“Without the jihadists, the
U.S. would have to resort to
massive deployment of its
own troops to the region --
a mission that the American
people will not accept.”
June 08, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The international Islamic
jihadist network, created nearly
four decades ago in Afghanistan
by the United States, Saudi
Arabia and Pakistan, is
unraveling in full view of a
planetary audience. Donald Trump
thinks it’s all his doing -- but
he’s wrong, of course.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has
rallied most of the Gulf
Cooperative Council to isolate
-- and possibly overthrow -- the
emir of neighboring Qatar, the
world’s third largest natural
gas producer. The dispute
between Qatar and the House of
Saud -- the two main funders of
al Qaida and its spawn, the
Islamic State -- is rooted in
rivalries beyond the mental
grasp of the idiot in the White
House, but Trump nevertheless
takes full credit. “During my
recent trip to the Middle East I
stated that there can no longer
be funding of Radical Ideology,”
Trump tweeted. “Leaders pointed
to Qatar — look!”
Trump appears to actually
believe that the Saudis -- the
godfathers, along with U.S., of
international jihadism –- have
renounced their bankrolling of
Islamist holy wars.
“So good to see the Saudi Arabia
visit with the King and 50
countries already paying off,”
tweeted Trump. “They said they
would take a hard line on
funding. Perhaps this will be
the beginning of the end to the
horror of terrorism!”
“The dispute between Qatar
and the House of Saud is
rooted in rivalries beyond
the mental grasp of the
idiot in the White House.”
The
Saudis
are blaming
their fellow Wahhabist, the Emir
of Qatar, for “adopting various
terrorist and sectarian groups
aimed at destabilizing the
region including the Muslim
Brotherhood Group, Daesh (ISIS)
and Al-Qaeda, promoting the
ethics and plans of these groups
through its media...supporting
the activities of Iranian-backed
terrorist groups in the
governorate of Qatif of the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the
Kingdom of Bahrain, financing,
adopting and sheltering
extremists who seek to undermine
the stability and unity of the
homeland at home and abroad, and
using the media that seek to
fuel the strife internally....”
In addition to shutting off
trade, travel and diplomatic
relations with Qatar, a tiny
peninsula jutting out from the
Persian Gulf side of Saudi
Arabia, the House of Saud has
excommunicated Qatar’s emir from
the Wahhabist fold -- a heavy
sanction among hereditary rulers
whose legitimacy is bound up in
their relationship to The Faith.
However, the key point of the
Saudi indictment involves
Qatar’s support for the Muslim
Brotherhood.
The Saudi royal family opposes
all forms of political Islam as
a threat to its own legitimacy
as Protector of the Two Holy
Cities, Mecca and Medina. Since
its final conquest of most of
the Arabian peninsula in the
early 20th century,
and in subsequent alliance with
British imperialism, the House
of Saud has ruled with the
assent of the Wahhabi clerical
class. It is a delicate
arrangement, in which the
hereditary royals are allowed
control of the state and
national resources in return for
the Saudi state’s support of the
clerics’ ultra-fundamentalist
Wahhabi ideology, which
sanctions the killing of Muslims
deemed heretics and “idolators,”
mainly Shia. The House of Saud
views the Muslim Brotherhood,
the godfather of modern
political Islam, as a challenge
to the legitimacy absolute royal
rule. The
Brotherhood has influenced the
widest range of Islamist
political tendencies, from
bourgeois electoral party
politics to advocacy of a
unified, Muslim-wide caliphate.
But Saudi Arabia does not
tolerate political pluralism,
and royal rule is ultimately
antithetical to a caliphate. And
therein lies the
political-theological
contradiction.
“The hereditary royals are
allowed control of the state and
national resources in return for
the Saudi state’s support of the
clerics’ ultra-fundamentalist
Wahhabi ideology.”
The House of Saud has trod a
perilous path to maintain its
family’s monopoly on the riches
beneath its soil. (Actually,
most of the oil lies in land
populated by the Kingdom’s Shia
minority.) The deal requires the
Saudi state to provide massive
support for the export of the
clerical class’s Wahhabist
ideology to the far reaches of
the Muslim world, yet it holds
temporal power firmly in the
hands of the princes, not the
clerics.
The other pillar of royal rule
is western imperialism. The
Brits, and then the Americans,
partnered with the House of Saud
as a bulwark against secular
nationalism in the Arab and
Muslim world. It was only
logical that the Saudis would
ally with the American CIA to
create the world’s first
international jihadist network
to overthrow a secular leftist
government in Afghanistan in the
late 1970s, thus bringing forth
al Qaida and its many offspring.
