By Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
“To understand reality is not the
same as to know about outward events. It is to perceive the essential nature of
things. The best-informed man is not necessarily the wisest. Indeed there is a
danger that precisely in the multiplicity of his knowledge he will lose sight of
what is essential. But on the other hand, knowledge of an apparently trivial
detail quite often makes it possible to see into the depth of things. And so the
wise man will seek to acquire the best possible knowledge about events, but
always without becoming dependent upon this knowledge. To recognize the
significant in the factual is wisdom.” (Dietrich
Bonhoeffer)
Today as we witness the carnage in
Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, the war in Somalia, the troubles in Lebanon,
Israel and Palestine, everyone’s attention is focused on the gathering of the
American Armada in the Persian Gulf and the possibility of US military attack on
Iran. President Bush and his staff go out of their way to emphasize that they
are doing their best to “reassure” their “allies” in the Persian Gulf (mainly
Saudi Arabia) that the
United
States is there to protect them against the
evil Persians. Meanwhile, Al Qaeda’s ideology is spreading unchecked throughout
the Muslim world. The actions of the Bush administration are helping to spread
this ideology. United
States is actually protecting the source of
this malaise and helping it to spread.
Al Qaeda’s ideology is based on
Wahhabism (also known as Salafism), named after Muhammad ibn al Wahhab
(1703-1792). Wahhabis differ from traditional Sunnis in that they believe in the
literal interpretation of the words of the prophet Mohammad. They are extremely
puritanical and legalistic in matters of faith and religious practice. They
believe such things as music, photographs, annual feasts, etc to be contrary to
Islam. They do not accept any other branches of Islam and consider them heretics
and killing them is not considered a sin.
Until the rise of House of Saud in
Saudi
Arabia, Wahhabism was a very small sect and was
rejected by many scholars in Sunni world. The religion of the House of Saud is
Wahabism. When in 1924-1925, Ibn Saud with the help of the British defeated
Hashemite (another tribe in Arabia) and captured Mecca, Wahhabism became the official religion of Arabia, or
what is now called Saudi
Arabia (named after Ibn
Saud).
According to Said K. Aburish, when
Ibn Saud captured Ryadth, his Wahhabi followers burned 1200 people to death. By
1932 over 400000 people were killed or injured, over 40000 were publicly
executed and over 350000 people had one of their limbs amputated. During this
time close to 1 million people fled Saudi Arabia. All this in a country
with a population at the time of 4
million people.[[1]]
Such barbarity on such a scale had never been seen in Arabia before.
This was the birth pangs of
Wahhabism as the state religion. The masterminds of the 9/11, the suicide
bombers of in Spain, or
England or
Indonesia are all Wahhabis. The
gruesome beheading of hostages, mass killing of civilians by bombs and spreading
of terror is nothing new to these people. What is new is the financial and
material support that they are receiving.
Today, the House of Saud with its
7000 princes, lacking legitimacy, relies on Wahhabi religious establishment to
stay in power. There exists a symbiotic relationship between the
two.
For over a quarter of a century, the
Wahhabi establishment in Saudi Arabia has been trying to
spread its brand of Islam across the Muslim world. The funding and logistical
supports have been provided by the ruling princes and their associates either
directly through the state or through religious charity foundations. They have
built religious schools (Madrassas) in many (usually poor) Muslim countries.
They distribute millions of Wahhabi books around the world. They build mosques
and finance the education of (foreign) clergies in Saudi Universities. The
Wahhabi ideology is being spread as never before and it is finding converts
across the globe. But why? Why is this ideology so attractive to some
Muslims?
The People
The Arab world is composed of 22
countries with a combined population of 280 million people. For over 50 years
the Arabs have been trying to deal with many problems both internal and external
without much success. Rising poverty, lack of freedom, stagnating economy and
repeated military defeats have increased the general frustration to such a level
that people are willing to try anything, no matter how horrible, as long as it
addresses some of their problems. For example, look at the Palestinian problem.
Their leaders had tried war several times and had failed. They had tried to use
their oil and failed. They tried an ever closer relationship with the
US, in the hope of getting some
results and failed. Having failed militarily and diplomatically the Arab
countries also failed socially and economically.
In a much quoted report “UNDP: Arab
Human Development Report 2002” [[2]]
the authors, majority of whom were eminent Arab scholars and intellectuals
ranked Arab human development at the bottom of their list. They comprehensively
catalogue the shortcomings of the Arab society from lack of political freedom to
poverty. According to this report one in five Arabs live on less than $2 per day
and over the past twenty years, growth in income per head, at an annual rate of
0.5% was lower than anywhere else in the world except sub-Saharan Africa. Some
of the other problems listed were the survival of absolute autocracies, the
holding of bogus elections, constraints on the media and on civil society,
intolerance, etc. In addition a sever deficit in production of knowledge was
seen as a compounding problem for the Arab societies.
