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November 16, 2009
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 1979-2009: Evolution of a Pivotal State
"Viewpoints" Special Edition - Middle East Institute
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Editor's Note:
The Middle East Institute recently released a special edition of "Viewpoints" addressing the "important developments in Saudi Arabia’s domestic and external affairs since" the watershed year of 1979. It was that year, according to Thomas Lippman in a "Viewpoints" essay, that "Saudis now remember .. as a difficult year because of distressing political events at home and overseas: the Iranian Revolution, the extremist takeover of the Great Mosque in Mecca, Shi‘ite rioting in the Eastern Province, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
The compilation of insights on these developments is a great service by MEI to those who follow Middle East affairs in general and the US-Saudi relationship in particular. We are pleased today to provide information about the "Viewpoints" Special Edition, including the introduction and the table of contents. A link to the complete report and related material are also provided for your consideration.
Link: Complete "Viewpoints"
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The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 1979-2009: Evolution of a Pivotal State
The Middle East Institute
October 14, 2009
Taken together, the events of 1979 both inside and outside the Kingdom were harbingers of things to come — of an economy still heavily dependent on oil rents; a social contract anchored in lavish subsidies and welfare services that are increasingly difficult to sustain; deeply conservative religio-cultural mores that cannot be insulated from the forces of globalization; and the vexing issues of managing domestic political dissent while maintaining a “special relationship” with the United States in the face of a diffuse radical Salafist movement worldwide and the expansion of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s regional power and influence. This collection of 21 essays, the fifth of six special editions of MEI Viewpoints commemorating the momentous events of 1979, seeks to shed light on some of the important developments in Saudi Arabia’s domestic and external affairs since then.
The year 1979 was among the most tumultuous, and important, in the history of the modern Middle East. The Middle East Institute is marking the 30th anniversary of these events in 2009 by launching a year-long special series of our acclaimed publication, Viewpoints, which offers perspectives on these events and the influence that they continue to exert on the region today. Each special issue of Viewpoints will combine the diverse commentaries of policymakers and scholars from around the world with a robust complement of statistics, maps, and bibliographic information in order to encourage and facilitate further research.
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The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 1979-2009: Evolution of a Pivotal State - "Viewpoints" Special Edition - Middle East Institute - Oct 14, 2009
Though its national origins date from the mid-18th century, the current (third) Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is relatively new. Its establishment in 1932 marked the culmination of several decades of successful military and political efforts led by the Kingdom’s founder, ‘Abd al-‘Aziz bin ‘Abd al-Rahman Al
Saud.
Popular misconceptions of Saudi Arabia abound. They are marked by static, sometimes distorted images of the country and its people: the varied Saudi landscape misrepresented in sharp dichotomous snapshots of oil rigs and vast stretches of empty desert; the diverse Saudi population miscast either as backward camel herders and desert dwellers or portly princes luxuriating in opulent palaces; and the misidentification of Wahhabism and contemporary jihadism, and thus the mischaracterization of Saudis as terrorists or as purveyors of terrorism.
Most people other than Saudis themselves are unaware of -- much less able to fathom
-- the magnitude of the changes that have occurred inside the Kingdom, and the stunning rapidity with which they have occurred. Much of this change has taken place over the past three decades
-- not all of it the handiwork of Saudis themselves, and by no means all of it positive.
Today, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has a population of more than 28 million, 82% of whom live in urban areas. The Kingdom dominates the Arabian Peninsula economically, politically, and militarily. The Saudi presence and influence radiates across the region and throughout the world in the form of investment capital, media, foreign aid, the championing of Muslim causes, and the conduct of diplomacy. Saudi Arabia, which possesses about 20% of the world’s petroleum reserves, is the largest petroleum exporter and plays a leading role in OPEC.
The breathtaking pace of Saudi Arabia’s modernization and ascent on the world stage has come at a cost. It has unleashed social forces that cannot easily be controlled. And it has fuelled fears and grievances that have proved impossible to ignore, yet difficult to manage.
The year 1979 is an important marker. The clutch of events that took place in the wider region during that year
-- the Iranian Revolution, the signing of the Camp David Treaty, the second “oil shock,” the launching of General Zia ul-Haq’s Islamization program in Pakistan, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
-- profoundly shaped Saudi Arabia’s subsequent regional and international role, and fed back into Saudi social and political relations in ways that continue to be felt.
The year was not without momentous events within Saudi Arabia’s borders as well. On November 20, 1979, Juhayman Sayf al-‘Utaybi and several hundred armed Salafists
-- including Saudis, Egyptians, Kuwaitis, Yemenis, and Iraqis -- seized the al-Masjid al-Haram (Grand Mosque) in Mecca, the holiest site in Islam, as thousands of worshippers were gathering for the dawn prayer. The same month, Shi‘ite protests erupted in the oil-rich eastern region of the country. The disturbing simultaneity of these challenges to the legitimacy of the Saudi system of rule led, among other things, to the restructuring of relations between the political leadership and the ‘ulama’ and to the securitization of the state.
Taken together, these events both inside and outside the Kingdom were harbingers of things to come
-- of an economy still heavily dependent on oil rents; a social contract anchored in lavish subsidies and welfare services that are increasingly difficult to sustain; deeply conservative religio-cultural mores that cannot be insulated from the forces of globalization; and the vexing issues of managing domestic political dissent while maintaining a “special relationship” with the United States in the face of a diffuse radical Salafist movement worldwide and the expansion of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s regional power and influence.
This collection of 21 essays, the fifth of six special editions of MEI Viewpoints commemorating the momentous events of 1979, seeks to shed light on some of the important developments in Saudi Arabia’s domestic and external affairs since then.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 1979-2009: Evolution of a Pivotal State - "Viewpoints" Special Edition - Middle East Institute - Oct 14, 2009
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The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 1979-2009: Evolution of a Pivotal State
A Special Edition of "Viewpoints"
I. Media, Culture, and Society
The Rise of a Media Kingdom, by Noha Mellor
Diwaniyyas, Intellectual Salons, and the Limits of Civil Society, by Toby Matthiesen
A Rentier Social Contract: The Saudi Political Economy since 1979, by Steffen Hertog
The Freedoms Saudi Women Really Want, by Natana J. DeLong-Bas
Obstacles to Equality for Saudi Women, by Eleanor Abdella Doumato
II. Religion, Politics, and the State
Tawhid or Jihad: What Wahhabism Is and Is Not, by David E. Long
Saudi Arabia’s Religious Counter-Terrorist Discourse, by Roel Meijer
Liberal Enclaves: A Royal Attempt to Bypass Clerical Power, by Andrew Hammond
The Neo-Reformists: A New Democratic Islamic Discourse, by Saud al-Sarhan
Saudi-Shi‘ite Political Relations in the Kingdom, by Toby Jones
Reforming the Judiciary in Saudi Arabia, by Joseph A. Kéchichian
Tribes and the Saudi Legal System: An Assessment of Coexistence, by Sebastian Maisel
From Generation to Generation: The Succession Problem in Saudi Arabia, by Nabil Mouline
III. Regional and International Relations
Saudi Arabia: Victim or Hegemon? by George Joffé
Saudi Arabia and Iran: Less Antagonism, More Pragmatism, by Paul Aarts and Joris van Duijne
How Salafism Came to Yemen: An Unknown Legacy of Juhayman al-‘Utaybi 30 Years On, by Laurent Bonnefoy
Saudi-Russian Relations: 1979-2009, by Mark N. Katz
Cooperation under the Radar: The US-Saudi Arabian Joint Commission for Economic Cooperation (JECOR), by Thomas W. Lippman
Saudi-American Relations, by F. Gregory Gause, III
Saudi Wahhabi Islam in the Service of Uncle Sam, by Askar H. Enazy
The United States and Saudi Arabia: Challenges Ahead, by Rachel Bronson
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, 1979-2009: Evolution of a Pivotal State - "Viewpoints" Special Edition - Middle East Institute - Oct 14, 2009
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About
The Middle East Institute
The mission of the Middle East Institute is to promote knowledge of the Middle East in America and strengthen understanding of the United States by the people and governments of the region.
For more than 60 years, MEI has dealt with the momentous events in the Middle East
-- from the birth of the state of Israel to the invasion of Iraq. Today, MEI is a foremost authority on contemporary Middle East issues. It provides a vital forum for honest and open debate that attracts politicians, scholars, government officials, and policy experts from the US, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. MEI enjoys wide access to political and business leaders in countries throughout the region. Along with information exchanges, facilities for research, objective analysis, and thoughtful commentary, MEI’s programs and publications help counter simplistic notions about the Middle East and America. We are at the forefront of private sector public diplomacy. Viewpoints is another MEI service to audiences interested in learning more about the complexities of issues affecting the Middle East and US relations with the region. The views expressed in these Viewpoints are those of the authors; the Middle East Institute does not take positions on Middle East policy.
To learn more about the Middle East Institute, visit the website at
http://www.mei.edu.
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