By Robert Fisk
27 March 2015
Saudi Arabia has jumped into the abyss.
Its air attacks on Yemen are a historic and
potentially fatal blow to the Kingdom and to the Middle East.
Who decided that this extraordinary battle should take
shape in the poorest of Arab nations? The Saudis, whose King is widely rumoured
in the Arab world to be incapable of taking decisions of state? Or the princes
within the Saudi army who fear that their own security forces may not be loyal
to the monarchy?
The “story” of Yemen appears simple. Houthi rebels,
who are Shia Muslims, have captured the capital of Sanaa with the help – so say
the Saudis – of the Iranians. The legitimate President – Abed Rabou Mansour
Hadi – has fled to the Saudi capital of Riyadh from his bolthole in the old
southern Yemeni capital of Aden. The Saudis will not permit an Iranian proxy
state to be set up on their border – always forgetting that they already have
an Iranian-proxy state called Iraq on their northern border, courtesy of the
2003 Anglo-American invasion of Iraq. The real “story” is more important.
Perhaps half of the Saudi army is of Yemeni tribal origin. Saudi soldiers are
intimately – through their own families – involved in Yemen, and the Yemen
revolution is a stab in the guts of the Saudi royal family. No wonder King
Salman of Saudi Arabia – if he indeed rules his nation – wishes to bring this
crisis to an end. But are his bombing raids on Sanaa going to crush a Shia
Muslim rebellion?
You can understand what it looks like from Riyadh. To
the north, the Shia Muslim Iranian Revolutionary Guards are assisting the
Shia-dominated Iraqi government in their battle against Sunni Muslim Isis. To
the north-west, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards are assisting the government
of Alawite (for which read, Shia) president Bashar al-Assad against Isis and
al-Nusrah and whatever is left of the so-called “Free Syrian Army”. The Shia
Hezbollah from Lebanon are fighting alongside Assad’s army. So are Shia Muslims from Afghanistan, wearing
Syrian uniforms. Saudi Arabia claims the Iranians are in Yemen with the
Houthis. Unlikely. But be sure their weapons are in Yemen.
Unprecedented in modern Arab history, a Sunni Muslim
coalition of 10 nations – including non-Arab Pakistan – has attacked another
Arab nation. The Sunnis and the Shia of the Middle East are now at war with
each other in Iraq, in Syria and Yemen. Pakistan is a nuclear power. The armies
of Bahrain and the Gulf states include Pakistani soldiers. Pakistanis were
among the dead in the first great battle against Iraqi troops in the 1991 Gulf
War.
But already, the battle for Yemen is dividing other
Arab countries. In Lebanon, the former Sunni Muslim Prime Minister Saad Hariri
has praised the “brave and wise” decision of King Salman to attack. Mr Hariri
is not only a Sunni – he is also a Saudi citizen. But the Shia Hezbollah, who
oppose Saudi intervention, called the Saudi assault an “uncalculated
adventure”. These words were chosen with care. They are exactly the words the
Saudis used against Hezbollah after it captured three Israeli soldiers in 2006,
a stupid political act which started the Israeli bombardment of Lebanon that
year.
The Americans do not know what to do. They cannot give
the Saudis direct military assistance – their nuclear talks with Iran are more
important – and so their soft verbal support for King Salman is supposed to
mollify their Sunni allies and avoid antagonising the Iranians. But the closer
a nuclear deal comes between the US and Iran, the more forcefully their
partners in the Arab world will push their cards. What provoked the Saudis into
their extraordinary adventure in Yemen was not the approach of Houthis towards
Aden but the approach of US-Iranian agreement at Lausanne.
Hezbollah may call the Saudi attacks a “Saudi-American
conspiracy” – an overused phrase which contains some truth – but the reality,
evident to every Arab, is that the Saudis, armed (or over-armed, as many might
say) by the US, are clearly prepared to use their firepower against another Arab
nation rather than the traditional enemy further north. Listening to the
rhetoric of the Saudis, you might think that they were bombing Israel.
History may say that the attacks on Yemen are the
start of a great civil war between Sunnis and Shia in the Middle East. This
would satisfy the West – and Israel – in a belief that the Arabs are at war
with themselves. But it may also be true that this is the last attempt by the
Saudis to prove that they are a major military power. In 1990, faced with the
arrival of Saddam’s legions in Kuwait, they asked infidel America to protect
them (to the fury of Osama bin Laden). They are a Wahabi nation, loyal –
officially, at least – to the same theology as the Taliban and Isis. Saudi
provided 15 of the 19 hijackers of 9/11. They gave us Bin Laden, who – let us
not forget – was also of Yemeni tribal origin. After Yemen supported Saddam’s
invasion of Kuwait, the Saudis threw tens of thousands of Yemenis out of the
Kingdom. In revenge for their disloyalty. Do they expect Yemenis now to rally
to their support?
The last time the Saudis involved themselves in Yemen,
they fought Nasser’s Egyptian army. It was a disaster. Now they have the
Egyptians on their side. Indeed, they even suggest the Egyptians may stage a
landing in Yemen. But to do what? To ensure that Yemen remains a faithful Sunni
nation? Will this assuage the Sunni militias battering the Egyptian army in
Sinai?
More seriously, will it resolve the coming struggle
within the royal family, whose princes do not all believe Yemen must be the
cornerstone of Saudi power – nor that Wahabism must be the permanent sectional
belief. And who gains from the new Yemen crisis? The oil producers, of course.
And that means Saudi Arabia – and Iran.
Robert Fisk is The Independent’s multiple award-winning Middle East
correspondent, based in Beirut
Source:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/the-battle-for-the-middle-easts-future-begins-in-yemen-as-saudi-arabia-jumps-into-the-abyss-10140145.html
URL: https://newageislam.com/the-war-within-islam/the-battle-middle-east-future/d/102169