By Ghassan Kadi
October 26, 2018
Link: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/50507.htm
October 26, 2018
Link: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/50507.htm
With the ever-changing and escalating
aftermath of the Khashoggi disappearance episode, there remain many fixed marks
that are interesting to identify.
But before we do, we must stop and briefly
look at the official American, Turkish and Saudi stands on this issue.
The Americans are best seen to be playing yoyo
with their Saudi “friends”. One moment they seem to be totally abandoning them
and sending them spiraling down in a free-fall, and the next moment they lift
them up, clutch them, and give them a sense of safety. Notwithstanding that on
the 3rd of October, and just before the Khashoggi story hit the
media frenzy, Trump reiterated that Saudi Arabia would not last two weeks
without America’s support, and what followed was a series of fluctuations and
backflips on the American side. At the time of promising severe measures
against the Saudis, Trump said that this will not mean canceling the arms deal
with Saudi Arabia. And when Pompeo visited Al Saud to talk to the royals,
leaving the Kingdom of Sand with an understanding that his boss Trump
articulated by hinting at vindicating the royals and putting the blame on some
rogue elements, America turned again supporting Turkish investigations and
awaiting their outcome, but just before Erdogan’s speech of the 23rd
of October, Trump reiterated that he was prepared to accept the Saudi Government
denial of involvement.
And speaking of Turkish investigations, the
highly awaited Erdogan speech ended in a pop and a fizzle, and was nothing
short of a domestic propaganda speech that had no conclusions and did not
provide any evidence as to the details of Khashoggi’s disappearance and alleged
murder. And “alleged” it remains until a body is found and identified by an
independent reliable coroner. The speech was not endorsed by America, and
America was for a few hours or so once again looking sympathetic towards the
Saudi royals, but less than 24 hours later, Trump was talking about the “worst
cover-up in history”.
There is no need to flood this article with
easy-to-find references to substantiate the above.
Back to Erdogan later.
These swings that are extremely bizarre and
hypocritical even by American standards make one wonders what kind of
relationship do Saudis and Americans have.
To understand the underlying nature of this
relationship, having a look at the events of the last ten years or so are
revealing enough without having to dig deeper into history.
To this effect, I am not talking about the
strategic alliances, defense agreements, the importance of oil to both
countries, the world and the Israeli role in all of this. I am not talking
about the Saudi obsession with Iran either. What I am talking about is the
personal human relationships between the Americans and Saudis as human beings
and how they view each other as men; this is about the personal
love-hate-respect-loath relationship between American policymakers and their
Saudi counterparts.
This “relationship” is not a simple one. It is
embroiled by deep cultural differences and belief systems. Having lived and
worked in Saudi Arabia, I can understand the Saudi mindset more than many, but
anyone who has had the same “privilege” that I had living there would concur,
albeit not necessarily be prepared to sit down and write about it.
In case the reader is unfamiliar with the
predominant Saudi mindset, speaking generally of course, allow me to pin point
certain pertinent aspects of it:
1. Contrary to the word of the Holy Quran and
which clearly states that God chose the Arabic language for the religion of
Islam, Saudis believe otherwise. They believe that Islam was God’s gift to
them.
2. Saudis also believe that God also gave
Arabia another gift; petrol, and the biggest national reserve of them all …
perhaps.
3. Al-Saud believe they have been afforded the
God-given mandate to rule Arabia at the time when petrol became such an
important commodity for the rest of the world.
4. Finally, the above “privileges” give
Saudis, especially members of the Royal Family, an illusion of being above
others. And this mindset views other nations from the perspective that Saudis
are the rich masters of the world and that they have the power and ability to
employ members of those other nations to “serve” them.
When I lived and worked in Saudi Arabia,
Saudis did not work. They had jobs, but they never really worked. Apart from
the security apparatus whose job is mainly to protect the status quo of the
Royal Family, the only other real working job that Saudis had was taxi driving.
But that was what poor and uneducated Bedouins did.
All other jobs from garbage collectors to
doctors to dockyard engineers were contracted to expats from different regions
of the world. Professional jobs that needed communication and fluency in the
Arabic language were given to Lebanese, Syrians, Palestinians, Jordanians and
Egyptians. Blue collar jobs were given to Yemenis and Arabs of the above
nationalities without tertiary education. High ranking professional jobs that
did not require fluency in Arabic were given to Americans and Europeans.
