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Saudi Arabia's double game in South Asia

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Saudi Arabia's double game in South Asia

CJ WERLEMAN

11 HOURS AGO

72699_AP_19289329934930_1582278610283.jpg


Saudi Arabia's prioritising of profit over principle has grown exponentially under Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman.

Saudi Arabia has jealously guarded its claim to being the “guardian of Islam” by being the undisputed leader in donating humanitarian aid to the Muslim world, with foreign aid contributions exceeding $90 billion – or 3.7 percent of its annual gross domestic product in thirty years spanning 1975 to 2005.

But in its current era of defacto Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman (MBS) rule, the Kingdom is replacing its previously expressed care for Muslim causes with the cold-hearted calculations of realpolitik.

Under MBS, Saudi Arabia is undergoing what can be viewed as an identity transformation, moving away from its brand of ultra-orthodox Islam towards a new nationalism - a move that rolls back the influence and control of the country’s religious establishment over the House of Saud. This, in turn, creates the political space for the MBS-led monarchy to be constrained less by religious notions portending to morality, and allow it to exact profits from its state-controlled oil business with ruthless efficiency.

On the rare recent instances it puts the weight of the monarchy behind a cause or crisis in the Muslim world, it does so but with begrudging reluctance, and typically because it has either trampled on or turned its back on an untouchable or sacred Islamic rail. This is no more evident than in the way it acted as a publicist for the US in soliciting Arab support for President Donald Trump’s so-called “Deal of the Century.”

The Saudis later publicly distanced themselves from the deal due to the broader Arab and Muslim anger towards what would’ve solidified a system of apartheid for the Palestinian people, while sanctifying Israel’s illegal claims to ownership of Jerusalem.

Saudi Arabia has danced a similar two-step with Pakistan over India’s human rights violations in Kashmir and New Delhi’s stripping of the Muslim majority territory’s “semi-autonomous” status.

On February 7, Saudi Arabia rejected Pakistan’s second plea for an urgent meeting of the council of Foreign Ministers on Kashmir at the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan responded by slamming of what he views as an apathetic Saudi response by saying, “We can’t even come together as a whole on the OIC Summit meeting on Kashmir.”

The following day, Saudi Arabia, responding to global criticism, performed a diplomatic U-turn, announcing it would work together with Pakistan to “advance the Kashmir cause,” including from the platform of the OIC.

Until now, the Saudi government has shown almost zero interest in the safety and well being of eight million Muslims in Kashmir, even seemingly pretending as though the Narendra Modi-led Indian government hasn’t set in motion the workings of a Hindu-settler-colonial project, akin to Israel’s colonisation of the Palestinian West Bank, euphemistically describing it as an “internal issue.”

Saudi Arabia’s muted response to Kashmir is explained by its petroleum sales to India, with the Kingdom now the Asian country’s second-largest supplier.

In October of last year, the trade ties between Riyadh and New Delhi became even stronger on the back of a bilateral deal that will ensure Saudi owned Aramco helps India build the capacity to hold emergency crude oil reserves as a “buffer against volatility in oil prices and supply disruptions.

Expect ties between Riyadh and New Delhi to grow ever closer in the coming years and decades, a relationship that will come at the expense of both Pakistan and the Kashmiri people.

India’s economy is not only seven-times the size of Pakistan’s but is also fast becoming one of the Arab world’s most strategic partners.

“As a growing market for Arab oil and gas, as a source of highly trained and competent personnel, and as a friendly country with a powerful military and a strong interest in geopolitical stability, India is a valuable neighbour in a dangerous part of the world,” observes the Wall Street Journal.

Saudi Arabia’s apathy towards the ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar mirrors its attitude and behaviour towards Kashmir. Three weeks ago the United Nations’ highest court, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), ordered Myanmar to take emergency “protective measures” to guarantee the safety of the Muslim minority, but the Myanmar military has defied the ruling in continuing to carry out weekly, almost daily attacks on Rohingya villages in Rakhine state.

