Riyadh’s $1.5bn a year deal
draws on thawed relations
to counter Iran’s influence
Saudi Arabia has agreed to restart oil aid
to Pakistan worth at least $1.5bn annually in July, according to officials in
Islamabad, as Riyadh works to counter
Iran’s influence in the region.
Riyadh demanded that Pakistan
repay a $3bn loan last year after Islamabad pressured Saudi Arabia to criticise
India’s nullification of Kashmir’s special
status. But the acrimony between the
two longtime allies has eased after
Imran Khan, the prime minister, met
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman in May.
News of the oil deal with Pakistan
comes as Saudi Arabia embarks on a
diplomatic push with the US and Qatar
to build a front against Iran, said analysts. Riyadh lifted a three-year blockade of Qatar in January in what experts
said was an attempt to curry favour with
the newly elected Joe Biden.
Pakistan had shifted closer to Saudi
Arabia’s regional rivals Iran and Turkey,
which, along with Malaysia, have sought
to establish a Muslim bloc to rival the
Saudi-led Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.
Khan has developed a strong rapport
with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
encouraging Pakistanis to watch the
Turkish historical television series Dirilis Ertugrul (Ertugrul’s Resurrection) for
its depiction of Islamic values.
Ali Shihabi, a Saudi commentator
familiar with the leadership’s thinking,
said that “bad blood” had accumulated
between Riyadh and Islamabad, but
recent bilateral meetings had “cleared
the air” and reset relations to the extent
that oil credit payments would restart
soon.
The Saudi offer is less than half of the
previous oil facility of $3.4bn, which was
put on hold when ties frayed. But Fahad
Rauf, head of equity research at Ismail
Iqbal Securities in Karachi, said: “Any
amount of dollars helps because time
and again we face a current account
crisis. And with these prices north of
$70 a barrel anything helps.”
Pakistan’s foreign reserves were more
than $16bn in June compared with
about $7bn in 2019 before it entered its
$6bn IMF programme.
Robin Mills at consultancy Qamar
Energy said: “Saudi Arabia and Pakistan
are allies, but their relationship has
always been rocky. And the PakistanIran relationship is better than you
might think.” Mills added that the timing of the Saudi gesture was “interesting” given that Iran was preparing to
step up oil exports with the US considering easing sanctions.
Ahmed Rashid, an author of books on
Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Taliban,
said that there were a variety of factors
that might have spurred Riyadh to
restart the oil facility.
It may be “partially linked to the
American need for bases” to launch
counter-terrorism attacks in Afghanistan from Pakistan, he said, but added
that its priority was probably to prevent
Islamabad from falling under Tehran’s
influence.
Rashid pointed out that Pakistan was
caught between China, which has
invested billions of dollars in infrastructure projects, and the US. “Pakistan has
to play it carefully, it is dependent on
China for the Belt and Road, dependent
on the west for loans,” said Rashi. “This
is a very complex game.”
Additional reporting by Anjli Raval in
London and Simeon Kerr in Dubai