The terrorist attack in the village of El-Kadih near the Shia enclave of Qatif in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, when a suicide bomber detonated himself in a local mosque during the big Friday prayer resulted in 20 people killed and more than 70 injured, has marked a new page in the modern history of the country. The Kingdom has never witnessed such large scale attacks even in the period of 2003-2006, when Al Qaeda made its infamous strikes in Jeddah and Riyadh.
It’s crucial to note that there’s a big difference between the events that happened ten years ago and those happening now. Back then terrorist attacks were the evildoings of Osama bin Laden aimed at striking the royal family at its heart, while cells of Al Qaeda Islamists were scattered all across the region, organizing attacks that were aimed at getting maximum media exposure.
Today the situation is fundamentally different, since the responsibility for yesterday’s attack was claimed by ISIL that keeps under its control a considerable part of both Iraq and Syria. In fact, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant has recently been manifesting the features of a quasi-state with its own army, territory, financial institutions, propaganda capabilities and education system. One year since the moment of its official creation this terrorist organization has managed to radically change the balance of powers, since it has been rapidly transforming in a major regional player that determines trends in the Middle East.
Saudi Arabia has initially failed to properly assess the risks of ISIL activities, despite a number of loud statements that its officials made condemning this Islamist group. Moreover, the Kingdom went as far as to announcing a relentless war against ISIL in August 2014, following the initiatives of Washington. But then Riyadh was quick to lose interest in any form of real confrontation with Islamists, assuming that routine bombing raids and the creation of a border rampart would do the trick, while leaving Baghdad to face ISIL advances on its own.
Saudi strategists must have been convinced that despite the loud initial declarations that ISIL was making on the establishment of a caliphate and future control over Mecca and Medina this organization did not have sufficient forces and means to wage war against the KSA. Even the November attack in 2014, when ISIL terrorists opened fire on Shiites in the governorate of Al-Ahsa failed to convince Saudi policymakers to start a fight against this evil.
In addition, has been widely perceived as a Sunni organization in the KSA which led to a somehow restrained approached, since certain forces in the Kindgom where nourishing aspirations that this terrorist group could be used by Saudi archrival – Iran. There was a hope that the struggle of Shia forces in Iraq against ISIL along with the troubles these Islamist cause to the government of Bashar al-Assad in Syria will lead to their mutual weakening and “annihilation” of both the terrorists and the Shia forces. And once the old Saudi king perished on 23 January 2015, his successor Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud has labeled the Houthis in the neighboring Yemen a major threat to the security of the Kingdom. Riyadh was concerned that the strengthening ties of the Houthis and their chief supporter Ali Abdullah Salih with Tehran will launch a processes similar to the one that was initiated by Iran in early 80’s in Lebanon, which would result in the transformation of Shia armed forces in Yemen in an analogue of Hezbollah. In a broader context, there it was believed that Iran is trying to surround Saudi Arabia with hostile states, namely Iraq, Syria and Yemen.
Therefore, once the Houthis started spreading their influence on the south of Yemen, beyond their original areas, it was regarded as a Tehran’s aggressive move against the Kingdom. After all, a similar approach was taken by Saudi Arabia when in 2011 Shiites launched protests in Bahrain, that resulted in the military intervention of Saudi troops in this country.
A similar course of actions can be witnessed in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia has been conducting countless air raids against the Houthis since the end of March under the pretext of fulfilling the request of the “legitimate President of Yemen Mansur Hadi“. The only difference from its intervention Bahrain is that the KSA has no sufficient amount of trained troops for combat operations in mountainous areas. Saudi allied states, such as Egypt and Pakistan refused to send their troops to Yemen, while restricting their support of this intervention by political statements. Gradually the Kingdom was forced to limit the scale of its air raids in Yemen due to the fact that they has had no effect on the combat capabilities of pro-Houthi forces.
On top of its military failures, Riyadh failed to initiate the process of political settlement on the basis of a national dialogue, since against the backdrop of the ongoing bombing in Sana’a and the scaled of destructions of their native town of Sa`dah the Houthis refused to take part in the conference that was carried out in the Saudi capital.
Now, after the suicide attack in El-Kadih, the situation has taken a completely different angle. Any sane analyst can tell you now that at the moment there is no way in which the Houthis can be the main security threat to the Kingdom. Moreover, they have already expressed their readiness to take part in negotiations in Geneva that were organized by a UN Special Envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed. And should Riyadh stop its aircraft attacks, the Houthis would most likely stop capturing military bases on Saudi territory.
On the other hand there’s no easy out for Saudi Arabia in the situation with ISIL. This so-called caliphate has called the largest terrorist attack on Saudi soil in the last decade the doing of its new province, which is equivalent to the declaration of war. ISIL militants are no longer interested in capturing Kurdish areas on the border with or launching advances in the direction of Baghdad, now they move closer to the Saudi border. At the same time they are moving rapidly toward Damascus, recently they have captured the ancient city of Palmyra, located some 200 kilometers from the Syrian capital.
Its clear that the KSA is urgent need to change its evaluations by give up the military operation against Yemen by supporting the negotiating in Geneva, while concentrating all of its efforts on the fight against ISIL. In this case she can find some new allies, including Russia.
Maxim Egorov, a political commentator on the Middle East and contributes regularly for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.