Obaid admitted that Saudi involvement in Iraq carried great
risk and "...could spark a regional war but the consequences of
inaction are far worse" and that his country "had pressed other members
of the Gulf Co-operation Council...Qatar, the United Arab Emirates,
Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman to give financial support to Sunnis in Iraq."
Arming the Neighborhood
In August, the Bush administration announced new
arms packages
for Israel and seven Arab nations comprising military equipment worth
$20 billion to Saudi Arabia, over $30 billion in military assistance to
Israel, and $13 billion to Egypt."
To some extent, the arms
packages are an extension of the same policies that have been in place
for years in the Middle East. For example since 1998, Saudi Arabia
alone has received over $15 billion in U.S. weapons.
But these sales have had little impact in the region other than arming everyone to the teeth. In her article,
The Saudi Arms Deal: Congressional Opposition Grows,
Rachel Stohl points out that "The United States has had little success
in the past using arms sales to buy leverage in the region. "
From Washington's viewpoint the sale has two objectives: bucking up the
Saudi-dominated six-member Gulf Cooperation Council and countering
Iran's influence. But the sales will likely cause Iran to respond by
boosting its arms caches.
A dangerous side effect of the sales
is the addition of more arms into a region where each country has
distinct objectives in the region and inside Iraq. The sales set the
stage for Iraq to be the flashpoint for a potential proxy and/or
regional war.
But most dangerously for Iraqis and U.S. troops, the sales reward a country that is providing an estimated
45% of all foreigners fighting U.S. troops and Iraqi government forces.
Destabilizing Iraq: The Saudi Role
A "clear" view of Iraq is now visible only through a blood-soaked
kaleidoscope of contradictory and conflicting U.S. policies. While the
Bush administration regularly lashes out at Syria and Iran for aiding
militias and foreign fighters in Iraq, according to official U.S.
military figures reported in the
Los Angeles Times on July 15,
about 45% of all foreign militants targeting U.S. troops and Iraqi
civilians and security forces are from Saudi Arabia. Fighters from the
kingdom are believed to have carried out the majority of suicide
bombings in Iraq.
Who is to blame for the influx of fighters
though? Gen. Mansour Turki, a spokesman for the Saudi Interior
Ministry, however, blames forces inside of Iraq for the flow of Saudi
human bombs into Iraq. If he is to be believed, "Saudis are actually
being misused. Someone is helping them come to Iraq. Someone is helping
them inside Iraq. Someone is recruiting them to be suicide bombers. We
have no idea who these people are. We aren't getting any formal
information from the Iraqi government." But Iraqis are quick to point
the finger across the border. Lawmaker Sami Askari, an advisor to Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Askari accuses Saudi officials of following a
deliberate policy of sowing chaos in Baghdad: "The fact is that Saudi
Arabia has strong intelligence resources, and it would be hard to think
that they are not aware of what is going on."
Askari claims
that imams at Saudi mosques regularly call for jihad against Iraq's
Shi'ites and that the Saudi government had funded groups to cause chaos
and bloodshed in Iraq's predominantly Shi'ite south.
But in
large part this continues to be conveniently overlooked by the Bush
administration so that massive arms packages can be sold to Saudi
Arabia, access to the vast oil reserves continues unabated, and the
Saudi royal family's long-standing connections to the Bush family
remain unmentioned in mainstream circles.
There are the odd rare days, however, when the boat does get rocked.
Just days before the $20 billion arms package was handed to the Saudi
monarchy, Bush administration officials voiced their anger at the
"counter productive" role of Saudi Arabia in Iraq. They accused Saudi
Arabia of regarding Maliki as an Iranian agent and actively working to
undermine his government and for offering financial backing to various
Sunni groups inside Iraq.
Zalmay Khalilzad, former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq and presently the U.S. ambassador to the UN, wrote in the
New York Times
recently, "Several of Iraq's neighbors, not only Syria and Iran but
also some friends of the United States, are pursuing destabilizing
policies there."
But this is the exception rather than the
rule. The cozy relationship between Washington and Riyadh continues,
largely unscathed.
And Destabilizing They Are...
"Mosul is where the Saudis are the most active today because it is
already primarily Sunni and there are a few Kurds," says Sureya Sayadi,
a 46-year-old Kurdish American woman who lives in the Bay Area of
California. Sayadi, from Kirkuk, Iraq fled to the United States with
her family when the U.S. left Kurds in the lurch after encouraging them
to rebel against Saddam Hussein in the aftermath of the 1991 war
against Iraq.
A teacher and a medical doctor, Sayadi fills the
rest of her time facilitating the work of an international NGO that
assists Kurdish orphans and victims of honor killings. She is busier
than ever as the number of both has escalated dramatically in
Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq. She believes Bush administration
policies "have empowered Islamist political parties whose clerics
promote honor killings" and have "destroyed Iraq's judicial system and
altered its laws to justify the killings." She adds, "One of our
Kurdish employees has heard from the community that the Saudis are
taking over parts of Kurdistan by promising people education."
In recent conversations with her NGO colleagues, Sayadi has found that
within the last two years, the Saudi government has financed the
construction of at least 50 mosques in Erbil and Suleimaniya alone.
