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Weekly Worker 439 Thursday July 4 2002
Imperialism, oil and the House of Saud
Saïd Aburish - The rise, corruption and coming fall of the House
of Saud - Bloomsbury 1994, £8.99, pp326
Almost a year ago, September 11 briefly put Saudi Arabia in the international
spotlight. The man that was most likely behind the attacks, Osama bin
Laden, is a member of a prominent Saudi family and most of the plane hijackers
were also of Saudi descent. More recently, the silence of the British
government over the Saudis’ detention and torture of four Britons on trumped
up charges of being behind a rash of explosions has once again raised
questions about the murky nature of the relationship between Saudi Arabia
and the western world.
Origins
Comparatively little is known about Saudi Arabia and its House of Saud
rulers by most westerners. However, they are hardly ideal partners in
a ‘war on terrorism’ that, ideologically, has been wrapped in ‘democratic’
packaging. Yet western imperialism - first Britain, then the United States
- has been instrumental in elevating the House of Saud to the position
of power it currently occupies and in maintaining its rule against all
odds. In return, the House of Saud has acted in support of western policy
objectives in the region and, crucially, helped to ensure an almost constant
flow of cheap oil.
All this belies its rather humble origins as merely one tribe amongst
the many vying for power and influence on the Arabian peninsula. Certainly,
the Al-Sauds have always been ambitious. In 1744 Muhammad ibn Saud, a
tribal chief and ruler of Dir’aiyah (a village now on the outskirts of
the current Saudi capital, Riyadh), allied himself with Muhammad ibn Abd
al-Wahhab, a conservative religious thinker. Wahhab gave his name to Wahhabism,
a particularly puritanical version of islam that put a stress on the purity
of religious practice, conservative social standards and the unity of
one god. This alliance was to prove highly significant, although it did
not fully fructify until nearly 200 years later.
From their base in Dir’aiyah the Saudis (here meaning members of the
Al-Saud tribe, not Saudi Arabians) expanded their influence steadily
through the region. A clutch of cities fell under their domination. However,
the area was under the sway of the Ottoman empire. A system of direct
and indirect rule ensured its hegemony and it was not about to let it
slip. Muhammad Ali, a governor of Cairo and Ottoman satrap, was instructed
by his masters to put down the irksome Saudi insurgency. Eventually his
son, Ibrahim Pasha, drove the Saudis back to Dir’aiyah, which in 1819
was razed to the ground. Though the Al-Sauds surfaced again in 1845 -
ruling Riyadh until 1891, when it fell to the Al-Rashid family - they
were eventually driven into exile in Kuwait.
However, by the end of the 19th century the star of the Ottomans had
waned. All of its borders were threatened. The Balkan countries rose in
open revolt and, encouraged by the big European powers, started to create
a whole patchwork of rival nationalist states. To the east, tsarist Russia
was encroaching on its territory, defeating the Ottomans in 1877. Britain
and France looked to extend their empires in the near east. Britain successfully
invaded Egypt in 1881 and France invaded Tunisia during the same year.
Internally, the Caliphate was wracked by dissent and bureaucratic intrigue.
Thus, by the time World War I broke out in 1914, the ‘sick man of Europe’
was already on its last legs. The eventual victory of France, the United
States and Britain against the Triple Alliance sealed the Ottoman Empire’s
fate. Its territory was part of the spoils of victory. The Middle East
was divided into British and French protectorates.
First contact
Meanwhile, the eventual founder of Saudi Arabia, Abdel Aziz Abdel Rahman
Al-Saud (or Ibn Saud), had begun to claw back the land lost by the Al-Sauds.
He recaptured Riyadh in 1902. In doing so he gave an early indication
of his personal ruthlessness and the carnage that was to follow his ascension
to power. He spiked the heads of his enemies on the city gates and burned
over 1,000 people to death. Despite this early success, Ibn Saud recognised
that he needed sponsorship from a major imperial power if he was to prevent
a repeat of the debacle of the previous century and finally defeat the
Al-Sauds’ tribal enemies.
Initially, he sought sponsorship from the sultanate of Turkey, but he
was rebuffed and forced to look elsewhere. Britain had signed a treaty
with Faisal Al-Saud, Ibn’s grandfather, in 1865, and so it had had some
contact with the Al- Sauds previously. Now, Britain wanted allies in the
region to give it a foothold within the territory of the decaying Ottoman
empire. The more allies it had, the greater its share of the Ottoman booty
would be. Ibn needed Britain’s logistical and military aid to decisively
defeat and subjugate his enemies. From the point of view of both parties
it was a marriage made in heaven.
