The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Contributor
WHEN Saudi Arabia
executed the Shiite cleric and political dissident Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr
on Saturday, the country’s leaders were aware that doing so would upset
their longtime rivals in Iran.
In fact, the royal court in Riyadh was probably counting on it. It got
what it wanted. The deterioration of relations has been precipitous:
Protesters in Tehran sacked Saudi Arabia’s embassy; in retaliation,
Saudi Arabia severed diplomatic ties. More severe fallout could follow —
possibly even war.
Why
did Saudi Arabia want this now? Because the kingdom is under pressure:
Oil prices, on which the economy depends almost entirely, are
plummeting; a thaw in Iranian-American relations threatens to diminish
Riyadh’s special place in regional politics; the Saudi military is
failing in its war in Yemen.
In
this context, a row with Iran is not a problem so much as an
opportunity. The royals in Riyadh most likely believe that it will allow
them to stop dissent at home, shore up support among the Sunni majority
and bring regional allies to their side. In the short term, they may be
right. But eventually, stoking sectarianism will only empower
extremists and further destabilize an already explosive region.
Over
the past decade, Saudi rulers have turned to Iran and Shiites every
time they needed an easy scapegoat. Anti-Iranian and anti-Shiite
sentiments have long existed among religious extremists in the kingdom,
but today they are at the heart of Saudi Arabia’s national identity.
This development is dangerous for Saudi Arabia’s Shiite community,
estimated at 10 to 15 percent of the population, and for the entire
Middle East.
This
is hardly the first time Saudi Arabia’s Shiites have come under fire.
Sectarianism under Saudi rule dates back to the early 20th century. But
until recently, the kingdom’s leaders have balanced strong-armed tactics
with efforts to accommodate community leaders, seeking to minimize the
dangers of sectarianism.
After
the 2003 invasion of Iraq unleashed a new wave of Sunni-Shiite tension
across the Middle East, Riyadh started to shift course. But in 2011, as
the Arab world exploded in popular protests, the Saudi government
cemented its commitment to sectarian confrontation. The Shiite majority
population in neighboring Bahrain rose up against the Sunni-dominated
monarchy. The Shiite minority in Saudi Arabia also took to the streets,
protesting for political reform.
Invoking
Iran and Shiites as a terrifying menace, Saudi rulers framed everything
from domestic protests to intervention in Yemen in sectarian terms and
in the process sought not only to demonize a minority group, but also to
undermine the appeal of political reform and protest.
Sheikh
Nimr had a long history of challenging the Saudi ruling family, but it
was his post-2011 activism that led to his execution. After speaking
defiantly about anti-Shiite discrimination, he was chased and arrested
by Saudi police in July 2012. The police who apprehended him claimed
that he had fired on them. Officially, Sheikh Nimr was executed for
sedition and other charges. More likely, he was executed for being
critical of power. He was not a liberal, but he gave voice to the kinds
of criticisms the Saudi royals fear most and tolerate least.
Still,
Sheikh Nimr’s execution was more important for what it communicated to
the kingdom’s domestic allies and to potential future dissidents. The
emergence of anti-Shiite sentiment over the past decade has not only
been used to stamp out efforts by the Shiite minority to gain more
political rights. In quashing calls for democracy originating from the
Shiite community, Riyadh has also undermined broader demands for
political reform by casting protesters as un-Islamic. Many Sunni
reformers who cooperated with Shiites in the past have since stopped.
The
Saudi authorities have good reason to be concerned about new calls for
reform. About a week before Sheikh Nimr’s execution, the kingdom
announced that it was facing an almost $100 billion deficit for its 2016
national budget. Declining oil revenues may soon force the kingdom to
slash spending on social welfare programs, subsidized water, gasoline
and jobs — the very social contract that informally binds ruler and
ruled in Saudi Arabia. The killing of a prominent member of a loathed
religious minority deflects attention from impending economic pressure.
The
danger in Saudi Arabia’s ongoing sectarian and anti-Iranian incitement —
of which Sheikh Nimr’s execution is just one part — is that it is
uncontrollable. As is clear in Syria, Iraq and even further afield,
sectarian hostility has taken on a life beyond what the kingdom’s
architects are able to manage. This has already proved to be the case in
Saudi Arabia, where terrorists aligned with the Islamic State have
carried out several suicide bombings on Shiite mosques in the past year.
The
real problem is not just that Saudis are willing to live with violent
sectarianism. They are now beholden to it, too. That the kingdom’s
leaders have embraced sectarianism so recklessly suggests that they have
little other choice. This should be frightening, considering more is
likely to be in store. But it should also be clarifying for those who
believe that Saudi Arabia is a force for stability in the Middle East.
It is not.
No comments:
Post a Comment