Despite the sectarian barbs traded between Saudi Arabia and Iran, Iran's unique ability to meet the kingdom's fast growing demand for electricity may help spur a reconciliation, according to the Atlantic Council's Jean-François Seznec. In his report Crude Oil for Natural Gas: Prospects for Iran-Saudi Reconciliation, Seznec argues that the two dominant energy producers do not necessarily need to see their energy production as competition.
Saudi Arabia's currently fuels its stunning 8 percent annual rise in demand for electricity with precious crude oil due to little low cost domestic natural dry gas reserves. Iran's vast gas reserves could be used to meet the kingdom's growing needs, but after decades of punishing sanctions its dilapidated gas fields need an estimated $250 billion in repairs. If Saudi Arabia used its investment power or buying power to help revitalize Iran's gas industry, it would both secure the energy it needs to meet its citizens' demands and free up its crude oil for export. While the sectarian rhetoric hurled back and forth may seem unstoppable and the timeline for reconciliation may be long, Seznec contends that both sides are rational at heart and highlights that that the benefit of economic cooperation on energy issues could open up better relations on a range of issues.
Why the world project Muslims as a terrorist?Karma Tashi
This presentation is all about why the world see Muslims as a terrorist. Even though, some extremist and fundamentalist are using a violence way to fight with infidel, that does mean non-fundamentalist are also using violence way.
Why Islam permeates our science and Timeline of Radical Islamsydneywolf
We need to educate moderate and secular muslim the fundamental cause of rising global Islamism based on a doctrine promulgated and bolstered by selfish agenda of middle eastern Arab despots.
Why the world project Muslims as a terrorist?Karma Tashi
This presentation is all about why the world see Muslims as a terrorist. Even though, some extremist and fundamentalist are using a violence way to fight with infidel, that does mean non-fundamentalist are also using violence way.
Why Islam permeates our science and Timeline of Radical Islamsydneywolf
We need to educate moderate and secular muslim the fundamental cause of rising global Islamism based on a doctrine promulgated and bolstered by selfish agenda of middle eastern Arab despots.
Post assad Geo-strategic Possibilities.Zakir Hussain
The paper deals with the post-Assad geo-strategic possibilities in the the region and the countries supporting or opposing the Assad regime.
The article has been published first at Indian Council of World Affairs.
IAI seminar on "The Fight against ISIS and the US Policy in the Middle East", with Daniel Serwer, Middle East Institute and School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University
Rome, 19 March 2015
the ppt is about the rise of islamic state and the current situation of coalition forces... the economy of the group and the measures to curbe the group
Survival of Two Regional Powers at the Expense of the Security of the Middle ...QUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: Many have called the current relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia a cold war. In an article in "The National Interest", Mohammed Ayoob refers to the competition between the two as "a new cold war" [Ayoob, 2013]. The relationship betweenIran and Saudi Arabia for the last three and a half decades has been tumultuous at best, so talk of conflict between these two countries isn’t anything new. The conflict is occasionally given more visibility to the rest of the world by media attention and political analysis, but it’s typically overshadowed by other newsworthy events elsewhere. However, now it looks like their infighting has expanded to full out aggression. The upsizing in military might have major and long-lasting consequences for many of the people that live in the Middle East. Current events related to the conflict between the two countries risk creating a new border system to emerge. The Islamic Republic of Iran and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia are fully responsible for the birth, development, and shaping of the coming borders. The purpose of this paper is to focus on the background of the conflictbetween Iran and SaudiArabia; a conflict with a Middle Eastern instability and danger of secessions in the region as part of the consequences. It is intended to provide a highlighting of the twocountries’ hugeinternalchallenges and thus the need to externalenemies in the form of intensifying the historicalShia-Sunniconflict.
The ISIS awareness: calling out for international attentionMina Woo
All photos were taken directly from the Internet - mostly news websites listed in the following:
express.co.uk
nbcnews.com
dailymail.co.uk
cnn.com
independent.co.uk
rt.com
360nobs.com
barenakedislam.com
madworldnews.com
This analysis has been made on what Media and individual say about ISIS on open platform like- Twitter, Blog, News & Forum. This is a Social Media monitoring and analysis report, not a Intelligence report. For creating the analysis report I have used historical data of the last one Year of Twitter, News, Blog, Forum & video conversations.
If you have any further question you can comment below.
Source: Looking Glass Publications
By Linda Lavender, Writer / Robin Barnett, Editor
Understanding the past proxies is relevant to the recent unrest in the Middle East, which is often mischaracterized as a purely sectarian conflict. While clearly there is a sectarian component to ongoing unrest in the region, the conflicts, both latent and manifest within Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen are often reported as a struggle between opposing religious sects - Sunnis and Shiites. However, according to F. Gregory Gause of the Brookings Institution, the best way to understand regional politics and the current unrest in the Middle East is through a Cold War framework between Saudi Arabia and the Republic of Iran where the central issue is that of regional hegemony.
Post assad Geo-strategic Possibilities.Zakir Hussain
The paper deals with the post-Assad geo-strategic possibilities in the the region and the countries supporting or opposing the Assad regime.
The article has been published first at Indian Council of World Affairs.
IAI seminar on "The Fight against ISIS and the US Policy in the Middle East", with Daniel Serwer, Middle East Institute and School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University
Rome, 19 March 2015
the ppt is about the rise of islamic state and the current situation of coalition forces... the economy of the group and the measures to curbe the group
Survival of Two Regional Powers at the Expense of the Security of the Middle ...QUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: Many have called the current relationship between Iran and Saudi Arabia a cold war. In an article in "The National Interest", Mohammed Ayoob refers to the competition between the two as "a new cold war" [Ayoob, 2013]. The relationship betweenIran and Saudi Arabia for the last three and a half decades has been tumultuous at best, so talk of conflict between these two countries isn’t anything new. The conflict is occasionally given more visibility to the rest of the world by media attention and political analysis, but it’s typically overshadowed by other newsworthy events elsewhere. However, now it looks like their infighting has expanded to full out aggression. The upsizing in military might have major and long-lasting consequences for many of the people that live in the Middle East. Current events related to the conflict between the two countries risk creating a new border system to emerge. The Islamic Republic of Iran and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia are fully responsible for the birth, development, and shaping of the coming borders. The purpose of this paper is to focus on the background of the conflictbetween Iran and SaudiArabia; a conflict with a Middle Eastern instability and danger of secessions in the region as part of the consequences. It is intended to provide a highlighting of the twocountries’ hugeinternalchallenges and thus the need to externalenemies in the form of intensifying the historicalShia-Sunniconflict.
The ISIS awareness: calling out for international attentionMina Woo
All photos were taken directly from the Internet - mostly news websites listed in the following:
express.co.uk
nbcnews.com
dailymail.co.uk
cnn.com
independent.co.uk
rt.com
360nobs.com
barenakedislam.com
madworldnews.com
This analysis has been made on what Media and individual say about ISIS on open platform like- Twitter, Blog, News & Forum. This is a Social Media monitoring and analysis report, not a Intelligence report. For creating the analysis report I have used historical data of the last one Year of Twitter, News, Blog, Forum & video conversations.
If you have any further question you can comment below.
Source: Looking Glass Publications
By Linda Lavender, Writer / Robin Barnett, Editor
Understanding the past proxies is relevant to the recent unrest in the Middle East, which is often mischaracterized as a purely sectarian conflict. While clearly there is a sectarian component to ongoing unrest in the region, the conflicts, both latent and manifest within Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen are often reported as a struggle between opposing religious sects - Sunnis and Shiites. However, according to F. Gregory Gause of the Brookings Institution, the best way to understand regional politics and the current unrest in the Middle East is through a Cold War framework between Saudi Arabia and the Republic of Iran where the central issue is that of regional hegemony.
An article by our Corse mate General Hasnain regarding Saudi is important from general knowledge and discussionAs he puts it "One could not have imagined the status of Saudi Arabia as it is today, having been one of the most powerful states in the Middle East. A combination of factors appears to have diluted its power and comparative strategic significance. This needs brief investigation although I am convinced that Saudi Arabia’s geo-strategic location, its energy resources and its ideological bent continues to make it one of the most significant countries in the world."
On April 4, 2016, the Atlantic Council’s Eurasian Energy Futures Initiative launched a report, Securing Ukraine’s Energy Sector, authored by Dinu Patriciu Eurasia Center’s Resident Senior Fellow, Anders Åslund.