Having seen their leaders’ failures
and not being allowed to express their anger and frustration; the young and old
have turned to religion, for religion is the only thing that governments allow.
It is under the banner of the religion and in the Mosques that people can gather
and quietly air-out their grievances. And it is these people that Wahhabis are
targeting. They promise a different system, a system without corrupt leaders and
foreign influence. Wahhabis turn these frustrations and anger into hate; hate
that is directed first at their own rulers and then other Muslims that do not
share the same ideologies as them (Wahhabis), and then the infidels.
But in order to gain the attention
of the potential converts, it is always the infidels that are targeted first. If
they can show that they are fighting to “liberate” Muslims from the “yoke” of
the foreign domination it would be much easier to attract converts than if they
begin to fight other Muslims. But ultimately, it is not the foreigners that are
the real targets, but the Muslims that do not share the same vision as Wahhabis.
Schizophrenic Arabia
The House of Saud’s relationship
with Wahhabis is symbiotic. The rulers rely on the religious establishment for
legitimacy and support, while the religious establishment relies on the
government for maintaining and spreading its ideology. Each feeds and supports the other. But
there is a problem. As long as these people were fighting the infidels outside
the Arabia, they represented no danger to the
government. But now they have evolved and become something that poses a danger
to the very people that were aiding it. Now Saudi Arabia has
become a Wahhabi state that both supports and fight fights extremists. On one
hand some of its princes, charity organisations and wealthy merchants supply
these extremists with money and other supports; on the other hand the government
tries hard to limit the activities of these groups at home while “supposedly”
aiding United
States to fight it abroad.
From all available evidence, it is
clear that Saudi
Arabia is actively propagating the Wahhabi
ideology through-out the Muslim world. In a recent documentary: “Dispatch:
Uncover Mosque”, shown on the English Channel 4, an investigative journalist
with a hidden camera visited many Saudi supported mosques to find out what was
really being preached (can
be viewed here) [[3]].
It was a scary documentary. The preachers, most of whom were trained in
Saudi
Arabia, preached a violent and xenophobic
version of Islam. They preached hatred of non-Muslims with a very strong
anti-western tone.
Another example of Saudi support of
this extremism was recently exposed in Algeria, where the government had to pass laws to
prohibit certain Wahhabi rituals and activities imported from
Saudi
Arabia.
“Algeria has been
trying to curb certain religious practices deemed subversive or out of line with
mainstream Islam and the state's law. Qur'an forgeries, unlawful marriages and
the spread of exorcism have the religious affairs ministry trying to consolidate
its control over mosques and train new Imams.
On December 16th, the ministry said
it was setting up committees across the country to ensure that Qur'an copies in
circulation are authentic. This decision was taken due to the appearance on the
Algerian market of copies of the Qur'an with "serious and malicious alterations
to its verses", according to the ministry's information officer, Abdelmajid
Tamine.
The ministry blames members of the
fundamentalist Salafi movement for the alterations. The changes reportedly
included additions and deletions in a subtle manner that no ordinary reader
would be able to notice. The movement, which originated in
Saudi Arabia, was brought to
Algeria during the 1980s by
young Algerians who studied in Saudi Arabia. Their spiritual
leader, Abdelmalek Ramdani, created the "La Colonne Cell", named after a
district of Hydra on the hills of Algiers. He is now an imam in a mosque in
Saudi Arabia after receiving death threats in Algeria because
of his views.
Algerian religious authorities have
been increasingly facing a challenge from the Salafi movement, prompting
Algerian Minister for Religious Affairs Bouabdallah Ghlamallah to declare that
the country is going through a "severe cultural and religious crisis".” [[4]]
Yet another example of the
Saudi
Arabia’s support for this extremist ideology
and spreading of terror is the creation of religious schools or madrassas. Dr
Vali Nasr, an authority on Islamic Fundamentalism argues that: “all of these
groups are rooted in a network of seminaries, or as the term is called in the
local vernacular, "madrassa." My argument was that the main source of funding
for these groups is Saudi
Arabia. In fact, this whole phenomenon that we
are confronting, which Al Qaeda is a part of, is very closely associated with
Saudi
Arabia's financial and religious projects for
the Muslim world as a whole. ...
For instance, in one Madrassa in
Pakistan, I interviewed 70 Malaysian
and Thai students who are being educated side by side with students who went on
to the Afghan war and the like. These people return to their countries, and then
we see the results in a short while. ... At best, they become hot-headed
preachers in mosques that encourage fighting Christians in Nigeria or in Indonesia. And
in a worst case, they actually recruit or participate in terror acts.” [[5]]
Those who received training in Afghanistan and later moved to
Algeria, are now spreading
throughout Northern
Africa.
