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.
