Context
- The article examines the enduring geopolitical instability in the Gulf rooted in structural power asymmetry between Iran and Arab states, arguing that the conflict can only be managed, not resolved.
- Source: C Raja Mohan writes: The Gulf’s geopolitical predicament cannot be solved. It can only be managed, The Indian Express
Structural Power Asymmetry in the Gulf
- Demographic Imbalance: Iran’s population (~90 million) far exceeds the combined ~27 million citizens of GCC states
- Political Structure: Iran is a unified state, whereas the Arab Gulf is fragmented among multiple kingdoms
- Core Imbalance: Iran is too large and powerful relative to its neighbours, preventing stable regional equilibrium
Historical Evolution of Gulf Security Order
- British Balancing Role: Britain maintained regional stability by protecting Gulf states while engaging Iran
- End of Old Order: British withdrawal “east of Suez,” Gulf independence (1971), and the 1979 Islamic Revolution dismantled the earlier balance
- Shift in Security Dependence: Gulf Arabs increasingly relied on external powers, especially the United States
Continuity of Iranian Hegemonic Ambitions
- Pre-Revolution Assertiveness: Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi pursued regional dominance through military expansion and territorial claims
- Territorial Actions: Seizure of Abu Musa and Tunb islands (1971) and claim over Bahrain
- Regional Intervention: Deployment of troops in Oman’s Dhofar to assert Iran’s role as security arbiter
- Military Build-up: Creation of a powerful military with US support
Post-Revolution Transformation without Structural Change
- Ideological Shift: Khomeini replaced Persian nationalism with Shia revolutionary ideology
- Strategic Continuity: Continued use of proxies, regional interference, and military projection
- Increased Intensity: Greater ferocity and religious motivation compared to the Shah’s period
- Domestic Consequence: External interventions intensified domestic unrest (reflected in protest slogans)
Gulf Arab Responses and Their Limitations
- GCC Formation (1981): Attempt to pool resources against Iran, weakened by internal divisions
- Reliance on Iraq: Support for Saddam Hussein as a counterweight to Iran during the Iran-Iraq War
- Strategic Backfire: Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait (1990) exposed risks of proxy balancing
- US Military Presence: American intervention (1991) replaced regional balancing with direct external security
Failures of Alternative Balancing Strategies
- Sunni Radicalisation Strategy: Support for radical Sunni groups to counter Shia Iran
- Blowback Effect: Culmination in the 9/11 attacks
- US Policy Shift: Destruction of Iraq and disbanding of its military created a power vacuum
- Iranian Expansion: Emergence of Shia-led government in Iraq and expansion of influence to the Mediterranean
Emergence of New Strategic Alignments
- Iranian Sphere of Influence: Land corridor from Tehran to Beirut through Iraq and Syria
- Arab-Israel Rapprochement: Shared concern over Iran fostered quiet cooperation between Gulf Arabs and Israel
Conflicting Strategic Objectives in the Region
- US-Israel-Gulf Demands:
- Curtail Iran’s missile and nuclear capabilities
- End support for proxy forces
- Stop interference in Arab internal affairs
- Internationalise the Strait of Hormuz
- Iran’s Counter-Demands:
- Right to nuclear and missile development
- Security guarantees against US action
- Removal of US bases in Arab states
- Compensation for war damages
- Role in governance of the Strait of Hormuz
Enduring Nature of Gulf Instability
- Balance of Power Constraint: Iran is too strong to ignore but not strong enough for unilateral dominance
- Arab Dependency: Gulf states cannot independently balance Iran and rely on US security guarantees
- Lack of Alternative Guarantors: No other power (Russia, China, Europe, India) can replace the US role
- Cyclical Instability: Regional tensions persist due to unresolved structural contradictions
Conclusion: Management, Not Resolution
- Structural Reality: Gulf conflict is rooted in enduring geopolitical imbalance
- Limited Solutions: No permanent settlement feasible under current conditions
- Strategic Outlook: Stability can only be managed through external balancing and cautious diplomacy, with inherent uncertainty
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