Currywurst and Chips wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2023 8:13 am
Dunners wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2023 7:50 am
Currywurst and Chips wrote: ↑Mon Dec 18, 2023 6:53 pm
Can one of the MENA experts on here explain why the gulf states are leaving policing of the Red Sea to the west when petroleum exports via the route are so integral to their interests?
I'm no expert, but could it be that the large swathes of the world has become too accustomed to relying on the US navy (with some French and UK backing) to police the main sea lanes for everyone else's trade benefit? Not that the alternative - a mix of competing navies rubbing shoulders with each other - isn't without it own risks either.
This was my initial thought.
The narrative these last 7-12 years though has been the US and the UK have become more isolationist and the UK’s armed forces are threadbare.
Also, what about all those billions of arms sales to Saudi that certain people get worked up about that were specifically for their military efforts against the Houthis…..
I think the narrative is broadly correct - relative to, say, the 1945-2008 period, the US has become more isolationist with each successive presidential election. UK armed forces have also been cut, but the British Navy remains a force to be reckoned with relative to what most of the world has. But if things properly kick off then, as we can see with the exhausted munitions supply to Ukraine, a Western coalition success is by no means a certainty.
The arms sales to the Saudis - well, f*ck knows where half of that stuff ends up. The dilemma any Saudi-type regime will face is that, should it invest in its own conventional military, then they risk their own military developing into a threat against their own ruling elite and mounting a coup. The 'safest' option is therefore to invest in an air force, and
was to partner with Israel for the army and nuclear support against Iran (and US/UK naval cover).
But an air force on it's own will never be enough against a side like the Houthis. They're not just some rag-band of rebels roaming around on the back of a 4x4 with some semi-automatics. They are large in number, occupy well defended ground positions throughout Yemen, have sophisticated tactical equipment, and actually have considerable support from the population. And, just in case I haven't mentioned it, they have serious funding from Iran.