It is the core purpose of the Atlantic Council to foster bipartisan support for policies that promote the security of the United States and the transatlantic community. The signatories of this piece have either served in Afghanistan, been involved in the formation of US policy in government, or otherwise devoted considerable time to Afghan affairs. They have come together to register a broad, bipartisan consensus in support of certain principles that they believe should guide policy formation and decision-making on Afghanistan during the remainder of the Obama administration and the first year of a new administration, of whichever party. It is critical that the current administration prepare the path for the next. A new president will come into office facing a wave of instability in the Islamic world and the threat from violent extremism, which stretches from Asia through the Middle East to Africa. This will continue to pose a considerable challenge and danger to American interests abroad, and to the homeland. The signatories support the continued US engagement required to protect American interests and increase the possibilities for Afghan success.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet, a civil society group comprising the Tunisian General Labor Union; the Tunisian Union of Industry, Trade, and Handicrafts; the Tunisian Human Rights League; and the Tunisian Order of Lawyers the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, October 9, 2015 "for its decisive contribution to the building of a pluralistic democracy in Tunisia." In a new Atlantic Council Issue Brief, "Tunisia: The Last Arab Spring Country," Atlantic Council Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East Senior Fellows Mohsin Khan and Karim Mezran survey the successes of Tunisia's consensus-based transition and the challenges that lie ahead.
"The decision to award this year's Nobel Peace Prize to Tunisia's National Dialogue Quartet is an extremely important recognition of the efforts made by Tunisian civil society and Tunisia's political elite to reach a consensus on keeping the country firmly on the path to democratization and transition to a pluralist system," says Mezran. With the overthrow of the authoritarian regime of President Zine El Abedine Ben Ali in 2011, Tunisia embarked on a process of democratization widely regarded as an example for transitions in the region. The National Dialogue Conference facilitated by the Quartet helped Tunisia avert the risk of plunging into civil war and paved the way for a consensus agreement on Tunisia's new constitution, adopted in January 2014.
In the brief, the authors warn that despite political successes, Tunisia is hampered by the absence of economic reforms. Facing the loss of tourism and investment following two terror attacks, Tunisia's economy risks collapse, endangering all of the painstaking political progress gained thus far. Unless the Tunisian government moves rapidly to turn the economy around, Tunisia risks unraveling its fragile transition.
Foreign Policy for an Urban World: Global Governance and the Rise of Citiesatlanticcouncil
In the latest FutureScape issue brief from the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security's Strategic Foresight Initiative, author Peter Engelke discusses the long-term economic, environmental, and policy implications of urbanization. Entitled "Foreign Policy for an Urban World: Global Governance and the Rise of Cities," the brief examines how urbanization is hastening the global diffusion of power and how cities themselves are increasingly important nodes of power in global politics.
Cyber 9/12 Student Challenge General Informationatlanticcouncil
In Washington, DC, student teams confront a serious
cybersecurity breach of national and international importance.
Teams will compose policy recommendations
and justify their decision-making process, considering
the role and implications for relevant civilian,
military, law enforcement, and private sector entities
and updating the recommendations as the scenario
evolves.
In Geneva, Switzerland, in
partnership with the Geneva
Centre for Security
Policy (GCSP), students
respond to a major cyberattack
on European networks. Competitors will provide
recommendations balancing individual national
approaches and a collective crisis management response,
considering capabilities, policies, and governance
structures of NATO, EU, and individual nations.
The competition fosters a culture of cooperation and
a better understanding of these organizations and
their member states in responding to cyberattacks.
Toward a Sustainable Peace in the South China Seaatlanticcouncil
The South China Sea (SCS) has been, and remains, an area rife with tension. Disputes among SCS states stem from unresolved issues relating to sovereignty, exclusive economic zones, natural resources, and acceptable uses of the military. In the past two decades, fishing boats have been detained or damaged, fishermen and sailors arrested or killed, and artificial islands constructed for military purposes. These years of strife have led to the current SCS state of play: it is a vitally important region where competition is high and trust is low.
This issue brief argues that SCS countries need to work toward a "mutual confidence" and "mutual dependence" end state. In particular, the paper focuses on sharing meteorological data to support humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations, including search and rescue operations, foreign disaster relief goods delivery, and medical care. A mutual confidence/mutual dependence relationship between two SCS states would help mitigate regional conflicts or disputes, which in turn can help lead to a more peaceful region.
On May 20-21, 2015, European leaders will gather for the Eastern Partnership summit in Riga, Latvia, to discuss the future of Europe’s East. Given the extreme challenges faced by the countries of the Eastern Partnership (EaP) since the last summit, in Vilnius, Lithuania in 2013, and the cooling of EU relations with several of the Eastern Partners, the upcoming meeting will surely pose tough questions for the future of the entire eastern framework.
At the same time, the Riga summit also presents an historic opportunity to put back on track a process that held significant promise at its inception but which has been slow to respond to crises and a low priority on the agenda for EU member states. In A Transatlantic Approach to Europe’s East: Relaunching the Eastern Partnership, Burwell examines the need for a closer and more integrated relationship between the European Union and the key countries of the EaP. Burwell argues that the Riga summit offers a key chance for Europe to both confront the challenges to its East, and to launch a new Transatlantic Partnership for Wider Europe in close cooperation with the United States. Failure to relaunch the EaP framework, by identifying the factors that make these countries vulnerable and designing strategies to overcome these specific weaknesses, will have dire consequences for the prosperity and security of the entire region.
President Barack Obama's summit meeting with Gulf leaders at Camp David on May 14 will end in failure if the administration does not propose a substantial upgrade in US-Gulf security relations that is as bold and strategically significant as the nuclear agreement–and likely formal deal–with Iran.
While the summit will not suddenly eliminate mistrust and resolve all differences, it presents an historic opportunity to put back on track a decades-old US-Gulf partnership that has served both sides and the region well, yet lately has experienced deep turbulence. Failure to strengthen these ties will have consequences, the most dramatic of which could be the acceleration of the regional order's collapse.
In a March 2015 Atlantic Council report entitled Artful Balance: Future US Defense Strategy and Force Posture in the Gulf, we made the case for a mutual defense treaty between the United States and willing Arab Gulf partners. In this issue in focus, we offer a more comprehensive and detailed assessment of the risks, concerns, benefits, and opportunities that would be inherent in such a treaty. We recommend a gradualist approach for significantly upgrading US-Gulf security relations that effectively reduces the risks and maximizes the benefits of more formal US security commitments to willing Arab Gulf states.
The solutions for socioeconomic development are no longer only in the public sector. Latin America has changed dramatically over the last decade, and the private sector can play an increasingly important role in the region’s progress. That’s where social impact investing comes in—a way that investors can make money while doing social good.
The White House has appointed a social innovation czar and the Inter-American Development Bank is doing work every day in this expanding arena. Is social impact investing one of the keys that will finally unlock the region’s intractable inequality?
In this new Latin America Center analysis, released today, Adrienne Arsht Center Senior Non-Resident Fellow Gabriel Zinny dissects how businesses, governments, and multilateral institutions can better provide goods and services to the underserved while making money.
Read this and key recommendations for accelerating the sector here:
• Formalize it. A clear, market-based legal system enforced by a solid judiciary branch is fundamental to attracting impact investments.
• Seed it. Governments should subsidize a measure of the often-lacking venture-stage capital for projects, especially when the entrepreneurs come from less-affluent communities.
• Decentralize it. Local governments should be viewed as public sector partners as they often have more flexibility to spur private social enterprise.
• Read more here…
If ever a turning point seemed inevitable in Pakistan’s militia policy, it was in the aftermath of the Peshawar school massacre in December 2014. Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) killed 152 people, 133 of them children, in the bloodiest terrorist attack in Pakistan’s history. The carnage sparked an unprecedented national dialogue about the costs and contradictions of the Pakistani political and military establishment’s reliance on violent proxies, such as the Afghan Taliban (from which the TTP originates), for security.
Why does Pakistan continue to differentiate between “good” and “bad” militias in the face of the Peshawar massacre? What are the costs of playing the good-bad militia game? What can be done to end Pakistan’s dependency on armed nonstate groups? In “Reimagining Pakistan’s Militia Policy,” Visiting Assistant Professor of Government at Skidmore College and US-Pakistan Exchange Program Fellow at the Atlantic Council’s South Asia Center, argues that Pakistan’s unwillingness to crack down on all terrorist groups is more a product of cold calculation than ideological shortsightedness. Understanding Pakistan’s close relationship with militias requires recognizing the strategic logic through which many states outsource violence.
