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Weekly Worker 579 Thursday June 2 2005
House of corruption
Eddie Ford takes a critical look at the 'reform attempts' of the Saudi
ruling elite and its strategic importance to the US
Last week, the Saudi regime and imperialism were in a bit of a panic
when the permanently ailing king Fahd, now in his early 80s, was rushed
to hospital complaining of breathing problems. This has been a common
pattern since 1996 when Fahd suffered a stroke, and ever since then crown
prince Abdullah has been the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia. News of Fahds
latest bout of ill-health sent the value of Saudi stocks tumbling by 5%.
However, according to official Saudi television, the king is now recovering
again. Of course, this could be just propaganda to disguise the true state
of Fahds condition - after all, we all remember how long it took
the Soviet authorities to admit that Leonid Brezhnev was dead.
Saudi Arabia stands as a living indictment of United States foreign policy.
Recall the inauguration speech of George W Bush in January. The re-elected
president solemnly declared that the central mission of the US was ending
tyranny in our world and lighting the untamed fire of
freedom in the minds of men - a fire, Bush hyperbolically
added, that burns those who fight its progress and which one
day will reach the darkest corners of our world.
Here is US imperialisms big lie - that its non-stop, rolling war
against terrorism is a global crusade for democracy. Of course,
such a claim is staggeringly hypocritical, and nowhere can this be clearer
than when we look at Saudi Arabia. By any reasonable standards, the monarchist
tyranny of Saudi Arabia sits rather oddly with a war on terrorism
that comes wrapped in democratic ideological packaging.
If anything, Saudi Arabia has to rank as one of the darkest corners
of our world. Indeed, you could easily call it one of the of the
most grotesque societies on earth.
Strict sharia law - enforced by totalitarian means - is imposed on the
masses by an extended royal family clique who are notorious for their
preference for whisky, casinos and expensive prostitutes over the Koranic
strictures on prayer, alms and fasting. Gross inequality characterises
the country. Princes build ever more extravagant and obscene palaces -
from income generated by the oil industry - while the real work is done
by foreigners. And at least half the countrys sparse population
consists of foreigners - not only the well paid Americans and British
ex-pats, but a mass of Indians, Pakistanis, Palestinians, Filipinos, etc,
who are treated little better than slaves and do all the menial work.
They are simultaneously economically vital to the regime and a potential
source of unrest. Women are, of course, second class subjects and suffer
all manner of humiliating restrictions and punishments.
Hardly surprisingly, within the country - and elsewhere in the islamic
world - the Saudi royal family and its corrupt state apparatus is widely
loathed and it is not for nothing that the increasingly isolated monarchical
regime lives in mortal fear of revolution. Tellingly, the quite justifiably
paranoid royal family does not even trust its own officer caste, with
only those closely related to it by birth and marriage being permitted
to fly armed aircraft - otherwise there might well be smouldering royal
palaces and governmental buildings. In other words, the Saudi royal family
is only too aware that even the smallest spark could ignite an untamed
fire that could sweep them and their fortunes away - with maybe
no time for a quick exit and a luxurious life of exile in Paris or Monaco.
That is why there was such scare over the health of king Fahd. Revolutions
begin above. And Saudi Arabia is exceptionally unstable. Even a minor
argument that pitted members of the ruling family against each other has
the danger of spiralling out of control. However, what begins above can
only be completed by those below.
Besides splits in the house of Saud, at the moment what both the Saudi
and US intelligence agencies particularly fear is discontent amongst the
lower sections of the aristocracy and the nouveaux riches. Accordingly,
there is a ban on political parties and absolute control of the media
- no formal or organised opposition to the royal family is allowed.
Groups or even individuals that urge the introduction of some measure
of open expression, or accountability, are spied upon, intimidated, harried
or simply thrown into jail. Thus a Saudi court recently sentenced three
activists, originally arrested in March 2004, to jail terms of between
six and nine years for stirring up sedition and disobeying the ruler
- that is, outrageously, the jailed trio were urging the royal family
to transform themselves into a constitutional monarchy and generally appealing
for an acceleration in what purports to be a programme of reforms.
