King Ibn Saud, a descendant of Wahhabi leaders, seized Riyadh
in 1901 and eventually conquered almost all the peninsula. By 1933, the
kingdom of Saudi Arabia finally coalesced close to its present form.
Ibn Saud established an absolute monarchy and ruled it by an all
encompassing Sharia; the body of Islamic religious law which regulates
public and private life
The Spanish royalty went from near
bankruptcy to extended riches because of voyages that brought them
yellow gold. The Saudi monarchy went from rags to riches with the
discovery of black gold. Since the 1940's, oil revenue has powered the
Saudi kingdom to tremendous wealth and, similar to the Spanish
experience, has brought it adversaries and continuous recurrences of
inflation.
“lslam remains a double-edged sword for the Al Saud.
It grants them legitimacy as protectors of the faith, yet it constrains
their behavior to that which is compatible with religious law. When
members of the family deviate from that straight path, they are open to
criticism since the regime's ’right to rule’ rests largely on the
alliance with the al-Wahhab family. Today, the ‘alliance’ between the
regime and official clergy is much contested by dissidents because the
parties no longer serve as ‘checks’ on each other.”
Understanding Political Dissent in Saudi Arabia, Gwenn Okruhlik, Middle East Report Online, Oct. 24, 2001.
Ferdinand
and Isabella had an Inquisition. The Saudi family, although more
lenient now, have had their severe human rights abuses.
Intolerance and Despotism
A
legal system based on sharia religious laws and a rule almost entirely
delegated to the Saudi royal family doesn't give confidence that human
rights or political freedom exist in Saudi Arabia.
“It is
alleged that capital punishment and other penalties are often given to
suspected criminals without due process. The government of Saudi Arabia
has also been criticized for its oppression of religious and political
minorities, homosexuality, and women. Although human rights groups such
as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and The Center for
Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia have repeatedly expressed
concern about the states of human rights in Saudi Arabia, the kingdom
denies that any human rights abuses take place.
Saudi women face
severe discrimination in many aspects of their lives, including
education, employment, and the justice system and are clearly regarded
as inferior to men. Although they make up 70% of those enrolled in
universities, women make up just 5% of the workforce in Saudi Arabia,
the lowest proportion in the world.
Freedom of speech and the
press are restricted to forbid criticism of the government or
endorsement of "un-Islamic" values. Trade unions and political
organizations are banned. Public demonstrations are forbidden.
Political
parties are banned, but some political dissidents were freed in the
1990s on the condition that they disband their political organizations.
Only the Green Party of Saudi Arabia remains, although it is an illegal
organization. The 1990s marked a slow period of political
liberalization in the kingdom as the government created a written
constitution, and the advisory Consultative Council, the latter being
an appointed delegation of Saudi scholars and professionals that are
allowed to advise the king.
Jewish, Christian or Hindu houses of
prayer are not allowed. Unofficially the government acknowledges that
many of the foreign workers are Christian and on Aramco civilian
compounds, foreign Christians are generally allowed to worship in
private homes or even hold services at local schools provided that it
is not spoken of in public. This is a degree of unofficial tolerance
that is not given to Judaism, Hinduism or atheism.”
Wikipedia, Human rights in Saudi Arabia.
Authoritarianism and human rights violations don't stop western money flows to the Saudi family.
The Money Flow
Oil
revenue in 2007 supplied the desert kingdom with 194 billion dollars.
If oil prices remain at about $140/barrel, combined revenues for 2008
and 2009 will increase to 700 billion dollars. A nation of only 27
million that imports most of its goods is actually the fourth leading
nation in trade balance, with a trade surplus of $88.9 billion.
Unlike
the oil producing nations of the Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia does not
have a sovereign capital fund. Instead of exporting, and thus
re-circulating much of their capital, the Saudis have retained
much of the surplus for internal investment or have established
companies that mainly allow only Saudi investors. Nevertheless, Saudi
oil revenue is flowing outwards. Some noteworthy examples:
As a
major partner of The Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ICCI),
Saudi Arabian capital will be flowing throughout the world, but not the
western world. ICCI has started Foras Investments, whose purpose is to
create international companies that will manufacture low-cost cars,
aircraft and satellites for and in more deprived nations.
By a
strange twist, New York's famous Plaza hotel has become co-owned by
Israel's Elad Group and the Saudi-based Kingdom Holding Co.
Saudi
Prince al-Waleed bin Talal, world's fifth richest man on Forbes World's
Richest People list, bought 5.46% of voting shares in News Corp, which
made him the fourth largest voting shareholder in News Corp., the
parent of Fox News.
