The workshop provides some continuity with previous workshops held at Gulf Research
Meetings. In recent years, the workshops which cover relations between Gulf and Asian
countries have considered the role which the major Asian powers could play in Gulf
security if the US were to reduce its commitments to the region – or perhaps in a
challenge to continuing US commitments. How realistic it is to imagine such a
development on the US side has not been made central to the discussion. This workshop
will seek to confront this critical question.
The US security role in the Gulf has been critical over the past four decades (at least). All
major regional and international issues in the Gulf have been affected and shaped by this
role – whether it has taken the form of support for key allies (the twin pillar policy of the
1970s), an over-the-horizon naval/military presence with direct involvement in specific
conflict situations (the 1980s), military engagement in defence of regional allies (the
1990s and early 2000s), or the more diffuse military presence in evidence today. At all
times, the US has acted to restrain/isolate/confront those states which it (and some of its
Gulf allies) have seen as disruptive to the stability of the region – conceived within the
framework of its own interests and principles. The dynamics of regional relations, and to
some extent those of national polities, have been deeply affected (some would say
engendered) by these policies.
Over this period, the United States has been explicit about the reasons for US
engagement. Gulf oil has been seen as being of vital importance to the economy of the
United States, whose industrial infrastructure would be seriously damaged by any major
disruption in the supply of oil. As the world’s largest consumer of oil (at some times
consuming about one-quarter of all oil produced globally), and the world’s largest
importer of oil, the continued flow of oil was seen as a vital national interest. But it was
more than that. The Western world as a whole was dependent on Gulf oil, and the US
3
position as the leading Western power required the US to act in defence of what was
conceived as Western interests generally. The Gulf region was formally outside the
geographical scope of Western security agreements and organisations, yet in practice the
region was seen as integral to the security interests of the Western powers. The very
absence of formal structures linking the Gulf to Western organisations enhanced the
significance of the US role: acting on behalf of Western countries generally, yet able to
take decisions and carry out engagements unilaterally.
Perspective on the Future
The fundamental economic assumption underpinning previous policy, at least as far as
the US economic interests go, has now changed. In the future, the US will not be
dependent on Gulf oil resources to any major extent in the supply of oil for its own
purposes. While the impact of shale gas and tight oil on the international oil market has
often been overstated, it is nonetheless true that the effect on US hydrocarbon imports
will be very significant. This, moreover, is part of a wider pattern where the US will be
producing larger quantities of energy based on sources other than traditional oil. Such
sources include renewables, nuclear power, and hydropower. At the same time energy
conservation measures in the US are expected to reduce the demand for “liquids” (oil of
all types) from 18.5 mbd in 2012 to 16.5 mbd in 2030.1
Overall, the result of these
changes will be that, by 2030, US demand for imported oil will be some 70 percent less
than it was in 2012. With regard to natural gas supply, the US will be producing enough
to export substantial quantities. Taking the whole energy picture, the US is expected to be
“99 percent energy self-sufficient” by 2030.2
Such oil as the US will need to import in
2030 (perhaps 3-4 mbd) will, in any case, most likely be drawn from sources close to the
US, especially from the Canadian oil sands and Brazilian conventional oil – both of
which are expected to have increased production very substantially.
At the same time, the US ability and willingness to finance a continued strong
naval/military presence in the Gulf may lessen. The combination of increased naval
commitments in the Western Pacific and tighter overall defence budgets may encourage
or force US governments to concentrate resources in the areas deemed most critical. East
Asia and the Western Pacific are more likely to figure prominently among the latter than
the Gulf.
Quite apart from the issue of whether the United States will have the immediate
economic interest and financial ability to maintain a presence in the Gulf, therefore, there
is the question of whether it will have the overall power – relative to that of other leading
international actors – to maintain the global role which has required a presence in the
Gulf. Assessing the likely future power resources of leading international actors is
difficult, of course, but a report published by the US National Intelligence Council in December 2012 provides a basis for making such an assessment. The report is entitled
Global Trends 2030: Alternative Worlds, and its focus is on “the rapid and vast
geopolitical changes characterising the world today.”3
It seeks to provide an
understanding of “possible global trajectories over the next 15-20 years.” The central
theme of the report is that “with the rise of other countries, the ‘unipolar moment’ is over
and Pax Americana – the era of American ascendancy in international politics which
began in 1945 – is fast winding down.”
The concept of “power” which the report uses is one which brings together a range of
different military, social and economic variables. Four main variables have been used in
the past to assess a country’s basis of power: GDP, population size, military spending,
and technology. The report makes some use of this paradigm, but also uses a more
complex multi-component power index which includes a wider range of variables such as
research and development, energy resources, human capital, and government revenue.
The overall trends are common to both paradigms: a steady decline in the power of the
US, the EU and Japan; steadily rising power of China and India; Chinese power
exceeding that of the US; and Russia maintaining a low but relatively stable share of
power. In the multi-component model, however, it is evident that the change in the power
balances occurs at a rather slower rate: China surpasses US power around 2040 (rather
than shortly after 2030, as in the four-component model); Indian power – despite
increasing rapidly – remains below that of the US and the EU even in 2050. In the fourcomponent model India surpasses the EU in 2035, and the US shortly before 2050.
There would seem, therefore, to be strong reason for the United States to be taking action
in the short-term to prepare for a significant reduction in its ability to shape global
politics. Yet there are also reasons why the scenario sketched out above may not hold
true. It can be, and has been, pointed out that US interests are more complex and manysided than can be conveyed by envisaging a simple transition from a focus on the Gulf to
one on East Asia. Key points in this more complex pattern of security concerns are the
following:
•US interests are global and strategic. They are not limited to short-term
economic interest. Although the US may not itself be dependent on Gulf oil,
many other countries (and allies of the US) are and will continue to be. For the
US to maintain its leading position in global politics, it needs to guarantee that
its friends and allies retain easy access to the oil supplies necessary for their
economic well-being. • Even in the Global Trends2030 report, the United States is seen as holding a
“first among equals” position, even though it will have lost its position of
global leadership. A world-wide reach of some kind, therefore, is still feasible. The US remains committed to a global campaign to counter acts of ‘terrorism’,
with primary attention focused on radical Islamist movements and activities.
While such movements and activities may be active mainly outside of the
Middle East rather than within, the ideological and financial linkages with
Middle Eastern Islamic individuals and communities are seen as critical. A
strong presence is deemed necessary to counter untoward Islamist activity. The
Arabian peninsula is seen as critical to the struggle against radical Islamist
violence while at the same time providing (in some countries) the facilities
needed for intelligence, monitoring and, in some circumstances, engagement. • The US has ongoing treaty obligations and understandings with Gulf
governments. To withdraw from these obligations and understandings would
damage the US’s reputation for reliability – outside the region as well as
within.
• US global policy seeks to restrict the spread of nuclear weapons, especially to
governments which are deemed by the US to be in breach of international law,
or globally-accepted norms and procedures (a category which some see as
coterminous with that of governments inimical to US interests). Iran is one of
the two countries where the US is currently most closely engaged in
monitoring and restricting the development of such weapons. Withdrawal from
the Gulf would signal a lessening of determination to confront Iran on the
issue. • The US has over the years shown an unwavering commitment to support the
state of Israel. A US-friendly strategic environment in the Gulf has been seen
by some key policy makers in the US as reducing the scope of security threats
to Israel. Iraq and Iran have both been seen as possible sources of strategic
threat to Israel. A strong US presence lessens the scale and likelihood of any
such challenge. • US intentions to rebalance towards Asia may be primarily geared towards
shifting naval strength from the Atlantic to the Pacific, than with moving away
from the Western Indian Ocean. The central objective, in this case, may be to
press European countries to take on more responsibility for their own defence.
The Gulf, moreover, is itself part of Asia so could be conceived as one element
in the Asia pivot.
Key papers presented to the workshop will be expected to analyse these apparently
contradictory influences on US foreign policy, balancing them against each other and
reaching conclusions on what the likely outcome may be over the years ahead. The
timescale over which predictive analysis is recommended is through to 2030, although
there may be reason for choosing a different end-point.