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Editor's Note:
The Saudi-American
Forum would like to thank Mr. Faruqui for permission to share
this Op-ed with our readers. It first appeared in the Daily
Times
of Lahore, Pakistan.
Scapegoating Saudi Arabia
for 9/11
By Ahmad Faruqui
Countering this
stereotyping of Saudi Arabia is Ambassador Freeman, who served
as Washington's envoy in Riyadh from 1989 to 1992, a span of
time that included the Gulf War.
Ever since the 9/11
attacks, a variety of American writers and talk-show hosts have
declared 'open season' on Saudi Arabia. The vilification of
Saudi Arabia began in July 2002. Laurent Murawiec, a Rand
Corporation analyst, called Saudi Arabia 'the kernel of evil' in
a briefing to the Pentagon's Defense Policy Advisory Board that
was then headed by arch neo-conservative Richard Perle.
Then in April of this
year, former CIA Director James Woolsey spoke at the University
of California, Los Angeles. Speaking in glowing terms about US
plans to remake the Arab Middle East, Woolsey threw the gauntlet
at the leaders of Egypt and Saudi Arabia: "We want you
nervous. We want you to realize now, for the fourth time in a
hundred years, this country and its allies are on the march and
that we are on the side of those whom you - the Mubaraks, the
Saudi Royal family - most fear: We're on the side of your own
people."
Continuing the theme,
Gerald Posner argues in his book, 'Why America Slept,' that
there were secret connections between Osama bin Laden and the
governments of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. Posner argues that
Saudi Arabia had a secret arrangement with Osama to stave off
fundamentalists within the kingdom.
Capitalising on this
Saudi phobia, Dore Gold, former Israeli representative to the
United Nations, published a book bluntly titled, 'Hatred's
Kingdom: How Saudi Arabia Supports the New Global Terrorism.'
This book, based largely on information drawn from Israeli
intelligence sources, has been accepted as a definitive piece of
'American' writing on Saudi Arabia.
Countering
this stereotyping of Saudi Arabia is Ambassador Freeman, who
served as Washington's envoy in Riyadh from 1989 to 1992, a span
of time that included the Gulf War. Last month, he spoke at the
School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins
University. Freeman said that he was reluctant to speak to
American audiences about Saudi Arabia because 'I find that in
the audience there are people who can rehearse the details of
the educational curriculum of Saudi Arabia and tell me what was
allegedly said in which mosque on what date by imam so-and-so.'
He noted sadly that people who had never been to Saudi Arabia,
did not speak a word of Arabic, and had in fact never even met a
Saudi were now considered experts on Saudi Arabia. 'I can say
honestly that I didn't know a damn thing about Saudi Arabia
before I went there.'
Commenting on the
current state of affairs in the US, he observed, 'To say
anything kind about Saudi Arabia is to invite a reprimand. To
say anything unkind about it is to win points.' He said it had
become conventional wisdom that religious education, especially
Islamic education in seminaries [madrassahs], leads to violence.
Ambassador Freeman said this theory had no basis in fact.
He then proceeded to
take on a number of myths related to Osama bin Laden. He said it
was commonly held that poverty breeds terrorism, even though
Osama comes from a family that is the equivalent of the
Rockefellers in Saudi Arabia. He also noted that most of the 15
Saudis who are alleged to have taken part in the attacks of 9/11
came from privileged backgrounds. 'However, even then people
argue that poverty causes terrorism. Environmental degradation
causes terrorism. Sexism causes terrorism. Whatever your pet
rock is, that causes terrorism. Arab culture breeds terrorism.
But, in fact, all the evidence seems to me to suggest that the
causes of the terrorism are a combination of humiliation and a
search for revenge on the one hand along with the lack of
alternative weapons - people who have M-16s don't need to blow
themselves up in order to strike targets. They can do it at less
cost to themselves. So, grievance and desperation seem to me to
be at the root of it.' In other words, terrorism is a form of
asymmetric warfare akin to guerrilla war.
Freeman
said that Americans ought to ask themselves a question or two
about who is the real enemy. Noting that Saudi bashing had
diminished recently, he said it was not because Americans
understand Saudi Arabia better or that they have done any
serious thinking about Saudi Arabia or the Middle East but
because everyone is preoccupied with the difficulties facing
American troops in Iraq.
He said it was very
difficult to ask Americans to think rationally about the Middle
East, at a time when 70 percent of them believed Saddam Hussein
was behind the 9/11 attacks, even though the Bush administration
has stated recently that there was no such connection. He added
that the US government clearly understood that Saudi Arabia was
an ally in the war on terror and the Saudi government clearly
understood that it needed the US equally to combat the threat of
terrorism in the kingdom. Paradoxically, both governments find
themselves defending their relationship against increasingly
hostile publics. Freeman stated, 'all of the animosity that now
exists in the United States towards Saudi Arabia is fully
mirrored in Saudi Arabia in attitudes at the popular level
toward the United States.'
He concluded his speech
by saying that there was a lot of evidence that the Saudis had
engaged in a fair amount of soul searching since the attacks of
9/11. He cited the speech of Crown Prince Abdullah at the Gulf
Cooperation Council in December 2001, in which he called on the
Arabs to stop blaming other people for their own mistakes and to
look within themselves to improve their situation. He also
mentioned the Crown Prince's Beirut initiative, in which he
(Crown Prince) had said that Saudi Arabia would be the first
country to normalize relations with Israel in the event of an
Israeli-Palestinian peace.
Youssef Ibrahim, a
senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former
correspondent for the New York Times, acknowledges that
Americans were genuinely incensed when they were attacked on
9/11 by a group of people of whom the majority were Saudi
citizens. But he argues that this does not this mean that the
Saudi nation is America's enemy.
Ibrahim says that the
anti-Saudi campaign has gone, 'as they say in Britain, a bit
over the top.' Just as the acts of a few Christian
fundamentalists who kill doctors at abortion clinics do not turn
all Christian fundamentalist criminals into America's enemies,
so the acts of a few extremist Saudis who may have carried out
the 9/11 attacks do not turn all Saudis into America's enemies.
It is time Americans eschewed emotionalism and began to think
rationally about Saudi Arabia.
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