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Book Review
The Two Faces of Islam: The House of Sa'Ud from Tradition to Terror
By Stephen Schwartz
Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi
Crude
By Robert Baer
Hatred's Kingdom: How Saudi Arabia Supports the New Global
Terrorism
By Dore Gold
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Whither Saudi Arabia? Three Authors Try to Penetrate a Middle East
Enigma
By David Long
It has been 37 years since I received orders to report as a junior
diplomat to the U.S. Embassy in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia. As I had just
completed a grueling course in colloquial Moroccan Arabic, which was
unintelligible in Saudi Arabia, I went kicking and screaming
figuratively, at least figuratively. What I found there was utterly
fascinating: a proud, intensely private and traditionalist people, newly
flush with oil money, rushing headlong from somewhere between the
seventh and the 18th century into the modern world.
Saudi Arabia was not a household name in those days. It had few of the
modern amenities that are associated with the kingdom now. King Faisal
shunned the radical Arab nationalism of the Egyptian president, Gamal
Abd al-Nasser, against whom he was fighting a proxy war, with covert
Israeli aid, on the side of Yemeni royalists in a civil war against the
Egyptian-backed republicans. Saudi Arabia had proved a staunch friend of
the United States, and following the Arab defeat the following June in
the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, Faisal was one of the few Arab leaders to
maintain friendly diplomatic relations with the United States.
Fast forward and the picture is totally changed. Saudi Arabia became a
household name in the 1970s when it led the Arab oil embargo against the
West, and again in 1990 to 1991 when American troops landed on Saudi
soil to repel Saddam Hussein from Kuwait. The Saudis even put up over
$50 billion to pay for the war. But post-September 11, 2001, things have
been different. Fifteen of the terrorists that day were Saudi citizens,
and their leader, Osama Bin Laden, though stripped of his citizenship,
was still a Saudi in the eyes of Americans, and was funded by private
donations from the Gulf oil states, including Saudi Arabia.
What had happened to the staunch personal friendships that existed
between the Saudi people and the thousands of Americans who went there
to share in the oil wealth and protect the kingdom from outside threats?
What happened to the close cooperation between the Saudi government and
the American government, dating back to World War II, on a whole range
of political, economic and military issues at considerable political
costs to both countries? Three books have recently been published, each
in its own way challenging whether Saudi Arabia was ever any true friend
in the first place and claiming that the relationship was based on the
self-serving American desire for oil revenues and on the self-serving
Saudi desire to perpetuate its own corrupt, anti-democratic governmental
system and its terrorist campaign to propagate its hate-filled Wahhabi
ideology for Islamist world domination.
In The Two Faces of Islam: The House of Sa'ud from Tradition to
Terror, Stephen Schwartz, former Washington bureau chief of the Forward,
asserts that mainstream Islam is not the face of the enemy in the war
against terror. Rather, the enemy is a fanatical, hypocritical,
totalitarian and violent version of Islam called Wahhabism, born in
central Arabia, that forms the ideological base of legitimacy for the
Saudi regime. The book is basically historical, beginning with the birth
of Islam and moving on to the birth of Wahhabism in the 18th century and
creation of the Saudi state in 1932, and finally, to the events leading
up to September 11 � a m�lange of the rise of militant secular Arab and
Islamic organizations and oil politics and the rise of militant Wahhabi
holy war under the tutelage of Saudi Arabia.
