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Saudi
Friends, Saudi Foes. Is Our Arab
Ally Part of the Problem? |
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The extraordinary act of destruction seen on September 11 had a noteworthy harbinger in Islamic history. In 1925, Ibn Saud, founder of the present Saudi Arabian dynasty, ordered the wholesale destruction of the sacred tombs, graveyards, and mosques in Mecca and Medina. These are, of course, the two holy cities of Islam, whose sanctity the Saudi exile Osama bin Laden and other Islamist extremists ostensibly seek to protect from the defiling presence of U.S. troops on Saudi soil.
The Saud party went on to demolish the cemetery in Mecca where the
prophet's mother, grandfather, and first wife, Khadijah, were buried; then to
smash many more honored sites, devastating the architectural achievements of
Arabia, including mosques and even Muhammad's house. Only the tomb of the
prophet was spared, after an outcry from traditional Muslims. This spree of vandalism was accompanied by wholesale massacres of Muslims
suspected of rejecting Wahhabism, a fanatical strain of Islam that emerged in
Arabia in the eighteenth century and has periodically disturbed the Muslim
world. In the nineteenth century, it fuelled the Arab nationalist challenge to
the tolerant and easygoing Ottoman Empire; and it became, and remains today, the
state-sanctioned doctrine of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, founded in 1932. These events of 75 years ago aid in understanding the violence of bin
Laden and other Islamic terrorists, who (since the waning of atheist left- ism
as a motivating ideology) are all Wahhabis. A direct line extends from the
demolition of the holy places in Medina and Mecca through the slaughter of 58
tourists in Egypt in 1997, the orgy of killing in Algeria in this decade, and
the bombardment of the Buddhist statues at Bamyan by the Taliban only months ago
to the assault on the World Trade Center, symbol of Western wealth and power. In
all these cases, unrestrained destruction and bloodshed were justified by
Wahhabi doctrine. Wahhabis,
who regard the veneration of the prophet and of saints as a
polytheistic corruption of Islam, are offended by the honouring of tombs and
shrines, along with many other traditional Muslim practices. Observance of the
prophet's birthday, for example, is illegal in Saudi Arabia, although lately
Prince Abdullah has introduced a novel concession: Observances in private homes
will no longer be subject to suppression by the religious police. Wahhabism's
bloodstained record
explains why so many Muslims around the world fear and hate Islamic
fundamentalism-and why certain marginal types are drawn to it. As an
acquaintance of mine put it, in Muslim Morocco, the footloose young sons of the
lower middle class and proletariat can take one of three paths. They may adopt
Western ways, drink and acquire girlfriends, and be envied. They may take up the
life of an ordinary observant Muslim and be respected. Or they may join the
Wahhabis-funded by the Saudis and organized by such as bin Laden-and be feared. This is the most important point for Western leaders to understand right
now: The West has multitudes of potential Muslim allies in the anti- terror war.
They are the ordinary, sane inhabitants of every Muslim nation, who detest the
fundamentalist violence from which they have suffered and which is symbolized,
now and forever, by the mass murder in New York. There is another historical lesson to be drawn.