The Atlantic Council, in partnership with NATO Allied Command Transformation (ACT), held the 4th annual Young Professionals Day (YP Day) in Washington, DC, on March 24. The event featured a full-day, outcome-oriented, strategic design thinking exercise with sixty young professionals representing twenty-four of NATO's twenty-eight member nations. Delegates collaborated to produce a list of creative solutions to pressing challenges NATO faces, ranging from how to address hybrid warfare and threats on NATO's southern flank, to how NATO can encourage innovation and deliver on the promises from the 2014 Wales Summit.
The NATO Young Professionals Day Report includes detailed descriptions of the top fifteen recommendations produced by delegates. Delegates' recommendations included creative and out-of-the box concepts, such as the creation of an "Innovation CEO" position within NATO with substantial powers to experiment with new policies. The group also suggested developing a dramatized HBO style series about the history of NATO to increase public awareness and improve the alliance's public approval; fostering partnerships with venture capital and the defense industry to develop new technologies and create common standards; and the deployment of an elite, rapid response force in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region that includes personnel from NATO partner countries in the south, to leverage local expertise. Details on these recommendations and more can be found in the full report available online here:
Defeating the Jihadists in Syria: Competition before Confrontationatlanticcouncil
Since August 2014, the US-led air campaign against the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) has successfully inflicted casualties on ISIS and weakened its oil revenues. However, the same efforts have also accelerated the rise of the Nusra Front, an al-Qaeda affiliate, and the near-collapse of nationalist rebel forces.
In "Defeating the Jihadists in Syria: Competition before Confrontation," Faysal Itani of the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East details the unintended consequences of the coalition air campaign and proposes a revised US strategy. He argues that the United States can effectively assist nationalist insurgents to defeat ISIS and the Nusra Front by enabling them to compete with and contain these groups before ultimately confronting them.
Itani writes that the US-led campaign thus far and the train-and-equip initiative set to begin next month undermine and weaken nationalist rebel forces. He criticizes these efforts for failing to provide sufficient support to the rebel forces, while directing them to target ISIS instead of the regime. Meanwhile, the Nusra Front and other jihadist organizations have greater resources and have been effective in targeting the Assad regime. As such, nationalist rebel forces and local populations have increasingly aligned with the Nusra Front and even tolerate ISIS in order to protect themselves against regime violence, criminality, and chaos.
Itani's proposed US strategy offers a practical and workable response to the rise of jihadists groups in Syria; this revised strategy seeks to support rebel forces to compete with the Nusra Front for popular support and to take control of the insurgency, contain ISIS, and build capacity for an eventual offensive against the jihadists. This approach will build on positive results in southern Syria by significantly increasing direct financial and material support and training for vetted nationalist groups that have already shown significant success. Simultaneously, in the north the campaign can provide sufficient material support to nationalist forces while expanding coalition air strikes to target ISIS's frontlines, allowing the nationalist insurgency to defend and govern territory. Only once nationalist insurgent forces have successfully competed with the Nusra Front and contained ISIS can they confront and ultimately defeat the jihadist groups in Syria.
Dynamic Stability: US Strategy for a World in Transitionatlanticcouncil
We have entered a new era in world history, a post-post-Cold War era that holds both great promise and great peril for the United States, its allies, and everyone else. We now can call this a "Westphalian-Plus" world, in which nation-states will have to engage on two distinct levels: dealing with other nation-states as before, and dealing with a vast array of important nonstate actors. This era calls for a new approach to national strategy called "dynamic stability."
The authors of this paper—Atlantic Council Vice President and Scowcroft Center Director Barry Pavel and Senior Fellow Peter Engelke, with the help of Assistant Director Alex Ward—kick off the Atlantic Council Strategy Paper series by telling the United States to seek stability while leveraging dynamic trends at the same time. The central task facing America is "to harness change in order to save the system," meaning the preservation of the rules-based international order that has benefited billions around the world, including Americans themselves, since 1945. Within its pages, the paper outlines the components of strategy in a swiftly-changing world.
Setting the Stage for Peace in Syria: The Case for a Syrian National Stabiliz...atlanticcouncil
In Setting the Stage for Peace in Syria: The Case for a Syrian National Stabilization Force, Frederic C. Hof of the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East, Bassma Kodmani of the Arab Reform Initiative, and Jeffrey White of the Washington Institute, present a new way forward—a sort of train-and-equip on steroids—the Syrian National Stabilization Force (SNSF).
Mexico's historic energy reforms continue to hold exciting promise for the country, achieving the requisite constitutional and implementing legislation over the last fifteen months. The global oil price climate, however, has prompted a few mid-course corrections to the rollout of the reforms. For Mexico to continue to attract excitement for its energy sector, the government will need to maintain a degree of flexibility while holding true to the principles of the reforms.
Places like Singapore, Boston, Bangalore, Pittsburgh, Silicon Valley, and others are known as leaders in innovation, but when it comes to building the knowledge economy, the Gulf has become one of the most ambitious regions in the world.
A decade ago, the consensus from outside the region was that Middle Eastern countries, including those in the Gulf, were a long way from developing knowledge economies— defined as economies that combine advanced research and development, entrepreneurialism, and creative thinking into innovative, wealth-generating enterprises. Fast-forward to 2015, and many Arab Gulf countries have become well known for their attempts at building knowledge economies, for instance through innovation clusters such as Abu Dhabi's Masdar City, Dubai's TechnoPark, Qatar's Science and Technology Park, and Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah University of Science and Technology. Through these and other efforts, Gulf countries have invested billions of dollars in dozens of initiatives to co-locate the sources of innovation—research labs, venture capital, entrepreneurs, high-technology companies, and educational institutions, in hopes of building globally renowned knowledge economies.
In Brainstorming the Gulf: Innovation and the Knowledge Economy in the GCC, the report's author, Peter Engelke, Senior Fellow for the Strategic Foresight Initiative in the Atlantic Council's Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, highlights the successes that Gulf states have enjoyed to date and addresses the major hurdles to sustaining and expanding these successes. While all signs point to the staying power of Arab Gulf leadership's long-term commitment to the knowledge economy, the harder part will be sustaining the knowledge economy's soft infrastructure—the dimension of entrepreneurial culture involving creativity, expression, inclusion, disruption, and borrowing from global cultural flows. If talented people are at the core of the innovation process, government policy in the Gulf ought to focus as much on the creation of dynamic and livable places in order to attract and retain the best talent from all over the world. As Arab Gulf states have already discovered, this pathway is disruptive, bringing with it significant social consequences.
This report is the result of a series of brainstorming sessions that took place between the summer of 2013 and the winter of 2014-2015, and between American, Russian, and European experts. The teams were led by Ellen Tauscher, the Vice Chair of the Atlantic Council's Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security and the former US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, and Igor Ivanov, the president of Russian International Affairs Council (RIAC) and former Foreign Minister of Russia, in an effort to keep the dialogue open and frank at a challenging time for European security. Not surprisingly, as events in Ukraine unravelled the post-Cold War security order, it proved impossible to narrow the differences and develop a common, action-oriented approach to the challenge of rebuilding the European security order. The report, a project of the Atlantic Council, the European Leadership Network (ELN), and RIAC is focused instead on the necessary first step of listening to each other and reflecting on the significant differences in the Western and Russian approaches. Discussions focused on gaining clarity on the interests at stake, from the US, European, and Russian perspectives, in order to better define whether and where common interests may still lie and how best to advance them. The report clearly points to the fact that managing the differences in the aftermath of the Ukrainian crisis will continue to require significant efforts on the part of decision-makers, experts, officials, international organizations, and will take time and strategic patience.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Donate to charity during this holiday seasonSERUDS INDIA
For people who have money and are philanthropic, there are infinite opportunities to gift a needy person or child a Merry Christmas. Even if you are living on a shoestring budget, you will be surprised at how much you can do.
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-to-donate-to-charity-during-this-holiday-season/
#charityforchildren, #donateforchildren, #donateclothesforchildren, #donatebooksforchildren, #donatetoysforchildren, #sponsorforchildren, #sponsorclothesforchildren, #sponsorbooksforchildren, #sponsortoysforchildren, #seruds, #kurnool
Working with data is a challenge for many organizations. Nonprofits in particular may need to collect and analyze sensitive, incomplete, and/or biased historical data about people. In this talk, Dr. Cori Faklaris of UNC Charlotte provides an overview of current AI capabilities and weaknesses to consider when integrating current AI technologies into the data workflow. The talk is organized around three takeaways: (1) For better or sometimes worse, AI provides you with “infinite interns.” (2) Give people permission & guardrails to learn what works with these “interns” and what doesn’t. (3) Create a roadmap for adding in more AI to assist nonprofit work, along with strategies for bias mitigation.
