In the early days, when PNAC was a new document, I remember that infamous hit list of eastern countries to be toppled to bring things about total domination of the globe; Saudi Arabia was on that list. Now surely the "royal" family has been in on this and knows all about it by now.
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It is possible that the current unrest could be usher to bring in even more despotic power for the Wahabbis and Salafists to increase level of international Islamophobia to encourage the clash of civilizations so desired by the Zionists. They both brutally enforce the Talmudic Noahide/Sharia Law that is so unbelievably evil. The Saudi family could flee to safety anywhere once they are deposed should this come about. The country itself? It would be business as usual for the internationals.. in whatever form that might take at the time.
But for now, the Saudi rulers are struggling to contain a new wave
of public protests that has erupted across the Arabian kingdom as security forces
open fire on unarmed civilians.
The big question: is the House of Saud finally
beginning to collapse like the fragile house of cards that this creaking,
ruling monarchy represents?
Just another frightfully despotic face of evil....
March 23, 2012
The irony is rich indeed. For the past year, the
Saudi rulers have done their utmost to crush the slightest dissent in their
country, while at the same time they have backed Western interference,
aggression and regime change in Libya and Syria under the guise ~ wait for it ~ of advocating democratic freedom and human rights.
At least two people have been reported dead from
Saudi police violence against an outpouring of crowds who have taken to the
streets in the kingdom ~ a female student and a man, described as a well-known
human rights activist, are the latest victims. Many others have been injured or
arrested as state security forces mobilize in what appears to be a desperate
bid by the rulers to contain spreading protests.
The irony is that Saudi Arabia is one of the most
vocal members of the Arab League to denounce Syria for alleged human rights
violations against protesters in that country. Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah has
even called on Syria’s President Bashar Al Assad to step down and give way to
greater democratic reforms.
The irony comes in at least two parts: Saudi’s
King Abdullah presides over an absolute monarchy that is brutally suppressing
all and any peaceful dissent in his country calling for democracy; and, two,
Saudi Arabia is funding and arming subversive groups in Syria who are accused
of committing assassinations, kidnappings and many other terrorisms to bring
down the secular Assad government.
For the past year, Saudi Arabia ~ the world’s
biggest oil producer and a key Western ally ~ has witnessed persistent protests
against the ruling House of Saud.
Up to now, the demonstrations calling for
democratic freedoms have been mainly located in Saudi’s oil-rich Eastern
Province, principally in the city of Qatif.
But, most worryingly for US-backed King Abdullah
and his entourage of brothers and half-brothers, there is this week growing
public dissent in all quarters of the kingdom.
Major street demonstrations are reported in the
capital, Riyadh, in the Central Province. Protests are also taking off in the
north, such as the city of Ar’ar, the western port of Jeddah and in the
southern university city of Abha.
When other Arab countries saw mass protests last
year against their dictatorial rulers, Saudi Arabia was also embroiled in the
regional ferment. However, Saudi Arabia appeared peripheral to the momentous
changes sweeping the Arab region with few media reports of any substantive
popular uprising.
This can be explained partly by the ruthlessness
of the Saudi authorities in crushing any incipient sign of protest in the
kingdom. At least 10 people have been killed over the past year from Saudi
state forces attacking peaceful demonstrations. Another explanation for the
apparent low-key public protests in Saudi Arabia is the under-reporting of such
events by the Western mainstream media.
The popular dissent in Saudi Arabia against its
rulers is to be sure there; it is just not being reported by the Western
corporate media. That is because Saudi Arabia is a major strategic ally of
Western governments, for example in supplying oil, buying huge amounts of
weapons, and advancing geopolitical agenda in support of the garrison state of
Israel or facilitating the NATO conquest of Libya, hammering Syria, and trying
to destabilize Iran.
The so-called free press and media in the West
take tacit orders from their governments. The corporate media also take, depend
on, lucrative advertising money from Saudi and Gulf Arab super rich
entrepreneurs and state Sovereign Wealth Funds. Reporting on protests in Saudi
Arabia and more especially reporting on state brutality is for the more
accurately termed unfree media tantamount to cutting off the hand that feeds.
But, despite the suppression of protests and
information, the people of Saudi Arabia are on the move against their
Western-backed despotic rulers. And the grievances are as abundant as the oil
in that country.
For a start, the Eastern Province has a large Shia
Muslim population – perhaps 50 per cent compared with 10 per cent overall in
Saudi Arabia. The Shia have been grossly discriminated against by the Wahhabi
rulers of the House of Saud. Despite possessing the vast oil wealth of the
Arabian Peninsula, poverty is rampant among the Eastern Province Shia.
Secondly, the Shia of Eastern Saudi Arabia are
inflamed by the House of Saud’s invasion of neighbouring Bahrain and the
ongoing brutal crackdown against the mainly Shia-led pro-democracy movement on
that island. Recall that before the relatively recent imposition of European colonial
boundaries, the people of Bahrain had close kinship with those of Eastern Saudi
Arabia. It is not uncommon for families to have members in both territories
until this day.
But the issue is much bigger than that. Right
across Saudi Arabia, there are deep, seething grievances in the populace
against the House of Saud, grievances that unite Shia, Sunni and
non-religionists alike.
Despite Saudi Arabia’s vast oil wealth and
official GDP per capita, unemployment and poverty are rampant. As with the other
Gulf Arab countries, Saudi Arabia’s rulers rely on a slave labour economy
recruited from South Asia and Africa. This means that many young Saudis have to
endure a life of unemployment.
Other grievances include no elections and
negligible freedom of expression – all forms of public protest are strictly
banned; the state is run on an extreme Wahhabist application of Sharia law,
where limbs are amputated for petty crimes and women are forbidden from driving
cars because the kingdom’s religious police view that particular activity as
being “unchaste”.
Nevertheless, the winds of change that have swept
the region seem now to be assailing Saudi Arabia with increasing force.
While analysts have been focusing on the
implications of a weakened Syria and Iran, the other side of coin has not
received much attention. The fallout from a determined pro-democracy movement
succeeding to overthrow the House of Saud in Saudi Arabia could be the surprise
to rock the region, akin to the seismic event of the Iranian revolution in
1979.
Such an outcome would not be hard to contemplate.
After all, Saudi Arabia as a state is a very recent and fragile construct. It
was only formed in 1932 when imperialist Britain shoe-horned Ibn Saud into
power against the Ottoman Empire and after the violent ouster of several tribal
rivals.
Ever since, the House of Saud has ruled with
fragile control over a fissile territory with deep, enduring tribal
animosities. The present ailing and 87-year-old King Abdullah is one of 37
reputed sons of Ibn Saud. Rifts within the House of Saud and rivalries as to
the successor of King Abdullah are constantly boiling. But even more explosive
than these House of Saud tensions are those of the general population who are
weary of dynastic, despotic rule.
A collapse of the House of Saud would have
explosive consequences. How would the US-led warmongering towards Syria and
Iran be conducted/blunted? How would that especial affront to international law
and human rights, Israel, continue to survive? The price of oil would hit
record levels beyond $150 a barrel and that would surely spell a coup de grace to the death-gasping capitalist world economy.
Bring it on.
You can reach the author at
cunninghamfinian@gmail.com.
This Khafir doesn't read his Qur'an, he reads whatever script was written in Tel Aviv for him to make sure the Christian Zionists see to to that Iran is attacked.
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