Wahhabism-whose
quintessence is war on America- seeks to impel Islam centuries back in time, to
the faith's beginnings, yet it is neither ancient nor traditional. Indeed, it
achieved its culmination, the establishment of the Saudi kingdom, only in the
1930s, in parallel wit4 fascism and Stalinism. Although it appears to be a
rejection of modernity, Wahhabism can usefully be thought of as a variant of the
nihilistic revolutionary ideologies that spilled oceans of blood in the
twentieth century but finally collapsed- truly, the discredited lies consigned
to history's graveyard of which President Bush spoke. Saudi-backed Wahhabism
may indeed follow communism to disintegration
sooner than we think; it may now stand at the close of its influence in the
world. That is because the Saudi regime has placed itself in a position much
like that of the Soviets at their end. The Saudis have been forced to make
concessions to the West that clash with the puritanical demands of Wahhabism;
their actions do not match their words. In the same way, the Bolshevik rulers of
Russia established an order blatantly in conflict with the egalitarian and
progressive promises held out by Communist ideology. And like the Soviets, the
Saudis have chosen a method of compensating for their failures that will
inevitably under- mine their power. The Soviet Union, although pledging coexistence with the capitalist
nations, wasted vast resources on Third World adventures intended to expand its
influence and legitimize its revolutionary rhetoric. These ranged from the
Spanish Civil War through the Korean War and on to Cuba, Indochina, Central
America, Africa, and of course Afghanistan. The irresolvable contradiction
between the reality of Soviet communism and its pretensions helped mightily to
prepare its downfall. Similarly, the Saudi regime poses as an ally of the democracies in the
antiterrorist coalition, while continuing to spend vast sums of its oil revenues
to promote Wahhabi radicalism throughout the Islamic world and the Muslim
communities in the West, including America. Recall the Saudis' obstruction of
the investigation of the suicide-bombing of the Khobar towers in which 19
Americans died in 1996. Now it emerges that almost all of the foot soldiers of
the September 11 conspiracy whose nationality has been ascertained were Saudi
nationals. An incident observed after the
war in Kosovo-in, which the West liberated a million and a half Muslims from a
genocidal Serbia-shows how the Saudis spread their vicious doctrine and in the
process earn the contempt of traditional Muslims. After the NATO bombing ended
in July 1999, something called the Saudi Joint Relief Committee for Kosovo, or
SJRCK, appeared on the scene. In its first two months, the committee claimed to
have spent a million dollars. Half of this was used to bring
388 Islamic "propagators" or missionaries to Kosovo to spread
Wahhabism among the Kosovars. A key goal was to recruit young men for training
as Wahhabi imams. Saudi-subsidized mass "cultural programs" featuring
prayers and lectures were held in stadiums. Propaganda printed in Albanian
pushed a simple message: Reject the West in its totality. The Albanians were
unreceptive, and soon the Saud- is and "aid workers" from other Gulf
States had become so overbearing that the local Muslim clergy were urging U.N.
administrators to expel them from Kosovo. The mufti of Kosovo, Dr. Rexhep Boja,
declared that the Kosovars had been Muslims for more than 500 years and needed
no instruction in the faith from foreigners.
Such anecdotes, common in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Central Asia, India,
and elsewhere, should help the West address its immediate problem: How to beat
terrorism without being seen to lead the global crusade against Islam that
Wahhabi propaganda insists we intend? We must first abandon the illusion that
because the Saudis are rich and their economic interests coincide with ours they
are all our friends. But we must also commit time and effort to helping
forward-looking, mainstream, and above all anti-Wahhabi Muslims become part of a
permanent coalition for worldwide security.
Many strategists in Western capitals ask where we will find Muslims
prepared to stand by the West. One tested Muslim statesman who is widely
respected, even idolized, in the Islamic world is the wartime president of
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Alija Izetbegovic. A learned and pious Muslim who was
imprisoned for his faith by Tito's Communist regime, Izetbegovic led the fight
for the survival of Bosnian Islam. He is an authentic warrior in a legitimate
jihad.
In 1997, addressing the Organization of the Islamic Conference in Tehran,
Izetbegovic declared, "Islam is best, but we [Muslims] are not the best.
The West is neither corrupted nor degenerate. It is strong, well educated, and
organized. Their schools are better than ours. Their cities are cleaner than
ours. The level of respect for human rights in the West is higher, and the care
for the poor and less capable is better organized. Westerners are usually
responsible and accurate in their words. Instead of hating the West, let us
proclaim cooperation instead of confrontation."
Izetbegovic, of course, is not an Arab, but neither are most of the
Muslims in the world. Most of the world's Muslims, given the chance, would
gladly side with Izetbegovic against both bin Laden and his patrons in Saudi
Arabia, a culturally incoherent, politically- two-faced country that we should
regard as a state backer of terrorism at least as dangerous as Libya or Iran. reprinted from the Weekly Standard |
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