Lodi News-Sentinel

It’s time to change our stance on Saudi Arabia

- Elizabeth Shackelfor­d is a senior fellow on U.S. foreign policy with the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. She was previously a U.S. diplomat and is author of “The Dissent Channel: American Diplomacy in a Dishonest Age.”

America’s longstandi­ng partnershi­p with Saudi Arabia has become a deal with the devil. But the devil isn’t holding up his end of the bargain. It’s time we gave up on it too.

It’s never been a good look for the United States, a self-proclaimed champion of democracy and human rights, to be the security guarantor of an abusive monarchy that treats women like property and long placed policing in the hands of an extremist religious faction.

And yet we justify this close partnershi­p largely in the name of security — our secure access to oil, to be more specific. The war in Ukraine has demonstrat­ed that this access isn’t there.

Saudi Arabia holds the second largest oil reserves in the world and, more importantl­y, an unmatched capacity to increase supply at times of crisis. Saudi Arabia has also been key to maintainin­g the global trade of oil in U.S. dollars, which helps keeps our currency in high demand and stabilizes its value.

The partnershi­p was also considered essential to counter anti-American sentiment in the region, specifical­ly from Iran. This justificat­ion has always been a doubleedge­d sword, however, since Saudi Arabia helped foment antiAmeric­an sentiment, too, to the tune of billions of dollars it spent to promote Wahhabism, the radical and intolerant strain of Islam that laid the foundation for terrorist organizati­ons like alQaida and ISIS.

In return for these supposed benefits, the United States has been the kingdom’s security guarantor, providing not only a military presence but also military technology, advice, and a flood of arms and hardware. From 2009 to 2020, U.S. military sales to Saudi Arabia amounted to more than $100 billion. We have delivered hundreds of aircraft, dozens of Patriot missile defense systems, thousands of armored vehicles, four frigate warships and tens of thousands of missiles. The United States also has thousands of troops in Saudi Arabia still.

Even if you thought the trade-off of supporting the repressive state was once worthwhile, it’s hard to make the case today. Saudi Arabia has become an even worse actor than before, both at home and abroad.

Advocates of maintainin­g the relationsh­ip might point to modest reforms under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, also known as MBS, who took the de facto leadership position in 2015 when his father acceded to the throne. Those reforms, however, were rapidly undermined by brutal crackdowns on dissent and opposition.

MBS was lauded for permitting women to drive, but then promptly jailed many female activists as if to remind them that he retained full control. In 2017, he purged competitio­n within the royal family when he had hundreds of potential rivals and opponents detained for months, some reportedly tortured.

The murder and dismemberm­ent of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018 was a particular­ly grotesque display of MBS’s brazen assault on critics.

MBS has also championed a more aggressive — and problemati­c — foreign policy. Rather than helping secure our interests in the region, our military support emboldened the Saudi state to act uncompromi­singly in a dangerous neighborho­od. If it was ever a stabilizin­g presence there, that no longer appears to be the case.

Saudi Arabia’s role in Yemen’s civil war since 2015 has exacerbate­d the conflict. The kingdom often strikes civilian targets, including school buses and hospitals, and since the United States has been Saudi Arabia’s primary weapons supplier, we are guilty as accomplice­s in these crimes. Saudi Arabia’s continued blockade of the country has caused severe human suffering. Despite President Joe Biden’s campaign commitment­s to end our support for the war, the United States has continued to provide weapons that help Saudi Arabia maintain its brutal fight.

Saudi Arabia has also been an ever-present spoiler of U.S. efforts to secure a nuclear deal with Iran, including recent attempts by the Biden administra­tion to restore the defunct deal. While it might be in Saudi Arabia’s interest to keep Iran under the yoke of a strict sanctions regime, the U.S. interest is clearly in a diplomatic solution.

Successive U.S. administra­tions have tolerated Saudi Arabia’s foul play on the promise that, one day, the kingdom’s capacity to deliver oil to the world market would insulate the United States from dire economic and security harm at just the time we would need it most.

That time has come. Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, gas prices have surged. Europe’s dependence on Russian oil and gas remains the main obstacle to Europe joining the United States in banning Russian energy imports. This means Europe continues to provide Russia with resources to fight its war, to the tune of nearly $1 billion a day.

Saudi Arabia, however, has — quite literally — failed to answer America’s call. When faced with a clear opportunit­y to assist its security guarantor on a matter of the gravest importance by pumping more oil to help supply Europe and take the pressure off world gas prices, Saudi Arabia has declined.

As recently as March, the United States answered Saudi Arabia’s pleas for additional Patriot missiles to help it fend off attacks from rebels in Yemen. But that failed to persuade Saudi Arabia to grant America’s request to pump more oil.

If Saudi Arabia can’t side with the United States against Russia in the face of its indefensib­le aggression against Ukraine, it’s high time the U.S. asked what this partnershi­p is good for. Our support of Saudi Arabia has never paid off, and that’s never been more clear than now.

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