UAE’s reasons for cancelling the agreement for purchase of F35

Modern Diplomacy
UAE’s reasons for cancelling the agreement for purchase of F35

Days after the UAE’s decision to cancel the agreement regarding purchase of F35 jets from the US, a CNN report stated that assessments of senior US officials suggested that transfers of sensitive ballistic missiles had taken place between China and Saudi Arabia, Modern Diplomacy writes. 

One of the reasons for UAE to cancel the deal with the US, was that it did not want to be caught in any sort of ‘cold war’ between both the US and China. Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Adviser to UAE’s leadership while speaking at a think tank in Washington DC earlier this month said: “I think we, as a small state, will be affected negatively by this, but will not have the ability in any way to affect this competition even positively really.”

While the US has been uncomfortable with UAE’s use of Chinese 5G technology, with Washington warning UAE that the latter’s use of technology will impact security ties between both countries,  the findings of US surveillance that China was trying to build a military installation in Khalifa port, close to Abu Dhabi, led to serious differences. While construction work on the site in Khalifa port was cancelled (though both UAE and China insisted that the facility was purely commercial in nature), and both UAE and US have publicly stated that their relationship is still strong, there is no doubt that recent events have cast a shadow on the bilateral relationship.

If one were to look at the case of Saudi Arabia developing ballistic missiles, it is important for a number of reasons. First it shows the increasing security imprint of China on the Middle East -specifically two Gulf Cooperation council (GCC countries) Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates (UAE) considered to be close to the US, and the fact that ties with China could emerge as a bone of contention in relations between Washington and Abu Dhabi and Riyadh.

A Senior Chinese official did not deny cooperation, in the sphere of ballistic technology, between Saudi Arabia and China while saying that both countries are comprehensive strategic partners. Said the official: ‘Such cooperation does not violate any international law and does not involve the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,”

Interestingly, China also shares robust economic ties with Iran and has been pitching for revival of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action JCPOA/Iran nuclear deal while UAE and Saudi Arabia, like US, Israel and other countries have expressed worries with regard to Iran’s nuclear ambitions. China and Iran had also signed a 25 year cooperation agreement, referred to as ‘strategic cooperation pact’ in March 2021 which sought to bolster economic and security linkages between both countries. Iran has also hinted that if the JCPOA does not revive it would go ahead and trade with China and other countries.

Second, the development of ballistic missiles by Saudi Arabia will have a significant impact on the Middle East, and make it tougher for the US and other countries to prevent Iran from developing a ballistic program.

US ties with Saudi Arabia

While information pertaining to Chinese assistance for Saudi development of ballistic missiles was available to the US even earlier, the Trump administration did not put much pressure on the Saudis on this issue. Biden Administration’s ties with Riyadh have been strained (as a result Saudi Arabia has been attempting to reorient its foreign policy significantly), though in recent months, the US has been working on remoulding ties. One of the reasons why did not impose sanctions on Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman (MBS even though declassified reports of CIA pointed to the fact that MBS was clearly involved in the Jamal Khashoggi murder (a number of Saudi officials were put on a no travel list, while financial sanctions were imposed on some officials) was that US did not want to allow ties with Saudi Arabia to further deteriorate

GCC countries like Saudi Arabia and UAE, which have shared strong economic and strategic ties with the US have been altering their foreign policy within the Middle East (one important example of this has been attempts by both countries to improve ties with Iran) as well as outside it. One of the propelling factors for the reorientation in foreign policy of Riyadh and Abu Dhabi is the belief that US will be less involved in the region in the future. While in the past, the China factor has never been a major issue in US ties with Saudi Arabia and UAE, with greater security and technological cooperation this could prove to be a thorny issue. Apart from its increasing economic clout, the biggest advantage which China possesses in the Middle East is that apart from strong ties with Gulf countries it also has good relations with Iran.

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