Why the world should take notice as Saudi Arabia joins Chinese alliance -- and how this relates to Taiwan
- Written by Andrew MacLeod, Visiting Professor, War and Security Studies/International Genetics, King's College London
Saudi Arabia’s cabinet recently approved the decision[1] to join the China-led Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO).
This could be a signal that Riyadh, with all its energy reserves, is choosing sides in the Ukraine war. Saudi Arabia, in part stung by US president Joe Biden’s refusal[2] to deal with the Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, is moving closer to Russia and China, particularly since the Chinese brokered a rapprochement[3] between the kingdom and Iran.
The SCO began its life[4] in 1996 as the “Shanghai Five” made up of People’s Republic of China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan. In 2001 it admitted additional central Asian states and renamed itself as the SCO, a military, political and economic collaboration[5] organisation. Since then most other central Asian states have joined, plus Mongolia as an observer and critically, in 2017, Pakistan and India[6].
In 2023 the SCO has nearly 50% of the global population as member states, observers or partners and approximately 30% of the global economy in nominal terms (that is pure dollar terms). It represents just over 40% in purchasing power parity (PPP[7]), a term[8] that measures economic power adjusted for the cost of goods in a country or group of countries.
To put that in perspective, the G7 represents a much smaller population and only about 27% of the global economy in PPP terms[9].
The SCO already had more economic clout than the G7 and in 2021 held its latest set of combined military exercises[10]. And now resource rich Saudi Arabia is joining. The SCO holds frequent joint military and counter terrorism exercises[11] with the next planned later in 2023[12]. It will be interesting to see how Saudi engages militarily.
This edging closer to Beijing is particularly significant given that China has recently strengthened its diplomatic credibility by negotiating a rapprochement[13] between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
The various Iranian/Arab disputes have been one of the reasons that the Middle East and Iran have remained unstable, fragmented and unable to push a regional approach to their problems.
Read more: Saudi-Iran deal won't bring peace to the Middle East but will enhance China's role as power broker[14]
Part of a wider strategy
The calamitous[15] war in Yemen is but one example. The conflict has been a proxy war between the Saudis and the Iranians for dominance of the region. As Saudi’s cost of oil production is lower than Iran’s, part of the Saudi strategy has been to keep oil prices artificially low, preferably below the US$65 (£52) per barrel figure that some analysts think to be the price Iran needs to balance its budget[16].
References
- ^ decision (www.reuters.com)
- ^ refusal (www.cnbc.com)
- ^ rapprochement (www.economist.com)
- ^ began its life (www.eurasian-research.org)
- ^ collaboration (www.jstor.org)
- ^ Pakistan and India (eng.sectsco.org)
- ^ PPP (www.oecd.org)
- ^ a term (www.imf.org)
- ^ terms (www.worldeconomics.com)
- ^ combined military exercises (pib.gov.in)
- ^ military and counter terrorism exercises (www.news.cn)
- ^ later in 2023 (bigasia.ru)
- ^ negotiating a rapprochement (www.economist.com)
- ^ Saudi-Iran deal won't bring peace to the Middle East but will enhance China's role as power broker (theconversation.com)
- ^ calamitous (www.ft.com)
- ^ balance its budget (www.reuters.com)
- ^ announced cuts in production (www.ft.com)
- ^ analysis (www.eiu.com)
- ^ assess the effectiveness (www.lowyinstitute.org)
- ^ stated aim (www.reuters.com)
- ^ the Quad (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ said (asia.nikkei.com)
- ^ new Aukus (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ 2758 (www.smh.com.au)
- ^ recognised government of all of China (www.spf.org)
- ^ borders of the territory of China (thediplomat.com)
- ^ constitution (english.president.gov.tw)
- ^ claims the mainland (theconversation.com)
- ^ opinions on integration (globaltaiwan.org)
- ^ military drills (www.abc.net.au)
- ^ banning ships (twitter.com)
- ^ leaking support (theconversation.com)