The Two Faces of Islam is by far the most erudite of the three books, as
well as the most sweeping in scope. Schwartz is sympathetic to what he
calls "mainstream" Islam, and his scathing view of Wahhabism was shared
by many mainstream Muslim scholars and clerics of the 18th and 19th
centuries. But the book's major flaw is Schwartz's lack of perspective
on the human dimension of his subject. He evinces virtually no
understanding of Saudi behavior or of the impact of the physical and
intellectual environment that molded it. It would be presumptuous to
suggest than any Westerner can see the world through Saudi lenses so
different are Saudi and Western cultures. Still, not to take those
differences into account is to risk misinterpreting Saudi behavior as an
unending stream of inconsistencies and irrationality. Schwartz appears
to have fallen into that trap. To him, apparently, Saudi behavior is
driven exclusively by the basest intentions and motivations. True, he
demonstrates some familiarity with other Muslims societies. He was an
interfaith activist in Kosovo and Bosnia; but little understanding of
Saudi behavior can be gained from experience among non-Arabian Muslim
populations. In the Islamic world, as in the Western world, one size
does not fit all.
Saudi behavior is shaped first and foremost by its ancient and highly
conservative Arabian desert culture, which in the seventh century became
permeated with Islamic values. That culture, which has remained
remarkably stable to the present, is nevertheless now under unbelievable
stress as it collides with the secularizing and dehumanizing effects of
oil-financed modernization. The extraordinary thing about Saudi culture
is not that it has resisted modern pop culture, the West's legacy to the
world, but that it has maintained its own cultural identity and values
despite the onslaught of modernization. In a world where family
structures are disintegrating, the basic unit of Saudi society is still
the extended family. One's first loyalty is to one's family, whose
lineage can be traced back to Ismail, or Ishmael, not to the Saudi
monarchy, which can be traced back only to the 18th century, much less
to the Saudi nation, which was created only in 1932. Saudi Arabia is a
society run by the elders of extended families who are collectively
ruled by the elders of the royal extended family, not a country of
individuals ruled by an individual ruler. In this context, the ancient
desert culture and customs and the Islamic values and mores of the royal
family are the same as those of any other Saudi family. Not to
understand this is not to understand commercial, political, social or
religious practices in the kingdom.
This is not to challenge the factual content of the case Schwartz
presents, highlighting sins of omission and commission attributed to
Saudis leading up to September 11. I do challenge, however, the accuracy
of his portrayal of Saudi society overall as corrupt, intolerant and
vicious, and the doctrine of the Wahhabi reform movement as a doctrine
of hate. Such broad generalizations unjustly stereotype a society and
its religious beliefs.
Robert Baer is a former CIA case officer, specializing in covert foreign
intelligence collection, with experience in the Middle East. In
Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude,
he seeks to trace how American public and governmental greed for oil
revenues created an unholy alliance with Saudi Arabia, whose Islamic
monarchy he sees as submerged in greed, corruption and Wahhabi
extremism. The book is essentially a collection of personal anecdotes
strung together with his personal observations and comes across as war
stories that a group of retired CIA case officers might presumably
relate to each other, suitably embellished and embroidered, late one
night over beers.
The book's chapters all bear evocative titles such "We Deliver
Anywhere," "Pavlov and His Dogs" and "In the War Against Terrorism, You
Lie, You Die." The pulp-spy-novel effect is reinforced by frequent
blacked-out sections, presumably to represent sections censored when the
manuscript was vetted by the CIA, as published works of all former CIA
employees must be. One can only speculate on the degree to which the
author and or the publishers felt that the blackouts would attract
potential readers with a prurient interest in secret stuff.
Although Baer exhibits more street smarts than the other two authors,
and is relatively more candid and less polemical, his book is far less
sophisticated. Gaps in his knowledge of petroleum economics, Islam and
Islamic law, and even some of the more rudimentary and easily available
facts concerning the House of Saud are quite evident. More interesting,
however, is the tone. With its portrayal of a world of perfidy, greed
and ineptitude, the book struck the reviewer as written in rage rage
directed not simply at the Saudis and their Wahhabism, but also at
American businesses and their Washington supporters, both willing to
sell their souls for a barrel of Saudi oil. Rage, too, at the
culpability of the CIA, the State Department and the FBI, and even
indirectly against Israel.
