Is the sun setting over the Sahara Desert?
July 18, 2013
One of the least
commented aspects of ousting Egypt’s Morsi is the defiant act of the Saudi
Royal House in backing the ouster of the Brotherhood and supporting the
military restoration.
The Saudi move is
unprecedented in its open defiance of White House declared backing for the
Muslim Brotherhood.
The implications of the
split are huge.
TWILIGHT IN
THE DESERT?
Since the time in 1945 on his return from the
fateful Yalta Conference, that US President Roosevelt met Saudi King Ibn Saud
and won exclusive rights for US Rockefeller-group oil companies to Saudi
Arabia’s vast oil wealth, the relationship between Saudi and US foreign policy
has been one of almost satrapy status for the Saudis.[1]
Following the Kissinger-orchestrated 1973 “oil
shock” in which OPEC raised its price by some 400%, Washington extracted a
pledge from the Saudis that they would insure that OPEC sold its oil only in
dollars, thereby ensuring the continued dominance of the US dollar as world
reserve currency. In return, Washington agreed to sell US arms including
training the Saudi Air Force.[2]
And in 2010 just as Washington launched its Arab
Spring “democracy” offensive in Tunisia, Egypt and across the Islamic arc of
crisis, the Obama Administration announced the largest arms deal in US history.
The US agreed to sell the Saudis 84 F-15s new and upgrade another 70 as part of
a €46 billion deal, the biggest arms deal in US history, as it prepared to
isolate Iran. [3]
As we reported in an earlier article, before the Egyptian
military coup, the Saudis had given secret assurance to Defense Minister and
Chief of the Army, General Abdul Fattah al-Sisi, that the Saudis along with
other conservative Gulf oil states including Kuwait and UAE would guarantee
financial support should the Obama Administration cut the €1 billion annual aid
to Egypt’s military in retaliation for ousting their man, Morsi.[4]
On July 17, the newly-sworn-in Egyptian
transitional government confirmed that it has received €6 billion in grants,
loans and fuel from Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
Saudi Arabia approved €4 billion in aid to Egypt
and the UAE has offered €2 billion in desperately needed support for the
economy. The Saudi funds comprise a €1.5 billion central bank deposit, €1.5
billion in energy products, and €750 million in cash, Saudi Finance Minister
Ibrahim Al-Assaf said. The UAE will make a €750 million grant to Egypt and a
€1.5 billion loan in the form of an interest-free deposit with Egypt’s central
bank. [5]
The news is a double slap-in-the-face to Washington
who had insisted that Morsi’s government buckle under to harsh IMF conditions
as precondition for financial help.
QATAR
REACTS DRAMATICALLY
Conspicuously, one Gulf energy-rich state absent
from the aid is Qatar whose Emir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani had poured more
than €6 billion in Egypt since the revolution two-and-a-half years ago and
perhaps another €7 billion to bankroll Islamists in Libya, Syria and Gaza, the
Palestinian enclave run by Hamas, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Qatar is home to the US Central Command’s Forward
Headquarters and the Combined Air Operations Center. And, most notably, until
the Saudi and UAE-backed military coup against Brotherhood rule in Egypt on
July 3, Qatar was home to leading members of the Muslim Brotherhood and one of
its major financial backers in Syria, Egypt, Libya, and across the Islamic
world. [6]
Within minutes of the Saudi and UAE backed Egypt
coup, the Emir of Qatar took note of the implications and announced his
abdication in favour of his son, Tamim. Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani, who had
shaped Qatar’s pro-Muslim Brotherhood foreign policy, has been silenced,
replaced by a military man who had been serving as deputy interior minister.
The new Qatar leadership is now using words like “reassessment”,
“recalibration” and “corrections” to discuss their foreign policy. In brief,
they dare not risk total isolation within the Saudi-dominated Gulf Arab states.[7]
The Saudi decision to take bold action to stop what
it saw as a disastrous US Islamic strategy of backing Brotherhood revolutions
across the Islamic world has dealt a blow to the mad US strategy of believing
it can use the Brotherhood as a political force to control the Islamic world
more tightly and use it to destabilize China, Russia and the Islamic parts of
Central Asia.
The Saudi monarchy began to fear that the secretive
Brotherhood would one day rise against their rule as well. They never forgave
George W. Bush and Washington for toppling the Baath Party secular dictatorship
of Saddam Hussein in Iraq that brought a majority Shi’ite to power there, nor
the US decision to topple close Saudi ally Mubarak in Egypt.
America’s dutiful “vassal state” in the Middle East, Saudi Arabia, revolted on July 3 by backing and supporting the military coup in Egypt.
Aside from loudly protesting the Egyptian generals’
coup against their Brotherhood allies, Washington so far has been able to do
little, an indication of the declining US global power. The Pentagon has sent
two amphibious assault ships carrying 2,600 Marines to the southern Egyptian
Red Sea coast. The huge USS Kearsarge
with 1,800 Marines and the USS San
Antonio with 800 Marines, “moved up into the Red Sea and parked off
Egypt, because we don’t know what’s going to happen,” stated General James
Amos, commandant of the Marine Corps.
Washington is suddenly in a major foreign policy
disarray as the new Egyptian interim government is sworn in. To be continued…
NOTES
[1] F. William Engdahl, Gods of Money,2009, edition. engdahl,Wiesbaden,
pp. 190-193.
[2] F. William Engdahl, A Century of War, edition. engdahl, 2011,
Wiesbaden, pp. 152-156.
[3] Ian Black, Barack Obama to authorise record $60bn Saudi
arms sale, The Guardian, UK, 13 September 2010, accessed in http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/sep/13/us-saudi-arabia-arms-deal.
[4] F. William Engdahl, Washington Islamist Strategy in Crisis as
Morsi Toppled, Veterans Today, 4 July, 2013, accessed in
[5] Reuters/AP, Egypt wins $ 8 billion Saudi and UAE aid
names PM, 17 July, 2013, accessed in http://www.arabnews.com/news/457496.
[6] N.P., Qatar’s foreign policy: Change of tack, The Economist, UK, July
15th 2013, accessed in http://www.economist.com/blogs/pomegranate/2013/07/qatar-s-foreign-policy.
[7] Ibid.
Very useful report.
ReplyDeleteI am happy to see the fall of the CIA-run Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.
Some American bloggers are wrongly suggesting that Morsi was the 'good guy'.
Cheers
Aangirfan.