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Monitoring Health for the SDGs - Global Health Statistics 2024 - WHOChristina Parmionova
The 2024 World Health Statistics edition reviews more than 50 health-related indicators from the Sustainable Development Goals and WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work. It also highlights the findings from the Global health estimates 2021, notably the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on life expectancy and healthy life expectancy.
RFP for Reno's Community Assistance CenterThis Is Reno
Property appraisals completed in May for downtown Reno’s Community Assistance and Triage Centers (CAC) reveal that repairing the buildings to bring them back into service would cost an estimated $10.1 million—nearly four times the amount previously reported by city staff.
About Potato, The scientific name of the plant is Solanum tuberosum (L).Christina Parmionova
The potato is a starchy root vegetable native to the Americas that is consumed as a staple food in many parts of the world. Potatoes are tubers of the plant Solanum tuberosum, a perennial in the nightshade family Solanaceae. Wild potato species can be found from the southern United States to southern Chile
Synopsis (short abstract) In December 2023, the UN General Assembly proclaimed 30 May as the International Day of Potato.
About Potato, The scientific name of the plant is Solanum tuberosum (L).
Crude Oil for Natural Gas: Prospects for Iran-Saudi Reconciliation
1. Crude Oil for Natural Gas
Prospects for Iran-Saudi Reconciliation
BYJEAN-FRANCOISSEZNECISSUEBRIEF
Jean-François Seznec is a Nonresident Senior Fellow in the Global Energy Center and an adjunct professor at the McDonough
School of Business at Georgetown University.
OCTOBER 2015
The relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia are often
presented as an intractable struggle between powers
that find legitimacy in their respective Islamic tradi-
tions: Shia in Iran and Sunni in Saudi Arabia.1
The Saudis
feel threatened by what they consider an encroaching
“Shia crescent” of Iranian influence, extending from
al-Sham (Syria-Lebanon) to Iraq, Iran, and Yemen.2
The
House of Saud, in particular, views this “crescent” as an
attempt to bring an end to its stewardship of Islam’s
holiest sites and replace it with Shia supervision. Simi-
larly, Iran fears the threat of encircling Sunni influence,
stretching across the states of the Gulf Cooperation
Council (GCC), through to Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan, and
parts of Syria. Certainly, the death of many hundreds
of Hajjis from Iran and other countries in Mecca on
September 24, 2015, as well as the dispatch of Iranian
soldiers to the Syrian front a few days later are creat-
ing great tensions between the two Gulf giants. Further
complicating this divide are not only differences in size,
cultural history, and educational levels, but also the
states’ seemingly contradictory economic interests.
In light of such tension, Saudi-Iranian reconciliation
seems impossible. However, in reality, the relations
between these two powers may be less antagonistic
1 The author would like to thank Mr. Samer Mosis, a graduate student at
Johns Hopkins’s School of Advanced International Studies, for his help in
fact checking and editing as well as for his suggestions on improving this
paper.
2 The term “Shia Crescent” was coined in 2004 by King Abdullah II of
Jordan, largely as a response to Iran’s growing influence in Iraqi elec-
tions and society. See Robin Wright and Peter Baker, “Iraq, Jordan See
Threat to Election from Iran: Leaders Warn against Forming Religious
State,” Washington Post, December 8, 2004.
than they appear. Saudi Arabia’s use of a sectarian
narrative to describe the 2011 uprising in Bahrain
and Iran’s self-appointed role as the champion of Shia
rights underline how sectarian rhetoric has primarily
been utilized by both states as a tool to garner popular
support for political ends, not one aimed at destroying
the opposing state.3
Indeed, Arabs and Persians have
influenced each other since the birth of Islam. Moreover,
since the defining battle of Karbala in 680 AD, Sunnis
and Shia more often than not have managed to peace-
fully cohabit. Presently, this propensity for cohabitation
is aided by economic factors. Primarily among these is
the geographic dispersion of natural resources in the
Gulf, with the disparity in supply and demand highlight-
ing the potential to transform economic tensions into
mutually beneficial arrangements. In this sense, where
Iran is envious, if not resentful, of Saudi Arabia’s role as
3 Fatima Ayub, “The Gulf and Sectarianism,” European Council on For-
eign Relations, November 2013, http://www.ecfr.eu/page/-/ECFR91_
GULF_ANALYSIS_AW.pdf.
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Center works to promote global access to affordable,
reliable, and sustainable energy.
Alongside government, industry, and civil society
partners, the Center devises creative responses
to energy-related geopolitical conflicts, advances
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to help develop energy strategies and policies that
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2. 2 ATLANTIC COUNCIL
the region’s leader in crude markets, Iran’s substantial
natural gas reserves hold the key to alleviating Saudi’s
surplus in natural gas demand. Accordingly, just as the
Gulf powers have set aside sectarian strife in the past
periods of détente, overlapping economic and political
interests today make reconciliation possible, despite
extremist activity in both countries.
Brief History of Past Relations
Since the end of World War II, the Persian Gulf (also
referred to as the Arabian Gulf or sometimes, in efforts
to avoid political controversy, simply the Gulf) has been
a theater of competition between Iraq, Iran, and Saudi
Arabia for the region’s political and ideological leader-
ship. The First Gulf War effectively put an end to Iraq’s
respective bid for power, but the competition between
Iran and Saudi Arabia continued. By favoring one Gulf
aspirant over the other, the United States has repeatedly
acted as a third party to this contentious relationship, its
foreign policy at times encouraging cooperation and at
others goading competition.
Starting with President Richard Nixon, the United States
enacted what some have dubbed a “twin pillars policy”
in the Gulf, looking to Iran and Saudi Arabia to maintain
its strategic interests in the region.4
This triangular rela-
tionship linked Saudi Arabia and Iran, not only through
a mutual patron, but also through common solidarity in
the face of communism and Arab nationalism. Yet, deriv-
ing from the Nixon administration’s view that Iran was
the Gulf’s predominant economic and military power,
security relations with Iran overwhelmingly overshad-
owed those with Saudi Arabia.5
This was best embodied
by the Nixon administration’s blank check to the Shah
of Iran, which effectively allowed Iran to purchase any
weapon, short of nuclear, it deemed necessary for its
defense; an offer that was not extended to any other US
ally, let alone Saudi Arabia.6
Nonetheless, while the pri-
macy of the Iranian-US relations surely instilled jealousy,
in Saudi powerbrokers, the special place Iran and Saudi
Arabia held in American foreign policy led to tacit, albeit
short-lived, Iran-Saudi cooperation.
American calculations, the twin pillars doctrine, and a
decades-long security structure were all swept away
in 1979 by Iran’s radical revolution, leaving in its place
animosity between Iran and the Gulf monarchies. Iran
and Saudi Arabia competed to paint themselves as the
4 Andrew Rathmell, Theodore Karasik, and David Gompert, “A New Per-
sian Gulf Security System,” RAND Corporation, 2005, http://www.prgs.
edu/content/dam/rand/pubs/issue_papers/2005/IP248.pdf.
5 Stephen McGlinchey, “Richard Nixon’s Road to Tehran: The Making of
the U.S.–Iran Arms Agreement of May 1972,” Diplomatic History vol. 37,
iss. 4, 2013, pp. 846-848.
6 John P. Miglietta, American Alliance Policy in the Middle East, 1945-
1992: Iran, Israel, and Saudi Arabia (2002), p. 58.
protectors of Islam and Muslims worldwide, with both
states employing sectarian religious rhetoric to build
popular support. With Sunnis comprising 90 percent
of the Islamic umma, Saudi Arabia’s geographic control
of the holy cities of Mecca and Medina and its Sunni
heritage gave it the advantage in this battle.7
Nonethe-
less, its leadership was still threatened by Iran’s self-
characterization as the one true Islamic government.8
Iran extended its campaign for the hearts and minds of
Muslims by increasingly positioning itself as an advo-
cate for marginalized Muslims, winning over Sunni and
Shiite Muslims alike with its bold calls for Islamic unity
in the face of Western hegemony.9
This threat was only
aggravated by Iran’s implication in a Bahraini coup plot,
sectarian tensions in Kuwait, and the Iran-Iraq War, in
which Saudi Arabia backed Iraq. Saudi-Iranian relations
reached their lowest point in 1987. That year, over four
hundred people were killed when Iranian pilgrims mak-
ing the hajj, the Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca, clashed
with Saudi police.10
In retaliation, some ayatollahs ampli-
fied their campaign for Iran’s Islamic leadership, turning
their aim to the Saudi source of legitimacy—its guard-
ianship of Mecca and Medina. Following the violence in
7 Pew Research Center, Forum on Religion & Public Life, Mapping the
Global Muslim Population (October 2009), http://www.pewforum.
org/2009/10/07/mapping-the-global-muslim-population/.
