Saudi
Arabia’s Phony War on Terror
Like a drug cartel claiming to have launched a
counternarcotics drive, the Saudi-led “anti-terror”
coalition includes all the world’s terror sponsors
By Brahma Chellaney
January 04, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
BERLIN – Containing the scourge of Islamist terror
will be impossible without containing the ideology
that drives it: Wahhabism, a messianic,
jihad-extolling form of Sunni fundamentalism whose
international expansion has been bankrolled by
oil-rich sheikhdoms, especially Saudi Arabia. That
is why the newly
announced Saudi-led anti-terror coalition, the
Islamic Military Alliance to Fight Terrorism, should
be viewed with profound skepticism.
Wahhabism
promotes, among other things, the subjugation of
women and the death of “infidels.” It is – to quote
US President Barack Obama’s description of what
motivated a married couple of Pakistani origin to
carry out the recent mass shooting in San
Bernardino, California – a “perverted interpretation
of Islam,” and the ideological mother of jihadist
terrorism. Its offspring include Al Qaeda, the
Taliban, Boko Haram, al-Shabaab, and the Islamic
State, all of which blend hostility toward
non-Sunnis and anti-modern romanticism into
nihilistic rage.
Saudi
Arabia has been bankrolling Islamist terrorism since
the oil-price boom of the 1970s dramatically boosted
the country’s wealth. According to a 2013 European
Parliament
report, some of the $10 billion invested by
Saudi Arabia for “its Wahhabi agenda” in South and
Southeast Asia was “diverted” to terrorist groups,
including
Lashkar-e-Taiba, which carried out the 2008
Mumbai terror attacks.
Western
leaders have recognized the Saudi role for many
years. In a 2009 diplomatic
cable, then-US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton identified Saudi Arabia as “the most
significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist
groups worldwide.” Thanks largely to the West’s
interest in Saudi oil, however, the Kingdom has
faced no international sanctions.
Now, with
the growth of terrorist movements like the Islamic
State, priorities are changing. As German Vice
Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said in a recent
interview, “We must make it clear to the Saudis
that the time of looking the other way is over.”
This shift
has spurred the Kingdom to announce a “crackdown” on
individuals and groups that fund terror. But,
according to a recent US State Department
report, some Saudi-based charities and
individual donors continue to fund Sunni militants.
From this
perspective, Saudi Arabia’s surprise announcement of
a 34-country anti-terror alliance, with a joint
operations center based in Riyadh, is a logical
step, aimed at blunting growing Western criticism,
while boosting Sunni influence in the Middle East.
But, of course, the alliance is a sham – as a closer
look at its membership makes clear.
Tellingly,
the alliance includes all of the world’s main
sponsors of extremist and terrorist groups, from
Qatar to Pakistan. It is as if a drug cartel claimed
to be spearheading a counternarcotics campaign.
Listed as members of the alliance are also all of
the jihadist citadels other than Afghanistan,
including war-torn Libya and Yemen, both of which
are not currently governed by a single authority.
Moreover,
despite being touted as an “Islamic” alliance, with
members coming from “all over the Islamic world,”
the group includes predominantly Christian Uganda
and Gabon, but not Oman (a fellow Gulf sheikdom),
Algeria (Africa’s largest country), and Indonesia
(the world’s most populous Muslim country).
The failure
to include Indonesia, which has
almost twice as many Muslims as the entire
Middle East, is striking not only because of its
size: Whereas most countries in the alliance are
ruled by despots or autocrats, Indonesia is a robust
democracy. Autocratic rule in Islamic countries
tends to strengthen jihadist forces. But when
democracy takes root, as in tolerant and secular
Indonesia, the clash between moderates and
extremists can be better managed.
Saudi
Arabia’s dysfunctional approach is reflected in the
fact that some alliance members – including
Pakistan, Malaysia, Lebanon, and the Palestinian
Authority – immediately declared that they had never
actually joined. The Kingdom seemed to think that it
could make that decision on behalf of the major
recipients of its aid.
Add to that
the unsurprising exclusion of Shia-governed Iran and
Iraq, along with Alawite-ruled Syria, and it is
clear that Saudi Arabia has merely crafted another
predominantly Sunni grouping to advance its
sectarian and strategic objectives. This aligns with
the more hardline policy approach that has taken
root since King Salman ascended the throne in
January 2015.
At home,
Salman’s reign so far has meant a marked increase in
the number of sentences of death by decapitation,
often carried out in public – a method emulated by
the Islamic State. Abroad, it has meant a clear
preference for violent solutions in Bahrain, Iraq,
Syria, and Yemen.
A smaller
Saudi-led Arab coalition has been bombing Yemen
since March, with the goal of pushing back the Shia
Houthi rebels who captured Sana’a, the capital,
after driving the Saudi-backed government from
power. Saudi warplanes have bombed homes, markets,
hospitals, and refugee camps in Yemen, leading
critics to accuse the Kingdom of deliberately
terrorizing civilians to turn public opinion against
the Houthis.
Saudi
Arabia’s solutions have often controverted the
objectives of its American allies. For example, the
Kingdom and its Arab partners have quietly
slipped out of the US-led air war in Syria,
leaving the campaign largely in American hands.
But beyond
Saudi Arabia’s strategic manipulations lies the
fundamental problem with which we started: the
Kingdom’s official ideology forms the heart of the
terrorist creed. A devoted foe of Islamist terrorism
does not promote violent jihadism. Nor does it
arrest and charge with “terrorism” domestic critics
of its medieval interpretation of Islam. Saudi
Arabia does both.
This speaks
to the main shortcoming of today’s militarized
approach to fighting terrorism. Unless the expansion
of dangerous ideologies like Wahhabism is stopped,
the global war on terror, now almost a generation
old, will never be won. No matter how many bombs the
US and its allies drop, the Saudi-financed
madrassas will continue to indoctrinate
tomorrow’s jihadists.
©
Project Syndicate, 2015. |