They are also very active on the Turkish/Iraq border and in Kirkuk and
Halabja. She explains, "They go to areas where there is the most
poverty and suffering, stepping in to offer services that people are
not getting from the government health care, education, and sometimes
employment and in the process implant[ing] their fundamentalist
ideology."
Sayadi believes the Saudi monarchy is directly
involved in funding "at least four new Islamic groups in Kurdistan.
They are exploiting the fact that Kurds are mostly Sunni."
During the summer of 2005, members of al-Qaeda and Ansar al-Sunna cells
were among several extremists arrested in Erbil, and most of them were
Kurds. Prior to this, Saudi mosque-building in the area during the
1990's combined with the return of Kurdish militants who had fought
against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan is believed to have led to the
emergence of groups like Ansar al-Sunna. The general perception was
that these men aspired to radicalize the general population by
replicating the Afghan model in Kurdistan. Reinforcing this trend
around that time, Saudi Arabia established links with these Kurds to
counter the power of Saddam Hussein. In 1992-93 Islamist Kurdish groups
worked under the Saudi based International Islamic Relief Organization
and other "charities," which pumped $22 million a month into Kurdish
areas. Today the Saudi names have been replaced with Kurdish names.
In the decade following the 1991 war, when Saudi "charities"
constructed 1,832 new mosques, alarmed Kurdish officials instituted
restrictions. Wahabi teachings followed in Saudi had been translated
into Kurdish and imported into the region, accompanied by the Salafi
strain, a puritanical, strict interpretation of the Koran adhered to by
al-Qaeda.
In 2003, U.S. air-strikes had targeted bases of Ansar
al-Islam on Iraq's northeastern border with Iran. These same radical
groups, thanks in large part to Saudi backing, are now alive and
flourishing in Kurdish controlled northern Iraq.
"Islamists,
from Saudi Arabia, are offering money to young Kurds, visiting their
schools, marrying Kurdish girls and taking them back to the kingdom."
Sayadi tells me, "Kurds have always been quite secular, none of us
practiced the hijab but now Kurdish women are being forced to do this.
There is segregation of men and women. People in sheer desperation and
hope for aid are turning more fundamentalist. The environment is ripe
for fundamentalism, and Saudi influence is increasing rapidly. They are
creating a hope-filled impression amongst the people that Islamic
assertion is the way to resist the West.
Kurdish girls assisted
by Sayadi's NGO have revealed that Saudi Islamists are pressuring
Kurdish women to adopt a fundamentalist ideology in exchange for free
religious studies in Kurdish universities. From her experience with
Kurdish refugees in southeastern Turkey she sees that, "In both Iraq
and Turkey Islamists are operating in a similar fashion, leaving no
stones unturned to convert people to fundamental Islam. They are buying
poor Kurds desperate for survival and feeding them ideology."
Sayadi's 35-year-old unemployed nephew Mushtaq, with a Kurdish mother
and a Shi'ite Arab father, used to drive a taxi between Beji and
Baghdad. "A man with a Saudi dialect called his mother, my step-sister
Gailas, and ordered her to raise $2,500 to free Mushtaq. They called
from his cell phone and had him appeal to his mother to give them the
money. She raised the money and brought it to a suburb in Baghdad where
they had instructed her to go only to find her son's burned taxi and
his hacked body wrapped in his prayer rug. The men said they did it
because he was Shia."
Another disturbing incident in northern
Iraq this April was the stoning to death of a 17-year-old Yezidi girl,
Du'a Khalil Aswad, by men from the Saudi-funded mosques.
Amnesty International condemned the killing, calling it "a so-called
honor crime" in which the girl "was killed by a group of eight or nine
men and in the presence of a large crowd in the town of Bashika, near
Mosul because she had engaged in a relationship with a Sunni Muslim boy
and had been absent from her home for one night."
Solutions?
The Middle East is floating in the violence and chaos bred by failed
Bush administration policies. Generations are now being raised in
occupations and/or war zones, which were caused and/or supported by
Washington. Needless to say, anti-American sentiment in the region is
quite likely higher than it has ever been in history.
The
primary sword in the belly of the Middle East that of the U.S.
occupation of Iraq must be immediately and unconditionally removed.
The United States must simultaneously pay full compensation to every
Iraqi who has lost a loved one or suffered damages as a result of the
U.S.-led invasion and occupation.
Second to this, the massive
weapons packages should be immediately canceled; there is no need to
attempt to douse the raging fires in the Middle East with yet more
sophisticated weaponry.
In addition, if Iran is to be
sanctioned, is it not inherently hypocritical not to be sanctioning
Saudi Arabia in the same way, since there is more than ample evidence
indicating that fighters, funding, and most likely weapons, are pouring
across its borders into Iraq?
The solution must, finally,
include diplomacy and even-handed dealings amongst all of the countries
in the Middle East, as opposed to the current model where countries
like Israel and Saudi Arabia effectively have carte blanche to do what
they may. Otherwise it is sure to fail.
Dahr Jamail has reported from inside Iraq and is a Middle East
expert. He writes for Inter Press Service, Atlantic Free Press The Asia
Times, and is a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus.