Fareed Zakaria
Over the last two decades, the United States has approached the Middle East though its own conceptual frameworks – dictatorships versus democracy, secularism versus religion, order versus chaos.
However, the most significant trend shaping the region today is something different – Sunnis versus Shiites. That sectarian struggle now infects almost every aspect of the region’s politics. It has confounded U.S. foreign policy in the past and will continue to limit the ability of America, or any outside power, to stabilize the region.
In his prescient book, “The Shia Revival,” Vali Nasr argues that the American invasion of Iraq in 2003 was the tipping point. The United States saw itself as bringing democracy to Iraq, but people in the region saw something different – the upending of the balance of power. Sunnis, who make up 85 percent of Muslims, had long dominated the Arab world, even in Shiite-majority countries such as Iraq and Bahrain. But in one stroke, that changed. Iraq, a major Arab state, would now be ruled by Shiites. This rattled other Arab regimes, and their anxieties have only grown since then.
Though there always was tension, Sunnis and Shiites did live in peace, for the most part, until recently. In the 1960s and 1970s, the only Shiite power, Iran, was ruled by the shah, whose regime was neither religious nor sectarian. In fact, when the shah was overthrown, the country that first gave him safe harbor was Egypt, the region’s largest Sunni power, something unimaginable in today’s sectarian atmosphere.
The pivotal shift took place in 1979. The Islamic Revolution in Iran brought to power an aggressively religious ruling class, determined to export its ideas and support Shiites in the region. That same year, in Saudi Arabia, militant radicals took over the Grand Mosque in Mecca, proclaiming opposition to the royal family and its lax ways. The event scared the Saudis, pushing the regime substantially to the religious right. And Saudi Arabia’s governing ideology of Wahhabi Islam was always opposed to Shiites.
As Iran has expanded its influence in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria, Saudi Arabia has responded by adopting an even more sectarian edge to its policies.
A decade ago, Saudi officials spoke of the need to include and empower the country’s Shiite minority. Today Saudi Shiites are viewed with suspicion, seen by some as agents of Iran.
In Yemen, a civil war has become a sectarian one. In a report for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Farea al-Muslimi points out that now the two sides in Yemen refer to each other as “Persians” and “Daeshites” (coming from the Arab acronym for ISIS). Muslimi writes that “sectarian discourse has become more heated, reorganizing Yemeni society along sectarian lines and rearranging people’s relationships to one another on a non-nationalist basis.”
Saudi Arabia has real strategic concerns about Iran’s influence, especially in Iraq. As Ali al-Shihabi, a Saudi banker-turned-writer said to me, “Southern Iraq is full of Iranian-backed militias. That’s just a two-hour drive from Saudi Arabia’s oil fields. The kingdom has to be worried.” But the policy of sectarian warfare may be about more than simply geopolitics. Saudi Arabia is facing a series of challenges, from Daesh to domestic extremists. The country’s large and active social media is dominated by radical Islamists. And as oil prices plunge, government revenues have collapsed and the nation’s generous subsidies to its people will be hard to sustain. The regime needs greater legitimacy.
Add up last weekend’s execution of a prominent Shiite preacher, the break with Iran, the war in Yemen and Saudi policy toward Syria, and you see a more assertive, aggressive and sectarian foreign policy than Saudi Arabia has ever pursued. The strategy is not without risks, external and internal. About 10 percent to 15 percent of Saudi Arabia is Shiite, and they live in the Eastern province, atop the kingdom’s oil fields. Neighboring Bahrain and Yemen are now filled with resentful Shiites, who see Saudi Arabia as repressing them. And Iran will surely react to Saudi actions over time.
In general, the United States should support Saudi Arabia in resisting Iran’s encroachments in the region, but it should not take sides in the broader sectarian struggle. This is someone else’s civil war. After all, Washington’s principal ally in the fight against Daesh is the Shiite dominated-government in Baghdad. And besides, the single greatest threat to America emanating from the Middle East is from radical Sunni militants – many of whom have drawn inspiration, funding and doctrine from Saudi Arabia. There are very few good guys in this story.
Fareed Zakaria is published weekly by THE DAILY STAR. A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on January 11, 2016, on page 7.
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