Swift winds of change blow across entire Middle East, not just UAE

Dubai. Photo: Ashraf Jandali/Shutterstock

Looking out of the window of a topless tower in Dubai, we could see sweeping changes taking place all around in front of our very eyes. Till a few years ago, it was skeletons of tall buildings coming up all around, altering the skyline constantly. Now we have to peep into the buildings to see how they are being filled with the most modern technological marvels, ranging from up-to-date computers to robots and artificial intelligence-driven devices to replace humans.

No other city in the world seems to have adopted technology with such speed and scale. If Dubai was the first to have erected a building by 3D printing, it is now experimenting with administering the world through artificial intelligence with speed and efficiency.

Today, reading through the 'Khaleej Times', one realizes that geopolitical changes are gripping not only the UAE but the entire Middle East. Internal and external changes are taking place at lightning speed in directions considered unthinkable even weeks ago. The main headline of the newspaper on April 18, 2023, is “It’s Official: Tehran Invites Saudi King.”

The report says that Iran said on Monday it has formally invited the custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Salman bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia to visit Teheran, following a reconciliation agreement reached last month between the two sides under a China-brokered agreement.

The picture accompanying the report is that of a detainee belonging to the Iranian-backed Houthi group, released unilaterally by Saudi Arabia embracing a relative at Sanaa Airport. Next to it is a statement by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that normalizing relations with Saudi Arabia would be a giant leap towards ending the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Unexpected moves, changes all around

Facts can be stranger than fiction not only in technology, trade and European investments, which far exceed Asian activities but also in the emergence of a new world order sweeping the world. Even as the Russia-Ukraine war continues to cause havoc, the rest of the world is engaged in finding new alliances and business methods to build the future.

As for internal social changes, the most telling picture is one of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman shaking hands with Saudi Arabia’s first female astronaut ahead of the launch of the Kingdom’s scientific mission to the International Space Station.

On April 19, 2023, a report is about Qatar and UAE restoring diplomatic ties and opening embassies more than two years after Arab states boycotted Doha and thus shattered the western-allied Gulf Arab bloc.

The boycott of Qatar on the ground that it had terrorist links in Egypt sent shock waves around the world and the boycott turned out to be a farce with the close family ties between Qatar and the UAE flourished. The winds of change elsewhere helped resolve this anomaly, establishing cordiality among the GCC countries. It is Shakespeare who said, “When sorrows come, they come not single spies, but in battalions.” In the Middle East, we are witnessing glad tidings coming in battalions.

China's ascendancy

The net effect of these changes is a dramatic rise in China’s fortunes and a consequent diminishing of US influence. China, which was quietly working on trade and economic relations in the region so far, has projected itself as a global power and President Xi Jinping as a builder of a community with a shared future for mankind. It has also proved that it is capable of stealing a march over the United States in the region.

China had tried to mediate peace talks between Israel and Palestine at least five years ago without much success on account of the commanding position that the US enjoyed. China recently increased contacts with the Arab world and Iran and last year China invited the GCC countries to hold a meeting in China.

President Xi visited Saudi Arabia last year and held several meetings with Arab leaders. High-level exchanges took place between China and Iran also, paving the way for the normalization of relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

US response on expected lines

The US attitude towards the Chinese role in the Middle East is likely to be negative at this moment because the US policy towards China remains ambiguous. But in matters like the Iranian nuclear issue, the US and China may converge in the future.

A solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict may also be desirable, though there is no immediate possibility of peace breaking out on that front. But if Saudi Arabia also recognizes Israel and Iran eases its opposition to Israel, a larger settlement of the Palestine issue may be possible.

India's diminishing role

India had a major role to play in the Middle East during the Cold War and soon after because India was in dialogue with all sides. Many seminal resolutions on the Middle East were based on the drafts of skillful Indian diplomats and Israel was very tolerant of the Indian position, even though India was pro-Palestine to the core.

After the Camp David Accords, when the Arab countries and Palestine sought to isolate Egypt and expel it from the Non-Aligned Movement, it was India which took the lead in supporting Egypt. Though India could not participate in peace-keeping operations in the Middle East because of technical objections by Israel, the role of India as a peacemaker was all too evident.

But with the more recent developments like the Russia-China alliance and the rise of China in the Middle East as against the United States, India’s role has diminished though the India-Israel-US-UAE grouping (I2U2) may assume some importance in the future.

Peace is a rare commodity these days and any ray of hope of peace should be welcome. 

The comments posted here/below/in the given space are not on behalf of Onmanorama. The person posting the comment will be in sole ownership of its responsibility. According to the central government's IT rules, obscene or offensive statement made against a person, religion, community or nation is a punishable offense, and legal action would be taken against people who indulge in such activities.