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Ear to the Ground

Saudis Play Into Radical islam’s Hands

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Posted on Apr 8, 2011
Navin Shetty Brahmavar (CC-BY)

Since 9/11, the overriding concern of U.S. policy across the Middle East and Central Asia has been to defeat al-Qaida and other radical Islamic groups. Hundreds of billions of dollars are being spent on that obsession. Yet when the secret history of the current “Arab Spring” is written, we may learn that one of the many unintended consequences of U.S. attempts to keep up with—and influence—the historic events was to provide a flood of new recruits to radical Islam.

The immediate cause: Saudi intervention in Bahrain.

While America and its allies have launched a military effort to protect the rebels in Libya, the Obama administration has voiced only muted protests as its major Arab ally in the region, Saudi Arabia, crushes the rebels in Bahrain—with what could be ruinous reverberations for all concerned.

The rebels in Bahrain are predominately Shiites who have long chafed under minority Sunni rule. Riding a surging wave of popular protests, the Shiites seemed to be on the road to forcing the government in Manama to accept at least some of their demands.

With the U.S. 5th Fleet based in Bahrain, American officials have also been concerned about the unrest. But their attempts to encourage the government to meet some basic demands for change failed. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, visiting Manama on March 12, criticized the regime for its “baby steps” toward reform.

Meanwhile, King Abdullah in neighboring Saudi Arabia looked on with horror as the Arab Spring came sweeping toward him. The Saudi elite, Sunnis themselves, have their own restive Shiite minority to contend with. The king was also concerned that a Shiite breakthrough in Bahrain would strengthen Iran’s sway in the region.

Even more alarming for Abdullah was the alacrity with which President Barack Obama turned his back on one-time dictator allies. America’s unceremonious dumping of Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak was a shocking harbinger. Could Washington’s remaining key Arab ally be next?

Thus, on March 14, the Saudis (along with their Persian Gulf allies) finally acted. They dispatched a thousand troops along with tanks and armored vehicles across the causeway that separates them from Bahrain to help brutally stifle the revolt.

In the process, the Saudi king reportedly ignored a specific request from Obama to stay out. The hell with the duplicitous Americans! He’d had enough of following Washington’s lead. The Americans were shocked and humiliated. Relations between the two governments are supposedly at a nadir.

That’s the official version. But when the history of these events is written, I imagine the real facts will tell a more Machiavellian tale: that the U.S. in fact gave a tacit go-ahead to the Saudis to act—with disastrous results.

There have been some unconfirmed reports to that effect, and they make sense. There was a trade-off: Libya for Bahrain. Without the Saudis, the U.S. could never have convinced the Arab League to ask for the creation of a no-fly zone over Libya. And without that Arab League resolution, the intervention in Libya would never have occurred. The Saudis and their Gulf partners are also taking part to some extent in that intervention, to provide at least a façade of Arab participation.

In return, I suspect, U.S. officials have been very muted in any criticism of the brutal crackdown in Bahrain—a country much more vital to Saudi interests than is Libya.

And brutal it has been: Backed up by the Saudis, Bahraini security forces and pro-regime thugs armed with swords and clubs attacked demonstrators throughout the kingdom. Human rights activists reported that 26 people have been killed, 300 have been imprisoned, and at least 35 people are missing in the three weeks since the crackdown began in earnest.

Yet scarcely a peep out of Washington.

OK, you say. What’s wrong with the U.S. trading Bahrain for Libya? It’s realpolitik, right out of the Henry Kissinger playbook.

Except that the consequences of that Saudi intervention may prove much more disastrous to Western (and Saudi) interests than any possible positive fallout from the adventure in Libya.

That according to a study just issued by the International Crisis Group. What has happened, says the report, is that the now thwarted and bloodied Shiite protesters in Bahrain, who had thought they could achieve change through peaceful protests—as the Americans have been advocating—may now turn to violence—exactly as al-Qaida and other radical Islamic groups have been preaching.

As the report puts it, “Manama’s crackdown and Saudi Arabia’s military intervention are dangerous moves that could stamp out hopes for peaceful transition in Bahrain and turn a mass movement for democratic reform into an armed conflict, while regionalizing an internal political struggle. They could also exacerbate sectarian tensions not only in Bahrain or the Gulf but across the region.

“Along with other member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Saudi Arabia purportedly is responding to dual fears: that the takeover would be tantamount to an Iranian one. Both are largely unfounded. It also is concerned protests might inspire similar movements among its own Eastern Province Shiites, oblivious that its involvement is likelier to provoke than deter them.

“Bahrain’s brutal crackdown and Saudi interference fan flames both want to extinguish. The most effective response to the radical regime change threat or greater Iranian influence is not violent suppression of peaceful protests but political reform. Time is running short and trends are in the wrong direction.

