The Wisdom of the UAE’s Retrenchment

Donald Trump and Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan (Wikimedia Commons)

by Paul R. Pillar

Mohammed bin Zayed (MbZ), crown prince of Abu Dhabi and the de facto chief executive of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), evidently has determined that his principal regional policies have not been working well and require a fundamental redirection. He is withdrawing his country from participation in the war in Yemen and trying to tone down confrontation with Iran. The UAE’s shift underscores some respects in which current U.S. policy in the region also could use redirection.

The UAE is one of three countries to which the Trump administration in effect subcontracted its Middle East policy, the other two being Israel and Saudi Arabia. A subcontractor can greatly complicate a project, in foreign policy as in home remodeling, when he suddenly decides on his own to go in a different direction. The new direction is not necessarily bad and may represent an improvement (see below), but in the meantime the owner of the project is left with the foreign policy equivalent of an unfinished bathroom.

If the Trump administration does not go in the same new direction, the United States will be even more isolated in the Middle East than it was before MbZ’s move. And of the two remaining partners, one cannot rule out similar shifts by Saudi Arabia’s crown prince and de facto ruler, Mohammed bin Salman (MbS). MbS cannot extract Saudi Arabia as easily from the Yemeni war, which is primarily his baby, as the UAE is extracting itself. But he faces some of the same setbacks and challenges, and now faces them without as much support as before from his friend MbZ. If MbS does overhaul Saudi policy, then a Trump administration that sticks to its current course would be doing so all alone except for its political partnership with the right-wing government of Israel, which as always will play the relationship for its own highly parochial reasons.

The lines of conflict in the Middle East have always been far more complicated than the picture the Trump administration has promoted, according to which the only thing that matters is unrelenting opposition to a supposedly Iranian-controlled Shia crescent. The war in Yemen vividly illustrates the complexity. The Houthi rebellion there began over local grievances involving insufficient central government attention to the interests of Yemenis in the northwest. Iran did not start the conflict and only began to see material aid to the Houthis—who have continued to make their own decisions, even when contrary to Iranian advice—as a cheap way to bleed and preoccupy the Saudis after MbS launched his big intervention in the war.

The complexity has recently gotten even greater with the outbreak of fighting between southern separatists, whom the UAE has supported, and forces allied with nominal president Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, who is Riyadh’s man and lives in exile in Saudi Arabia. The two sides in this fight are supposed to be coalition partners in fighting the Houthis. This new dimension to the mess has probably hastened MbZ’s inclination to extract the UAE from it.

Southern separatism has defined the lines of conflict in Yemen at least as much as Houthi grievances have, as reflected in the fact that not very many years ago the southerners had their own country. (Trivia question: what is the only state ever removed from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism because the state ceased to exist? Answer: South Yemen, when it merged with the other part of Yemen in 1990 to form a single Yemeni republic.) A threat of international terrorism still is a factor in the south, in the form of a branch of al-Qaeda, against which the Houthis are staunch foes. The recent developments in Yemen make President Trump’s veto of a congressional resolution calling for an end to U.S. involvement in Saudi Arabia’s war there appear all the more ill-advised.

The UAE’s recent posture, aimed at easing rather than exacerbating tensions with Iran, underscores how much the Trump administration’s posture toward Iran is an obsession rather than a strategy. The Emiratis do not, any more than other denizens of the Gulf, want a war in the area, which could have highly destructive effects on their own economic and security interests. What they have wanted instead is for Iran, as a regional rival, to stay weakened, isolated, and despised. For the U.S. to unquestioningly take sides in such regional rivalries is not in U.S. interests, although it is in the UAE’s interests. What is not in the UAE’s interests, as MbZ evidently realizes, is for the Emiratis to follow a U.S. path, staked out by a war-seeking John Bolton, that has a high chance of ending in armed conflict.

A major mistake of the Trump administration is to assume that Gulf states, just because they are rivals to varying degrees of Iran, should or must be as obsessive about the subject as the administration is. Gulf rulers such as MbZ cannot afford to let obsessions become centerpieces of their foreign policy. They live in the neighborhood, even if the United States does not.

MbZ’s redirection of policy, which amounts to a realization that the neighborhood must be shared, even with rivals, makes good sense. MbZ has made mistakes but is a smart man, whose smarts are reflected in his ability and willingness to recognize mistakes and correct them. He realizes that the UAE’s economic and security interests are best protected through some degree of rapprochement with Iran. He realizes that the Trump administration’s current course of never-ending and always escalating confrontation cannot lead to anything good. The UAE will now be more in line with those Gulf states—Kuwait, Oman, and Qatar—whose postures had already reflected such realizations.

It would be good for the United States if the Trump administration made the same sort of adjustments that the UAE is making—not because the United States should blindly follow the lead of an “ally” but instead because the facts of conflict in the Middle East make it in U.S. interests to do so.

Paul Pillar

Paul R. Pillar is Non-resident Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Studies of Georgetown University and an Associate Fellow of the Geneva Center for Security Policy. He retired in 2005 from a 28-year career in the U.S. intelligence community. His senior positions included National Intelligence Officer for the Near East and South Asia, Deputy Chief of the DCI Counterterrorist Center, and Executive Assistant to the Director of Central Intelligence. He is a Vietnam War veteran and a retired officer in the U.S. Army Reserve. Dr. Pillar's degrees are from Dartmouth College, Oxford University, and Princeton University. His books include Negotiating Peace (1983), Terrorism and U.S. Foreign Policy (2001), Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy (2011), and Why America Misunderstands the World (2016).

SHOW 4 COMMENTS

4 Comments

  1. I believe Paul Pillar is absolutely right in his diagnosis and thoughtful propositions about needed adjustments in policies by the U.S. government in that particular region. Unfortunately after the clueless Bush intervention in Iraq that ultimately liberated the inner Shi’ite strength opening the doors to Iran in the passage, two forces go opposed to that logic. One is Israel that was left facing directly the only truly opposing capable warriors near its borders and another is the intrinsic inability of today’s U.S. to deal with complexities, not only in the Middle East but anywhere, at a worldwide scope.

  2. Paul Pillar:

    They are not retrenching, they are pursuing their agenda of creating a South Yemen – again.

  3. UAE sleazing the coalition of Saudi against Yemen is all BS and the coalition still killing the innocent women and children of Yemen. It’s a political bluff on part of UAE because the arm sales or other requested secret armaments were refused. Now UAE is signaling to the US that it is moving away from the coalition against Yemen and getting more aligned with Iran.
    All nonsense!
    It is time for Iran to reclaim Bahrain as part of its historical sovereignty at the UN and also calling the presence of the US military base as illegal.

  4. Mr. Paul Pillar is a shinning example of what an “ideal American” would look like. Just his background and career in the military, coupled with his extensive education, and evolving into journalism, and foreign policy expertise or scholarship. Then the fact that he’s apparatly done it with honor, honesty, and intelligence. And above all, a sense of high rationality tempered and enhanced with classy humility. I may not always agree with the way he sees or thinks, but, I can only respect the man and wished more Americans learn from him.

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