“They began in Algeria, moved south to Mali, west to Mauritania and now east to Morocco and Tunisia. Al
Qaeda is alive and well in North Africa. Don’t
credit Osama Bin Laden; he just issues orders. The group that has brought Al
Qaeda to pro-U.S. allies in North Africa is the Salafist Brigade for Combat and
Call, the last active Islamic insurgency group in Algeria.
The Salafist Brigade announced a
merger with Al Qaeda, which means little except that the brigade has a mandate
to expand outside of Algeria in cooperation with foreign
Islamic cells.
Suddenly, Salafist cells, now
renamed Al Qaeda Organization for the Countries of the Arab Maghreb, have been
growing like wild flowers in Mali, Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia.
.” [[6]]
All of these groups adhere to the
Salafi/Wahhabi sect of Islam. Saudi Arabia by financing the spread
of this form of fanaticism is indirectly or even directly aiding the very
terrorist organisations that she is proclaiming to fight. The House of Saud has
created a monster that is threatening to devour the Kingdom. To defeat it the
House of Saud has to either accommodate it by showing that they are as
puritanical and fanatical as the terrorists, or fight them head-on and try to
destroy them totally. And here lies the dilemma: the House of Saud relies on
this religious sect for its legitimacy and survival. It can not seriously weaken
the Wahhabi establishment within the kingdom without weakening its own
position.
So what does the House of Saud do?
It does what it has always done: try to buy itself out of the problem and point
the finger at others. I have already listed the past activities of the House of
Saud in the article “Saudi
Arabia, Egypt and Jordan: With
friends like these…”, so I will not go into detail here. Suffice to say that the
House of Saud, when faced with a problem, has always gone for “rent a solution”
or “check book diplomacy”.
Saudi
Arabia vs. Iran
Another problem facing the House of
Saud is the rise of the Shi’ite Iran. Wahhabis consider Shi’ites to be heretics
and Saudi Wahhabi scholars have repeatedly issued religious decrees (Fatwas)
calling for murdering of Shi’ites everywhere. For example, recently an
influential Saudi cleric Sheikh Abdel-Rahman al-Barrak issued a Fatwa calling
the Shiites infidels. He argued that “The rejectionists (Shi’ites) in their
entirety are the worst of the Islamic nation’s sects. They bear all the
characteristics of infidels. They are in truth polytheist infidels, though they
hide this. The Sunni and Shi’ite schools of Islam are opposites that can never
agree; there can be no coming together”. [[7]]
This decree coming out of
Saudi Arabia was very similar
to the statements that came from Al Qaeda in Iraq.
“In a four-hour anti-Shia sermon, released on
the Internet a week before his death in a U.S. bombing raid in June but
apparently recorded two months earlier, Zarqawi ran through a list of Shia
“betrayals” and cited a number of venomously anti-Shia tracts written
by scholars in the fundamentalist Wahhabi branch of Sunni Islam. He declared
that there would be no “total victory” over the Jews and Christians without a
“total annihilation” of the Shia, whom he called the secret agents of Islam’s
enemies. “If you can’t find any Christians or Jews to kill, vent your wrath
against the next available Shia,” Zarqawi said. He claimed that his fellow
terrorists, the Hezbollah in Lebanon, were only pretending to oppose
Israel, while in reality
their mission was to protect Israel’s northern border. Zarqawi
concluded with a formal declaration of war on the Iraqi Shia leader Moqtada
al-Sadr and his “bastards.” [[8]]
Please note that there is a
distinction between main stream Sunni Muslims and Wahhabies, in that the main
stream Sunnis are very moderate, non-violent and very tolerant of others.
However, as was mentioned before, the Wahhabis are extremists and as such are
diametrically opposed to the Shi’ites. For instance, in Iran women vote,
work, drive (even Lorries and taxis [[9]]),
attend universities (Some 60% of university entrants are women [[10]])
and serve in paramilitary organisations and the police. They are also
represented in the Parliament. And to cap it all, the Islamic Republic of Iran
accepts and allows Gender change. Compare this to Saudi Arabia. It
is no wonder that they consider Shi’ites to be heretics.
The core of the problem is that
Shi’ites allow for interpretation of the laws. This makes it extremely flexible.
It allows the religion to adapt to the needs of the society. Wahhabis are stuck
in the past and abhor change. They are rigid. That is why, wherever they are, be
it Afghanistan,
Somalia or
Algeria, they try to turn the clock
back.
United
States to the Rescue
Dorothy Thompson once said that the only force that can
overcome an idea and a faith is another and better idea and faith, positively
and fearlessly upheld. Saudi
Arabia is afraid that if Iran is successful in its rise, it may become a
model for Muslims in the Middle East. It may
weaken and ultimately destroy the Wahhabi version. The Wahhabi clerics know that
in an ideological fight, their version of Islam is going to lose. They now are
looking at United States to
protect them by weakening Iran. And by all indications, United
Sates is obliging.
