By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Real Purpose Of A U.S.-Saudi
Security Agreement
Earlier this year, the
United States and Saudi Arabia were close to sealing a bilateral defense
treaty. The agreement’s terms are largely agreed upon, but its formal signing
was postponed amid the present conflict in the Middle East. Analysts have
frequently viewed this deal as but a piece of a larger puzzle. As conflict has
racked the Middle East since Hamas’s heinous October 7 terrorist attack, the
potential treaty tends to be characterized as one element of a “megadeal” aimed
at pacifying the region: a cease-fire in Gaza would set the stage for the
Saudis to normalize relations with Israel in return for a U.S. security
guarantee and strengthened American and Israeli commitments to Palestinian
statehood.
But that is the wrong
way to look at a U.S.-Saudi treaty. In reality, the impetus for such a treaty
preceded the conflict in Gaza. If signed, the agreement will not merely be
another transaction in which the United States pays for an Arab state to normalize
ties with Israel. The strategic context for it is global, not regional: If
successful, a U.S.-Saudi treaty will pave the way for better security
integration of U.S. partners in the Middle East and less direct American
intervention there. In the long run, it will not tie the United States down in
the region but help free Washington to act with greater latitude elsewhere. And
the deal will draw Washington’s most capable friends in the Middle East deeper
into efforts to address global challenges, including that posed by the rise of
China.
The Best Of Both Worlds
Few in Washington
question the current wisdom that the United States must increase its focus on
the Indo-Pacific or that doing so will require a decreased focus on the Middle
East, a region that continues to drain U.S. resources. Yet this trade-off holds
only if one considers the Middle East of middling importance in the United
States’ competition with China or conceives of U.S. national security strategy
as akin to a zero-sum game where policymakers merely push their pieces from one
region to another.
In reality, the
Middle East remains vitally important to both U.S. and Chinese interests. The
past year’s turmoil demonstrates not that U.S. attention to the region has been
futile but that the United States cannot ignore the region, however
much it may wish to do so, and that it urgently needs a new, more sustainable
strategy for securing its interests there. A bilateral defense treaty with
Saudi Arabia may seem an unusual response, as it might appear only to promise
deeper U.S. involvement in the Middle East. But if successful, a U.S.-Saudi
defense treaty would in fact shift more of the burden of addressing the
region’s troubles onto U.S. partners, limit Chinese influence, and even draw
partners closer in U.S.-led efforts to address global challenges and entrench
Washington’s preferred norms.
Such a treaty would
bring three potential strategic benefits. First, it would more closely bind
Saudi Arabia and the United States, solidifying one of Washington’s most
important partnerships in the Middle East. A mutual defense guarantee would be
the centerpiece of any U.S.-Saudi treaty, but any such treaty would also
facilitate cooperation between the two countries in sensitive high-tech areas
such as artificial intelligence and related supply chains as well as Saudi
access to U.S. defense technology. Such cooperation on technology would also
limit China’s opportunities in these areas and circumvent controversies that
often arise in the transactional, issue-by-issue negotiations that typically
characterize U.S. partnerships in the region. More frequent and routine
collaboration in technology could also help to entrench Washington’s preferred
norms and practices for data privacy and the regulation and transfer of
technology, potentially enabling their spread throughout the Middle East, given
Saudi Arabia’s economic and financial weight there.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia, September 2024
Second, the treaty
would help Saudi Arabia—and by extension, the region—manage and resolve crises
without extensive U.S. intervention. Saudi Arabia is already one of the world’s
top buyers of American and other Western arms. But this reliance is becoming
more of a strategic liability for Washington. With needy partners in Europe and
Asia, it is difficult to justify putting Saudi Arabia first in line for U.S.
arms sales, even if Riyadh pays up front and without assistance, unless it
plans to use those systems to advance mutual interests with the United States.
Selling one more shell or jet to Taiwan or Ukraine, for example, accomplishes
far more for U.S. interests than sending those tools to a partner that will not
or cannot use them. In a world of rekindled contention between great powers,
this strategic math is just as important as the financial calculus of arms
sales, if not more so.
A U.S.-Saudi defense
treaty would presumably bring more frequent military exchanges and exercises,
enabling the United States to better shape critical Saudi reforms that aim to
turn its military into a modern fighting force. These improved capabilities must
of course be accompanied by a willingness to act. Saudi Arabia under Crown
Prince Mohammad bin Salman has demonstrated greater will than in the past to
project its power and influence—for example, in its military campaign in
Yemen—but its capabilities and strategic planning have not matched its
ambition. As a result, some in the West have distanced themselves from Saudi
Arabia; a more effective approach would forge a closer working partnership that
can channel Saudi ambitions toward shared ends.
The United States
doubtless hopes that a formal defense partnership with the Saudis would serve
as the foundation for deeper multilateral coordination of U.S. defense
relationships in the Middle East than the pacts it has signed so far with
smaller (yet still critical) regional partners. This process began with the
Abraham Accords and has already yielded collaboration, such as military
exercises sponsored by the U.S. Central Command that have brought together
Israeli and Arab officers. It has also led to the impressive effort by the
United States, Israel, and an array of regional partners in mid-April to
intercept the approximately 300 missiles and drones that Iran
launched against Israel. But while this showed the potential for regional
defense cooperation, it also demonstrated the region’s continued dependency on
the United States. Washington would like to continue bolstering the former
while reducing the region’s requirement for the latter. Perhaps
counterintuitively, this would be best accomplished not by stepping away from
the region but by even more intensive training of regional forces through
mechanisms that a bilateral treaty would likely produce. By strengthening U.S.
partners, such a treaty would free up American forces and allow Washington to
attend to priorities in the Indo-Pacific and elsewhere without abandoning its
interests in the Middle East. The accord would also underline a competitive
advantage that the United States has over China: the United States can act as
both a security integrator bringing parties across the region together and as a
security guarantor providing new military technology, neither of which China
can offer at this stage.
