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    BREMMER: 'Saudi Arabia is in serious trouble, and they know it'

    Natasha Bertrand
    Business InsiderJanuary 4, 2016
    View photos

    (Adnan Abidi/Reuters)
    A Shi'ite Muslim in front of Saudi Arabia’s embassy in New Delhi burned a picture of Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz on Monday during a protest against the execution of cleric Nimr al-Nimr, who was executed along with others in Saudi Arabia.

    Saudi Arabia’s growing international isolation and Iran’s rising regional influence have led the kingdom to “double down” on protecting its interests, according to a new analysis of the world’s top 2016 risks by Eurasia Group, the world’s largest political-risk consultancy.

    That at least partly explains the kingdom’s decision to sever diplomatic ties with Iran on Sunday, after Iranian protesters ransacked and set fire to the Saudi embassy in Tehran over Saudi Arabia’s execution of prominent Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr.

    On Monday, Saudi Arabia moved to cut off all commercial ties with Iran, according to Reuters, and bar its citizens from traveling there.

    “Saudi Arabia is in serious trouble, and they know it,” Ian Bremmer, president of Eurasia Group, told Business Insider on Sunday.

    The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) is “much more challenged on the economic front, more isolated regionally and globally, and beset with succession issues (given the King’s controversial son),” Bremmer said, referring to King Salman’s newly empowered 30-year-old son, Mohammed bin Salman.

    He added: “They hate the international attention on them given the growing ISIS concerns and want to make regional tensions an Iran story, which helps them domestically. All of which leads toward escalation.”

    Al-Nimr, a Shiite cleric who was an outspoken critic of Saudi Arabia’s treatment of its Shiite Muslim minority, was executed on charges of inciting domestic terrorism and plotting to overthrow the Saudi government.

    Iran protested the grouping of al-Nimr — a cleric in his mid-50s known for his fiery rhetoric — with hardline jihadists executed by Saudi Arabia for their alleged ties to Al Qaeda. Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei predicted “divine vengeance” over al-Nimr’s execution.

    View photos

    (Reuters/Toby Melville)

    By cutting ties with Iran, Saudi Arabia also shifts public attention away from its domestic problems, which include a drop in oil prices and growing political instability stemming from rivalries within the Saudi royal family.

    “We are determined not to let Iran mobilize or create or establish terrorist cells in our country or in the countries of our allies,” Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister, Adel al-Jubeir, said at a news conference in Riyadh on Sunday. “We will push back against Iran’s attempts to do so.”

    Indeed, some analysts say the KSA’s execution of al-Nimr stemmed from a desire to push back against Iran and its allies.

    “The key source of Saudi anxiety is Iran,” Eurasia Group noted in its 2016 risk analysis. “Soon to be free of sanctions, Iran’s economy will strengthen, and its government will have more money to spend in support of regional clients.”

    But as The Soufan Group, a strategic security intelligence firm, noted in its daily briefing, “If the execution of Sheikh Nimr is intended to take the minds of Saudi’s Sunni population off the recent 40% price hike in gasoline and point the finger at an external enemy as the cause of current economic woes, it may not be enough.”

    The group added: “To pursue that line of exculpation, the Saudi royal family will have to continue to escalate its rhetoric and action against Iran.”

    View photos

    (REUTERS/Raheb Homavandi/TIMA)
    Iranian protesters in Tehran, Iran, on Sunday with pictures of al-Nimr during a demonstration against al-Nimr’s execution.

    Any action Saudi Arabia takes against Iran, and vice versa, will most likely be indirect. Neither country wants to become embroiled in a direct conflict, said Abbas Kadhim, a senior foreign-policy fellow at the School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University, in The New York Times on Monday.

    “These countries don’t trust one another, and they see every event as an opportunity to raise tensions,” Kadhim said. “Both countries will try their best to try to fortify their proxies and their activities, which is going to create more trouble.”

    Saudi Arabia and Iran are locked in a proxy war in Syria, where Iranian-backed Shiite militias are fighting Saudi-backed Sunni rebels battling to overthrow the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    Iran and Saudi Arabia also support opposing sides in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia has been launching airstrikes against the Iran-aligned Houthi rebels since March.

    “While a shooting war with Iran is unlikely, the kingdom will push back wherever it views Tehran as gaining advantage,” Eurasia Group wrote in its analysis of the new year’s top geopolitical risks. “More generally, expect an isolated and domestically weaker kingdom to lash out in new ways.”

    NOW WATCH: These are the biggest risks facing the world in 2016



    More From Business Insider

    • Saudi Arabia is severing diplomatic ties with Iran
    • Saudi Arabia just executed a prominent Shia cleric and 46 others for terrorism
    • More countries in the Middle East are cutting diplomatic ties with Iran

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