When the Arab League foreign ministers hold on an emergency meeting this
Thursday, three items are slated to top their agenda – the crisis in Syria, the
threat of war in Sudan and three rock outcroppings in the Gulf.
The tiny
islands Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs have been in dispute for more
than four decades. But a visit to Abu Musa by Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad on April 11 has ratcheted up tensions over them at a time when the
region is already on edge over the nuclear standoff between Tehran and the West
and over the revolution in Syria.
“No one wants a new foreign policy
issue to erupt at this junction, but that is exactly what is happening. And,
this time it may stick because of the timing,” Theodore Karasik, director for
research and development at the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military
Analysis, told The Media Line. “It’s a whole new level of rhetoric.”
Iran and its
Arab Gulf neighbors have a long and growing list of mutual grievances. The Arabs
accuse Tehran of developing nuclear weapons as a way of establishing hegemony
over the region and of provoking unrest among their minority Shiite populations.
Iran resents its Arab neighbors for aligning with the US and for siding with
the rebels seeking to bring down Syrian president Basher Assad, a key ally of
Tehran.
In that context, the dispute over the three islands seems like a
sideshow. They have a combined population of maybe 2,400 people – and possibly
less since no one is sure anyone actual lives on the Tunbs – and a land area not
much bigger than New York’s Coney Island.
But they sit close to the
Strait of Hormuz, through which a large part of the world’s oil is shipped, and
their status is packed with symbolic value over historical rights and national
prestige.
Ahmadinejad’s visit was the first ever by an Iranian leader
since the country gained control of Abu Musa in 1971. Worse still, he used the
opportunity to score propaganda points by reminding the world that the body of
water separating his country from the Arabian Peninsula is the “Persian” Gulf,
not the “Arabian Gulf,”as Arab countries prefer to call it.
Iran’s Arab
neighbors responded angrily. The United Arab Emirates (UAE), whose Sharjah
emirate claims the islands for itself, recalled its ambassador after what it
called was a “flagrant violation” of its sovereignty. Gulf officials said any
“aggression” against the UAE would be considered an act against the entire Gulf
Cooperation Council, the six-country alliance led by Saudi Arabia. Countries as
far afield as the US, France, Britain and Italy weighed in.
Iran hasn’t
backed down. A Culture Ministry official in Tehran has proposed holding a film
festival on the island with the theme of independence. Another office announced
plans to dispatch archaeologists from the University of Tehran to carry out
excavations that will reveal “the ancient civilization of Iran in the region.”
Incongruously, given the background of war threats and absence of any notable
attractions, Iran’s cabinet voted last week to turn Abu Musa into “a model
tourist resort.”
More menacingly, Iranian Gen. Ahmad Reza Pourdastan told
state television: “If these disturbances are not solved through diplomacy, the
military forces are ready to show the power of Iran to the offender. Iran will
strongly defend its rights.”
But Joshua Teitelbaum, an expert on Saudi
Arabia at Israel’s Bar-Ilan University, said he doubted either side wanted the
Abu Musa controversy to lead to actual conflict, thus the risks entailed with a
provocation are low. The Gulf powers routinely protest Iran’s control of the
three islands, but they have never risked any kind of military response, he
said.
“It’s a cheap way to raise the flag. There is lot of jockeying for
position right now, like threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz. It’s all
part of the great game,” Teitelbaum told The Media Line. “It’s just a way of
putting their thumb in the Saudi eye.”
Nevertheless, both sides of the
dispute have good reasons for wanting to put the islands into
contention.
At home, Ahmadinejad is trying to recover politically from a
thumping defeat in parliamentary elections last month and is casting about for
issues that will enhance his leadership credentials, said Karasik of the
Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis.
Days before
Ahmadinejad’s visit to Abu Musa, Iran entered into talks with the US and other
world powers, the so-called P5+1 group, over its nuclear program. To ensure no
one inside or outside Iran interprets the talks as a sign of weakness in the
face of sanctions and setbacks in Syria, Iran is looking for issues that their
country remains a power to contend with, Karasik said.
“Although they are
coming to the negotiating table, [the Iranians] still can cause mischief in
the region and what better way to do that than to slap the UAE’s face over this
issue. They know it will resonate with the Gulf Arabs,” he said. He warned,
however, that in the long term, the strategy could backfire by keeping the
dispute over sovereignty on the diplomatic agenda.
“Both – the timing and
the reasons – are connected to the decline of Iran’s regional influence and its
being forced to back down on… the nuclear issue. Furthermore, Tehran has sought
to discipline and to frighten the GCC countries from the repercussions of their
stances on Syria,” said Raghida Dergham, a columnist for the Dar Al-Hayat
daily.
Saudi Arabia and its Arab allies have good reason to match the
Iranian rhetoric, short of risking military confrontation, added Teitelbaum. As
their activity in Syria demonstrates, the Gulf Arab countries have been taking
on a more assertive role in the region.
“The way the Iranians are going
crazy in the Gulf, the Saudis are going to respond to everything. They’re not
going to let any Iranian step go unanswered, verbally or diplomatically,” he
said. “They aim is to keep Iranians on as short a leash as possible.”
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