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As U.S. steps back from Middle East, China steps in

Welcome to the post-American Middle East.

That’s the pointed message Iran, Saudi Arabia, and their eager mediator, China, wanted to send Washington with last Friday’s announcement of a Beijing-brokered rapprochement between the region’s rival Muslim powers.

Why We Wrote This

The U.S. has long been the preeminent outside actor in the Middle East. Now China is asserting itself there, stealing Washington’s diplomatic thunder. What does this portend?

Iran seems to have ditched any intentions of abandoning its nuclear weapons ambitions, and to have thrown in its lot with China.

The Saudis are positioning themselves as a major regional power increasingly independent of Washington.

And for Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the Iran-Saudi deal is part of a grander political vision – that China will ultimately displace the United States as the world’s leading power, by leveraging its economic clout to expand its financial, diplomatic, and military footprints worldwide.

America has been deliberately retreating from its decades-long role as the preeminent outside actor in Mideast affairs, shifting its focus to the challenge China poses. And China, meanwhile, has been focusing on the Middle East.

How might Washington respond to these developments? While President Joe Biden won’t want to reduce the U.S. regional presence any further, he will focus more broadly on China’s challenge to the interests of America and its allies worldwide, in the hope that Washington and Beijing can stabilize their unavoidably competitive relationship.

Welcome to the post-American Middle East.

That’s the pointed message Iran, Saudi Arabia, and their eager mediator, China, wanted to send Washington with last Friday’s announcement of a rapprochement between the region’s rival Muslim powers.

But America’s retreat from its decades-long role as the preeminent outside actor in Mideast affairs has been a deliberate choice – spurred by a range of factors, not least the disastrous aftermath of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, which began two decades ago next week.

Why We Wrote This

The U.S. has long been the preeminent outside actor in the Middle East. Now China is asserting itself there, stealing Washington’s diplomatic thunder. What does this portend?

And one irony of China’s Mideast diplomatic breakthrough is that it could dissuade the U.S. from further ceding the significant diplomatic and military weight it still has in the region.

That’s because the main importance of the deal isn’t what it will mean for Iranian-Saudi relations. It’s what the agreement says about the interests and motivations of each of the deal-makers, and the implications for longer-term U.S. interests, in the Middle East and beyond.

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