The Good
Old Saudis Have Let Us Down
By Robert Fisk
January 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"The
Independent"
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six of our British military chaps, it seems, are
helping the Sunni Saudis kill Shia Yemenis. And
they’re not actually in Yemen, merely helping to
choose the targets – which have so far included
hospitals, markets, a wedding party and a site
opposite the Iranian embassy. Not that our boys and
girls selected those particular “terrorist” nests
for destruction, you understand. They’re just
helping their Saudi mates – in the words of our
Ministry of Defence – “comply to the rules of war”.
Saudi
“rules”, of course, are not necessarily the same as
“our” rules – although our drone-executions of UK
citizens leave a lot of elbow-room for our British
warriors in Riyadh. But I couldn’t help chuckling
when I read the condemnation of David Mephan, the
Human Rights Watch director. Yes, he told us that
the Saudis “are committing multiple violations of
the laws of war in Yemen”, and that the British “are
working hand in glove with the Saudis, helping them,
enhancing their capacity to prosecute this war that
has led to the death of so many civilians”. Spot on.
But then he added that he thought all this “deeply
regrettable and unacceptable”.
“Regrettable” and “unacceptable” represent the
double standards we employ when our wealthy Saudi
friends put their hands to bloody work. To find
something “regrettable” means it causes us sadness.
It disappoints us. The implication is that the good
old Saudis have let us down, fallen from their
previously high moral principles.
No wonder
the MoD has popped across to Riyadh to un-crease the
maps and explain those incomprehensible co-ordinates
for the Saudi leaders of the “coalition against
terror”. Sorting this logistics mess out for the
Saudis does, I suppose, make it less “unacceptable”
to have our personnel standing alongside the folk
who kill women for adultery without even a fair
trial and who chop off the heads of dozens of
opponents, including a prominent Saudi Shia cleric.
Those very
words – regrettable and unacceptable – are now the
peak of the critical lexicon which we are permitted
to use about the Saudis. Anything stronger would
force us to ask why David Cameron lowered our flag
when the last king of this weird autocracy died.
And exactly
the same semantics were trotted out last week when
the Tory MP and member of the Foreign Affairs Select
Committee, Daniel Kawczynski – who was also chairman
of the all-party UK parliamentary group on Saudi
Arabia – was questioned on television about the 47
executions in Saudi Arabia, the kingdom’s
misogynistic policies and its harsh anti-gay laws.
Faced with the unspeakable – indeed, the outrageous
– acts of a regime which shares its Wahhabi Sunni
traditions with Isis and the Taliban, Kawczynski
replied that the executions were “very regrettable”,
that targeting civilians would be “completely
unacceptable” and the anti-gay laws “highly
reprehensible”. “Reprehensible”, I suppose, is a bit
stronger than regrettable.
It was
instructive, also, to hear Kawczynski refer to
executions as “certain domestic actions”, as if
slicing heads off human beings was something to be
kept within the family – which is true, in a sense,
since the Saudi authorities allow their executioners
to train their sons in the craft of head-slicing,
just as we Brits used to allow our hangmen to bring
their sons into the gallows trade. This familial
atmosphere was always advertised by its ambassadors
and their friends. Prince Bandar bin Sultan, when he
was Saudi Arabia’s man in Washington, spoke of his
country’s religion as part of a “timeless culture”
whose people lived according to Islam “and our other
basic ways”. A former British ambassador to Riyadh,
Sir Alan Munro, once advised Westerners to “adapt”
in Saudi Arabia and “to act with the grain of Saudi
traditions and culture”. This “grain” can be found,
of course, in Amnesty’s archives of men – and
occasionally women – who are beheaded each year,
often after torture and grotesquely unfair trials.
Another
former ambassador, Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles – or
“Abu Henry” as he was affectionately called by his
Saudi friends – used arguments back in 2006 that
might have come from David Cameron today. “I’ve been
hugely impressed by the way in which the Saudi
Arabian authorities have tackled and contained what
was a serious terrorist threat,” he said then.
“They’ve shrunk the pool of support for terrorism.”
Which is exactly how our Prime Minister justified
his support for Saudi Arabia’s place on the UN Human
Rights Council last October. “It’s because we
receive from them important intelligence and
security information that keeps us safe,” he told
Channel 4’s Jon Snow.
But wasn’t
there, nine years ago, a small matter of the alleged
bribery of Saudi officials by the British BAE
Systems arms group? The Financial Times revealed how
Robert Wardle, the UK director of the Serious Fraud
Office, decided he might have to cancel his official
investigation after being told “how the probe might
cause Riyadh to cancel security and intelligence
co-operation”. The advice to Wardle was that
persisting with his official enquiry might “endanger
lives in Britain”. Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara
ordered the investigation closed.
The advice
to Wardle, I should add, came from none other than
Sherard Cowper-Coles, who later became UK ambassador
to Afghanistan and, on retirement from the Foreign
Office, worked for a short time as a business
development director for BAE Systems. Our former man
in Riyadh now has no connection with BAE – yet it
would be interesting to know if the Saudis are using
any of the company’s technology in the bombing of
civilian targets in Yemen.
But relax –
this would elicit no expressions of outrage,
condemnation or disgust at Saudi Arabia – nor any of
the revulsion we show when other local head-choppers
take out their swords. Any such UK involvement would
be unacceptable. Even regrettable. We would be sad.
Disappointed. Say no more.
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