Arming the Saudis

by: Stephen Zunes, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis

Arming the Saudis
(Photo: The U.S. Army / Flickr)

The Pentagon has announced a $60 billion arms package to the repressive family dictatorship in Saudi Arabia, the largest arms sale of its kind in history. Rejecting the broad consensus of arms control advocates that the Middle East is too militarized already and that the Saudis already possess military capabilities well in excess of their legitimate security needs, the Obama administration is effectively insisting that this volatile region does not yet have enough armaments and that the United States must send even more.

According to reports, Washington is planning to sell 84 new F-15 fighters and three types of helicopters: 72 Black Hawks, 70 Apaches and 36 Little Birds. There are also reports of naval missile-defense upgrades in the works.

Though supporters of such arms sales argue that if the United States did not sell weapons to the oil-rich kingdom, someone else would, neither the Obama administration nor its predecessors have ever expressed interest in pursuing any kind of arms control agreement with other arms-exporting countries. A number of other arms exporters, such as Germany, are now expressing their opposition to further arms transfers to the region due to the risks of exacerbating tensions and promoting a regional arms race.

The United States is by far the largest arms exporter in the world, surpassing Russia - the second-largest arms exporter - by nearly two to one.

The Iranian Rationalization

The ostensible reason for the proposed arms packages is to counter Iran's growing military procurement in recent years, though Iranian military spending is actually substantially less than it was 25 years ago. Furthermore, Iran's current military buildup is based primarily on the perceived need to respond to the threatened US attack against that country, a concern made all the more real by the US invasion and occupation of two countries bordering Iran on both its east and west in recent years.

This US insistence on countering Iran through further militarizing this already overly militarized region is particularly provocative. Not only has the United States refused to engage in serious negotiations with Iran regarding mutual security concerns, but it has discouraged its regional allies from pursuing arms control talks or other negotiations that could ease tensions between the Arab monarchies and the Islamic Republic. If the Obama administration were really interested in addressing its purported concerns regarding Iranian militarization, it would be willing to engage in more serious diplomacy to limit the procurement of conventional arms on a region-wide basis.

In addition to alleged worries about Iran as a military threat to the region, US officials have also tried to justify the arms package as a means to respond to Iran's growing political influence. However, most of Iran's enhanced role in the region in recent years is a direct consequence of the decision by the Bush administration - backed by the current vice president, secretary of state, secretary of defense, and other leading Obama administration officials - to overthrow the secular anti-Iranian regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq and replace it with a new government dominated by pro-Iranian Shiite parties. Another key element of Iran's growing influence is the earlier US decision to oust the anti-Iranian Taliban of Afghanistan and replace it with a regime dominated by tribal war lords, a number of whom have close Iranian ties. Similarly, Iranian influence has also increased in the Levant as a direct consequence of US-backed Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip and Lebanon, which have strengthened popular political support for Hamas and Hezbollah and their ties to Iran.

Iran's emergence as a major regional military power also took place as a result of earlier American arms transfers. Over a 25-year period, the United States pushed the autocratic regime of Shah Reza Pahlavi to purchase today's equivalent of over $100 billion worth of American armaments, weapons systems and support, creating a formidable military apparatus that ended up in the hands of radically anti-American Shiite clerics following that country's 1979 Islamic revolution.

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Rather than respond to these setbacks by further militarization, the Obama administration should, instead, seriously re-evaluate its counterproductive propensity to try to resolve Middle Eastern security concerns primarily through military means. Instead of meeting the legitimate defensive needs of America's allies, the proposed deal is yet another arrogant assertion of American military hegemony. As US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns put it in 2007 in response to a previous arms package to the Saudis, such weapons transfers "say to the Iranians and Syrians that the United States is the major power in the Middle East and will continue to be and is not going away."

As exiled Saudi activist Ali Alyami of the Center for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia put it, "Appeasing and protecting the autocratic Saudi dynasty and other tyrannical regimes in the Arab world will not bring peace, stability, or an end to extremism and terrorism."

There is also the possibility that, as with Iran following the 1979 revolution, US arms provided to the Saudis could end up in the hands of radical anti-American forces should the government be overthrown. The Saudi regime is even more repressive than Iran's in terms of its treatment of women, gays, religious minorities and political dissidents. Indeed, seeing their countries' wealth squandered on unnecessary weapons systems pushed on them by the US government and suffering under their despotic rulers kept in power in large part through such military support are major causes of the growing appeal of anti-American extremism among the people of the Middle East.

More Arms, Less Security

US officials insist that the Saudis alone are responsible for their procurement of these sophisticated weapons. Yet, underneath this convenient claim of Saudi sovereignty that supposedly absolves the United States of any responsibility in the arms purchases and their deleterious effects, lies a practice that can be traced as far back as the 1940s: The U.S Defense Department routinely defines the kingdom's security needs, often providing a far more pessimistic analysis of the country's security situation than do more objective strategic analyses. Conveniently, these alleged needs lead directly to purchases of specific US weapons.

As Robert Vitalis, director of the Middle East Center at the University of Pennsylvania, looking at the history of US arms transfers to the Saudi royal family, observed,

"If the billions have not been useful to the Saudis, they were a gold mine for Congresspersons compelled to cast pro-Saudi votes, along with cabinet officials and party leaders worried about the economy of key states and electoral districts. To the extent that the regime faces politically destabilizing cutbacks in social spending, a proximate cause is the strong bipartisan push for arms exports to the Gulf as a means to bolster the sagging fortunes of key constituents and regions - the "gun belt" - that represents the domestic face of internationalism."