The royal family of Qatar, with
a citizen population of only
200,000 (the rest of the 2
million inhabitants are
non-citizens, mostly low-wage
workers, a plurality from
India), is also nominally
Wahhabist. But they chose a
different path to political
legitimacy -- while also
becoming exporters of jihadist
terror. The tiny state’s emirs
tried to establish a pan-Arab
and pan-Muslim political
presence commensurate with their
wealth -- the highest per capita
in the world -- through an
aggressive strategy including
generous support for the Muslim
Brotherhood. Qatar gave billions
to the short-lived government of
Egyptian president Mohamed
Morsi, before he was overthrown
by the military in 2013. (The
Saudis then funneled billions to
his jailer, General Abdel Fattah
el-Sisi who, predictably, has
joined in the isolation of
Qatar.)
“They wishfully believe that by
exporting terror, they insulate
themselves from jihadist wrath.”
The emirs garnered considerable
global prestige through their
news and analysis outlet, but
Al-Jazeera was often a source of
irritation to the Saudi, Kuwaiti
and Emirati royals, as well as
western imperialists. Al-Jazeera
was accused of blatantly
favoring the Muslim Brotherhood
government in Egypt, and kicked
out of the country. The next
year, Saudi Arabia and other
Gulf states severed relations
with Qatar for eight months, as
punishment.
Despite their differences,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates are all
partners with the U.S. in the
proxy, terror war against Syria.
It’s a matter of
self-preservation. As hereditary
regimes, they reject democracy
of any flavor. As clients of
western imperialism, they oppose
Arab nationalism and are
ultimately subservient to
Washington. They are allied with
the most reactionary elements of
the clergy, who demand support
for Islamist war. And, they
wishfully believe that by
exporting terror, they insulate
themselves from jihadist wrath.
But, the weight of
contradictions spell doom for
all of these autocrats -- and
looming defeat for the United
States.
Donald Trump seems honestly
giddy, apparently believing he
has forced the Saudis to reject
jihadist terror and to punish
Qatar for its support of ISIS
and al-Qaida. Perhaps he truly
does not know that the main
actor in the proxy war is not
Saudi Arabia, the Emirates,
Kuwait, or Qatar –- it is the
CIA, the other, and most
important, godfather of Islamist
jihad. (The CIA is not a friend
of Trump, so maybe they are not
talking to each other.) The
United States has become
dependent on al-Qaida and its
cousins as foot soldiers of
imperialism in southwest Asia.
If the fighters are
decommissioned, through the
denial of arms, money and
protection, then the war against
Syria is lost, and the U.S.
military offensive begun by
President Obama in 2011, with
the unprovoked attack on Libya,
will have ended in defeat.
Without the jihadists, the U.S.
would have to resort to massive
deployment of its own troops to
the region -- a mission that the
American people will not accept.
“The main actor in the proxy war
is not Saudi Arabia, the
Emirates, Kuwait, or Qatar –- it
is the CIA, the other, and most
important, godfather of Islamist
jihad.”
The Saudi regime, in particular,
may not survive an end to the
Syria war. During the course of
the conflict, the Islamic State
faction of al-Qaida crossed a
political Rubicon, declaring war
on Saudi Arabia in 2014 and
proclaiming itself a caliphate.
The only ideological difference
between the Islamic State and
al-Qaida in Syria is that al-Qaida
is willing to postpone the
establishment of a caliphate,
while ISIS is not. Otherwise,
the two factions are identical
in their political theology. If
the jihadists are defeated in
Syria -- and, especially, if
they feel they have been
betrayed -- they will vent their
most intense fury on their
co-religionists and former sugar
daddies in the Gulf. Al-Qaida
will become an ISIS, with no
mercy on its former patrons.
So, don’t believe for a second
that the Saudis are abandoning
ISIS and al-Qaida, or are
attempting to force Qatar to do
the same. Neither is the CIA,
which simply rebrands its
jihadists when their names
become too notorious.
Does Donald Trump know that the
Saudis are blowing smoke in his
face? Does he realize that his
own CIA and military have no
intention of giving up their
jihadists, whom they cannot do
without? Who knows? Does it
really matter? The criminal U.S.
war against Syria will unravel
from the weight of its own
contradictions. In the end,
Washington’s Gulf “partners”
necks will be on the chopping
block.