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Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Saudi Pandering - The Western Nations Achilles Heel

I for one have never been happy with the free ride that Saudi Arabia has gotten in the war against terror.  After all, most of the muslims that flew airplanes into buildings on 9/11 not to mention Bin Laden are products of the Saudi culture.  Additionally the Saudis have been exporting their radical version of Islam, Whabbism, all over the world.  In his New York Sun article Saudi Royals Mask A Jihad Agenda, Youssff Ibrahim writes

Keeping Saudi Arabia’s royal family safe from radical Islamists is the West’s strategic concern and delusion.

The only intelligent question for America about Saudi Arabia is: Should we deal with the royals of the house of Saud or go directly to their bearded, Kalashnikov-toting Osama bin Laden-loving followers?

For half a century, the West has preferred to believe that its choice in Saudi Arabia is the moderate, friendly Saudi royal family or the wild-eyed, sandal-clad zombies of jihad, disregarding the seamless relationship between the two.

We have blithely ignored that Mr. bin Laden was a product and a protégé — even a full-fledged member — of the ruling establishment in Saudi Arabia. Indeed, his 52 brothers and other members of his family have intermarried widely with the royal family.

Since Abdulaziz Al-Saud founded his kingdom in 1932, power in Saudi Arabia has rested in the hands of one rabid group of Muslim jihadists: the 40,000 perfumed princes and princesses of the Saud tribal dynasty. They are the public face of Saudi Arabia, the folks who show up in the White House as ambassadors to America.

In Saudi Arabia, these royals nurture a vast entourage and infrastructure of palaces, attached mosques, religious schools, and charitable networks at home and, more important, abroad. These institutions are tied to elegant public princes, but also to many more we never see overseas. They dole out the money and in return demand blind obedience and a steady stream of Wahhabite devotees.

Saudi royal wealth has funded not only hundreds of religious schools inside the kingdom, but also hundreds more in Pakistan, Egypt, Afghanistan, Britain, America, and Asia. The network stretches far and wide, and Wahhabi recruits create the fodder that supplies suicide bombers for Hamas, the Taliban, Iraqi jihadis, and Pakistani-British transit bombers.

So the question, again, is whether we want to deal with the royals or the nuts. I propose the latter. For starters, it serves transparency.

Why allow an enemy to hide behind seductive royals when most of the family consists of die-hard jihadists who fund Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood, and other Islamic terror groups worldwide? The game allows “royals” to pose as friends as they supply our former presidents and politicians — President George H.W. Bush, President Clinton, President Carter, and our current commander in chief, among others — with hefty business deals and promises of more to, in effect, give cover to a jihad agenda.

Dealing directly with the bearded and the sandaled also makes America far more secure.

Thanks to the current system of bribery, the Saudis have gotten away with murder. In the 48 hours after the attacks of September 11, 2001, the White House — under pressure from the Saudi ambassador, Prince Bandar — permitted more than 50 members of the bin Laden family to leave America secretly when almost every other flight in and out of the country was grounded.

Detaining and questioning some of this group would have landed a few of them in Guantanamo and yielded crucial information, but they purchased a White House pass to escape. And had it not been for the “special relationship” between America and Saudi Arabia, 15 of the 19 hijackers who flew planes into buildings that day would not have been allowed to live and train here in the first place.

Most of all, the ability to call a spade a spade would increase America’s credibility in the Muslim world immensely. This royal family, so beloved by the Bush administration and other White Houses, carries out beheadings, cuts off legs and hands, orders women stoned for adultery, and has reduced half of its society to the status of concubine.

Dumping it will give a considerable boost to any noble American project in the Arab world.

The old saw ‘With friends like that, who needs enemies’ would seem to apply to the Saudis.  The blindness of the Bush administration to recognize the Saudis for what they really - a bunch of radical jihadists exporting terror over the world is unconscionable.  To Bush bashers who will be salivating over this post, the previous administration were no better in pandering to the Saudi royalty.  Personally, I don’t believe that victory in this war is not possible if we can’t recognize the enemy when it’s bodly in front of our face.

Comments

Doc,

As much as I hate saying this, the problem isn’t the Saudi Arabs.  Nor is it the “Palestinians” or the Iranians, or the Iraqis, in either Sunni or Shi’ite flavors.

The problem is Islam.  Period.  And the sooner we recognize that fact, and get over our temerity at criticizing the religious faith of those who use that faith as justification for their virulent hostility and savagery, the more likely we will be to survive as a nation and as a civilization.


“Poverty of goods is easily cured; poverty of the mind is irreparable.”

Bat One on April 24, 2007 at 06:24 am

The problem is Islam.  Period.

bat, I couldn’t agree with you more.  In fact I have previously commented and posted on that very subjest, that the so-called war against terrorism is really a war with Islam.  Unfortunately, people in government and leftists like sparkie, hawk and * are in denial of the overall threat.

This post does not invalidate your comment but attempts to show that our Arab ‘allies’ like Saudi and Pakestine are really not in our camp but are a part of the Islamic problem.  In order for this problem to go away, Islam has to be abolished or morph into something that is tolerant and condemns violence.  I don’t see that happening in the near term although there are finally muslims that are speaking out against terorism.


You don’t have to be a moron to be a liberal Democrat but it sure helps.

docdave on April 24, 2007 at 07:27 am

I don’t think there is any Muslim nation that is not a potential problem in the future. As many, including myself, have said repeatedly, Islam declared war on the rest of the world 1300 years ago, and have never declared that war to be ended.  Even so, the path of wisdom is to evaluate each threat in terms of its immediacy, and Saudi is down the line a bit.  Some elements on this blog are simply trying to create a distraction from the top priorities in the war against terrorism, which are, in order, Iraq, Iran and Syria.
I would like to see a lot more real support from the non-fundamentalist Muslims, though. Not just political support(talking), but real logistical and military support.  If they are really opposed to the fundamentalist Muslims, they should be just as interested in defeating them as we are.  Their freedom is at stake.


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robert108 on April 24, 2007 at 08:30 am

I don’t think there is any Muslim nation that is not a potential problem in the future.

Here is where we disagree a bit.  I believe the Saudi problem is now not in the future especially considering how they have spread whabbism in our country and elsewhere.  Granted we can be waging war everywhere but we shouldn’t be giving the Saudis carte blance either.


You don’t have to be a moron to be a liberal Democrat but it sure helps.

docdave on April 24, 2007 at 09:57 am

DD: I think I was talking about priorities, not either/or.


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robert108 on April 24, 2007 at 10:15 am
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