Pakistan needs a modus vivendi between Iran and Saudi
Arabia to avoid a sectarian implosion at home.
It’s been
a particularly interesting week for Pakistani diplomacy. In a rare display,
both Nawaz Sharif, the country’s prime minister, and General Raheel Sharif (no
relation), the chief of army staff, jointly traveled to Saudi Arabia and Iran,
in what was billed as an attempt by Islamabad to mediate between the quarreling
Middle Eastern giants.
Saudi
Arabia’s execution of Nimr al-Nimr, a prominent Shia Sheikh, on January 2 led
to massive protests against the Saudi embassy, which was ransacked by Iranian
protesters. The incident led to the cessation of formal diplomatic ties
between the two countries and intensified the underlying politico-sectarian
divides in the Middle East.
Pakistan’s
role in the Saudi-Iran split isn’t entirely obvious. The country is a
Sunni-majority state with the second-largest Shia population of any
Muslim-majority state after Iran. Pakistan shares close historical and
diplomatic ties with Saudi Arabia, but shares a border with Iran. For
Islamabad, maintaining good ties with both Riyadh and Iran is a priority for
entirely different reasons.
Meanwhile,
Pakistan’s leaders have no particular intention to be seen as siding with
either Saudi Arabia or Iran and their highly sectarian geopolitical feud for
influence in the Middle East. Nevertheless, ahead of the Nawaz and Raheel
trips, the Pakistani foreign office issued a statement noting that “Pakistan is
deeply concerned at the recent escalation of tensions between the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
Against
this backdrop, the two Sharifs traveled this week, first to Riyadh and then to
Tehran. In Saudi Arabia, where they arrived on Monday, the Pakistani leaders
essentially continued the conversation that had been initiated by the Saudis
days after the fallout from Nimr al-Nimr’s execution.
Mohammed
bin Salman, the Kingdom’s deputy crown prince and defense minister, met with Pakistani officials,
receiving assurances from Pakistan that it would stand with Riyadh. Gen. Sharif
had assured Salman that Pakistan would stand with Saudi Arabia. In Riyadh,
Nawaz Sharif exchanged views with the Saudi leadership about regional issues,
including the diplomatic crisis with Iran. Sharif urged restraint and
encouraged a peaceful solution to the dispute between the two states.
On
Tuesday, the two Sharifs traveled to Tehran where they met with Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani. Their arrival in Iran came days after the
international agreement to limit Iran’s nuclear program, known as the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action, was implemented. Additionally, they arrived in
Tehran just days after local officials on both sides of the Iran-Pakistan
border revealed that the strategically important port cities of Chabahar in
Iran and Gwadar in Pakistan would become “sister cities,” connected by a railway track.
In Tehran, as in Riyadh, the two Sharifs listened to Iranian concerns and
consulted on a range of regional issues.
What’s
interesting is that Pakistan is trying to position itself as an honest broker
of sorts between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Nawaz Sharif’s government is taking a
gamble on the idea that it can broker talks between the two Middle Eastern
giants while avoiding getting drawn into the geopolitical-sectarian contest
that so bitterly divides Iran and Saudi Arabia. Pakistan is experimenting with
shuttle diplomacy in the Middle East. After his meeting with Rouhani, Nawaz
told the press that “Pakistan has conveyed Saudi Arabia’s concerns to Iran, and
will pass on Iran’s concerns to Saudi Arabia.”
For
now–not knowing what was said behind closed doors in Tehran or Riyadh–it
appears that both sides are eager to work with Pakistan. Both Iran and Saudi
Arabia, at Pakistan’s behest, will appoint special envoys to meet with Pakistan’s
own “focal person” on the issue. Based on Nawaz Sharif’s comments after his
first attempt of shuttle diplomacy, the impetus for Pakistan to undertake this
diplomatic initiative is concern about fighting terrorism. “We are
fighting a common enemy that is terrorism. Together we can fight and defeat
this menace. It cannot be fought separately,” he said.
That
statement in particular is odd for a variety of reasons. As is apparent from
recent op-eds by the Iranian
and Saudi foreign ministers
in the New York Times, each sees the other as a sponsor of terrorism in
the Middle East. Pakistan, meanwhile, has its own internal struggle against
terrorists hostile to the state (such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and its
associated acts). Pakistan talks about Islamic brotherhood and “Muslim unity,”
but it’s unclear if it has a realistic road map to bridge the serious rift
between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
Perhaps,
above all, Islamabad’s concerns about an intensifying Saudi-Iran split have to
do with its own sectarian struggle. Violence against Pakistan’s Shia community has grown at the
hands of Deobandi extremist groups, who take their inspiration from
Saudi Arabia’s puritanical spin on Sunni Islam known as Wahhabism. Meanwhile,
some prominent voices in Pakistan–even from within the country’s local and
national government–see undue Iranian influence at play among Pakistani Shias. Pakistan
has seen the post-1979 contest for supremacy in the Middle East between Iran
and Saudi Arabia play out at home and is eager to avoid any additional
sectarian escalation at home.
The one
reassuring sign of this week’s shuttle diplomacy comes with the shared
itinerary between Nawaz and Raheel. The General’s participation suggests that
the Pakistani army, which is seen as the locus of control for the country’s
foreign and security policy, buys in to the prime minister’s vision of helping
Riyadh and Tehran bridge their differences. The Pakistani military’s interests
in the Iran-Saudi Arabia divide are fairly skewed toward Saudi Arabia, which
has historically been an important financial benefactor.
Pakistan
received a $1.5 billion “unconditional grant” from Saudi Arabia in 2014, which
helped the country service its debts at a time of financial
difficulty. (Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has personal stakes as
well–Riyadh hosted him in exile after he was removed from power by Pervez
Musharraf in 1999.) Saudi-Pakistani military cooperation is advanced and
Riyadh even included Pakistan in its “Islamic military alliance,” to Pakistan’s surprise initially.
If push
came to shove, there is little reason to doubt that Pakistan’s military would
stand by Saudi Arabia instead of Iran. That decision isn’t one that would be
taken lightly and, based on Pakistan’s moves this week, it appears that neither
Sharif is particularly interested in having matters escalate to that point.
Pakistan’s relations with India and Afghanistan are complicated and fraught
enough that it doesn’t need difficulties with a third neighbor.
Time will
tell if Pakistan’s decision to mediate between Iran and Saudi Arabia will be
successful. Nawaz and Raheel’s first attempt at shuttle diplomacy suggests that
both Riyadh and Tehran will buy in to the process. Unfortunately, the “hard”
part of this attempt at deft diplomacy–getting the Iranians and Saudis to work
out their differences–lies ahead. By Ankit Panda
Modus Vivendi - a working arrangement between conflicting interests; practical compromise
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