8 R. K. Ramazani, Revolutionary Iran: Challenge and Response in the
Middle East (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1986), pp. 19-30.
9 Aylin Unver Noi, “A Clash of Islamic Models,” Hudson Institute, July
10, 2013, http://www.hudson.org/research/9770-a-clash-of-islamic-
models.
10 John Kifner, “400 Die as Iranian Marchers Battle Saudi Police in
Mecca; Embassies Smashed in Teheran,” New York Times, August 2,
1987, http://www.nytimes.com/1987/08/02/world/400-die-iranian-
marchers-battle-saudi-police-mecca-embassies-smashed-teheran.
html?pagewanted=1.
IRAN AND SAUDI
ARABIA COMPETED
TO PAINT THEMSELVES
AS THE PROTECTORS
OF ISLAM AND
MUSLIMS WORLDWIDE,
WITH BOTH STATES
EMPLOYING SECTARIAN
RELIGIOUS RHETORIC
TO BUILD POPULAR
SUPPORT.
3. ATLANTIC COUNCIL 3
Mecca, Ayatollah Khomeini declared that the “vile and
ungodly Wahhabi [Saudi rulers] are like daggers which
have always pierced the heart of the Muslims from the
back,” and that Mecca was in the hands of “a band of
heretics.”11
These claims were echoed by high-ranking
Iranian politicians, including Speaker of the Parliament
Ali Akbar Rafsanjani, and were followed by an Iranian
campaign calling for the “liberation” of Mecca from Saudi
control.12
Diplomatic relations were severed in the wake
of these events.
The end of the Iran-Iraq War and the death of Khomeini
freed Iranian foreign policy from its obligatory confron-
tational tone. Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who had as-
sumed the Iranian presidency in 1989, proclaimed that
“Iran needs to stop making enemies,” to which the Saudi
Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal suggested that the
two countries could see “a future of positive relations.”13
Diplomatic relations were restored in 1991 and Raf-
sanjani would go on to meet with Saudi Arabia’s then-
Crown Prince Abdullah in March 1997 in Pakistan. The
meeting paved the way for Iran’s hosting of the triennial
summit of the Jeddah-headquartered Organization of
the Islamic Conference (now called the Organization
of Islamic Cooperation) in December 1997, where, in a
historic thawing of relations Abdullah met with Presi-
dent Mohammad Khatami, Rafsanjani’s successor. In a
testament to the potential for reconciliation and coop-
eration, Abdullah praised the Iranians for their “immor-
tal achievements . . . and their invaluable contributions
throughout our glorious Islamic history.”14
The following
years would bring about slow but substantive warming,
including the resumption of Iranian participation in the
hajj, the exchange of military attachés, an agreement of
noninterference in each other’s internal affairs, and cul-
minating in the ground-breaking visit of Iranian Presi-
dent Khatami to Jeddah in 1999.15
Indeed, for a brief
period, it seemed that détente had been realized.
Unfortunately, that détente proved fleeting. The 2005
surprise election of hardline populist Mahmoud Ahma-
dinejad as Iran’s President brought rapprochement to a
standstill. Ahmadinejad rekindled Iran’s hawkish foreign
policy supporting militant movements in Iraq and Leba-
non, announcing the resumption of uranium enrichment
11 Khomeini’s message to Karrubi, Radio Tehran, August 3, 1987,
quoted in BBC Summary, August 4, 1987.
12 Martin Kramer, Arab Awakening and Islamic Revival (New Brunswick:
Transaction, 1996), pp. 161-87.
13 Afshin Molavi, “Iran and the Gulf States,” in Robin Wright, ed., The
Iran Primer: Power, Politics, and U.S. Policy (Washington, DC: United
States Institute of Peace, 2010), p. 160.
14 Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdulaziz, Address to the 11th Summit of the
Organization of the Islamic Conference, Tehran, Iran, December 9-11, 1997,
http://www.saudiembassy.net/archive/1997/speeches/page0.aspx.
15 Anthony H. Cordesman, Saudi Arabia Enters the Twenty-First Cen-
tury (Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, 2003), p. 49.
and challenging Saudi Arabia’s role as advocate of the
common Arab by emphasizing Iran’s commitment to
the Palestinian cause and opposition to Western im-
perialism.16
Ahmadinejad’s brinkmanship demolished
the Saudi-Iranian détente and amplified fears in Saudi
leadership that Iranian influence was spreading across
its periphery. Iran at the same time felt increasingly
threatened by an American military presence in the
Gulf. This military buildup was based on Washington’s
cooperation with GCC monarchies, primarily Saudi Ara-
bia. Iranian leaders viewed Saudi Arabia not only as the
leader of an international effort to deny Shiite govern-
ments rights and influence across the region, but also as
the chief transgressor that allowed for the United States’
domination of the Gulf.
Main Areas of Contention Today
Over the last four years, the Saudi monarchy has been
increasingly concerned about the influence of Iran in the
region. Saudi Arabia has seen Iran’s influence extend to
its north in Syria by way of Alawi support and Hezbollah
ground forces; in Iraq, by way of Shia militias and politi-
cal influence in Baghdad; further west, by way of Hezbol-
lah becoming a major player in Lebanese politics; and to
the kingdom’s south by way of Iranian activity in Yemen,
allegedly supporting the Houthi rebellion.
Competition for Oil Markets
In modern times, energy markets have been used as
a tool in the ideological war as much as forces on the
ground. Both countries desperately need to maximize
their natural resources in order to ascend to the re-
gional leadership role they aspire to. In this realm, Saudi
Arabia has a major advantage. It has nearly twice the oil
reserves and three times the production capacity of Iran
and, more importantly to the global oil markets, it is the
only reliable supplier in OPEC.17
Saudi Arabia initiated the 1973 Arab oil embargo to
protest states that supported Israel during the Yom Kip-
pur War. Although the embargo may have affected global
prices, it failed to accomplish its stated political goal
of ending Western support for Israel.18
Following this
failure, Saudi Arabia has tried very hard to disconnect oil
supplies from politics. In the 1970s, unlike Iraq, Libya,
and Iran, it did not nationalize foreign companies out-
16 Frederic Wehrey, et al., “Saudi-Iranian Relations since the Fall of Sad-
dam,” RAND Corporation, 2009, http://www.rand.org/content/dam/
rand/pubs/monographs/2009/RAND_MG840.pdf.
17 EIA, “International Energy Statistics”; “Worldwide Look at Reserves
and Production,” Oil & Gas Journal January 1, 2015; EIA, “Iran: Interna-
tional Energy Data and Analysis,” June 19, 2015; EIA, “Country Analysis
Brief: Saudi Arabia,” September 10, 2014, p. 3; Anjili Raval, “Saudi Strat-
egy to Retain Oil Dominance,” Financial Times, August 6, 2015.
18 Meghan L. O’Sullivan and Jeane Kirkpatrick, “40 Years after Embargo,
OPEC Is Over a Barrel,” Bloomberg View, October 17, 2013.
4. 4 ATLANTIC COUNCIL
right but slowly bought the assets of the international oil
companies (IOCs) operating domestically. This allowed
the Saudi state to take control of its crude operations
and sales, all while maintaining excellent relationships
with IOCs, a move that has helped the kingdom become
a leader in oil technology today.