Contact was thus established in 1904. Britain agreed to advance Ibn Saud
small subsidies, but beyond that did little with its new creature. These
subsidies were used to expand and maintain colonies of Wahhabi fanatics,
the Ikhwan, which would later form the backbone of Ibn Saud’s conquering
army. World War I saw the Al-Sauds’ tribal enemies, like the Ibn Rasheeds,
siding with Turkey. Ibn Saud thus attacked them with Britain’s blessing.
Small subsidies became larger and a gaggle of advisers, alongside what
was then advanced military equipment, were despatched to assist Ibn Saud’s
advance.
Afforded a decisive advantage by Britain’s backing and able to make use
of Ikhwan fanaticism, Ibn Saud was able to bring the whole of eastern
Arabia under his control by 1917. Britain’s vision of Arabia’s fate following
Turkish defeat was clear: in the words of Lord Crewe it wanted “a disunited
Arabia split into principalities under our suzerainty” (p 21). For his
part, Ibn Saud, was, by and large, happy to acquiesce.
However, another British protégé in the region, the Hashemite monarch,
King Hussein, was far from content. He had taken western Arabia, but was
less servile than Saud and was not keen on British “suzerainty”, much
preferring to exercise his own over an enlarged, independent and unified
Arab nation. Rather than directly attack its erstwhile ally, Britain gave
Ibn Saud free reign to do the job. As Britain had pledged itself in 1915
to defend Ibn Saud’s territory, he was fighting a war that he could not
lose. By 1925 the Hijaz, an area that included Mecca, Medina and the most
urbanised parts of Arabia, had succumbed to his armies.
Bloodbath
Ibn Saud now ruled over a people with a myriad of different tribal and
religious identities. To add to his problems, the social base that he
could claim among the ruled was thin. If the new territory were to be
governable, then the creation of a unified identity was required. Given
the fact that the new entity was created by conquest, with not a hint
of any movement from below, this would have to come from above. In short,
everything pointed to a bloodbath and that was exactly what happened.
Wahhabism was a minority religious sect that viewed intolerance of other
strands of thought as a religious duty. They were ‘heretics’ and therefore
their treatment as sub-human was more than justified. As an ideology it
was therefore well equipped for the task in hand: the unleashing and justification
of mass terror. The Saud loyalist Ikhwan were the obvious choice to carry
out that terror. They formed the core of the Committee for Advancement
of Virtue and Elimination of Sin (Caves), a body which exists to this
very day. Religious and non-religious dissenters were butchered, as the
Ikhwan murdered their way across the newly acquired territory. Houses
were ransacked and whole towns were razed to the ground. Singing was forbidden,
flowerpots were smashed, and telephone lines were cut because they were
the work of the devil. In other words not just human lives were destroyed
but the very fabric of higher culture was attacked in an orgy of barbarism.
Shades of Afghanistan under the Taliban.
Eventually Saud became weary of their growing power. In turn they questioned
his close relationship with Britain. Saud, however, had no intention of
ending his reliance on Britain and the stage was set for the inevitable
showdown. They rebelled against Saud, but the support of the British gave
him the edge. Having served their purpose and secured the House of Saud’s
domination, the Ikhwan were massacred (though they were reintegrated as
the White Guard - later the National Guard). No doubt some on the modern
left might have seen something ‘anti-imperialist’ or even ‘progressive’
in this rebellion of reactionary fanatics against a despotic British puppet.
However, the kind of ‘progress’ offered by the Ikhwan opposition can be
seen in the intensity of the regime of terror inflicted upon the Saudi
people by Caves.
Oil
Saudi Arabia is, of course, known for one thing above all others. That
is the vast quantities of oil that the country produces. In terms of capacity
it has no equal among the Gulf states. There are 264 billion barrels of
proven oil reserves (more than a quarter of the world total) with up to
one trillion barrels of oil probably being ultimately recoverable (Energy
Information Administration report, January 2002). Not only is it present
in vast quantities, but it is also cheaply produced due to flat land and
huge deposits at shallow depths.
