|
SAUDI
SUICIDE BOMBINGS WORK
AGAINST AL QAEDA
by Wyche Fowler
& Edward S. Walker
As
in Egypt in 1997, the
killings will fuel a
backlash against
extremists.
The
brutality of the crime
will not soon be
forgotten. Gunmen
stepped out of their
vehicles, quickly
approached the site,
shot the security
guards patrolling the
area and then
indiscriminately
murdered anyone in
their path. Foreigners
began evacuating the
country immediately.
The government, having
battled the same
extremists for more
than a decade, engaged
forcefully in a
wide-scale crackdown
on radical Islamic
groups.
The
country was Egypt. The
city was Luxor. The
date was Nov. 17,
1997.
This
particular act of
terrorism claimed the
lives of 58 tourists.
Gamaa al Islamiya,
headed by an Egyptian,
Ayman Zawahiri, who
would become Osama bin
Laden's top deputy,
claimed responsibility
for the largest
massacre of foreigners
in recent Egyptian
history.
Despite
the difference in time
and place, there are a
number of factors
linking Luxor and
Monday's suicide
attacks in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia. First,
compelling evidence
indicates that both
incidents bear the
Zawahiri signature,
one that has come to
identify Al Qaeda
attacks. Although
intelligence officials
in the U.S. are just
now being dispatched
to the kingdom to
investigate, Saudi
officials have already
announced what we
believe to be true: Al
Qaeda masterminded the
well-coordinated and
near-simultaneous
strikes on civilian
targets - its
terrorist trademark.
Second,
the attacks had a
common agenda: to
undermine leaders in
Cairo and Riyadh,
respectively. This
week's bombing was not
a stab at the Middle
East peace process,
nor was it aimed
primarily at the
United States. There
are scores of other
installations in the
kingdom and elsewhere
that would have been
better proxies for
Washington and led to
greater American
casualties.
This
was an attack aimed at
U.S. support for Saudi
Arabia, at the Saudi
government itself and
particularly at Crown
Prince Abdullah.
Vinnell Corp. was
targeted not because
it was American but
because of its
long-standing contract
to train the Saudi
National Guard, headed
by Abdullah. And this
is not the first
attack on Vinnell and
the Saudi National
Guard.
In
November 1995, a bomb
blast at a Saudi
National Guard
training base left
seven people dead,
including several
Americans.
One
final similarity: in
Egypt, the excess and
savagery deprived the
terrorists of popular
support and places to
hide. As millions of
tourists traveled
elsewhere, the
precipitous decline in
foreign revenues
caused widespread
economic hardship.
The
Luxor violence rallied
Egyptians behind their
government and marked
the beginning of the
end for Gamaa Al
Islamiya. The Egyptian
government cracked
down unequivocally;
most of the group's
leaders were jailed or
fled to Afghanistan,
and they were publicly
reviled.
A
similar popular
revulsion is beginning
to take hold in Saudi
Arabia. After all, a
substantial number of
this week's victims -
not counting the
bombers - were Saudis.
Already our
conversations with
people in the region
indicate that the
devastation caused by
these terrorists has
fomented a backlash
against religious
extremists. Ordinary
Saudis are saying
khalas! -
"enough!" -
as the death toll
mounts.
|
As
in Egypt in 1997, the
killings will fuel a
backlash against
extremists.
The
brutality of the crime
will not soon be
forgotten. Gunmen
stepped out of their
vehicles, quickly
approached the site,
shot the security
guards patrolling the
area and then
indiscriminately
murdered anyone in
their path. Foreigners
began evacuating the
country immediately.
The government, having
battled the same
extremists for more
than a decade, engaged
forcefully in a
wide-scale crackdown
on radical Islamic
groups.
The
country was Egypt. The
city was Luxor. The
date was Nov. 17,
1997.
This
particular act of
terrorism claimed the
lives of 58 tourists.
Gamaa al Islamiya,
headed by an Egyptian,
Ayman Zawahiri, who
would become Osama bin
Laden's top deputy,
claimed responsibility
for the largest
massacre of foreigners
in recent Egyptian
history.
Despite
the difference in time
and place, there are a
number of factors
linking Luxor and
Monday's suicide
attacks in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia. First,
compelling evidence
indicates that both
incidents bear the
Zawahiri signature,
one that has come to
identify Al Qaeda
attacks. Although
intelligence officials
in the U.S. are just
now being dispatched
to the kingdom to
investigate, Saudi
officials have already
announced what we
believe to be true: Al
Qaeda masterminded the
well-coordinated and
near-simultaneous
strikes on civilian
targets - its
terrorist trademark.
Second,
the attacks had a
common agenda: to
undermine leaders in
Cairo and Riyadh,
respectively. This
week's bombing was not
a stab at the Middle
East peace process,
nor was it aimed
primarily at the
United States. There
are scores of other
installations in the
kingdom and elsewhere
that would have been
better proxies for
Washington and led to
greater American
casualties.
This
was an attack aimed at
U.S. support for Saudi
Arabia, at the Saudi
government itself and
particularly at Crown
Prince Abdullah.
Vinnell Corp. was
targeted not because
it was American but
because of its
long-standing contract
to train the Saudi
National Guard, headed
by Abdullah. And this
is not the first
attack on Vinnell and
the Saudi National
Guard.
In
November 1995, a bomb
blast at a Saudi
National Guard
training base left
seven people dead,
including several
Americans.
One
final similarity: in
Egypt, the excess and
savagery deprived the
terrorists of popular
support and places to
hide. As millions of
tourists traveled
elsewhere, the
precipitous decline in
foreign revenues
caused widespread
economic hardship.
The
Luxor violence rallied
Egyptians behind their
government and marked
the beginning of the
end for Gamaa Al
Islamiya. The Egyptian
government cracked
down unequivocally;
most of the group's
leaders were jailed or
fled to Afghanistan,
and they were publicly
reviled.
A
similar popular
revulsion is beginning
to take hold in Saudi
Arabia. After all, a
substantial number of
this week's victims -
not counting the
bombers - were Saudis.
Already our
conversations with
people in the region
indicate that the
devastation caused by
these terrorists has
fomented a backlash
against religious
extremists. Ordinary
Saudis are saying
khalas! -
"enough!" -
as the death toll
mounts.
|

Crown
Prince
Abdullah
welcomed
Secretary
Powell one day
after the
Riyadh
bombings.
|
Uniting
with our allies to
fight our common enemy
- the terrorists - is
the right thing to do.
It should have been a
lesson learned after
9/11. Regrettably, it
was not. Instead,
self-described
"experts" on
Saudi Arabia, many of
whom have never spent
more than a few days
in the kingdom,
engaged in an orgy of
stereotypes and
half-truths. Too
often, their voices
dominate the airwaves
with pithy but grossly
distorted sound bites.
Their verbal lynching
of Islam, Arabs and
Saudis undermines
every one of us who
seeks to isolate and
destroy terrorists.
After
all the inroads this
administration has
made against the
forces of
international
terrorism, we cannot
gratify Bin Laden by
letting him believe
that terrorism will
accomplish his aims.
Saudi-bashing gives
aid and comfort to Bin
Laden and his
followers while
undercutting Bush.
That is not the way to
fight the war on
terrorism.
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