These conditions breed terrorism. Scions of some of Saudi Arabias
most established families have embraced jihadi ideology. Most famously
Osama bin Laden, of course. So, although a police state, Saudi Arabia
is a powderkeg. The only question is, who will be the first to light the
fuse?
True, Saudi Arabia has just undertaken its first ever nationwide municipal
elections. But only a small proportion of the population took part in
this first, very limited, exercise in controlled democracy
- some 300,000 men voted. Women were not allowed to vote and only half
of the councils members were up for election, with the other half
being directly appointed by the authorities. Most of those who won seats
had been approved by conservative muslim scholars.
Naturally, all manner of flunkies and apologists for the Saudi regime
have attempted to argue that these municipal elections show that the kingdom
is taking the first, faltering steps towards democracy and even remind
us that it took centuries for bourgeois democracy to emerge from feudal
Europe - hence the Saudi royal family should be the object of patient
encouragement, maybe even faint praise, not admonishment or scorn. Just
be patient, wait a while, and maybe in a few centuries or more Saudi Arabians
will be enjoying a western type of liberal democracy.
This long view is of course sheer bunkum. It is a complete
fallacy to believe that capitalism and democracy somehow naturally evolved
together, in an incrementalist, almost organic, manner - though
such a Whiggish view is virtually holy writ amongst certain schools of
thought, not least official communism and the cruder version
of biblical Trotskyism, which foolishly peddles the idea that democratic
tasks are the responsibility of the bourgeoisie and not the working class.
No, in reality, all democratic reforms and gains - no matter how inadequate,
partial or transitory - have had to be fought for in the face of bitter
and determined opposition from above - the bourgeois and aristocratic
classes. Self-evidently then, only popular organisation, struggle and
determination has seen the ruling class concede democratic reforms.
Obviously, the Saudi royal family has absolutely no intention of introducing
any measure of real or substantive democracy - just perhaps a vague or
ghostly semblance of openness in order to gain, or so it hopes, a slightly
greater degree of political and moral legitimacy, both internally and
externally. Yet it almost goes without saying that the royal clique would
immediately suspend, if not speedily reverse or crush, even these very
small half-reforms, if it felt remotely threatened by them. The royal
regime in Saudi Arabia, like many others, is anti-democratic to its very
core and any real, lasting, genuinely democratic reforms will only be
won by mass, consciously organised struggle, not reformist patience.
Throughout its history, the Saudi elite has been 100% dependent on great-power
sponsorship - first colonial-imperial Britain, then US superimperialism.
The imperialist powers elevated the House of Saud to the position of power
it currently occupies, propped it up and now maintains its rule against
all the odds. (What was that about ending tyranny in the world,
Mr Bush?) In return, the Saudis have acted as a conservative brake throughout
the region and, crucially, helped to ensure an almost constant flow of
cheap oil - the regime has usually acted to hold down prices.
On top of all this, a thoroughly obscene oil for arms system
has developed. In return for the oil, the US and Britain supply vast quantities
of the latest sophisticated weaponry - battle tanks, surface-to-air missiles,
fighter-bombers, warships, etc. However, at the end of the day, this is
not for the defence of Saudi Arabia or even the house of Saud itself.
There is too much hardware for the Saudi armed forces to use. Most of
it simply rusts in the desert sands. Monstrously, the whole system, worth
billions of dollars every year, involves the destruction of value on an
enormous scale. British prime ministers and US presidents alike - of whatever
political stripe - have happily connived at this colossal waste of wealth.
When Fahd finally dies, it is not guaranteed that the transition to prince
Abdullah will be smooth. Given the regimes deep unpopularity, and
the total lack of any sort of social base in Saudi society, even the slightest
wobble could send it spiralling into crisis, if not crashing to a well
deserved death.
Under these conditions, it is vital that democratic and secularist roots
are planted in Saudi Arabia and the Middle East as a whole, if we are
to avoid the prospect of fundamentalist or Talibanite counterrevolution.
Eddie Ford
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