These military expenditures place a major toll on the fiscal well-being of Middle Eastern countries. Military expenditures often total half of central government outlays. Many senior observers believe that debt financing in Saudi Arabia that has been used in the past to finance arms purchases has threatened the kingdom's fragile social pact of distributing oil rents to favored constituents and regions.

A very important factor, often overlooked, is that a number of Middle Eastern states - such as Egypt, Jordan, Tunisia and Morocco - are highly dependent on Saudi Arabia for financial assistance. As Saudi Arabia spends more and more on arms acquisitions, it becomes less generous, leading to serious budget shortfalls throughout the Arab world. The result is that these arms sales may be causing more instability and, thereby, threatening these countries' security interests more than they are protecting them.

The implications of these ongoing arms purchases are ominous on several levels. For example, one of the most striking, but least talked about for the Middle East, is the "food deficit," the amount of food produced relative to demand. With continued high military spending - combined with rapid population growth and increased urbanization - the resulting low investments in agriculture have made this deficit the fastest growing in the world.

For these and other reasons, ultimately the largest number of civilian casualties, the greatest amount of social disorder and the resulting strongest anti-American sentiment may come as a consequence of US-supplied weapons systems and ordinance that are never actually used in combat.

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Stephen Zunes is a professor of politics and chair of Middle Eastern studies at the University of San Francisco.


Comments

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Where have you been? You

Where have you been? You live in the U.S.A., the world's leading arms dealer and number 1 militaristic nation in the world. The military budget is larger than the rest of the world's combined. And the U.S.A. is the leading arms supplier to the underdeveloped nations of the world. What part of that do you not understand? Saudi Arabia is just one more sale for a corporate campaign donor and the Middle East is a marketing opportunity for more arms sales. Get with the program. Is this a great country or what!



This is so flipping

This is so flipping neat!

Here, we have trouble keeping Saturday night specials limited to Saturday, though we are pretty effective about localizing the violence through impeccable social stratification.

Food shortage? With chemical and drug companies colluding to create indestructible "stuff" to pour down our craws, and our illustrious legal system upholding their chicanery, how can we go wanting?

Shame on us for not just sitting down and not purchasing, not participating in the stampede.



The West's expectation is to

The West's expectation is to pit Saudi Sunnis against Iran/Pakistan Shia leading to significant gains. If I can see this, I am sure the Saudis and Iran/Pakistan is more aware of it. Saudis want more muscle so they can throw their weight around in the region. Eventually, it is going to be Israel, Saudis and Iran the three major powers in the Middle East with Superpowers backing one or two of the locals. The more things change, the more they remain the same. If we spend money on economic, social, and political development, humanity will benefit a lot more compared to continued spending on military industrial complex.



The irony of this "deal" is

The irony of this "deal" is that the US suppliers will be paid in US T-Bills......
Further "socializing" your debt....
Saudi gets the de-tuned version, and American
taxpayers end up paying for it.
Israel gets the state of the art version as a "gift",
and American taxpayers end up paying for it.
What a system.



This is a fragging joke. A

This is a fragging joke. A sick twisted fragging Joke.



Wait. Isn't someone going

Wait. Isn't someone going to blame this on Israel and the Zionist lobby?



Tunisia and Morocco are

Tunisia and Morocco are middle eastern states. Unbelievable! Have you ever seen a world map? You really need to go back to school for more education.



Arms shipments to the Shah

Arms shipments to the Shah of Iran
did not keep him in control of Iran.
One day the Saudi "royal family" will be toppled.
(hopefully by a secular revolution, not by
sociopathic religious nuts)



I guess we have already

I guess we have already forgotten that most of the 911 "terrorists" were from Saudi Arabia.



They want the Middle East to

They want the Middle East to tear itself apart, and then swoop into pick up the pieces, with shattered governments and their military unable to resist. Suzerainities will pop up all over.



The U.S. wants to be in

The U.S. wants to be in control of whom fights whom for whatever reason. That way they can't become too independent and start wide-scale conflicts without our assistance. They can keep the region in a perpetual state of conflict and therefore manageable. This is how Christianity trumps Islam with technological and economical superiority in order to seem theologically and ideologically right.



So the Saudis "already

So the Saudis "already possess military capabilities well in excess of their security needs." We send billions of dollars worth of armaments annually to the Israelis who "already possess military capabilities well in excess of their security needs."



The US wants to sell 2.3

The US wants to sell 2.3 trillion of useless arms into the region: UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt etc..

No danger for the US or its military base Israel, because the advanced modes aren't supplied or blocked. In case of a war against Iran the US will get a cheap supply from its regional allies.

Arabs must be very "intelligent" people.



Note: of all our industries,

Note: of all our industries, the military weapons' ones are very protected & NEVER outsources.



Now that the Persian Gulf

Now that the Persian Gulf has been put into the care of the Iranians by Dubya's massive blunder in Iraq, the US is going to need another counterweight to the most populous country in the region where the world gets a vast amount of the oil it depends on. Of course we could have left Iraq in situ with the strategic uncertainty as to whether it really had nuclear weapons (Saddam's purpose in not allowing inspections until forced to) where it instead of us or the Saudis could have served as the counterweight to the growing strength of a hostile Iran, but that would have required foresight and moderation on the part of Bush*, two things he was not known for even before 2000.



The only thing better than

The only thing better than the toppling of this & other Fascist dictatorships supported & installed by the US would be for the US government to be toppled by it's own people. The USA is the largest & most evil empire in the history of the world. The Mongols, the British, none are a match in size or pure evil. Even Stalin killed mostly his own & Hitler & Tojo only wanted what the Brits already had. Obama has everything from his James Bond killing squads to his kill from a desk drones & of course the "black prisons" have not gone away. You Americans should be ashamed of yourselves for letting this evil loose on the world!



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