December 16, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
One might postulate that the United States
is regularly supporting so-called allies
whose very nature will eventually generate
blowback that will do terrible damage to
actual American interests. The recent
example of the
mass shooting at the Pensacola Naval Air
Station in Florida by Saudi Second
Lieutenant Mohammed Alshamrani is
illustrative. Alshamrani killed three
American sailors while three other Saudi
students filmed what was taking place,
presumably for posting on social media.
Though the U.S. and The Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia
have no actual alliance, the American
and Saudi militaries have a relationship
that began during the Second World War.
Currently, Washington supports Riyadh as a
force multiplier and extension of U.S. power
in the Persian Gulf region to serve as a
check on what if perceives to be as hostile
Iran. Saudi Arabia, nurturing its own
regional ambitions, clearly sees Iran as its
principal enemy. As the White House also
appears keen to do whatever is necessary to
bring about regime change in Tehran, the
tendency in Washington to serve as an
apologist for whatever Riyadh does will
continue for the foreseeable future. And, as
an added bonus, the Saudis buy billions of
dollars’ worth of American made weapons
annually.
Someone has to train the people who fly
the expensive warplanes, so Saudi Air Force
“students” are sent to American bases like
Pensacola where they undergo language and
flight training that is normally conducted
by civilian contractors. The student pilots,
surely carefully screened by Saudi security,
would be unlikely candidates for staging a
terrorist attack in the United States, but
the Alshamrani incident suggests that there
is more dissidence bubbling beneath the
surface than is apparent from the rosy
assurances about The Kingdom coming out of
the White House and the Royal Palace in
Riyadh.
The investigation of Alshamrani
continues, but
it seems clear that he was unhappy with
aspects of America’s pro-Israel and
interventionist foreign policy. He also
connected with
radical websites on social media and his
colleagues report that he would periodically
return to the U.S. from home leave in Saudi
Arabia “more religious.” On the night before
the incident, he showed a film that included
a mass shooting.
Alshamrani is just one
element in the considerable potential
downside inherent in the undeclared
bilateral relationship. Apart from the
regional instability created by the fact
that Washington has to look the other way
while the Saudis use American weapons to
carry out genocide in neighboring Yemen,
many observers believe that Saudi Arabia
is basically unstable. Its prevailing
fundamentalist Islamic sect referred to as
Wahhabism is backward looking and hostile to
the United States and the West. Some have
even suggested that a large majority of
ordinary Saudis, i.e. not those who benefit
from the bilateral relationship, hate the
U.S. One recalls that fifteen out of the
nineteen 9/11 hijackers were Saudi
nationals.
All of which means that the United States
is training and arming people who just might
turn their training and weapons against
Washington if the al-Saud royal family
cannot stay in power. The situation is
somewhat comparable to that in Afghanistan,
where so-called “green-on-blue” incidents in
which Afghan army recruits kill their
foreign trainers occur on a regular basis.
The chief difference is that should the
Saudi dissidents gain power, they would have
a huge and much more lethally sophisticated
arsenal to play around with.
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Other regional powers are watching how
the situation involving the American
presence in Saudi Arabia develops. Recently
Iran’s leader Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei
commented on media reports that the
Saudis would be constructing U.S. provided
nuclear reactors. He said "I do not know of
any regime in the region and perhaps the
world as bad as the Saudi government. It is
not only despotic, dictatorial, corrupt
and tyrannical but also sycophantic. [The
Americans] want to supply [the Saudis] with
nuclear equipment. They have announced to
build missile manufacturing centers for it
[and] they see no problem because Saudi
Arabia depends on them and belongs to them.
Of course, if they build them, I personally
will not be upset because I know that God
willing [all the weapons] will fall into the
hands of Muslim Mujahedin [for use against
the Americans] in the not too distant
future.”
The current situation with the House of
Saud is not good. It is a regime that is
under considerable pressure because of its
corruption. Internationally, it has few
friends due to its widely condemned war in
Yemen as well as from the consequences
arising over the killing and dismembering in
Istanbul of Jamal Khashoggi. The situation
also invites comparison with other current
and past U.S. relationships in the region.
Washington props up an unpopular and
unstable regime headed by President Abdel
Fattah el-Sisi in Egypt while also funding
and training the country’s military. In the
past, the U.S. was the main arms supplier
for the Shah’s Iran, ignoring abuses
committed by the regime because Iran was
perceived to be a major regional power,
reliably stable and apparently western
looking.
The United States is also in trouble with
its other major regional partner in the
Middle East, Israel. As is the case with
Saudi Arabia, the United States has no
actual alliance or pact with the Jewish
state, though such an arrangement is
currently being considered. As in the case
of Saudi Arabia, the United States has no
say in the military actions being undertaken
by its client Israel. The Jewish state
regularly bombs targets in Gaza, Syria and
in Lebanon, just as the Saudis do in Yemen.
As the United States is the arms supplier to
both nations and is more-or-less the de
facto guarantor of a one-sided stability in
the region, it has self-assumed
responsibilities without having any input
into the decisions making process. Trump’s
obsession with destroying Iran, which has
promised to do in his next term, makes him
blind to the deficiencies in the allies he
seeks to use to that end.
The situation with Israel is particularly
dangerous as the Jewish state possesses a
nuclear arsenal and it is widely believed
that many in its military command structure
are prepared to
use those devices against Iran. In 2015,
Israeli defense minister Moshe Ya’alon
explained how Israel might have to strike
Iran hard to prevent a long war. He cited
the examples of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and
then describing the process for making such
a decision as “at the end, we might take
certain steps.”
Either way, the United States of America
is burdened with a number of false allies
that use the relationship with Washington to
enable their own schemes. If and when the
whole house of cards begins to collapse, the
U.S. will plausibly find itself with no
friends and confronted by enemies that it
empowered and also helped to train and
equip.
Philip Giraldi is