This mentality produced a generation or two or
three of Saudis who are filthy rich, overweight, and engrossed with
self-grandeur and superiority that was fed time and time again by their
financial prowess.
But this is not restricted to Saudis only. Arabs
of the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait all have that same superiority disease.
Qatar that has a Qatari population of less than 200,000 has a population of
over one and a half million expats to “serve them”. This is exactly how they
see it; themselves being masters, and expats beings serving serfs.
In recent times, the Saudi and Gulf youth have
increasingly been gaining tertiary education qualifications, receiving generous
government scholarships and immediate employment following graduation. The
Saudi Government protects its people by imposing quota rules on the percentage
of Saudi employees in companies as well as the public sector of course.
However, this fact has not been reflected in the work load they perform. These
educated Saudis sit at the head of governmental positions and companies in
tokenistic managerial supervisory roles over an entire staff of foreign
professionals. They often try to assert their positions and feed their egos by
yelling and barking irrelevant, and often laughable orders, at their employees
and junior staff. And even if they are not in managerial roles, they will still
be around the foreign professionals, leaving all the work for them to do and
doing nothing themselves.
Saudi professionals I “worked with” were
living examples for me to learn this mindset. They did not lift a finger, but
when a report was submitted by either myself or other expats around me, a Saudi
name had to appear as its senior author, and he received all the accolade.
Saudis genuinely believe that they can buy
anything and anyone with money, including buying the stature of being a leading
nation.
And if, hypothetically-speaking, the Saudis
were to contract a Western company to build them a space ship and send a man to
Mars, they will regard this as a Saudi achievement. Surprised? Well, just have
a look at Dubai’s “achievement” in building Burj Khalifa, the tallest building
on earth.
Once again, that Saudi mentality is not any
better or worse than the general oil-rich Arabian one. They are all almost
identical.
At a deep and subtle level however, the Saudis
(and Gulfies in general) know well that in the eyes of the Empire and its
cohorts, they are perceived as a bunch of “uncivilized camel riders” who happen
to be horribly rich by sheer luck. They know that they are not really regarded
as true allies of the West, but as its milking cow; and some Saudis and Gulfies
are trying to change this image.
None tried harder than Prince Bandar Bin
Sultan.
Prince Bandar Bin Sultan was Saudi Arabia’s
Ambassador to Washington from 1983 to 2005. He became the Saudi royal who best
understood the Western mind and how the West regarded the Arab World, and
especially Saudi Arabia. He had his own evil agenda he wanted to use to
catapult himself into ascending to the throne as the first grandson of founding
King Abdul-Aziz.
He was a close personal friend of the Bushes
and many others in the previous and successive American administrations. And,
if America ever had a Saudi Prince that American lawmakers could speak to and
reciprocate understanding with, it was Bandar Bin Sultan.
He was banking on the fact that his father,
Sultan, had been in line for the throne for decades and was Crown Prince ever
since King Abdullah took the throne in 2005. But to Bandar’s disappointment,
his father died in 2011, before King Abdullah who died in 2015.
As Bandar Bin Sultan was grooming himself to
become king after his father, his knowledge of the Western mind and closeness
to many key people in the United States led him to realize that he had to
present himself as a competent and reliable partner in order to be respected.
Bandar wanted to demonstrate his personal
character worth to his American allies by plotting the “War on Syria”. That war
was his pet project and his license to achieve equality with his American
friends. But Bandar fell on his sword when Syrian resistance proved to be much
stronger than his ambitions, and not long after his failed desperate attempt to
persuade America to attack Syria after he blamed the Syrian Army for a chemical
attack that he staged in East Ghouta in September 2013, Bandar disappeared,
vanishing into oblivion.
With the rapid and unprecedented changes in
the line of Saudi throne succession that followed Prince Sultan’s death, and
which eventually presented Mohamed Bin Salman (MBS) as the new Saudi strong-man
Crown Prince, the young prince had big shoes to fill. Haunted by the image,
ambition and failures of Bandar, MBS had a bigger “obligation” to prove his
worth to his American “allies”.