Oppositely, Iran never managed to develop its oil
resources beyond 4 million barrels per day (b/d),
(compared to Saudi Arabia’s current 10.4 million b/d)
and, in the past ten years, has lost substantial produc-
tion capacity.19
The loss of capacity, which started with
the fall of the shah, culminated in the international
embargo on Iranian crude in 2012 and resulted in ex-
ports declining to between 1 and 1.4 million b/d from
July 2012 to December 2014.20
Moreover, while the cost
of Iranian production is low by global standards, it is
somewhat higher than that of Saudi Arabia. This is ag-
gravated by the fact that Iranian oil fields are reputed
to be in a state of disrepair, requiring extensive invest-
ment and technology that Iran can only attain from out-
side sources.21
Yet, if Iran is to attain either, it will find
itself in a costly state of dependence on foreign entities,
limiting its ability to compete with the Saudis. Com-
paratively, the cost of Saudi oil extraction today varies
somewhere in the remarkably low range of $1.5 per
barrel to $6.0 per barrel, with a conservative average
of $4.0 per barrel, while Iran’s cost is estimated at $2.0
per barrel to $7.0 per barrel with an average of $5.0
per barrel.22
Furthermore, Saudi Arabia is no longer
dependent on technology from the IOCs, either because
it has developed its own or has easily acquired it from
the world’s best engineering firms.
19 EIA, “Iran: International Energy Data and Analysis,” June 19, 2015;
MEES, “August OPEC Production: Output Falls for First Time in Six
Months,” vol. 58, iss. 36, September 2015.
20 Lloyd’s List Intelligence, “Iran Poised to Claw Back Market Share de-
spite Sanctions,” March 10, 2015, http://info.lloydslistintelligence.com/
iran-poised-to-claw-back-market-share-despite-sanctions.
21 Christopher Adams, Najmeh Bozorgmehr, and Ed Crooks, “Iran: The
Oil and Gas Multibillion-Dollar ‘Candy Store,’” Financial Times, July 16,
2015, http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/92402244-2975-11e5-8613-
e7aedbb7bdb7.html#slide0.
22 Author’s interview with international oil company executives familiar
with Arab/Persian Gulf operations for the Saudi side of the estimates
and with Dr. Sara Vakshouri for the Iranian figures.
Iran’s main advantage over Saudi Arabia does not lie in
crude oil but in natural gas (NG). BP now lists Iran as the
global leader in NG reserves, giving it the potential to
be second largest exporter of NG after Russia.23
Yet even
here Iran has suffered from its political isolation. The
decline in Western capital and technology contributed to
the lack of maintenance of Iran’s gas fields. As a result,
today Iran is a net importer of NG. Should Iran refurbish
its gas fields, it could become a major power in the NG
world, finding it relatively easy to develop pipelines to
supply Pakistan, increase its sales to Turkey, and even
start selling piped NG to Oman and the United Arab
Emirates (UAE). With better-managed gas fields, Iran
could also develop its burgeoning chemicals industry,
which has been greatly hampered by the lack of sup-
ply of methane and ethane. Accordingly, to effectively
compete with Saudi Arabia in the energy markets, Iran
would be wise to shift its focus away from crude oil pro-
duction and toward redeveloping its NG fields. It is this
potential NG production that could provide Gulf Arab
states a viable starting point for renewed cooperation.
Underlining this possibility is Saudi Arabia’s natural gas
problem. Since 1974, Saudi Arabia’s economic growth
has been spectacular, growing from a nearly medieval
economy in the mid-twentieth century to one of the
world’s most advanced economies today. This growth
has fueled tremendous improvements in health and edu-
cation, which in turn has resulted in a massive popula-
tion growth—from around six million people in the early
1970s to nearly thirty million today.24
This combination
of economic and population growth has increased the
demand for energy exponentially, with domestic de-
mand for both water and electricity growing at about 7.5
percent annually.25
Driven by both industry and household needs, Saudi
water and electricity demands are largely met through
large-scale flash desalinization projects that cogenerate
electricity, most which run on NG. Yet, since about 70
percent of the gas produced in the kingdom (8.4 trillion
British Thermal Units (BTU) per day) is associated with
oil production, which stood around 10.3 million b/d in
2015, Saudi Arabia has to maintain at least 7 million b/d
of crude production in order to provide the associated
23 1201.4 trillion cubic feet (34 trillion cubic meters) of NG reserves.
See BP Statistical Review of the World Energy (June 2014), p. 20, http://
www.bp.com/content/dam/bp/pdf/Energy-economics/statistical-re-
view-2015/bp-statistical-review-of-world-energy-2015-full-report.pdf.
24 World Bank Database, “Indicator: Total Population,” http://data.
worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.TOTL.
25 Christopher Segar, “Saudi Energy Mix: Renewables Augment Gas,” In-
ternational Energy Agency, November 3, 2014, http://www.iea.org/ieae-
nergy/issue7/saudi-energy-mix-renewables-augment-gas.html; Abdel
Aziz Aluwaisheg, “Runaway Consumption Alarming for Saudi Arabia,”
Arab News, August 4, 2013, http://www.arabnews.com/news/460158.
IRAN’S MAIN
ADVANTAGE OVER
SAUDI ARABIA DOES
NOT LIE IN CRUDE OIL
BUT IN NATURAL GAS.
5. ATLANTIC COUNCIL 5
gas necessary to avoid stifling economic activity.26
To
counter this limitation, Saudi Aramco has been seek-
ing to develop non-associated gas fields, finding some
success in the Karan dry gas field, which produces 1.8
billion cubic feet per day, and looking to find more in
the Arabiyah and Hasbah fields, which could come to
production toward the end of 2015. Nonetheless, these
fields are difficult and expensive to tap because they
are offshore and produce sour gas, which in light of the
heavily subsidized domestic NG prices ($0.75 per million
BTUs as set by the Council of Minister), would create
large, albeit undisclosed, losses to Saudi Aramco.27
Since
NG is plentiful in some parts of the Gulf, it makes little
sense for the kingdom to spend a great deal of money to
develop expensive alternatives.
Religious Issues: Sunni vs. Shia
For centuries there has been competition between vari-
ous schools and sects within Islam. However, the competi-
tion between these schools often tends to be hijacked for
political purposes by power seeking groups and individu-
als.28
And, when the need for control declines, these vari-
26 US Energy Information Administration, “Country Analysis Brief:
Saudi Arabia,” September 10, 2014, p. 3, http://www.eia.gov/beta/in-
ternational/analysis_includes/countries_long/Saudi_Arabia/saudi_ara-
bia.pdf; Saudi Aramco, “Saudi Aramco 2014 Facts and Figures,” 2015,
http://www.saudiaramco.com/content/dam/Publications/facts-and-
figures/2014-saudi-aramco-facts-figures.pdf.
27 The cost of extracting NG from the associated gas is not known, but is
certainly very low and perhaps not too much higher than the set price of
$0.75/million BTUs.
28 Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, Islamic Leviathan: Islam and the Making of
State Power (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001).
ous religious leaders often find it convenient to promote
love and understanding of their “brothers.” This is why
the situation on the ground in the Gulf is more compli-
cated than a simple Sunni-Shia sectarian dichotomy. With
Shia making up anywhere from 10 percent to 15 percent
of the kingdom’s population, most of whom live on the
east coast of the kingdom, Saudi leadership fears that Iran
is using the kingdom’s Shia population to cut into their
control of the country.29
Despite long-held political efforts
to eradicate and oppress Shiism, the Shia have grown
increasingly involved in the running of the country. There
are many Shia at Saudi Aramco and other large Saudi
companies, and many are involved in politics through the
Consultative Assembly of Saudi Arabia, the Majlis as-
Shoura. Nevertheless, there is often a feeling of frustration
among the Saudi Shia who feel discriminated against and
targeted by the more conservative Wahabi elements.30
Though there is a strong religious component to the
tensions with Iran, it should not be exaggerated or
viewed as the single motivating factor. Even if many in
the Saudi leadership view the numerous street dem-
onstrations in the eastern province over the past three
years as proof of Iranian meddling, their fear is less
that Shiism is seeking to dominate the region and more
that Iran is attempting to extend its influence. In other
words, it is not so much religion that impacts Sunni-
Shia relations, but more of an Arab vs. non-Arab state
issue, with Arab Sunnis assuming that the non-Arabs
(read Persians) will utilize sectarian issues to their
advantage. Furthermore, while Saudi Arabia remains
founded upon religious grounds, Wahabi dominance of
personal and national identification has eroded.31
This
transformation has been fueled not only by modern-
ization, but also by the growth of a new form Saudi
nationalist sentiment, one that is tightly linked to both
the Saudi monarchy and the growth of Saudi Arabia
as a powerful, and respected, nation-state.32
It is this
form of nationalism that, by superseding polarizing
Wahabi doctrine, has allowed the kingdom’s popula-
tion to unite around the idea of being “Saudi,” regard-
less of sect or tribe.33
Indeed, even though they are
29 “Protests Break Out after a Shia Cleric Is Sentenced to Death,” Econo-
mist, October 16, 2014, http://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-
and-africa/21625868-protests-break-out-after-shia-cleric-sentenced-
death-sword-unsheathed.
30 Paul Raymond, “Yemen Backlash: Gulf Shia Portrayed as ‘Enemy
Within,’” Al-Araby al-Jadeed, April 16, 2015, http://www.alaraby.co.uk/
english/features/2015/4/16/gulf-shia-treated-as-enemy-within-as-
yemen-burns.
31 Caryle Murphy, “Saudi Arabia’s Shifting Islamic Landscape,” Pulitzer
Center on Crisis Reporting, April 1, 2014, http://pulitzercenter.org/
project/middle-east-saudi-arabia-islam-religion-salafi.
32 Nawaf Obaid, “There Will Be No Uprising in Saudi Arabia,” Foreign
Policy, March 10, 2011, http://foreignpolicy.com/2011/03/10/there-
will-be-no-uprising-in-saudi-arabia/.
33 Theodore Karasik, “Nationalism Is Taking on a New Meaning in
Saudi,” National, June 7, 2015, http://www.thenational.ae/opinion/com-
The 2005 election of hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
heightened Saudi-Iran tensions after a temporary thaw. Photo
credit: Agência Brasil/Wikimedia Commons.
6. 6 ATLANTIC COUNCIL
not Hanbali Sunni, many Shafii and Sufi groups in the
western provinces, as well as the numerous Zaidi Shia
in the south of the country, identify as “Saudi” and are
not viscerally opposed to the present leadership. By the
same token, Iran is not purely “Persian” or even Shia.
There are many Arabs in Iran, both Sunnis and Shia, as
well as many non-Arab Sunnis, like the Kurds.34
Hence,
while sectarian conflict surely plays a role in the Gulf’s
conflicts, it is more a byproduct of hostility between
states than its cause.
Interests in Common
The areas of contention between Iran and Saudi Arabia
could potentially lead to extensive long-term confronta-
tion.35
Yet, if Iranian and Saudi leaders are able to view
sectarianism as undermining their nations’ economic
or political interests, they may see beyond shortsighted
sectarian rhetoric and pave the way for a more coopera-
tive relationship between the two countries.
Oil and NG Interests
In the summer of 2015, after months of deliberations, the
P5+1—the United States, the United Kingdom, France,
China, Russia, and Germany, plus the European Union—
successfully put forward the Joint Comprehensive Plan
of Action (JCPOA) on Iran’s nuclear program. With the
JCPOA’s implementation, Iran will not only see interna-
tional sanctions that have crippled its economy lifted, but
will also find a number of new beneficial economic op-
portunities arise. In a post-JCPOA environment, numerous
incentives exist for Iran and Saudi Arabia to cooperate,
rather than compete, in energy and economic matters.
The most obvious of these incentives lies in the demand
and supply of NG in the Gulf. Saudi Arabia needs more ac-
cess to lower cost NG than it presently can produce from
non-associated sources for its own domestic consump-
tion. From Saudi Arabia’s point of view, if it were to find
plentiful, low-cost NG within the Gulf, it would not be
forced to maintain a high minimum of oil production to
produce enough NG to keep its economy going. It would
also free up crude oil which is presently used to gener-
ate electricity, crude oil that could then diverted to the
world markets, thus giving Saudi Arabia more leeway
to influence prices. At this time, Saudi Arabia can only
ment/nationalism-is-taking-on-a-new-meaning-in-saudi.
34 Ali Mamouri, “Iranian Government Builds Bridges to Sunni Minority,”
Al-Monitor, http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/12/ira-
nian-government-builds-bridges-to-sunni-minority-hedsum-app-b.html
35 John Bell, “The Greater Reality for Iran and Saudi Arabia,” Al Jazeera,
March 30, 2015, http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2015/03/
greater-reality-iran-saudi-arabia-150330051616953.html; Kim Ghat-
tas, “The Saudi Cold War with Iran Heats Up,” Foreign Policy, July 25,
2015, http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/07/15/the-saudi-cold-war-
with-iran-heats-up/; Yoel Guzansky, “Saudi Arabia and the Nuclear
Agreement with Iran,” INSS, July 22, 2015, http://www.inss.org.il/index.
aspx?id=4538&articleid=10116.
influence the markets by increasing production to force
prices down, a maneuver that has ultimately been aimed
at forcing producers like Russia to cut production and
disincentivize Iranian production. If Saudi Arabia did
not have to produce at least 7 million b/d for its associ-
ated gas, it could cut production to shore up prices, while
maintaining the option of flooding the markets. In this
scenario, NG could flow at a relatively low cost from the
Iranian fields to the UAE and Oman, which, in turn, could
limit their imports from Qatar. Qatar could then divert the
difference to Saudi Arabia. Of course, if it were to become
politically feasible, Saudi Arabia and Iran would find the
greatest benefit in directly transferring gas by pipeline on
the short distance between the offshore South Pars gas
field in Iran and Saudi Arabia. As part of this NG negotia-
tion, the Saudis could also allow for a negotiated slow
return of Iran to oil markets by cutting small amounts of
production, providing room for a slight increase in Iranian
production—a coordinated transition that would satisfy
Iran while making little impact on Saudi Arabian revenue.
In fact, deriving from the inelasticity of oil, this transition
could result in increased revenue for the kingdom.
The Iranians need substantial technology and capital to
develop or improve their oil and NG fields. While in total
it is estimated that Iran requires somewhere between
$200-250 billion over the next six years in order to fulfill
the necessary investments in its oil and gas industry, it
will not see more than $50 billion in usable, liquid assets
flow back into the country once sanctions are lifted.36
This requirement for a large input of capital provides
Saudi Arabian public and private entities the opportunity
for either direct or indirect involvement in financing the
rebirth of the wells, especially of the South Pars NG field,
which requires over $40 billion alone, as well as the build-
ing of pipelines necessary to get NG flowing to the Gulf.37
36 Sara Vakhshouri, “Iran’s Oil Production Boost Scenarios in a Post-
Sanctions Era,” MEES, July 3, 2015; United States Institute of Peace, The
Iran Primer, “US Treasury Official on Nuclear Deal,” http://iranprimer.
usip.org/blog/2015/aug/06/us-treasury-official-nuclear-deal.
37 Vakhshouri, “Iran’s Oil Production Boost Scenarios in a Post-Sanc-
tions Era,” op. cit.
WHILE SECTARIAN
CONFLICT SURELY
PLAYS A ROLE IN THE
GULF’S CONFLICTS, IT
IS MORE A BYPRODUCT
OF HOSTILITY BETWEEN
STATES THAN ITS CAUSE.
7. ATLANTIC COUNCIL 7
Saudi Arabia and Iran also could work together to coor-
dinate chemical and fertilizer development. Saudi Arabia
today is one of the most successful chemical producers
in the world. If Iran’s chemical industry, which suffers
from lack of NG, wants to grow, it will need to either
compete or coordinate with the very efficient Saudi pro-
ducers. The chemical companies of both countries could
mutually benefit from developing advanced chemical
production that takes advantage of each of their respec-
tive resources and capacities. For example, after sanc-
tions are lifted, Iran’s natural abundance of ethane will
allow it to develop ethylene downstream production,
while the kingdom could push the growth of industries
based on naphtha from its refineries, hence freeing up
market share for both countries.
There are also a number of possible mutually ben-
eficial ventures, including a move by Saudi Arabia’s
government-owned Ma’aden, the lowest cost aluminum
producer in the world, to establish downstream joint
ventures (JVs) in Iran that would capitalize on Iran’s
high-quality work force and large market. Even more,
Ma’aden, as the largest advanced fertilizer company in
the Gulf, could produce cheaper, higher-quality fertil-
izers by adopting Saudi phosphates and Iranian ammo-
nia as feedstock. On the private side, entities such as Al
Ujain, Sahara, Sipchem, and Tasnee are already involved
in the treatment of NG. Saudi’s prominent cement com-
panies and others in energy-dependent industries are
other potential buyers of Iran’s NG, methanol, and am-
monia. However, none of these economic scenarios are
feasible unless a political settlement between the major
antagonists in the Gulf occurs.
Political Interests in Common
When it comes to their own survival, the Iranian ayatol-
lahs and the monarchial Saudi leaders can be pragmatic.
