Saudi
Arabia is 'The Kingdom Whose Name We Dare Not
Speak At All'
By Robert
Fisk
July
22, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Theresa
May has oddly declined to comment on the
reported
arrest of the mini-skirted lass
who was videotaped cavorting through an ancient
Najd village this week, provoking unexpected
roars of animalistic male fury in a kingdom
known for its judicial leniency, political
moderation, gender equality and fraternal love
for its Muslim neighbours.
May should, surely, have drawn the attention of
the rulers of this normally magnanimous state to
the extraordinarily uncharacteristic behaviour
of the so-called religious police – hitherto
regarded as extras in the very same kingdom’s
growing tourism industry which is supported by
its newly appointed peace-loving and
forward-thinking young
Crown Prince.
But of
course, since May cannot possibly believe that a
single person in this particular national entity
would give even a riyal or a halfpenny to
“terrorists” – of the kind who have been tearing
young British lives apart in Manchester and
London – she’s hardly likely to endanger the
“national security” of said state by condemning
the arrest of the aforementioned young lady. In
any event, a woman so proper that she would not
risk soiling her hands by greeting the
distraught survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire
has no business shedding even a “little tear”
for middle class girls who upset what we must
now call The Kingdom Whose Name We Dare Not
Speak At All.
Or at least, we do not dare to speak
its name. It’s now a week since this
extraordinary woman – our beloved May, not the
cutie of Najd – declined to publish perhaps the
most important, revelatory document in the
history of modern “terrorism” on the grounds
that to identify the men who are funding the
killers running
Isis, al-Qaeda,
al-Nusrah and sundry other chaps, would endanger
“national security”. Note that Amber Rudd, May’s
amanuensis, intriguingly declined to specify
whose “national security” was at risk. Ours? Or
that of The Kingdom Whose Name We Dare Not Speak
At All – henceforth, for brevity’s sake, the KSA
– which must surely be well aware which of its
illustrious citizens (peace-loving, moderate,
gender-equalised, etc) have been sending their
lolly to the Isis lads.
May
denies
supressing report into Saudi Arabia’s
funding of extremism to protect arms deals
Was it
not, after all, Lord Blair who ten years ago
also closed down the Serious Fraud Office’s
enquiry into a bribery scandal allegedly
involving BAE Systems and The Kingdom Whose Name
We Dare Not Speak At All? On that occasion, I
seem to recall, our “national interest”
prevented us knowing what was going on because
this might result in the end of “security
cooperation” between us and the KSA. Blair
talked of “extremely difficult and delicate
issues” in the bribery enquiry.
So let
me try and get this right. In 2006 and 2007, we
were not allowed to know anything about
potential bribery between BAE and the KSA
because of our “national interest” – and the
danger to our “security”. But now we’re not to
know who is funding the Isis boys and girls
because this too would damage our “national
security” – even though the funders apparently
came from among the people whose “security
cooperation” was so important to us ten years
ago. I trust those in the UK who have survived
the knife-wielding, suicide-bombing cultists of
Isis can follow this tomfoolery.
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It’s
not just a question of Aunty Amber scribbling on
her piece of paper to get a man to ring a bell
and then switch off a microphone to stop us
hearing a fatal reference to the KSA – though
this widely circulated snatch of video is highly
instructive. What gets me is the whole
idolisation of political secrecy that now
surrounds The Kingdom Whose Name We Dare Not
Speak At All. Her Majesty’s Opposition, after
much waffling about the hypocrisy of the
Government, appear to have now accepted that the
access of Privy Councillors – keeping everything
secret from the public but not from themselves –
salvages the matter for now.
10
examples of Saudi Arabia's human
rights abuses
In a
real world of responsibility, of course, the
Metropolitan Police Commissioner would be asking
why dark and criminal deeds cannot be fully
exposed with all the rigour now being promised
on the Grenfell deaths. But no, Commissioner
Cressida Dick will be taking no such action –
even though she was mightily involved in
anti-terrorism in the aftermath of the 2005
London bombings when she was commander of the
police control room in the operation in which
poor and very innocent Brazilian Jean Charles de
Menezes was slaughtered by the cops after being
wrongly identified as a potential suicide
bomber. The inquest jury exonerated Dick from
this disaster. But doesn’t she have a few duties
when Lady May and Aunty Amber are covering up a
document that fingers those who fund the real
suicide bombers?
But no.
The Kingdom Whose Name We Dare Not Speak At All
is now as sacred as Israel used to be; that is,
largely inoculated from all criticism. Once, we
all feared to condemn Israel for its war crimes
in Gaza for fear that we would be accused –
falsely, as usual – of anti-Semitism. Now we
must fear to condemn or even mention the KSA
lest we be accused of endangering our national
interest. It’s a real dog’s breakfast, this
closing of national debate. Why soon, we will be
afraid to ask why Israel strategically bombs the
Syrians, Hezbollah and the Iranians – but never
Isis – in the Syrian civil war.
Yet one
moment, ladies and gentlemen. In less than three
months from now, our beloved Prime Minister –
perhaps or perhaps not still May – will travel
to Jerusalem to commemorate jointly with the
Israelis the hundredth anniversary of the
Balfour Declaration. This manual for refugeedom
which the Government now extols as such a fine
document, one in which the British – for
heaven’s sake – will feel “pride”, according to
May, is the same wretched paper (a single
sentence) which effectively created the
Palestinian refugee tragedy that remains with us
to this day.
Now
there’s a document to suppress in the “national
interest”. There’s a statement of disgrace and
hypocrisy that might well be deleted by our
Government on the grounds of “national
security”. Or at least quietly forgotten. But
no, in the orgy of secrecy in which we are
invited to share, it is that for which we should
be most ashamed that is to be praised – and that
which we should read which is to be hidden from
us.
This
article was first published by
The Independent
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.