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Editor's Note:
The Saudi-American Forum would
like to thank Mr. Khashoggi for permission to share his article
with our readers. This article originally appeared in The
Daily Star on January 28, 2004.
How the Saudis Can Defend
Against American Critics
By Jamal A. Khashoggi
Saudi-American relations appear
publicly to be doing well. There are regular contacts between
officials from both countries and active cooperation in security
matters and in the war against terrorism. The latest example was
the decision by the two countries to add a Bosnian company to
the United Nations list of terrorist organizations.
However, this cooperation does
not mean we should rest on our laurels and rely entirely on the
Americans. Rather, we should be even more vigilant for as long
as extreme conservatives such as Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz and former Pentagon official Richard Perle are part of
the Bush administration. We should deal with the latter with
particular care and count our fingers each time we shake hands
with one of them, and feel for our wallets whenever they give us
a hug. For not only are they fervent friends of Israel and proud
of it, they also have very close ties with the Likud extremists
there, and, as such, hold Israel's interests and its security
and future above all other considerations. There will never be a
day when Saudi interests and those of the Israelis will
coincide. Even if one day we reconcile ourselves to coexist with
them, we will not tie our future to theirs.
This is unlike Saudi relations
with Iraq, from which the kingdom was alienated for decades. We
are now moving closer than ever to one another. It will never be
the same with Israel, for the latter was never one of us to
begin with.
We do not know what the future
holds, and for that matter neither do the Americans, who are
deeply involved in their Iraqi adventure. One thing is certain
however: Washington is interested in us for our oil, but also
for our Islam - and we have a great deal of both. Saudi Arabia
has also, unfortunately, become a factor in the upcoming U.S.
presidential election; candidates believe that the more they
attack the kingdom and point their finger at us, the more
patriotic they will appear. We must fight this tendency. The
speaking tour that Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi
ambassador in Washington, undertook several weeks ago to address
Americans, was aimed at doing just that.
I
discussed American-Saudi relations lately with a friend who had
just returned from the United States and knows the country very
well. He was pessimistic and not at all convinced by the public
smiles and handshakes. Even U.S. President George W. Bush's
statements that the accusations against Saudi Arabia do not
constitute administration policy failed to reassure my friend.
It is clear that Bush will not make serious attempts to put an
end to these accusations for as long as none of his close aides
are involved. Nor should we expect the negative attention to
change with a new administration. Even the Democrats, who may
have little chance of winning the upcoming election, have jumped
on the bandwagon. In a recent article published in London's The
Guardian, for example, former Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright called for continued pressure on Saudi Arabia.
However, there has, been a shift
in the kind of articles about Saudi Arabia appearing in American
publications. Well-researched pieces written by various scholars
and published in respectable and specialized periodicals have
now replaced the superficial and often unsubstantiated articles
that used to appear, for example, in The Wall Street
Journal and U.S. News and World Report. Since these
articles have an impact on American public opinion, and
regardless of whether we agree with their findings, we should be
aware of their content in order to respond to those who will ask
us for answers the next time they visit the kingdom.
Saudi diplomats have tried to
minimize the impact of American pressure by avoiding any steps
that would be seen as confrontational. However, it is time for
us to reevaluate the gains and losses of the recent past and,
based on that, to make rational decisions concerning the future
shape of our very important and strategic relationship with the
United States.
On the one hand, we should
maintain our high level of cooperation with Washington in the
war against terror, since both our countries are on the
receiving end of attacks. The same goes for oil: It is in our
interest to keep selling it to the United States and the West
and to preserve moderate oil prices. On the other hand, we
should confront American attacks against us, whether in the
press or in the courts, since the pursuit of innocent people is
another issue altogether from collaboration against terrorism.
We have seen how harmful the accusations leveled against Saudi
businessmen have been, and how the tight controls imposed on
Saudi students have forced many of them to leave the United
States to enroll in British universities, or even educational
establishments in Australia and New Zealand.
Our reaction so far has been to
appreciate the situation Americans found themselves in after
Sept. 11, 2001, and to wait until the storm passes. But the
storm, far from passing, is increasing in intensity and an
ever-larger number of demands and accusations are being made as
time goes by. We are also aware that there are those in
Washington and Israel who see the situation as a golden
opportunity to strike the coup de grace against the kingdom's
position and influence in the Arab and Muslim worlds - as well
as
to its role as a U.S. ally.
That
is why we have to fight back. Last November, Saudi Defense
Minister Prince Sultan and Saudi Ambassador to the United
Kingdom Prince Turki al-Faisal won a legal battle against the
families of Sept. 11 victims, who had irresponsibly accused them
of financing terrorist activities. This was good news. Also good
news was the legal victory that Mohammed Abdel Latif Jamil and
his company won against the European edition of The Wall
Street Journal, which had claimed that the Saudi-Arab
Monetary Agency was keeping a close watch over the company's
transfer deals because of suspected links to terrorism, an
accusation that proved groundless. The newspaper was fined and
forced to issue a denial. These, however, are but the early
rounds in a long battle.
We should look for the weak
links in the chain of American accusations against Saudi Arabia
in order to support those unjustly attacked. And we should do
this by undermining their legal bases. We should force American
courts to make public what it says is "secret
evidence" that Attorney General John Ashcroft relies upon
in making his accusations. Once we can do that, the American
public will be at pains to believe evidence of this kind, drawn
mostly from cheap Arab magazines, and on the strength of which
funds have been frozen and many a home destroyed. But then again
these stories need another article.
About The Author
Jamal
A. Khashoggi, a former editor in chief of Saudi Arabia's Al-Watan,
is adviser to the Saudi ambassador in London, Prince Turki
al-Faisal. He is a regular
political commentator for Local Saudi Channel, MBC, BBC,
Aljazera TV, Abu Dubai and Dubai TV. In addition, he writes
a weekly column in Al Madina newspaper, Beirut’s Daily
Star, Kuwait’s Alrai Alam,
and Doha’s Al Sharq and occasionally in several Arab and
international publications.
Mr. Khashoggi received his Bachelor’s
degree in Business Administration from Indiana State University,
USA.
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