Finally, a U.S.-Saudi
defense treaty could bring the Saudis and perhaps others in the region further
into efforts to tackle global challenges. Riyadh has already demonstrated
interest in exercising its global influence beyond adjusting its oil supply to world
markets. In August 2023, Saudi Arabia hosted an international summit on the war
in Ukraine. It has also sought a more prominent role in meetings of
multilateral groupings such as the G-20. Washington, for its part, has
increasingly recognized Saudi Arabia’s potential, as well as that of the United
Arab Emirates and other wealthy Gulf states to leverage wealth and diplomatic
influence in addressing transnational issues such as climate change and
critical minerals processing. After decades of viewing Middle Eastern states as
objects of U.S. foreign policy, Washington increasingly sees them as partners
in it. A U.S.-Saudi defense treaty can further aid in drawing these partners
out of their regional bubble by increasing their natural links and commonalities
with U.S. allies in Asia, Europe, and elsewhere.
Understanding The Risks
A U.S.-Saudi defense
treaty will not be without its risks, but the real risks are often
misidentified. There is little reason to believe a treaty would increase the
chances of a war between the United States and Iran. Even though the United
States declined to respond militarily to Iran’s attack on Saudi oil facilities
in 2019, any future U.S. president, treaty or not, will likely feel motivated
to come to Saudi Arabia’s defense—or to that of another Gulf partner or
strategic shipping route—in the event of a major Iranian attack. By formalizing
what is already close to a de facto commitment, the United States can better
deter Iran by eliminating any doubt that an attack on Saudi Arabia would prompt
a strong U.S. response. And a treaty would not necessarily tie U.S. forces down
in the region more than they already are. Evidence from the Middle East and
elsewhere suggests that the involvement of U.S. forces in a given region is
connected to threat levels and other factors, not the existence of a treaty.
American forces have surged into the region recently in response to Iranian
threats, for example, even though the United States has no formal treaty allies
there.
The real risks are
twofold. The first is of misaligned expectations. Policymakers in Washington
will likely expect that by signing a bilateral defense treaty, Saudi Arabia
will be committing to refrain from any actions that jeopardize U.S. security
and to contribute more constructively to stability in the Middle East.
Increasingly, policymakers expect allies to refrain from cooperating with U.S.
adversaries not only in traditional military and defense matters but also
through indirect actions that will enhance U.S. rivals’ broader
military-industrial complexes. Such actions could simply involve providing
adversaries with access to certain technologies or even, in the case of Russia
especially, cooperating to protect their revenues through mechanisms such as
OPEC Plus, which includes 22 of the world’s major oil exporters. Washington
will be looking for Saudi Arabia not only to show preference for the United
States at the margins, but to also make a firm commitment to the U.S.-led
alliance system that it would join after inking a treaty. Saudi normalization
with Israel would be vital to securing ratification of the accord by the U.S.
Senate and to realizing the full benefits of multilateral security cooperation
in the region. It would also serve as a strong signal from Riyadh that Saudi
Arabia is making a strategic and not merely a tactical shift in its foreign
policy.
The second risk
involves the fickleness of U.S. foreign policy, of which Saudi Arabia and other
Gulf states have found themselves disproportionately on the receiving end.
Twenty-plus years of quixotic nation-building efforts should have taught U.S.
policymakers that the United States can hold fast to its own values without
imposing them on others. Washington can harbor strong and valid concerns about
the human rights or political practices of partners such as the Saudis while
still working practically to promote reform—or better yet, supporting partners’
own programs of reform, such as Riyadh’s Vision 2030—rather than recklessly
threatening to break relations after every new unsavory revelation. Riyadh sees
the treaty ratification process, which requires approval by a two-thirds
majority in the U.S. Senate, as a way of ensuring that Washington sticks to its
commitments, just as the United States sees Saudi normalization with Israel as
a signal of Riyadh’s long-term commitment.
The Middle East Goes Global
There is no imminent
great-power shift in the Middle East. Yet competition between the United States
and China there, as elsewhere, is indeed growing, and it is regarded by U.S.
partners as a serious risk. Many have responded by choosing “omni-alignment,”
that is, participating in both U.S.-led multilateral institutions and newer
Chinese-led alternatives, to minimize the risks and maximize the benefits they
can accrue from contention between the two powers. Even countries that
understand China’s limits as a partner worry that the United States has become
increasingly unpredictable and transactional as its attention shifts between
short-term crises in places such as the Middle East and long-term priorities,
notably in the Indo-Pacific.
A U.S.-Saudi defense
treaty could help to ameliorate this dynamic in the Middle East, both by
tightening the bonds between Washington and one of its most important partners
in the region and by putting those partners in a better position to address
crises on their own. Some may worry that the treaty would trap the United
States in the Middle East. In reality, a closer bilateral partnership on
defense could over time limit Chinese inroads in the region, bolster Riyadh’s
and other partners’ capacities to act without U.S. intervention, and even bring
Saudi Arabia deeper into common efforts to tackle global challenges. Along with
the increasing activism by countries such as India and Japan, the expansion of
these efforts could help arrest the global order’s decline into a stalemate
between the two great powers. Rather than worry about the emergence of a new
cold war, Washington should work to build a new global diplomatic-security
concert, toward which a U.S.-Saudi defense treaty can be an important step.
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