Saudi
Arabia is now pushing hard to “contain”
Iran through
United States and
UK. It is also spending as much as it
can in creating a fissure along the sectarian lines in the Islamic community.
Saudi controlled press and their affiliates have started using Sunni and
Shi’ite. The Saudis are trying hard to regain lost ground in the Muslim world by
trying to scare them of the rising Shi’ite. But what they don’t seem to
understand is that no one is fond of the Wahhabi version of Islam.
The House of Saud is very unpopular
among both Arabs and non-Arab muslims. House of Saud is often referred to in
Arabic as “Um al Fessad” or mother/origin of corruption. Even the very Wahhabi
extremists that they have succoured for so long are after their heads. The only
ones that seem to be willing to protect the House of Saud are the
United
States and other Western powers. And that is
because of oil. United States
is willing to aid and protect Saudi Arabia no matter what, as long
as the oil companies are given lucrative contracts and armament manufacturers
can sell their goods. The policy of see no evil, hear no evil, has been part and
parcel of successive US administrations and it is not
about to change. Everyone seem to ignore the financial aid that Saudis are
giving to the Iraqi insurgents that are killing US
servicemen.
“The Associated Press reports that
"key Iraqi officials" say private Saudi citizens are providing millions of
dollars in funding to Sunni insurgents in Iraq. Much of
the money is used to buy weapons.
The Iraqi officials interviewed for
the article say most of the money comes from "private Islamic donations inside
Saudi
Arabia, known as zakat." The zakat is one of
the five pillars of Islam, and all Muslims are obliged to give it, primarily for
the "poor and needy." Some Saudis know where the money goes, the officials say,
but others give the money to Islamic clerics and don't know where it
goes.
The two Iraqi officials said that
while some of the funding goes to Iraqi Sunni leaders, who then disburse it,
other channels are being used to send money directly to insurgents. Among them
are Iraqi drivers working on road links between Iraq and
neighboring countries.
Several drivers interviewed by the
AP in several Middle East capitals said Saudis have been using religious events,
like the annual hajj pilgrimage to Mecca and a
smaller midyear pilgrimage, to send money into Iraq on buses
that carry returning pilgrims.”[[11]]
Saudi
Arabia’s involvement in the arming of the
Somalia’s Islamic court was recorded
by UN, yet no one said a word.
“The Bush administration has
acknowledged that Saudi
Arabia was financing the Al Qaida-aligned regime in
Somalia. Officials said
Saudi Arabia has become a
leading financier of the Islamic takeover of Somalia. The
so-called Islamic Courts Union, headed by an Al Qaida commander wanted by the
United States, has garnered
most of its foreign support from Saudi
Arabia and Yemen. "I don't want to say the Saudi
government is supporting any particular [Islamic] court," Assistant Secretary of
State Jendayi Frazer said. "But I do know that there is money coming in from
Saudi Arabia.".”[[12]]
Their involvements with Taliban,
their funding of Maddrassas in Pakistan and other places are also
well known. Yet we see that United
States is gathering an armada to threaten
Iran and “protect”
Saudi
Arabia.
Am I the only one that thinks that
US is looking for terrorists in all the wrong places? Am I the only one that
thinks that it is about time we forced the House of Saud to change its policies?
Am I the only one that thinks the mainstream media should begin to discuss the
role of Saudi
Arabia in all these problems? Am I the only one
that thinks it is about time to look at Iran as an ally in the fight against
terror rather than an enemy?
It seems that despite all evidences
United States is determined
to attack Iran or at least
goad Iran to attack US interests. So far
US has and is trying to strangulate Iran’s economy (please read “Plan for
Economic Strangulation of Iran”), repeatedly breached the Iranian airspace,
arrested its diplomats and according to the latest reports probably has been
involved in kidnapping another diplomat [[13]].
It has repeatedly accused Iran in aiding the insurgent, despite
the contrary evidence provided by US intelligence
services.
“A new U.S. intelligence estimate
Friday, however, concluded that Iranian and other outside meddling is "not
likely" a major cause of the bloodshed in Iraq, and a new McClatchy analysis of
U.S. casualties in Iraq found that Sunni Muslim insurgents, not Iranian-backed
Shiites, have mounted most — but not all — attacks on American forces.”[[14]]
What is United States’
aim in all this? Is it to ensure the survival and spread of Wahhabism and its
extremist views or is it to fight terror? From what I can see, Bush
administration like House of Saud has become Schizophrenic. What do you
think?
About the author: Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar lives in Norway.
He is a management consultant and a contributing writer for many online
journals. He's a former associate professor of Nordland University, Norway.
Copyright Abbas Bakhtiar, all rights
reserved.
[1] Said K. Aburish, “The House of Saud”, Bloomsbury, 1994. ISBN 0-7475-2040-2