“In short, the intervention likely achieved precisely the opposite of what it intended.”

Over the years, throughout the region, from Egypt to Yemen to Saudi Arabia, such repression and subsequent radicalization has been a vital source of recruits for al-Qaida. 

Yet, on his latest visit to Saudi Arabia, Gates, secretary of defense of what is still billed as the most powerful nation on the planet, reportedly didn’t dare raise the issue of Bahrain with King Abdullah.

Just imagine having to face the monarch’s wrath!

—Posted by Barry Lando.

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By Jagan, April 10, 2011 at 3:11 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I strongly disagree with this report. Since I am staying in Bahrain from 2004, I know the governments support towards the Nationals and Expats in Bahrain. They are providing maximum support for both. Nationalization(Bahrainisation) process was also moving faster than before.

But some peoples starts protest with the support of some external powers like Iran and HIsbullah. They were really misguiding the people of Shiete community.

70% of the Shietes are loving peace and they will not involve in any problems. But these misguides make all these problems.

Govt. acted very carefully and with intelligence. Now almost all things are coming back to normal.  I am sure that if the Crown Price Starts talks with these people, it will Leeds to a good end. WHich will solve the divison between the people.

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By gerard, April 8, 2011 at 4:47 pm Link to this comment

Rico:  If it were only the nose that is involved,  nobody would be complaining much.  It’s the financial heart and the intelligent soul of the U.S. that are not only “involved” but are being destroyed by adding violence to violence instead of exploring available and less lethal means to “help”.
  Even under the best of circumstances, the more or less ignorant and futile interventions of U.S. force (especially in its own present state of domestic disarray) are questionable—unless you think that appearances of virtue are what we both need here and there.
  Restive populations will probably find that appearances do not satisfy their empty futures, here or there. Revenge is the world’s most popular form of defense, unfortunately for all concerned. Short-sighted, but true.

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By SarcastiCanuck, April 8, 2011 at 2:17 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

No matter what the U.S. does,Sunnis and Shia will continue to kill each other,blow up each others churches and rule in a clanish/religious centric manner.I don’t expect the Shias to be any better at ruling and bringing the two houses of Islam closer together in this ever polarized region.Just look at Iraq,even they are saying it was better under Saddam.If they didn’t have any oil over there I expect that the American government and people would not give a Shiite what they do to themselves.I’m sure if you armed both sides evenly they’d probably exterminate themselves.And both sides would kill in the name of God of course.Only God can fully wash the blood off of fools hands….

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By TDoff, April 8, 2011 at 1:56 pm Link to this comment

It’s too bad that the US is not properly aiding the rebels in the Middle East in overthrowing their oppressive governments. We, the oppressed people of the US, must hope that those oppressed peoples recognize that we support them, it is just the US oppressive government that is against them.
And we, the oppressed people of the US, have enough problems of our own, trying to overthrow our own oppressive capitalist dictatorship, to be able to help them at this time.
But someday, if/when the ‘god’ in whom we trust comes to his/her senses, and calls the thieving despots who rule the US to his/her bosom, hopefully way before their ‘time’, we may become free enough again to help others in need. And return to our former status as a beacon to the oppressed of the world, as a home for responsible individual freedom to flourish, instead of a refuge for greedy despicables to rampage and rule.
And in the meantime, while we’re waiting for ‘god’ to do his/her duty, we have our own rebellion to run.

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By FRTothus, April 8, 2011 at 11:59 am Link to this comment

>>”...we may learn that one of the many unintended consequences of U.S. attempts to keep up with—and influence—the historic events, was to provide a flood of new recruits to radical Islam.”<<

The consequences are anything but “un-intended”.  Such is the blindness and naivety of the punditry, that they cannot grasp the notion that it is the intention of the US-run Terror State to stir up and incite what it will then label “radical” to justify the very Terror State they are determined to operate and provide justification for. It is the function of the US-led Terror State to keep the world unstable, so that the American citizenry (the real target of US propaganda) will allow the Terror State to continue spending any amount of money on arms and war.

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rico, suave's avatar

By rico, suave, April 8, 2011 at 9:25 am Link to this comment

Another perfect example of unassailable truthdig logic:

Homegrown Arab uprisings are being violently opposed by the local powers that be.
The US exists.
It’s all the US’s fault.

QED

And another example of wanting it both ways:

Bitch and moan because the US puts its nose in everyone else’s business, then bitch and moan because it doesn’t.

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By ardee, April 8, 2011 at 7:23 am Link to this comment

Every time I hear our President utter his unctious and smarmy reasons for intervention in Libya I wonder why those folks are so much more deserving of our bombs than are the various peoples around this world attempting to throw off their own tyrants.

The West continues to see far too many places as resources to be pillaged and governments installed or propped up to serve our corporate interests. We have dug a great deep hole for ourselves and must beware “the fire next time”.

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