Posted on 10/29/2017 7:52:58 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The half-a-trillion-dollar initiative to build a tristate city at the Saudi, Egyptian, and Jordanian border in the Gulf of Aqaba will more than likely lead to Riyadh recognizing Israel and integrating Tel Aviv into the project.
The ambitious Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman unveiled a $500 billion project at an investment forum earlier this week in an effort to bring some serious substance to his Vision 2030 project of fundamentally diversifying his countrys oil-dependent economy in the coming decade. The proposal calls for a gigantic city called NEOM to be built at the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba in the northeastern corner of the Red Sea, with the plan being for it to eventually extend into neighboring Egypt and Jordan as well. The Crown Prince promised that it would be a technologically advanced city with its own laws and administration, and it will also be free from anything traditional.
The latter remark hints that Mohammed Bin Salman wont allow the Kingdoms traditional Wahhabi socio-cultural regulations to be enforced there, which goes along with his other headline-grabbing statement during the event when he said that Saudi Arabia will return to moderate Islam and swiftly deal a blow to extremist ideologies. Quite clearly, as analyzed in the authors earlier piece this month about Saudi Arabias shifting grand strategy, a deep state conflict is indeed being fought in the country between its monarchic and clerical factions, with the former poised to carry out a soft coup against the latter as it seeks to modernize the country. This will surely result in some behind-the-scenes tumult in the coming future, if not overt destabilization, but the point of the present article isnt to dwell too much on that tangent.
Instead, its relevant to have brought that up in order to make the case that Saudi Arabia is on the cusp of an unprecedented paradigm change that will likely see it recognizing Israel if the monarchy is successful in snuffing out the clerics political influence. Saudi Arabias Egyptian and Jordanian NEOM partners have already recognized and signed peace treaties with Israel, and Riyadh is known to be coordinating with Tel Aviv in crafting a comprehensive anti-Iranian regional policy, amongst other strategic commonalities that they share. Moreover, the secret meetings between Saudi Arabia and Israel over the years suggest that their relationship is much warmer in private than either side publicly presents it as for their own respective domestic political reasons.
Israel has always wanted relations with Saudi Arabia, though Riyadh has traditionally shirked away from this because it wanted to present itself as a strong supporter of the Palestinian cause, made all the more symbolic by the Saudi monarchys custodianship over the Two Holy Mosques given the religious dimensions of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. However, if Mohammed Bin Salman comes out on top in his deep state soft coup against the Wahhabi clerics, then he can easily lay the blame on them for his countrys refusal to recognize Israel after all of these decades. Not only could he be interested in doing this as the ultimate expression of his countrys radically transformed identity under his stewardship, but he might be just as importantly driven by the geostrategic imperatives related to Vision 2030s flagship NEOM project.
The Gulf of Aqaba was chosen not just because it would allow NEOM to spread into Egypt and Jordan, but also because of its proximity to Israel, which is promoting its Red-Med railway proposal as the perfect Mideast complementary component of the New Silk Road. Tel Aviv keenly knows that the Chinese are always looking for backup plans and transport route diversification in order to not be too dependent on any single connectivity corridor, and in this case, overland rail transit from the Gulf of Aqaba to the Eastern Mediterranean via Israel comes off as exceedingly attractive to Beijings strategists. Furthermore, China has fantastic relations with both Saudi Arabia and Israel, so from Beijings perspective, this is the perfect Mideast win-win, especially if the Peoples Republic can find a way to insinuate that its possible financing of both the NEOM and Red-Med projects contributed to bringing peace to the Mideast.
In addition, theres also the Russian factor to take into consideration, and its objectively known though commonly denied in the Alt-Media Community that Moscow and Tel Aviv are on excellent terms with one another and basically cooperate as allies in Syria. When accounting for the fast-moving Russian-Saudi rapprochement and Moscows envisioned 21st-century grand strategic role in becoming the supreme balancing force in Eurasia, its likely that Russia would be in favor of any Saudi recognition of Israel and Tel Avivs integration into the NEOM project because it would then allow the Russian business elite both in the Russian Federation and Israel to invest in this exciting city-state and the complementary Red-Med Silk Road corridor.
Seeing as how Mohammed Bin Salman is trying to purge the clerics political influence from the Kingdom, its very possible that Saudi Arabia will end up recognizing Israel in the near future and blaming its decades-long delay in doing so on the Wahhabis. The grand intent behind this isnt just to formalize the Saudi-Israeli anti-Iranian partnership or to show the world just how serious the Crown Prince is in changing the course of his country, but to please Riyadhs newfound Multipolar Great Power partners in Moscow and Beijing, both of which enjoy exceptional relations with Tel Aviv but would probably be reluctant to invest in the Kingdoms NEOM city-state project so long as its connectivity access remained dependent on the Suez Canal chokepoint.
Russia and China would feel more strategically secure if Israel was incorporated into this megaproject so that its territory could be used for overland transshipment between the Red and Mediterranean Seas via the Red-Med railway proposal, which would then make NEOM infinitely more attractive from a logistics perspective for all sorts of investors. If Saudi Arabia doesnt recognize Israel, then this non-Suez workaround is impossible and the NEOM city-state loses its grand strategic significance in the context of the Multipolar World Order, which could consequently lead to a lack of investment and therefore the potential failure of Vision 2030s flagship project. As such, due to the economic-strategic imperatives associated with NEOM, as well as the geopolitical paradigm shift staking place in Saudi Arabia, Riyadh will probably recognize Israel in the coming future in order to guarantee that its city-state initiative succeeds and ultimately transitions the Kingdom away from its oil-exporting dependency.
Yes, a pipeline through Syria rather than Israel wasn’t smart, and the Saudis probably knew it at the time. Times have changed. As to relations with Israel, could the Saudis recognize that a Republican, a Trump perhaps, if relations are to warm, this is the time to do it.
Tying up with Israel will cause the Palestinians, Turks and other Sunnis to attack the Al Saud family, leading to the collapse of the Saudi Empire
The Iranians will be extremely happy with this. They get the Saudis to collapse. That's the only reason they were "anti-Israel" -- Hamas are Sunni and hate Shia
Another nice thing about a huge, purpose-built, EPCOT-like megalopolis for all Arabs to reside, is, if they got nuts again, one air raid, goodbye.
Great point about the pipeline.
The Saudis have most of their oil fields in the predominantly Shia area of the country.
I think it's safe to assume that such a futuristic city would have next generation air defenses.
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