The war on Yemen was MBS’s own “love-child”.
He wanted to kill two birds with one stone; overcoming the Houthis, and proving
to America that he is reliable in curbing Iran’s regional influence. He was
hoping he could prove that his army was able to fight and win a war against
Iran itself. He thus gave his war a name akin to American military operations;
“Operation Decisive Storm”. Sounds a bit like “Operation Desert Storm”, does it
not? In doing this, he wanted to put himself on par with great military leaders
and score a quick and decisive victory in Yemen. Three years later, he cannot
even hold his own borders.
In more ways than one, in as much as the
Saudis and Gulfies have the afore-mentioned superiority complex, ironically
they also possess a huge inferiority complex. They try to prove their own worth
by bragging their “friendship” with America, and when President Trump made his
first formal visit as President to Saudi Arabia, he was greeted like no other
visiting foreign dignitary anywhere in the past. Only Elizabeth Taylor could
claim such a reception as Hollywood’s version of Cleopatra.
Trump’s visit was Saudi Arabia’s greatest
moment of “pride”.
But even on much smaller matters, Saudis and
Gulfies brag their Western employees and they have a special liking for white
blue-eyed Westerners. With thousands of Americans and Westerners working in
Saudi Arabia and the Gulf, it would be rare, if not impossible, to find a black
American/Westerner; especially if the post involves being in the public view.
And this is because, if you are a Saudi employer and you need a Westerner to
fill the position of a public relations officer, you would want a white,
blue-eyed person on that desk and not a black person. After all, a black
Westerner could be mistaken for a Sudanese, a Somalese or a member of any other
“inferior” African nation; as perceived in the eyes of the Saudis/Gulfies.
Back to the Khashoggi debacle and the role of
Erdogan. As mentioned above, in his Tuesday the 23rd of October
speech, Erdogan did not supply the goods, and it was time for America to pull
the rug from underneath his feet, reclaim control of the narrative, and draw
the Saudi yoyo back up again to give the Saudis a bit of a breather; until
further notice. America can neither afford to keep the fate of the Khashoggi
story in Erdogan’s hands any more than it can afford to lose the Saudi milking
cow. But the human relationships between Americans and Saudis are now perhaps
at their worst, and mostly for the Saudis. The Saudis have again failed the
validity and fortitude test and they know they have taken a back step that
needs many years, perhaps decades to recover from. In the eyes of the
Americans, their credibility as partners and viability as capable men has
suffered a big time blow.
The biggest twist perhaps in the Khashoggi
debacle is that the Saudis have always felt that they were entitled to the same
level of impunity the West affords to itself. After all, this was how Al-Saud
got away with persecuting dissent, imposing undemocratic laws, and exporting
Wahhabi ideology and the terror acts that come with it. Needless to mention the
biggest human tragedy of them all; inflicting war crimes in Yemen, killing tens
of thousands and inflicting starvation and disease upon millions others.
But when America lifted the blanket of
impunity on the Saudis over the Khashoggi story leaving them out on their own
to face the consequences of their crimes for a change, the Saudis indeed did
not survive for more than two weeks.
Just imagine how would the world popular
opinion could be manipulated if leading Western media outlets suddenly “decide”
to start reporting the Yemeni tragedy and the role of Saudi Arabia in creating
it, and specifically the role of MBS in creating this tragedy. Will MBS in this
instance become the West’s new Saddam?
MBS has been named, his Foreign Minister
desperately tried to isolate him from the Khashoggi story, but it is up to
America and its “fake news” media to decide whether or not MBS is implicated,
and the more they implicate him, the deeper America can dig into his pocket.
And as this article was getting ready to be submitted for publishing, MBS
himself broke his silence proclaiming that the murder of Khashoggi was a
heinous crime and that those responsible will be punished.
Either way, when the Saudis return to the negotiating
table with their American “partners”, MBS will not only be facing a bill for
American protection of Saudi Arabia per se, but also a bill for protecting his
own personal aspirations to become king as well as protecting his own head. He
must prepare himself to expect a hefty price of his own head. What will that
price be is yet to be seen.
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