Attempts to have the Saudis recycle more
western capital reached an embarrassing level when British Prime
Minister Gordon, before attending an energy summit during late June,
2008, appealed to the Saudis "to buy up Britain's nuclear industry and
recycle their riches." Gordon compounded his pandering by referencing
the Persian Gulf and naming it the Gulf of Arabia. In a speech, Brown
said “the North Sea, which has passed its peak in terms of oil and gas
supplies, will be turned into the equivalent for wind power of what the
Gulf of Arabia is for oil.”
The one way flow of capital, due to
oil exports, disturbs western nations. Saudi Arabia's possible export
of terrorism is more disturbing.
Exporting Terrorism
The
Saudi Arabia government and the king's extended family are not and have
not been directly linked to international terrorist financing or
activities. Just the opposite - the Saudis are aggressively combating
terrorism. Nevertheless, the Saudi Arabia continent is considered a
probable major ground for financing of terrorists, enlisting of
terrorists, training of terrorists and the disbursement of terrorists
to Iraq and Afghanistan - and for good reason - past performance of the
Saudi government and presence of terrorists on Saudi territory arouse
suspicion.
During the 1980's the Saudis supported Saddam Hussein
in his war against Iran and had friendly relations with the Taliban
until the 9/11 terrorist attack. The Saudi monarchy, as part of its
commitment to Islam, funds Islamic schools and charities, some of whom
have been accused of fomenting anti-Western attitudes, contributing to
terrorist organizations and developing terrorists. Most damaging is
evidence that linked the wife of the Saudi ambassador to Washington to
the family of a Saudi man in San Diego who befriended and assisted two
of the Sept. 11 hijackers. Princess Haifa al-Faisal, the wife of
Ambassador Bandar bin Sultan, provided tens of thousands of dollars in
what she believed were charitable gifts for medical care to Osama
Bassnan. The F.B.I. questioned Mr. Bassnan and a Saudi neighbor, Omar
al-Bayoumi, after learning they had befriended and assisted two of the
Saudi hijackers, Khalid al-Midhar and Nawaq Alhazmi. Reports of the FBI
meetings have been classified, but The New York Times, August 2, 2003,
claims the two Saudis might have been Saudi intelligence agents.
By JAMES RISEN and DAVID JOHNSTON
WASHINGTON,
Aug. 1 - The classified part of a Congressional report on the terrorist
attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, says that two Saudi citizens who had at
least indirect links with two hijackers were probably Saudi
intelligence agents and may have reported to Saudi government
officials, according to people who have seen the report.
Many of
the Al-Qaeda operatives in post-Hussein Iraq originate from Saudi
Arabia and neighboring Yemen. These terrorists, as well as those
training and operating on Saudi soil are undoubtedly receiving funds
from a close source. Considering the vast and unchecked funds flowing
through Saudi banks and institutions, it's reasonable to assume that
some of the oil revenues are unknowingly being siphoned to illicit
activities and arrive in terrorist hands. The Saudi Ministry of
Interior recently detained 520 terror suspects, who they claimed had
targeted an oil facility. One of them admitted to receiving an
equivalent of $133,000 (from who?) and Saudi security forces seized
another equivalent of $400,00 cash, which was hidden in remote desert
areas. Although Mauritania, Yemeni and Iraqi nationals, some of who had
university degrees and came to the Kingdom on private drivers’ visas,
composed the terrorist cell, Saudis composed the majority of those
detained.
The most serious element in Saudi Arabia for creating
terrorism is Saudi Arabia. Combine Saudi society, the contradictory
actions of the government with the large and mostly barren landscape
and Saudi Arabia is a perfect situation for all types of dissent and
allied terrorism.
Although claiming to adhere to Koran
principles, the desert kingdom allows the United States, a hostile and
non-Muslim nation, to construct bases on its territory, has accumulated
vast wealth for one family, has not sufficiently attended to income
distribution and uses oil revenue to support the lifestyle of group of
jet setters. These operations enrage Islamist extremists, who sense the
Saudi family is hypocritical and violates religious tradition. On the
other hand, the authoritarianism, political persecution and extensive
human rights violations fuel a bubbling dissent that is prepared to
explode. The vast and barren areas are not easily controlled and
terrorists have both internal support and places to hide. It is
certainly not deliberate, but Saudi Arabia is fertile ground for
developing and exporting terrorism.
This feature concerns the
Saudi government and they know it concerns all governments. However,
they also know the western world is more concerned with their energy
sources. The Saudis realize that having oil is having control and they
are starting to use that control.
Shaping Middle East Policy to Saudi Wants
Aware
of internal antagonisms that threaten the regime, the Saudis have
shaped policy to prevent external assistance to dissidents who might
topple the regime. The policy tends to counter Shiite power and
indicates the delicacy of the Saudi government. The monarchy is most
concerned with Iran, Iraq and Lebanon and their Shia populations.
