Review
of US-Saudi ties comes with calls for troop pullout
By
J.P. LAWRENCE
STARS AND STRIPES • October
12, 2022
President Joe Biden talks on the phone with King
Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia on Feb. 9, 2022. Biden’s
administration is being urged to withdraw U.S. troops from Saudi Arabia in
response to a dramatic cut in oil production. (Adam Schultz/White House)
A decision by Saudi Arabia that indirectly will
help Russia fund its war in Ukraine has the U.S. weighing whether to scale back
ties with a Middle East ally that houses thousands of U.S. troops and buys more
American arms than any other nation.
The Saudi-backed move by the OPEC+ cartel to slash
oil production has led President Joe Biden to review U.S.-Saudi ties amid calls
by lawmakers to withdraw troops and missile defense batteries deployed there.
Biden is analyzing whether the relationship with
Saudi Arabia still serves U.S. interests, National Security Council spokesman
John Kirby told reporters Tuesday in a conference call.
U.S. officials asked their Saudi counterparts to
delay a decision on oil production for a month, The Wall Street Journal
reported Tuesday. Saudi officials dismissed the request, saying their decision
was purely economic and had no political dimensions, the report said.
But Russia, a member of OPEC+, stands to take in
greater oil revenues if a more limited supply results in higher prices, as
expected.
“We thought it was a shortsighted decision and
that it benefited Russia,” said Kirby, who declined to give further details on
the review.
Any change in the relationship will have to
balance the desire to sending a message to Riyadh with the value the Saudis
provide in advancing U.S. security goals.
President Joe Biden attends a summit July 16, 2022, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The United States sells more arms to Saudi Arabia than to any other country. (White House/Twitter)
The country offers stable staging points for a
range of operations, including protecting “interests in the region against
hostile action by Iran and Iran-backed groups,” a White House statement in June
said.
The roughly 3,000 U.S. service members there
maintain aircraft and provide air and missile defense in coordination with the
Saudi government.
Other U.S. troops and contractors work on defense
and security cooperation programs. Riyadh is Washington’s largest foreign
military sales customer, with more than $100 billion in contracts supporting
the country’s security ministries, according to a State Department fact sheet.
But Biden’s recent remarks that U.S.-Saudi ties
need to be reconsidered are a “strong signal that the relationship is in
trouble,” said Jeff Colgan, a professor of political science at Brown
University in Rhode Island.
The president told CNN’s Jake Tapper that Saudi
Arabia should expect “some consequences for what they’ve done with
Russia," but he declined to give specifics.
“Oil has always glued the two countries together,”
Colgan said. “Lately, however, the relationship seems to be under as much
strain as ever.”
A bill introduced by three congressional Democrats
last week would withdraw troops as well as Patriot and Terminal High Altitude
Area Defense anti-missile interceptors from Saudi Arabia.
The legislation seeks to give Biden tools “to
recalibrate these relationships so they’re more in our interest,” one of the
lawmakers, Rep. Tom Malinowski, D-N.J., said on CNN last week.
While most modern presidents have claimed broad
powers to wage war, some legal scholars think Congress is constitutionally
authorized to regulate military activity, such as by setting funding
constraints and time limits on the deployment of troops, a Lawfare Institute
blog post said in 2019.
The U.S. has shifted military assets out of Saudi
Arabia before, noted Bilal Saab, senior fellow and director of the defense and
security program at the Washington-based Middle East Institute.
The U.S. removed advanced missile defense systems and Patriot batteries
from Saudi Arabia in 2021, only to return them about six months later.
Relations between Saudi Arabia and the
U.S. are at a lower point than they were after the 9/11 attacks, in which 15 of
the 19 terrorists were Saudis, Saab said.
Logistically, pulling out the relatively
small number of troops from Saudi Arabia to somewhere else in the Middle East
would be easy and take days, not weeks, he said.
But the geopolitical costs of such a
move could be immense, he added, even as the U.S. attempts to pivot away from
the Middle East.
Saudi Arabia is the third-leading source
of imported oil for the United States, providing about half a million barrels
per day to the U.S. market, according to a Congressional Research Service
report published in February.
And spurning Saudi Arabia, a codified
security partner of the U.S. since 1951, could create a narrative of
abandonment that leads countries in the region to turn to Russia or China,
other analysts have said.
“Our footprint in Saudi Arabia serves
U.S. interests first and foremost,” said Saab, who has written about the
importance of a stable global oil market. “We would be shooting ourselves in
the foot if we pulled out.”
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