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European Tech Sovereignty
17MAY

Saudi back-channel to Iran intensifies

3 min read
14:28UTC

Saudi Arabia is working the backchannel China brokered in 2023 with increased urgency, but the Shaybah oilfield strike demonstrated that Iran's civilian government cannot stop the IRGC from hitting the targets Riyadh most needs to protect.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Saudi Arabia's use of backchannel diplomacy rather than formal US security invocation signals a deliberate choice to absorb strikes rather than escalate — the channel's significance is as much what it prevents as what it seeks.

Saudi officials deployed their diplomatic backchannel to Iran with "increased urgency" since mid-week, Bloomberg reported on Friday, involving both security and diplomatic officials. The channel was established during the 2023 Saudi-Iran rapprochement brokered by China — the agreement that was supposed to have ended the two countries' proxy confrontation and opened reliable communication between Riyadh and Tehran.

The urgency is inseparable from the target. Iranian forces struck Saudi Arabia's Shaybah oilfield on Day 7 — one of the world's largest, producing approximately one million barrels per day . The strike escalation across the week moved from military infrastructure to diplomatic targets to energy: the BAPCO refinery in Bahrain , Fujairah port, then Shaybah — reprising the September 2019 Abqaiq-Khurais playbook that temporarily halved Saudi output. Riyadh is not pursuing diplomacy from regional goodwill. It is pursuing diplomacy because the next Iranian strike could take several million barrels per day offline.

The backchannel connects to the wrong half of Iran's fractured authority. Saudi security officials can reach the people around Pezeshkian — the same civilian leadership that, on the same day, issued and failed to enforce a halt order on strikes against neighbouring countries. The IRGC's 31 autonomous provincial commands were designed to operate without central direction. The civilian president has no constitutional command authority over them; under Article 110, that belonged exclusively to The Supreme Leader. Khamenei is dead. The interim council's inheritance of his powers under Article 111 has never been tested, and the IRGC's institutional culture does not recognise civilian substitution. The Carnegie Endowment published two analyses on 7 March framing the result: The Gulf monarchies are caught between "Iran's desperation and the US's recklessness," and Iran is pushing its neighbours toward Washington. Both describe a structural outcome in which the pre-2026 Gulf-Iran rapprochement is functionally destroyed regardless of how the war ends.

Riyadh has already signed a joint statement with Washington, Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, and the UAE reserving "the option of responding to the aggression" — the first time these states committed in writing to potential offensive action against Iran. The backchannel and the joint statement are not contradictory; they are two instruments of the same calculation. Saudi Arabia will talk to Tehran to stop the strikes on its oil fields. If talking fails, the joint statement provides the framework for what follows. The question is whether anyone on the Tehran end of the line can deliver what Riyadh requires — not a promise to halt, but an enforceable halt — when the forces firing the missiles do not answer to the people answering the phone.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Saudi Arabia and Iran restored diplomatic relations in 2023 and set up a direct private communication line — a kind of hotline between their security officials. Now that Iran's missiles have hit Saudi oil fields, Riyadh is urgently using that line to try to stop the attacks. Crucially, Saudi Arabia is doing this instead of formally asking the United States military to defend it, which would almost certainly make the war much larger. The backchannel is therefore not just diplomacy — it is Saudi Arabia's way of keeping a ceiling on the conflict.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

China's role as original broker gives Beijing a structural stake in the channel's success: Gulf oil stability is existential for the Chinese economy, with roughly 60% of Chinese crude imports transiting Hormuz. China could offer Iran economic inducements — investment guarantees, energy contracts, sanctions relief leverage — that Saudi Arabia cannot. The body treats this as a Saudi-Iran bilateral; the Chinese dimension is invisible in the narrative but potentially load-bearing for any outcome.

Root Causes

The 2023 rapprochement was partly motivated by Saudi recognition that full strategic alignment with the US-Israel axis on Iran created unacceptable domestic and economic exposure. The backchannel is the product of that pre-existing risk-management calculation, not improvisation under fire.

Escalation

Saudi's non-invocation of its bilateral US security framework is itself a de-escalatory act: activating that framework would draw American forces into direct defence of Saudi territory, expanding the war's geographic and political scope. The backchannel's existence and urgency indicate Riyadh has made a deliberate calculation to absorb economic damage rather than trigger that expansion — a constraint on escalation the body does not identify.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If the backchannel fails and Saudi Arabia formally invokes its bilateral US security framework, American forces would be obligated to defend Saudi infrastructure directly, expanding the war's scope beyond the current US-Israel-Iran frame.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    China's role as original broker gives Beijing a credible entry point to offer Iran economic inducements that could make a de-escalation package viable — an opportunity for Chinese diplomatic relevance that Beijing has strong incentives to exploit.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    Regardless of outcome, the Carnegie Endowment's assessment that the pre-2026 Gulf-Iran rapprochement is functionally destroyed means any backchannel success would be a transactional ceasefire, not a restoration of the 2023 normalisation framework.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #26 · President orders halt; IRGC ignores him

Bloomberg· 7 Mar 2026
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