Iran
About
two million Shiites, who compose 8% of the population, live in Saudi
Arabia. Unfortunate for the Wahhabi clerics, "most Saudi Shiites reside
in the oases of Qatif and al-Hasa in the Eastern Province, which is
also home to the world's greatest concentration of oil assets and about
90 percent of Saudi Arabia's oil production. Given the extraordinarily
tight world oil supply and demand balance, the kingdom's critical role
as a swing producer, which enables it to quickly increase output above
normal production levels to reduce the risk of an energy shock in the
event of a supply disruption, makes conflict between Salafi-Jihadists
and Shiites in the oil-rich province a disturbing scenario not only for
Saudi Arabia's oil industry, but also for the world economy."
Saudi Arabia's Shiites and their Effect on the Kingdom's Stability, John Solomon, the Jamestown Foundation Terrorism Monitor.
The
Saudis fear the Shiite dominated Iranian theocracy will assist the
Saudi minority Shiite population to rebellion - and for good reasons -
the Shiite minority in Saudi Arabia is greatly repressed, Iran resents
the Saudi alliance with the Great Satan, the United States, Iran needs
other powerful Shiites to reinforce its authority and Iran senses that
Saudi Wahabbism, Saudi royalty and Saudi mal-distribution of oil
wealth, betray the beliefs in Islam. Add to the mix, Saudi Arabia's
support of Iran’s foes; Saddam Hussein during the Iraq-Iran war and the
Taliban of the late 1990s, and hostility between the nations is more
due to Saudi actions than Iranian actions.
Of course, the United
States aggravates the antagonisms between the two Muslim nations. While
punishing Iran for pursuing needed nuclear technology, the U.S.
administration has offered to assist Saudi Arabia in developing nuclear
reactors, training nuclear engineers, and constructing nuclear
infrastructure. Saudi fear is a major driving force of U.S. policy
towards Iran.
Iraq
U.S. and Saudi policies towards Iraq
have tracked each other. Both nations supported Saddam Hussein against
Iran in the 1980s, cooperated in the Gulf war against Iraq in the
1990s, remained belligerent towards Saddam Hussein and favored the
eventual invasion of Iraq. After realizing that the overthrow of Saddam
Hussein allowed a Shiite majority to gain control and another Shiite
dominated Iraq government, which could ally itself with Iran, bordered
on Saudi Arabia, panic reversed policies. Abruptly, U.S. shifted its
alliances to the Iraqi Sunnis, many of whom had been associated with
Saddam Hussein. The U.S. is now guided by a Saudi stated policy: "If
the U.S. leaves Iraq we will arm Sunni militias."
Lebanon
While
the Sunni Saudis vocally attack Shiites, and claim the Shia are
"destabilizing the Arab world and are hostile to Sunnis," the Wahabbi
leaders continually destabilize the Middle East and remain hostile to
all Shia. Unproven accusations that Iran leads Hezbollah into
disturbing Lebanon politics are countered by accusations that the
Saudis provide support for Sunni Prime Minister Siniora's position. Why
the Saudis are concerned with Lebanon and are hostile to Hezbollah, the
only Arab group that has successfully confronted Israel, an enemy of
the Saudis, is a mystery. The Wahabbis evidently believe that elevating
Shia power reduces their power. That belief is shared by al-Qaeda, who
also rail against the Shia and are a sworn enemy of Iran.
Ancient
Saudi Arabia spurred the growth of the Arab world. Modern Saudi Arabia
has left the Arab world. Its self-centered struggle for survival has
alienated most of the Arab states, especially Libya and Syria.
Contradictory policies make enemies of those who can most assist Saudi
Arabia in fighting one of its stated enemies, which is Israel, and make
friends with the U.S., whose closest ally is Israel.
Colonial
America spurred the growth of political and religious freedom, of
democracy and economic liberty. Modern America has betrayed its
founding fathers. Its self-centered struggle for obtaining oil has
permitted it to contradict its beliefs and excuse the Saudi monarchy’s
legal, political, social, cultural, economic and moral systems, all of
which are anathema to U.S. positions.
The Saudis have defined
their freedom - free from western dictates and undue western influence
- not what the Bush doctrine envisioned. They serve U.S. interests in
the Middle East, by assuring oil supplies. The U.S. serves their
interests, mostly in furnishing their weak military with a supporting
army that is ready to fight the Saudi battles, from Lebanon to Syria to
Iraq and to Iran. Saudi power is shaping other U.S. foreign policy
misadventures.
Dan Lieberman is the editor of Alternative
Insight, a monthly web based newsletter. He can be reached at
alternativeinsight@earthlink.net