Neither Saudi Arabia nor the OIC has offered to take a lead role or play any role in resolving what is one of this century’s worst genocide campaigns. Why? Saudi Arabia ruthlessly and jealously protects its status as China’s top supplier of crude oil, and the Myanmar-China Oil and Gas Pipelines carry oil from the Arabian Peninsula to China’s landlocked Yunnan Province through Myanmar.

“One could argue that Saudi Arabia is less likely to be outspoken on this (Rohingya) issue because it actually relies on the Burmese government to protect the physical security of the pipeline,” Bo Kong, a senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who has written about China’s global petroleum policy, told the Associated Press.

There was a time, until very recently, that Saudi Arabia seized opportunities to enhance its reputation in the Muslim world, remembering it was the number one international donor towards cyclone relief in Bangladesh in 2007 and provided Pakistan with $220 million in humanitarian aid for the 2010 floods. But now under MBS, Saudi Arabia is moving away from its religiously inspired generosity and morality, and in its place is embracing nationalism and the maximisation of petroleum profits.

https://www.trtworld.com/opinion/saudi-arabia-s-double-game-in-south-asia-33993
 
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Very realistic picture presented in the article. Saudi will lose support if it changes the policies of its old kings. KL summit was just a start, OIC will soon be replaced if they keep it useless as it is.
 
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Saudi Arabia's double game in South Asia

CJ WERLEMAN
MBS DOING WHATEVER IT CAN TO HARM SAUDI PAK TIES. THIS WILL SURELY AFFECT NUCLEAR UMBRELLA PROVIDED BY PAK TO RACIST SAUDI REGIME IN FUTURE WHEN ISRAELIS START BEATING THE DRUM OF WARS AT THEIR DOOR STEP. I WONDER WHO'S GONNA SAVE THEM THEN.
11 HOURS AGO

72699_AP_19289329934930_1582278610283.jpg


Saudi Arabia's prioritising of profit over principle has grown exponentially under Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman.

Saudi Arabia has jealously guarded its claim to being the “guardian of Islam” by being the undisputed leader in donating humanitarian aid to the Muslim world, with foreign aid contributions exceeding $90 billion – or 3.7 percent of its annual gross domestic product in thirty years spanning 1975 to 2005.

But in its current era of defacto Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman (MBS) rule, the Kingdom is replacing its previously expressed care for Muslim causes with the cold-hearted calculations of realpolitik.

Under MBS, Saudi Arabia is undergoing what can be viewed as an identity transformation, moving away from its brand of ultra-orthodox Islam towards a new nationalism - a move that rolls back the influence and control of the country’s religious establishment over the House of Saud. This, in turn, creates the political space for the MBS-led monarchy to be constrained less by religious notions portending to morality, and allow it to exact profits from its state-controlled oil business with ruthless efficiency.

On the rare recent instances it puts the weight of the monarchy behind a cause or crisis in the Muslim world, it does so but with begrudging reluctance, and typically because it has either trampled on or turned its back on an untouchable or sacred Islamic rail. This is no more evident than in the way it acted as a publicist for the US in soliciting Arab support for President Donald Trump’s so-called “Deal of the Century.”

The Saudis later publicly distanced themselves from the deal due to the broader Arab and Muslim anger towards what would’ve solidified a system of apartheid for the Palestinian people, while sanctifying Israel’s illegal claims to ownership of Jerusalem.

Saudi Arabia has danced a similar two-step with Pakistan over India’s human rights violations in Kashmir and New Delhi’s stripping of the Muslim majority territory’s “semi-autonomous” status.

On February 7, Saudi Arabia rejected Pakistan’s second plea for an urgent meeting of the council of Foreign Ministers on Kashmir at the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan responded by slamming of what he views as an apathetic Saudi response by saying, “We can’t even come together as a whole on the OIC Summit meeting on Kashmir.”

The following day, Saudi Arabia, responding to global criticism, performed a diplomatic U-turn, announcing it would work together with Pakistan to “advance the Kashmir cause,” including from the platform of the OIC.