Presently, all the states inside and outside the region
agree that the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq
and al-Sham (ISIS) must be eradicated. Iran and Saudi
Arabia are individually waging war against an ideol-
ogy that demands the annihilation of all Shia and of the
present Sunni leadership alike. In an overly ambitious
plan, Saudi Arabia is trying to simultaneously destroy
the Iranian- and Russian-supported Assad-Alawi clan
in Syria, as well as ISIS. Iran is also embroiled in a futile
attempt to destroy ISIS on numerous fronts. Yet neither
state can afford to spend tens of billions of dollars on
South Pars, an offshore gas field located in the Persian Gulf, is set to play a central role in Iran’s energy future. Photo credit: Alire-
za824/Wikimedia Commons.
8. 8 ATLANTIC COUNCIL
endless wars. Consequently, only through a compromise
forged between Iran and Saudi Arabia, and includ-
ing other Sunni powers such as Turkey and Egypt, can
either state see the demise of ISIS. To do so, Saudi Arabia
may have to accept that the Alawis remain in the Syrian
political process in some capacity, while Iran would have
to acquiesce to limiting its efforts to establish a “Shia
crescent.”38
Conclusion
In spite of the latest rhetoric triggered by the Mecca
tragedy and the renewed tensions over Syria, reconcilia-
tion between Iran and Saudi Arabia is possible. Dialogue
can easily develop into mutually beneficial cooperation.
Across history, sectarian issues are often not causes of
bloody wars, but rather are merely the consequences of
political struggles, where local leadership utilizes violent
sectarianism to rally people around them. In Saudi
Arabia, it has meant allowing the Wahhabi extremists
to whip up anti-Shia feelings. In Iran, it manifests as the
leadership’s premise that they are the true defenders of
the Shia religious orthodoxy. The terrible cost of these
manipulations can be seen in Yemen, Iraq, and Syria.
While this paints a grim picture of reality, it also pro-
vides some hope. If sectarian sentiment is not the true
source of conflict, then sectarian violence can be tamped
down more easily than is generally assumed.
In the late 1990s, the leaders of Saudi Arabia and Iran
saw that that they could gain support through economic,
business, and political cooperation rather than sectarian
issues. Today, leaders on both sides are poised to come
to the same conclusion. In the wake of Minister Javed
Zarif and President Hassan Rouhani’s accomplishments
during the JCPOA deliberations, Iranian moderates
have increasingly gained popularity, with Rafsanjani,
the loudest advocate for better Saudi-Iranian relations,
already acquiring popular support for his latest electoral
campaign.39
The success of Iran’s moderate politicians,
who are the key to looking beyond sectarian rhetoric,
will be largely based on the promise and fulfillment
of economic development. If these Iranian politicians
rise to power—and the new, young Saudi leadership
agrees—cooperation could come in the form of Iran’s
minimal re-entry into the oil markets and the focus on
natural gas cooperation. Iran could benefit from Saudi
investments and purchase of NG, as well as investments
38 It should be reminded that Saudi Arabia used to be very close to the
Assad clan. The relationship deteriorated after the assassination of Rafik
Hariri attributed by the Saudis to President Bashar al-Assad. Alliances
in the Middle East can be very fickle and often change rapidly. Hence,
a change of heart by the Saudis against the Assad cannot be dismissed
summarily.
39 Rohollah Faghihi, “Hard-liners Rage against Rafsanjani as Elec-
tions Near,” Al-Monitor, http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/origi-
nals/2015/08/iran-rafsanjani-elections.html.
in downstream industrial ventures using chemicals and
aluminum produced in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia could
have access to plentiful NG at a lower cost than their
non-associated NG and have increased markets for their
chemicals, fertilizers and metals. With these economic
interests in mind, and in a time of plummeting energy
prices, there would be additional incentive to work
together to curb ISIS. Iran and Saudi Arabia can even
work together to bring about governments of national
unity in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen. Ultimately, if leaders on
both sides make an effort to set aside sectarian tools and
instead garner support through economic development,
they could very well usher a period of renewed détente
in the Gulf.
IF LEADERS ON BOTH
SIDES REPLACE
SECTARIAN RHETORIC
BY ECONOMIC
COOPERATION, THEY
COULD USHER A PERIOD
OF LONG TERM DÉTENTE
AND PROSPERITY IN THE
GULF.
9. CHAIRMAN
*Jon M. Huntsman, Jr.
CHAIRMAN,
INTERNATIONAL
ADVISORY BOARD
Brent Scowcroft
PRESIDENT AND CEO
*Frederick Kempe
EXECUTIVE VICE
CHAIRS
*Adrienne Arsht
*Stephen J. Hadley
VICE CHAIRS
*Robert J. Abernethy
*Richard Edelman
*C. Boyden Gray
*George Lund
*Virginia A. Mulberger
*W. DeVier Pierson
*John Studzinski
TREASURER
*Brian C. McK. Henderson
SECRETARY
*Walter B. Slocombe
DIRECTORS
Stephane Abrial
Odeh Aburdene
Peter Ackerman
Timothy D. Adams
John Allen
Michael Andersson
Michael Ansari
Richard L. Armitage
David D. Aufhauser
Elizabeth F. Bagley
Peter Bass
*Rafic Bizri
*Thomas L. Blair
Francis Bouchard
Myron Brilliant
Esther Brimmer
*R. Nicholas Burns
William J. Burns
*Richard R. Burt
Michael Calvey
James E. Cartwright
John E. Chapoton
Ahmed Charai
Sandra Charles
Melanie Chen
George Chopivsky
Wesley K. Clark
David W. Craig
*Ralph D. Crosby, Jr.
Nelson Cunningham
Ivo H. Daalder
*Paula J. Dobriansky
Christopher J. Dodd
Conrado Dornier
Thomas J. Edelman
Thomas J. Egan, Jr.
*Stuart E. Eizenstat
Thomas R. Eldridge
Julie Finley
Lawrence P. Fisher, II
Alan H. Fleischmann
*Ronald M. Freeman
Laurie Fulton
Courtney Geduldig
*Robert S. Gelbard
Thomas Glocer
*Sherri W. Goodman
Mikael Hagström
Ian Hague
John D. Harris, II
Frank Haun
Michael V. Hayden
Annette Heuser
*Karl Hopkins
Robert Hormats
Miroslav Hornak
*Mary L. Howell
Robert E. Hunter
Wolfgang Ischinger
Reuben Jeffery, III
*James L. Jones, Jr.
George A. Joulwan
Lawrence S. Kanarek
Stephen R. Kappes
Maria Pica Karp
Francis J. Kelly, Jr.
Zalmay M. Khalilzad
Robert M. Kimmitt
Henry A. Kissinger
Franklin D. Kramer
Philip Lader
*Richard L. Lawson
*Jan M. Lodal
Jane Holl Lute
William J. Lynn
Izzat Majeed
Wendy W. Makins
Mian M. Mansha
William E. Mayer
Allan McArtor
Eric D.K. Melby
Franklin C. Miller
James N. Miller
*Judith A. Miller
*Alexander V. Mirtchev
Obie L. Moore
Karl Moor
Georgette Mosbacher
Steve C. Nicandros
Thomas R. Nides
Franco Nuschese
Joseph S. Nye
Sean O’Keefe
Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg
Ahmet Oren
*Ana Palacio
Carlos Pascual
Thomas R. Pickering
Daniel B. Poneman
Daniel M. Price
Arnold L. Punaro
*Kirk A. Radke
Robert Rangel
Teresa M. Ressel
Charles O. Rossotti
Stanley O. Roth
Robert Rowland
Harry Sachinis
John P. Schmitz
Brent Scowcroft
Alan J. Spence
James Stavridis
Richard J.A. Steele
*Paula Stern
Robert J. Stevens
John S. Tanner
*Ellen O. Tauscher
Karen Tramontano
Clyde C. Tuggle
Paul Twomey
Melanne Verveer
Enzo Viscusi
Charles F. Wald
Jay Walker
Michael F. Walsh
Mark R. Warner
David A. Wilson
Maciej Witucki
Neal S. Wolin
Mary C. Yates
Dov S. Zakheim
HONORARY
DIRECTORS
David C. Acheson
Madeleine K. Albright
James A. Baker, III
Harold Brown
Frank C. Carlucci, III
Robert M. Gates
Michael G. Mullen
Leon E. Panetta
William J. Perry
Colin L. Powell
Condoleezza Rice
Edward L. Rowny
George P. Shultz
John W. Warner
William H. Webster
*ExecutiveCommittee
Members
List as of September 25,
2015
Atlantic Council Board of Directors