Iran vs. The Saudis: Their Proxy Wars Rage in Iraq and Across the Muslim
World

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/global.php?id=956000



By Peter Brookes
 
 Sunni insurgency, Sunni-Shia sectarian violence, al Qaeda terror - Iraq
doesn't need more problems. But it has one that too often gets overlooked:
It's quickly becoming the latest battlefield in the proxy war between the
Middle East's rising powers, Saudi Arabia and Iran. 

The Saudis are (mostly) Sunni Arabs, while the Iranians are (largely) Shiite
Persians - and each seeks to dominate the Middle East and lead the Muslim
world. Their growing rivalry is a major factor not just in Iraq but also in
Lebanon, the Palestinian territories and even Sudan. 

* In Lebanon, Saudi Arabia backs the government of Prime Minister Fouad
Siniora. Iran backs Shia Hezbollah, which has sought to topple the
democratically elected government since the end of the war with Israel last
summer. 

* In the Palestinian territories, both Iran and Saudi Arabia are courting
Hamas. While Tehran has long supported Hamas against Israel, Riyadh cut in
on Hamas' dance card in February by brokering a political agreement between
Hamas and Fatah at Mecca. 

* The Saudis recently stepped in to help ink a peace deal between Sudan and
neighboring Chad. They won points for preserving peace within Sunni Islam -
but also likely hoped to get Khartoum to stop Iran's funding of the
conversion of young Sunni Sudanese to Shiism. 

But Iraq is the major flashpoint. The Iranian regime seeks two basic things
there: 1) An ignominious defeat for America, leading to a U.S. withdrawal -
from the region, if possible; and 2) The establishment of a Shia-dominated,
pro-Iran Iraqi government. 

Tehran has been co-opting Shia politicians and clerics at least since the
war began. Firebrand, anti-Amerian cleric Muqtada al Sadr is a good example
of one who's increasingly in the Persian's pockets. 

But not all Iraqi Shia are sympathetic to Iranian encroachment. There's an
ethnic difference (Arab vs. Persian), too, as well as bitter memories from
the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. And many Iraqi Shia despise the aggressive brand
of Shiism pitched by the Iranians. 

Yet survival trumps other issues, and Tehran has made gains by providing
arms, money and training to the militias that have sometimes seemed the best
hope for Iraqi Shia, especially the poor, to resist attacks from Sunni
insurgents and al Qaeda suicide bombers. 

The Saudis, by contrast, largely back their fellow Sunnis in Iraq - with the
important exception of al Qaeda and the insurgents. Above all else, they
want to prevent Iraq from falling under Tehran's sway. One big fear is that
sectarian strife could flow over Iraq's borders into Saudi Arabia - stirring
up trouble with Saudi Arabia's Shia minority. 

Riyadh has been none too pleased with U.S. progress in Iraq; recently, it's
started taking matters quietly into its own hands. Covert Saudi support has
been flowing to places like Anbar, where Sunni tribal forces are being
"re-empowered." 

Happily, though, that support is bolstering the overall U.S. effort - for
the Sunnis of Anbar have been striking back at the strong (and
overwhelmingly foreign) al Qaeda presence in the province, rather than
fighting Iraqi Shiites. 

But the Saudis, unhappy with - and distrustful of - Shia ascendance in Iraq,
still refuse to meet with Iraq's Shia Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki,
despite repeated American requests. They remain an "insurance policy" for
their Iraqi co-religionists - a possible counter if the Shia start a new
round of sectarian violence or if Iran manages to install a puppet Iraqi
government down the line. 

Indeed, an adviser to the Saudi government wrote an op-ed last fall that
warned of a "massive Saudi intervention to stop Iranian-backed Shia militias
from butchering Iraqi Sunnis" if America pulls out of Iraq. (The Saudi
government disavowed the piece, but the signal remains.) 

There's no love lost in this relationship - the two sides have been foes
since the Islamic Republic of Iran emerged after the 1979 revolution. 

* In 1987, Iranian pilgrims tried to incite sectarian divisions while on the
holy Hajj to Mecca. Saudi security forces killed 402. 

* Iran was fingered in the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia, which
killed 19 American servicemen and injured nearly 400. 

* Al Qaeda operatives, who've supposedly been under "house arrest" in Iran
since shortly after arriving from Afghanistan in early 2002, are likely
behind the terrorist acts in Saudi Arabia that started in 2003. 

Naturally, both countries are spending billions on military modernization;
the Saudis will spend $60 billion over the next several years. Iran is
pursuing nuclear weapons while claiming it's a "peaceful" program; the
Saudis are now looking at developing "peaceful" nuclear energy of their own.


Sure, the Saudis and the Iranians have met a few times over tea to make
amends recently, but the signs aren't good. The rivalry is most likely only
to intensify.

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