Mentre il BND tedesco, secondo fonti di stampa, avrebbe modificato la propria analisi sul conflitto siriano la notizia del sempre maggiore coinvolgimento degli Hezbollah negli scontri mi dà la possibilità di segnalare questo spunto di riflessione di John Alterman, del CSIS di Washington. Egli evidenzia come in Medio-Oriente sia ritornata l’epoca delle “guerre per procura” e non solo con riferimento al caso siriano.
[...] It is more accurate, however, to see the region entering an age of proxy wars, on a scale that is likely to dwarf the Arab Cold War that pitted Saudi Arabia against Egypt in the 1950s and 1960s.
While Iran and Saudi Arabia are major antagonists in the unfolding battles, they are not the only ones. The emerging wars are genuinely multipolar, and U.S. policy and practice will need to adapt to this emerging reality.
The most active proxy war is in Syria, where a range of regional and global powers seeks to shape the future of the country. What is surprising is not so much the scale of that assistance as its diversity. Support flows from governments, institutions, and individuals to a dizzying array of actors. Some are principally armed and others are principally political; some are disciplined and others seem determined to sow terror.
More than two years into the conflict, there is remarkably little strategic coordination among the parties supporting Syrian opposition forces, contributing to sustained disarray and infighting among the forces themselves.
Support does not follow clear sectarian or religious lines. Saudi Arabia and Qatar, two Wahhabi states, appear to support different clients in Syria. The Saudi government fears trained and networked jihadi fighters flowing back into the kingdom as they did after the Afghan war in the 1980s, and it fears inspiring a politicized Islamist opposition. It acts with some caution in Syria, and this avowedly religious government appears to favor secular nationalists.
Qatar appears confident that a jihadi wave will not threaten the emirate and is casting bets widely to hasten Bashar al-Assad’s fall. The United Arab Emirates, deeply distrustful of political Islam of any stripe, is among the most cautious of the Gulf states, seeking to check Iran without supporting Islamist fighters. Iran, of course, is betting heavily on the Assad government, while rumors spread that Russia is looking for a solution that preserves Syria’s integrity even if it does not preserve Assad. Western countries have their own preferences and red lines, and each has its own clients.
The proxy war extends far beyond Syria, however. Egypt’s major political parties reportedly receive extensive outside funding, with Qatar heavily bankrolling the Muslim Brotherhood and Saudi Arabia reportedly supporting salafi parties.
Among a range of Arab forces, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates invested especially heavily in the effort to depose Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya, supporting different troops on the ground under the protection of NATO airstrikes. They backed different parties in 2011 and continue to do so.
There are many antagonists in tiny Bahrain—with only 600,000 citizens—but Saudi Arabia and Iran are the most active, supporting the Sunni and Shiʽite communities respectively. [...]
Una situazione molto complessa, insomma, che necessita di un’attenta analisi e di una puntuale pianificazione.
22 maggio 2013 - 2:53 pm | by Silendo | 1 Comment »
Tags: arabia saudita, egitto, hezbollah, iran, medio-oriente, russia, siria, stati uniti.
Dalla Reuters:
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said on Sunday a $10 billion arms deal under discussion with Washington’s Arab and Israeli allies sent a “very clear signal” to Tehran the military option remains on the table over its nuclear program.
“The bottom line is that Iran is a threat, a real threat,” said Hagel, who arrived in Israel on Sunday on his first visit to Israel as defense secretary.
“The Iranians must be prevented from developing that capacity to build a nuclear weapon and deliver it,” he told reporters on his plane.
The first stop on Hagel’s week-long Middle East trip came two days after the Pentagon said it was finalizing a weapons deal to strengthen the militaries of Israel and two of Iran’s key rivals – Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
The deal includes the sale of KC-135 aerial refueling tankers, anti-air defense missiles and tilt-rotor V-22 Osprey troop transport planes to Israel as well as the sale of 25 F-16 Fighting Falcon jets to the UAE.
The UAE and Saudi Arabia also would be allowed to purchase weapons with so-called “stand-off” capabilities that enable them to engage the enemy with precision at a distance. Defense officials said the “stand-off” arms would give the two countries more sophisticated systems than they currently have.
Asked if the arms deal sent a message that the military option was on the table if Tehran moved to build a nuclear weapon, Hagel said: “I don’t think there’s any question that that’s another very clear signal to Iran.”
But he added the military option had been “very clear to Iran for some time” and said the arms deal was a continuation of the U.S. policy to maintain Israel’s so-called “qualitative military edge” in the region, a general reference to the supply of advanced U.S.-made weaponry and technology to the Jewish state. (…)
21 aprile 2013 - 2:30 pm | by Silendo | 1 Comment »
Tags: affari strategici, arabia saudita, iran, israele, medio-oriente, stati uniti.
Ne dà notizia la Reuters…
2 marzo 2013 - 4:15 pm | by Silendo | 1 Comment »
Tags: al qaeda, arabia saudita, sicurezza nazionale, terrorismo.
… il numero di febbraio della rivista edita dal CTC di West Point.
20 febbraio 2013 - 5:00 pm | by Silendo | No Comments »
Tags: al qaeda, arabia saudita, guerriglia, libia, pakistan, siria, terrorismo.
Colin Kahl, Melissa Dalton e Matthew Irvine, del Center for a New American Security, hanno condotto una ricerca sulle potenziali conseguenze di un Iran dotato di armamento nucleare. Nel report, dal titolo “Atomic Kingdom: If Iran Builds the Bomb, Will Saudi Arabia Be Next?“, gli autori sostengono l’improbabilità che l’Arabia Saudita, in risposta ad un Iran nucleare, arrivi a dotarsi anch’essa di armamento nucleare:
The Saudis would be highly motivated to acquire some form of nuclear deterrent to counter an Iranian bomb.
However, significant disincentives – including the prospect of worsening Saudi Arabia’s security environment, rupturing strategic ties with the United States, damaging the country’s international reputation and making the Kingdom the target of sanctions – would discourage a mad rush by Riyadh to develop nuclear weapons. And, in any case, Saudi Arabia lacks the technological and bureaucratic wherewithal to do so any time in the foreseeable future. Saudi Arabia is more likely to respond to Iranian nuclearization by continuing to bolster its conventional defenses against Iranian aggression while engaging in a long-term hedging strategy designed to improve civilian nuclear capabilities.
20 febbraio 2013 - 2:54 pm | by Silendo | 2 Comments »
Tags: arabia saudita, iran, nucleare e risorse energetiche.
Visto che stiamo discutendo dell’attacco alla Polizia di Stato, un articolo d’Oltreoceano sulla sicurezza delle infrastrutture critiche.
24 ottobre 2012 - 10:32 am | by AllegraBrigata | 23 Comments »
Tags: arabia saudita, cyber-mf, stati uniti.
Un sintetico quadro della situazione preparato da Matteo Verda per IL, magazine del Sole 24 ore.
Dalla stessa rivista consiglio anche gli articoli di Leonardo Maugeri e Massimo Nicolazzi.
30 agosto 2012 - 11:47 pm | by Silendo | 5 Comments »
Tags: affari strategici, arabia saudita, medio-oriente, nucleare e risorse energetiche, russia, stati uniti.
Il numero di agosto della rivista del Combating Terrorism Center. Gentilmente segnalato da un gentilissimo lettore…
24 agosto 2012 - 8:00 pm | by Silendo | 75 Comments »
Tags: al qaeda, arabia saudita, cyber-mf, pakistan, siria, somalia, terrorismo.
Un pezzo della Reuters sulla nomina di Bandar bin Sultan.
22 luglio 2012 - 9:30 am | by Silendo | 2 Comments »
Tags: arabia saudita, intelligence, medio-oriente.
Leonardo Maugeri, già responsabile delle strategie dell’Eni ed ora Research Fellow del Belfer Center, ha presentato qualche giorno fa, presso il magnifico Harvard Club di New York, un discussion paper dal titolo: “Oil: the Next Revolution – The Unprecedented Upsurge of Oil Production Capacity and What It Means for the World“.
Secondo Maugeri, autore peraltro di alcuni interessantissimi libri sull’argomento, la capacità produttiva petrolifera globale dovrebbe passare entro il 2020 dagli attuali 93 milioni ai 110 milioni di barili al giorno (+ 17,6 mbd). Un incremento nell’offerta dovuto ad un mix di prezzi elevati e nuove tecnologie che potrebbe trasformarsi in sovrapproduzione ove la domanda mondiale (attualmente sui 90 mbd) non aumenti ad un ritmo dell’1,6% all’anno.
Una rivoluzione nel mercato petrolifero che, oltre ad avere conseguenze di tipo industriale, potrebbe avere un discreto impatto di tipo geopolitico. Una parte consistente di tale incrementi, difatti, si produrrebbe in Paesi non medio-orientali: Stati Uniti, Canada, Venezuela, Brasile.
Scrive Maugeri nell’introduzione del suo studio: “While opinion-makers, decision-makers, the academy, and the financial market seem to be caught up in the “peak-oil” mantra and an excessive enthusiasm for renewable energy alternatives to oil, oil prices and technologies are supporting a quiet revolution throughout the oil world. If this “oil revolution” is true, it may change the way most people think about energy and geopolitics.”
Oil – The Next Revolution – By Leonardo Maugeri
28 giugno 2012 - 8:00 pm | by Silendo | 13 Comments »
Tags: affari strategici, arabia saudita, medio-oriente, nucleare e risorse energetiche, sicurezza nazionale, stati uniti.
Il numero di giugno 2012 della rivista del Combating Terrorism Center.
28 giugno 2012 - 12:00 am | by Silendo | No Comments »
Tags: al qaeda, arabia saudita, australia, terrorismo.
28 maggio 2012 - 1:30 pm | by Silendo | 5 Comments »
Tags: al qaeda, arabia saudita, pakistan, sicurezza nazionale, siria, terrorismo.
Il Centre Français de Recherche sur le Renseignement ed il Centre international de recherche et d’études sur le terrorisme et d’aide aux victimes du terrorisme hanno pubblicato il rapporto conclusivo (qui in francese e qui in inglese) di un’attività di indagine effettuata in Siria nel dicembre scorso. Oggetto dello studio: le dinamiche della crisi iniziata nel marzo dello scorso anno nel Paese medio-orientale.
Una crisi – gli autori parlano espressamente di “une libanisation fabriquée” – la cui gestione è influenzata dalla questione iraniana e dagli interessi, conflittuali, di una pluralità di attori regionali ed extra-regionali.
This «manufactured Lebanonization» of Syria is the result of actions led by three main groups:
- the Syrian regime, its military units and various security services;
- political and religious groups including the Muslim Brotherhood and leaders of Salafist groups with support from governments and political forces in neighbouring countries: Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and, to a lesser extent, Iraq;
- regional and international powers involved in the zone: Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United States, and, to a lesser extent, France.
The media networks of the Gulf states, with support from major Anglo-‐American press agencies and their European and French counterparts, have become frontline players in this crisis, with «global» coverage aimed primarily at the overthrow of the Damascus regime, similar to what occurred in Libya.
The Lebanonization of Syria
20 febbraio 2012 - 10:30 am | by Silendo | 3 Comments »
Tags: arabia saudita, francia, gran bretagna, iran, iraq, israele, russia, siria, stati uniti.
… nella competizione strategica tra Stati Uniti ed Israele: l’analisi di Brandon Fite (CSIS).
9 febbraio 2012 - 2:17 pm | by Silendo | No Comments »
Tags: affari strategici, arabia saudita, cina, iran, israele, medio-oriente, nucleare e risorse energetiche, russia, stati uniti.