Until now, the Saudi government has shown almost zero interest in the safety and well being of eight million Muslims in Kashmir, even seemingly pretending as though the Narendra Modi-led Indian government hasn’t set in motion the workings of a Hindu-settler-colonial project, akin to Israel’s colonisation of the Palestinian West Bank, euphemistically describing it as an “internal issue.”

Saudi Arabia’s muted response to Kashmir is explained by its petroleum sales to India, with the Kingdom now the Asian country’s second-largest supplier.

In October of last year, the trade ties between Riyadh and New Delhi became even stronger on the back of a bilateral deal that will ensure Saudi owned Aramco helps India build the capacity to hold emergency crude oil reserves as a “buffer against volatility in oil prices and supply disruptions.

Expect ties between Riyadh and New Delhi to grow ever closer in the coming years and decades, a relationship that will come at the expense of both Pakistan and the Kashmiri people.

India’s economy is not only seven-times the size of Pakistan’s but is also fast becoming one of the Arab world’s most strategic partners.

“As a growing market for Arab oil and gas, as a source of highly trained and competent personnel, and as a friendly country with a powerful military and a strong interest in geopolitical stability, India is a valuable neighbour in a dangerous part of the world,” observes the Wall Street Journal.

Saudi Arabia’s apathy towards the ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar mirrors its attitude and behaviour towards Kashmir. Three weeks ago the United Nations’ highest court, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), ordered Myanmar to take emergency “protective measures” to guarantee the safety of the Muslim minority, but the Myanmar military has defied the ruling in continuing to carry out weekly, almost daily attacks on Rohingya villages in Rakhine state.

Neither Saudi Arabia nor the OIC has offered to take a lead role or play any role in resolving what is one of this century’s worst genocide campaigns. Why? Saudi Arabia ruthlessly and jealously protects its status as China’s top supplier of crude oil, and the Myanmar-China Oil and Gas Pipelines carry oil from the Arabian Peninsula to China’s landlocked Yunnan Province through Myanmar.

“One could argue that Saudi Arabia is less likely to be outspoken on this (Rohingya) issue because it actually relies on the Burmese government to protect the physical security of the pipeline,” Bo Kong, a senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who has written about China’s global petroleum policy, told the Associated Press.

There was a time, until very recently, that Saudi Arabia seized opportunities to enhance its reputation in the Muslim world, remembering it was the number one international donor towards cyclone relief in Bangladesh in 2007 and provided Pakistan with $220 million in humanitarian aid for the 2010 floods. But now under MBS, Saudi Arabia is moving away from its religiously inspired generosity and morality, and in its place is embracing nationalism and the maximisation of petroleum profits.

https://www.trtworld.com/opinion/saudi-arabia-s-double-game-in-south-asia-33993
 
.
Saudi Arabia's double game in South Asia

CJ WERLEMAN

11 HOURS AGO

72699_AP_19289329934930_1582278610283.jpg


Saudi Arabia's prioritising of profit over principle has grown exponentially under Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman.

Saudi Arabia has jealously guarded its claim to being the “guardian of Islam” by being the undisputed leader in donating humanitarian aid to the Muslim world, with foreign aid contributions exceeding $90 billion – or 3.7 percent of its annual gross domestic product in thirty years spanning 1975 to 2005.

But in its current era of defacto Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman (MBS) rule, the Kingdom is replacing its previously expressed care for Muslim causes with the cold-hearted calculations of realpolitik.

Under MBS, Saudi Arabia is undergoing what can be viewed as an identity transformation, moving away from its brand of ultra-orthodox Islam towards a new nationalism - a move that rolls back the influence and control of the country’s religious establishment over the House of Saud. This, in turn, creates the political space for the MBS-led monarchy to be constrained less by religious notions portending to morality, and allow it to exact profits from its state-controlled oil business with ruthless efficiency.

On the rare recent instances it puts the weight of the monarchy behind a cause or crisis in the Muslim world, it does so but with begrudging reluctance, and typically because it has either trampled on or turned its back on an untouchable or sacred Islamic rail. This is no more evident than in the way it acted as a publicist for the US in soliciting Arab support for President Donald Trump’s so-called “Deal of the Century.”

The Saudis later publicly distanced themselves from the deal due to the broader Arab and Muslim anger towards what would’ve solidified a system of apartheid for the Palestinian people, while sanctifying Israel’s illegal claims to ownership of Jerusalem.

Saudi Arabia has danced a similar two-step with Pakistan over India’s human rights violations in Kashmir and New Delhi’s stripping of the Muslim majority territory’s “semi-autonomous” status.

On February 7, Saudi Arabia rejected Pakistan’s second plea for an urgent meeting of the council of Foreign Ministers on Kashmir at the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan responded by slamming of what he views as an apathetic Saudi response by saying, “We can’t even come together as a whole on the OIC Summit meeting on Kashmir.”

The following day, Saudi Arabia, responding to global criticism, performed a diplomatic U-turn, announcing it would work together with Pakistan to “advance the Kashmir cause,” including from the platform of the OIC.

Until now, the Saudi government has shown almost zero interest in the safety and well being of eight million Muslims in Kashmir, even seemingly pretending as though the Narendra Modi-led Indian government hasn’t set in motion the workings of a Hindu-settler-colonial project, akin to Israel’s colonisation of the Palestinian West Bank, euphemistically describing it as an “internal issue.”

Saudi Arabia’s muted response to Kashmir is explained by its petroleum sales to India, with the Kingdom now the Asian country’s second-largest supplier.

In October of last year, the trade ties between Riyadh and New Delhi became even stronger on the back of a bilateral deal that will ensure Saudi owned Aramco helps India build the capacity to hold emergency crude oil reserves as a “buffer against volatility in oil prices and supply disruptions.

Expect ties between Riyadh and New Delhi to grow ever closer in the coming years and decades, a relationship that will come at the expense of both Pakistan and the Kashmiri people.

India’s economy is not only seven-times the size of Pakistan’s but is also fast becoming one of the Arab world’s most strategic partners.

“As a growing market for Arab oil and gas, as a source of highly trained and competent personnel, and as a friendly country with a powerful military and a strong interest in geopolitical stability, India is a valuable neighbour in a dangerous part of the world,” observes the Wall Street Journal.

Saudi Arabia’s apathy towards the ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar mirrors its attitude and behaviour towards Kashmir. Three weeks ago the United Nations’ highest court, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), ordered Myanmar to take emergency “protective measures” to guarantee the safety of the Muslim minority, but the Myanmar military has defied the ruling in continuing to carry out weekly, almost daily attacks on Rohingya villages in Rakhine state.

Neither Saudi Arabia nor the OIC has offered to take a lead role or play any role in resolving what is one of this century’s worst genocide campaigns. Why? Saudi Arabia ruthlessly and jealously protects its status as China’s top supplier of crude oil, and the Myanmar-China Oil and Gas Pipelines carry oil from the Arabian Peninsula to China’s landlocked Yunnan Province through Myanmar.

“One could argue that Saudi Arabia is less likely to be outspoken on this (Rohingya) issue because it actually relies on the Burmese government to protect the physical security of the pipeline,” Bo Kong, a senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who has written about China’s global petroleum policy, told the Associated Press.

There was a time, until very recently, that Saudi Arabia seized opportunities to enhance its reputation in the Muslim world, remembering it was the number one international donor towards cyclone relief in Bangladesh in 2007 and provided Pakistan with $220 million in humanitarian aid for the 2010 floods. But now under MBS, Saudi Arabia is moving away from its religiously inspired generosity and morality, and in its place is embracing nationalism and the maximisation of petroleum profits.

https://www.trtworld.com/opinion/saudi-arabia-s-double-game-in-south-asia-33993
Very true article.
What Pakistan should do is keep them engaged. Force them to invest in Pakistan.
But keep away from them in regional matters. The only way forward is turkey and Malaysian blog. This would also satisfy the people of pakistan to great extent to be in minor leadership role.
 
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Very true article.
What Pakistan should do is keep them engaged. Force them to invest in Pakistan.
But keep away from them in regional matters. The only way forward is turkey and Malaysian blog. This would also satisfy the people of pakistan to great extent to be in minor leadership role.
TURKEY AND MALAYSIA JUST BARK AND DONT BITE BOTH ARE WEAK NATIONS NOBODY TAKES THEM SERIOUSLY
 
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As I said in another thread the facade of religious brotherhood is giving way to realpolitik and thats best for all parties involved. Saudis dont care about Kashmir and Pakistan cannot be hostile towards Iran in the way Saudi wants (we are neighbors for goodness sake). Its a relationship which has its limits and "religious brotherhood" has been used to enhance its facade in the past. With that going away now both parties get a better perception of where the other stands.
 
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Pakistanis are just an ungrateful lot. The more that Saudi does for Pakistan, the more Pakistanis expect. They (Pakistanis) never appreciate what was done for them but are quick to complain about what was not done for them. Saudi has no reason to go out of its way to accommodate Pakistan in the manner in which it did over the years since the formation of Pakistan. Instead, Pakistan takes huge handouts from Saudi, complaining all the way as they use it up
 
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A perfect article showing reality.

Thanks again for this masterpiece TRTWORLD. While our own Pakistani news agencies sleep and toe Bharti or so called neutral bias.
 
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Pakistanis are just an ungrateful lot. The more that Saudi does for Pakistan, the more Pakistanis expect. They (Pakistanis) never appreciate what was done for them but are quick to complain about what was not done for them. Saudi has no reason to go out of its way to accommodate Pakistan in the manner in which it did over the years since the formation of Pakistan. Instead, Pakistan takes huge handouts from Saudi, complaining all the way as they use it up

Shut up you Indian troll.

Pakistan is not going to jump in every war just because it is asked to do so. The Yemen war is wrong. Whether KSA likes this or not is upto them.
 
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Shut up you Indian troll.

Pakistan is not going to jump in every war just because it is asked to do so. The Yemen war is wrong. Whether KSA likes this or not is upto them.

He bears a Pakistani Flag .. lol. Whenever someone saying anything a bit Blunt...he is Either a Patwari or an Indian on PDF... Golden Days.

Btw, You like it or not...very recently Saudis forced PM Imran Khan Niazi to say NO to the Malaysian Summit. Thats is the Kind of Influence they have. They Infact "Summoned" your PM..and said.. DONT GO. ( and these are NOT MY words.. Read the Article )

Pakistan's Khan cancels trip to Malaysia under pressure from Saudi Arabia

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/pakistans-khan-cancels-trip-malaysia-under-pressure-saudi-arabia
 
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at least saudia has provided billion of dollars for nuclear progrm as well as first batch of f16 and are still providing billions and best thing is they dont ask to repay them.
Well said, the most unworthy "friends" are those who only give lip service. In real life, do you prefer a friend who always praises you but offers no help when you are in money trouble or a friend who doesn't seem to be very close but always comes in to save you from going bankrupcy? I'll choose the second.
 
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Pakistanis are just an ungrateful lot. The more that Saudi does for Pakistan, the more Pakistanis expect. They (Pakistanis) never appreciate what was done for them but are quick to complain about what was not done for them. Saudi has no reason to go out of its way to accommodate Pakistan in the manner in which it did over the years since the formation of Pakistan. Instead, Pakistan takes huge handouts from Saudi, complaining all the way as they use it up
And off course we haven’t done enough for them?

Well said, the most unworthy "friends" are those who only give lip service. In real life, do you prefer a friend who always praises you but offers no help when you are in money trouble or a friend who doesn't seem to be very close but always comes in to save you from going bankrupcy? I'll choose the second.
There is no free lunch in the world.
 
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