It has become apparent that the billions of US dollars annually spent
on Saudi oil seldom reciprocate loyalty anymore.
The recent military figures made available to The Los Angeles Times by
senior American officials state that roughly 45% of all foreign
combatants in the Iraq war theatre come solely from Saudi Arabia.
However, this should, in no way, be a revelation.
For years, many in the West have overtly expressed their outrage at
Wahabbist odium towards religious plurality, the backwards
indoctrination of Saudi school children through their public
educational system, the apocalyptic conspiracy theories that are rife
in Saudi state-run media, and the profound antipathy that the majority
in their religious establishment have towards western values.
In 2002, with the images of 9/11 still fresh in the American mindset
and approximately nine months before the start of the Iraq war, scholar
Victor Davis Hanson wrote a most detailed analysis about America’s
self-defeating “alliance” with the House of Saud.
In Our enemies the Saudis, Hanson examines the conundrum of why a
western, liberalized society that bases its entire identity on
pluralism can have any diplomatic relations, let alone a strong
alliance, with the reactionary neo-Caliphate oligarchy of Saudi Arabia.
The “anomaly raises the key question: why have close relations with the
Saudis been a cornerstone of American foreign policy for decades?”
Considering the complexities and sheer irrationality of Middle Eastern
politics, one can imagine that this aspect of American foreign policy
must certainly possess some esoteric meaning.
Yet, “the answer” could not be more salient. To Hanson, it is simply
“oil, and nothing more” that the keeps the American government
reluctantly married to the Saudi royal family. The US clearly lacks
what they have and, as a result, practicality trumps the American motto
of liberty and justice for all.
Hanson’s analysis was 5 years ago and the brunt of his argument still
rings true. Yet, the dynamics in this troubled region have since
shifted dramatically. In removing Sadaam, what the US has ultimately
done is uncover the unintended consequences and the nonsensicality of
its long-held diplomatic ties to certain nefarious parties of the
Middle East. The Saudi alliance is only one of several.
Think about it.
When on any given Monday, a sharply dressed official from the US State
Department conducts a one hour harangue on the evils of Iran for
supplying Shia militias in Southern Iraq with roadside bombs and then,
that same official, only a few hours later, attends a “working lunch”
with his Saudi counterpart, the utter stupidity of American foreign
policy manifests itself to the world.
How can the American government expect to be taken seriously when it
applies different standards to two parties, who in essence, commit the
same offence? Why is Shia radicalism viewed as somehow more pernicious
than Wahabbi fundamentalism when both parties engage in similar
activities? In fact, Hanson himself clearly points out that “Saudi
terrorists have killed more Americans than all those murdered by
Iranians, Syrians, Libyans, and Iraqis put together.”
It is time for the American government to stop splitting hairs and
reconcile itself with the byproducts of decades of misdirected foreign
policy.
What President Bush must understand is that the same Saudi delegate who
is yearly invited to his Crawford ranch, who sits down to dinner with
him as they exchange pleasantries, is just as evil and inimical to
American interests as any mystic Ayatollah on the streets of Qom.
For years, successive American administrations have courted Saudi
allegiance in return for American interests to be played out in the
broader Middle East. Yet, they have turned a blind eye to the Saudi
government’s rampant human rights abuses, support for terrorism, and
mass indoctrination of Stalinist ideology upon their public.
It is now a sober reality that the American alliance with Saudi Arabia
is of no further use. It is disingenuous of the Bush administration to
proclaim that they “will go after the terrorists” all the while
attempting to “win hearts and minds” when they are clearly married to
‘the makers of terrorists’, those who vitiate young hearts and minds.
If blind American allegiance towards the House of Saud stems only from
energy concerns, then certain shifts in trade with Russia, Azerbaijan,
Canada, Mexico, and dare I say, Iran, can easily alleviate those
concerns.
Yes…Iran, and why not? If the American government can do business with
a nation like Saudi Arabia, which has a citizenry that is intoxicated
with hate towards the West, teaches its children that Jews are monkeys,
and actively supports “charities” that send money to the families of
suicide bombers, then surely the US can do business with any other
rogue regime. Follow the numbers: 80% of those who murdered 3,000
people on 9/11 were Saudis; and now 45% of foreign combatants in Iraq
are Saudis.
American credibility is marred, not because of its stance towards Iran,
its alliance with Israel, or Saudi subterfuge. The damage to US
credibility comes from the schism between American rhetoric and action
– because of its inconsistency.
For years, America ignored calls to back away from the serpent that is
Saudi Arabia. Therefore, now, it cannot complain if, every so often, it
is bitten by it.
Original
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America & The House of Saud
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