another long-term partnershi­p with the Kingdom's arch-enemy, Iran. Moreover, in contrast to Beijing's economic undertakin­gs with the Saudis, the 25-year China-Iran cooperatio­n agreement that the two countries signed in March 2021 not only involves a reported $400 billion Chinese investment in Iran, but has a major military component as well.

Indeed, in January, together with Russia, China held naval exercises in the northern Indian Ocean - they had also jointly exercised in 2019 - and in late April, Chinese State Councilor and Minister of National Defense Gen. Wei Fenghe led a senior military delegation to Beijing for talks on military cooperatio­n. Wei met with Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, as well as with his counterpar­t, Defense Minister Mohammad Reza Ashtiani, and with Armed Forces General Staff (AFGS) Chief of Staff Mohammad Bagheri. After his meeting with Wei, Bagheri confirmed journalist­ic speculatio­n that China and Iran had "agreed to expand bilateral cooperatio­n in joint military drills, exchange of strategies, training issues, and other common fields."

 ?? ?? ‘‘In January, together with Russia, China held naval exercises in the northern Indian Ocean - they had also jointly exercised in 2019 - and in late April, Chinese State Councilor and Minister of National Defense Gen. Wei Fenghe led a senior military delegation to Beijing for
‘‘In January, together with Russia, China held naval exercises in the northern Indian Ocean - they had also jointly exercised in 2019 - and in late April, Chinese State Councilor and Minister of National Defense Gen. Wei Fenghe led a senior military delegation to Beijing for

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan