Saudi Arabia just beheaded a prominent anti-government activist and Shiite cleric, Nimr al-Nimr, on trumped-up charges of "terrorism", executing him alongside suspected al Qaeda fighters. The message Riyadh sent was simple enough — Shiite activists are equivalent to terrorists in the Kingdom's calculus, and this predictably engendered outrage all across the world, especially in majority-Shiite Iran. The resultant protests, some of which regretfully turned violent and targeted Saudi diplomatic facilities, were cited as 'proof' of Iran's 'aggression' against Saudi Arabia and became the publicly presentable reason for why Riyadh cut off all diplomatic and economic ties with Tehran.
Suspicious Timing
Sanctions Removal
The timing of this provocation couldn't be more suspect, since it convincingly appears as though the Saudis staged it at precisely the moment when Iran was expected to be reintegrated into the global economy. The UNSC sanctions are widely expected to be lifted by the end of the month or early February, and it looks like Saudi Arabia wants to spoil the event by provoking an anti-Iranian maelstrom that puts pressure on the EU to reconsider its planned energy and infrastructure investments in the country.
Ultimately, France and Germany's economic engagement with Iran will come down to whether or not the US gives them the approval to proceed at their expected pace, and considering how successful Washington was in forcing Brussels to cut its preexisting and very profitable ties with Moscow, it can't be precluded that it could do the same in obstructing unestablished and still forthcoming deals with Tehran.
Of relevance, the US is prepping a new round of unilateral sanctions against Iran due to the latter's missile tests in October, indicating a shift in strategic attitude towards the country that strongly suggests a corresponding European reaction.
Syrian Talks

Curiously, Turkish President Erdogan paid a visit to the Kingdom right before the unannounced execution and shortly after the terrorist gathering, so connecting the anti-Syrian plot points, it looks like the Turkey-Saudi-Qatari bloc of destabilizers plans to undermine both the Geneva intra-Syrian and Vienna extra-Syrian peace talks. As regards the former, they may now order their radical Islamist proxies into making unreasonable demands in order to sabotage the dialogue process, and per the latter, they might threaten to temporarily suspend their participation if Iran isn't kicked out.
Hidden Motives
Yemen

The reader should be reminded that it's less of an "anti-terrorist" organization and more like a quasi-legitimized international mercenary marketplace, so what the Saudis really want is a semi-plausible reasoning for contracting more fighters into the field.
Additionally, the Ansarallah are Shiite, and linking them, their sect, and Iran to "terrorism" in the Sunni sectarian-manufactured mindset is also meant to excuse any large-scale crackdown against Bahraini and Saudi Eastern Province protesters (both of which are majority Shiite) on cooked-up "anti-terrorist" grounds.
The end effect of all of this is to transform the "anti-terrorist" coalition into an anti-Shiite one and institutionalize militant Muslim sectarianism.
Russia
Saudi Arabia and its American "Lead From Behind" masters want to turn the heat up against Iran and punish it for its anti-terrorist cooperation with Russia. The unipolar world, especially the members that invested billions of dollars in regime change terrorists, is angered beyond belief by the success that Russia has had in literally blowing up their assets in Syria.
Considering the active and supporting roles that Iran has played on Russia and Syria's side, most prominently through the use of military advisors and allowing cruise missile strikes through its airspace, there should have been no doubt that some type of consequences would ensue.
It becomes apparent in hindsight that the US and Saudi Arabia were taking their time in plotting their response, which as is visibly being demonstrated, is a dramatic escalation of the New Cold War. In the full spirit of these tense and exclusionary times, a concentrated effort is being made to 'isolate' Iran from the rest of the international Muslim community, most of which is part of the Saudi-led "anti-terrorist" coalition and thus under its organizational influence.
Coup Fears

Many Saudi royals were unhappy about this decision, and 30-year-old Mohammad bin Salman's reckless War on Yemen angered them even more. Rumors began to swirl that some of the royals were serious in plotting a coup, and they reached such a fever pitch that The Guardian even reported in late September on a mysterious unnamed prince that was at the forefront of the regime change movement. However thought-out the plot may have been, it's probably largely sidelined now that tensions have been purposefully ratcheted up with Iran. In the interests of 'national security', the pervasive mood is such that no 'patriotic' Saudi royal would dare rock the country's stability at a time when ties with Tehran have never been worse, essentially quelling the internal revolt for as long as the crisis carries on for (and which probably won't dissipate for quite some time anyhow).
Global Perspective
Wrapping everything up, the tactics of staged provocations and multilateral 'isolation' being played against Iran at the moment closely mirror those that were earlier used against Russia. To remind everyone, the US-organized Color Revolution in Ukraine and subsequent nationalist violence created the conditions where Crimea's residents felt unsafe and opted to reunify with the Russian Federation.
The patriotic uprising in Donbass sprung up almost concurrent with that, and the following Civil War (all of which was American-provoked) was used as the excuse for the West to sanction Russia.
Worse still, NATO exploited this 'opportunity' to illegally deepen its presence in Eastern Europe in contravention to the 1997 NATO-Russia Founding Act. Multilaterally and in conjunction with the EU sanctioning Russia and NATO marching ever more determined to the east, the entirety of Central and Eastern Europe aside from Belarus, Serbia, and the Republic of Macedonia united in presenting a singular front against Russia.
At the beginning of 2016, almost the exact same thing is now happening to Iran. Saudi Arabia chose to savagely behead Sheikh al-Nimr in order to create the 'Ukrainian-like' chain of destabilizing excuses to 'justify' a preplanned multilateral response against Iran. Just as NATO and the EU teamed up against Russia, it now looks like the Saudis' "anti-terrorist" coalition and other Riyadh-dominated Mideast institutions will do the same against Iran. Altogether, the general strategy is to create 'containment' coalitions across Eurasia in a desperate bit to hem in the most active multipolar forces in the supercontinent, be it Russia in Eastern Europe or Iran in the Mideast.
Accordingly, it follows that China will be next, and the preconditioning necessary for the next preplanned provocative action is already being practiced in the South China Sea. If some members of ASEAN such as Vietnam and the Philippines formally team up with the US and Japan to 'contain' China, then the three multipolar Great Powers will only have the shared space of Central Asia between them to exercise strategic maneuverability. As a result, the Eurasian Heartland would become ground zero for the next regional destabilization, be it a 'Central Asian Spring' or an ISIl-like terrorist invasion, albeit one which has the potential to offset all three multipolar leaders in one fell swoop.
The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of Sputnik.










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| 0 | Edit | Delete The killing of the Shiite Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr is a planned provocation to escalate the tension in the M. East. It continues what Turkey started with the downing of Russian Su-24 aircraft. It is not a single act by S. Arabia, but a collective decision by NATO and its allies in the region. Reply 
| 0 | Edit | Delete Let us not lull ourselves into grandiose pictures of glorified western and middle eastern unipolar plans of self preservation. Such complex plans can seldom be executed owing to factors outside the control of the axis of evil. Reply 
| 0 | Edit | Delete "The unipolar world, especially the members that invested billions of dollars in regime change terrorists, is angered beyond belief by the success that Russia has had in literally blowing up their assets in Syria" - THAT SENTENCE MADE ME SMILE.
Reply 
| 0 | Edit | Delete Athanasios, NATO HAS TO GO. No ifs, ands or buts. Reply 
| 0 | Edit | Delete ivanwa88, "the straw that broke the camels back" - yeah, lets not wish ill on those cute camels, because their riders have no decency. Camels can't choose their owners...LOL.
Show new comments (0)Athanasios
ivanwa88
I still stand by my thought that Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr al Nimr was executed out of total frustration with not only the lack of progress but by there imminent defeat. Leading to the collapse of there evil plan. The Saudi frustration reached an absolute breaking point when touted spiritual and military leader Alloush was killed in a Syrian air raid whilst in a meeting in a outer suburb of Damascus. He was a Gadiffi type figure supported to the hilt by Saudi government to overthrow Assad and rule Damascus for Saudi interests. His death was a bitter blow and the straw that broke the camels back.(no pun intended) Saudi and co are now desperate and a distinct danger to peace on Earth. Albeit the military options on there part would be fraught with disaster with or without Turkey and or Israel. Non the less there are still many dangerous options still in play to feel we are safe and sound.
Ann
When are the real civilized countries like Russia and China going to gather all of their allies and resources together and stand up to the "unipolar" globalists? They have to be stopped.
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