However, Saudi Arabia’s vast oil-producing potential was not recognised
at first. The first oil concession was granted to a British company, Eastern
General Syndicate, in 1923. Though Eastern General did confirm the existence
of “some oil”, it sat on it. Britain itself was hardly in desperate need
of a new source, possessing as it did access to ample supplies in Iraq,
Iran and Bahrain; what is more, it was in decline as an imperial power.
In contrast, America was in desperate need of a foreign supplier of oil
and was in the ascendant. In 1933, Standard Oil, a Californian company,
won the concession for the bargain price of $250,000.
Having attained his dominant position by aligning himself with what was
then the world’s foremost power, Ibn Saud was not slow to recognise the
shift that had taken place in global politics post-World War II. Writing
in the margins of an agreement to lease the Dhahran airbase to America,
he urged his descendants “to maintain the friendship of our American brothers”
(quoted on p161).
The “American brothers”, in the course of time, made Ibn Saud himself
and his successors fabulously wealthy. Previously they had been reliant
on British subsidies and revenue generated from muslims making the Hajj
pilgrimage. Now, the opportunity to make money existed on a truly mind-boggling
scale. An unnamed prince, who allegedly gave away a new Cadillac when
the petrol tank was empty and bought another with a full tank, is pretty
mild example provided by the author of the House of Saud’s profligacy.
As Aburish states, “Without the west there would be no House of Saud”
(p148). We have already seen how Britain’s backing was instrumental in
clearing Ibn Saud’s road to power. Nowadays there is a relationship of
even greater co-dependency. On the one hand, the western world in general
and America in particular benefits from cheap oil, with prices not just
being kept down by the low extraction costs due to nature, but also by
the active connivance of the Saudi regime. During the period of the cold
war, Saudi Arabia also provided a counterweight to Arab nationalist regimes
like that of Gamal Abdul Nasser, regimes that tended to lean towards the
USSR. It also lavished money on anti-communist forces in the region such
as the mujahedin. Now, however, despite this role being much diminished,
it remains a key, and usually loyal, US ally in the region (though Saudi
Arabia finances Hamas, it promotes disunity amongst other Arabs and would
not dream of attacking Israel directly - anti-jewish propaganda is as
far as it goes). In return America provides it with an overarching protection
against the numerous internal and external threats to its existence.
An obscene oil for arms system has developed. In return for cheap oil
the military industrial complex of the US and Britain supply vast quantities
of the latest sophisticated weaponry - battle tanks, surface-to-air missiles,
fighter-bombers, ships, etc. However, this is not for the defence of Saudi
Arabia or the house of Saud. There is too much hardware for the Saudi
armed forces to use. Much of it simply rusts. Furthermore the royal family
does not trust its own people nor even the officer caste. For example,
only those closely related to it are permitted to fly armed aircraft.
In other words, the whole system - worth billions every year - involves
the destruction of value on an enormous scale. British prime ministers
- Labour and Tory, US presidents - Democrat and Republican - happily connive
in this colossal waste of productive resources.
The Saudi regime has barely extended its social base beyond that which
it enjoyed at its inception. Though George Bush and Tony Blair claim to
be crusaders for democracy, their ally in Saudi Arabia is run as a family
concern. No political parties are allowed, let alone free elections to
a sovereign parliament. Women are, of course, second class subjects and
suffer all manner of humiliating restrictions and punishments. And around
half the country’s sparse population consists of foreigners - Indians,
Pakistanis, Palestinians, Filipinos, etc, who are treated little better
than slaves. They are economically vital and do all the menial work -
a ready source of revolt.
Those in and around the house of Saud have amassed fortunes worth billions.
Up to their necks in corruption, they squander the country’s wealth on
countless palaces and gambling binges in London, Las Vegas and Monte Carlo.
Despite imposing their fundamentalist version of islam on the mass of
population, the princes and kings of Saudi Arabia use - and abuse - high
class prostitutes and consume alcohol to the point of addiction. All this
is common knowledge amongst the people.
Thus, while having all the appearances of immense strength, the house
of Saud is in fact highly vulnerable. They are hated and despised. Bin
Laden is just the tip of the iceberg. Opposition - to the extent that
we know of it - is far from progressive. Left and secularist forces are,
for the moment, less vocal than those of such fundamentalist demagogues,
who offer nothing, apart from the promise of further horror and repression.
James Mallory
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Saïd Aburish
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