In the end, he focuses on oil, not hate: "Like it or not, the U.S. and
Saudi Arabia are joined at the hip," he writes. "Its future is our
future." His solution, if the Saudis do not shape up, is simply to take
their oil fields by force, and he outlines how that might be done.
Whatever one may think of a policy of grabbing whatever one wants from
whomever one does not particularly like, his preference clearly places a
higher priority on the vital strategic importance of Saudi oil than on
the Saudi contribution to Islamist terrorism.
Dore Gold, author of Hatred's Kingdom: How Saudi Arabia Supports the New Global
Terrorism, is a former Israeli
envoy to the United Nations and foreign policy adviser to former Israeli
prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The scope of his book is narrower
than Schwartz's, beginning with the Wahhabi revival in the 18th century
and continuing to the present. Like Schwartz, Gold characterizes
Wahhabism as a militant offshoot of mainline Islam, but his emphasis is
more narrowly focused on its projection of hatred, a term that is used
repeatedly and which appears not only in the title but in the titles of
two concluding chapters as well. Though superficially historical in
organization, the book is far more polemical in style, with Gold
appearing rather like a prosecuting attorney laying out a case.
Wahhabism, he writes in a typical passage, "is nothing less than the
religious and ideological source of the new wave of global international
terrorism," exemplified by the September 11 attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon. Aside from a highly selective choice of
citations, uniformly pejorative, from noted commentators his expert
witnesses he cites at length incendiary Wahhabi rhetoric and
intelligence reports on Saudi charitable support for groups engaged in
terrorist acts, his evidence. He concludes his case by arguing that
Saudi Arabia must be forced to stop supporting Wahhabi hatred and
terrorism in the name of Islam.
By portraying Wahhabism as a political ideology of hatred in which
unsanctioned political violence is justified by jihad, Gold ignores the
purely religious focus of its central doctrine, Tawhid. The essence of
Tawhid is the all-encompassing oneness of God (wahid means "one" in
Arabic), as expressed in the profession of faith, "There is no god but
God, and Mohammed is His messenger." Wahhabism teaches that communion
with the one true God is accomplished neither through mysticism nor
rationalism a heated debate in the early years of Islam but only through
submission to God's will as revealed in the Koran and the Sunna, Islam's
"oral law," and by carrying out God's will through deeds, both personal
and corporate, to uphold virtue and suppress evil. Those deeds
constitute jihad in its broadest sense, and are to be carried out by
peaceful means and not just through force. Doctrinally, whatever the
excesses of individual Wahhabi clerics and their followers might be,
they cannot be blamed solely on the teachings of Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab
any more than the excesses of American Protestant clerics can be laid at
the feet of John Calvin or Martin Luther.
Gold's reliance on textual analysis also obscures the influence of
historical changes in political and social conditions on cycles of
violence and nonviolence. Militant jihad decreased somewhat with the
decline and fragmentation of the Abbasid Caliphate in the 11th and 12th
centuries, not because of a change of belief but because of a change in
the political environment. But in 18th-century Arabia at the time of Ibn
Abd al-Wahhab, tribal warfare was still endemic. Tribal warriors flocked
to the banner of Tawhid not to make peace but to add new meaning and
purpose to their ancient warring way of life. By the 20th century,
however, Saudi tribal warfare had disappeared. In 1929, at the battle of
Sibila, King Abd al-Aziz crushed the Ikhwan, his Wahhabi tribal warriors
who, disgruntled over efforts to resettle them as peaceful farmers, had
risen up against him. It was the last major Bedouin battle in history.
From then until after World War II, with the exception of a brief war
with Yemen in the 1930s, Saudi Arabia had no standing army.
Taken together, these three books do more to detract from than to add to
the understanding of Saudi Arabia, its people, its government and its
religious creed. Understanding Saudi Arabia does not absolve Saudis from
responsibility in aiding and abetting the new global Islamist threat.
The record is clear enough on that count. But greater understanding does
increase the chances of better analyzing the true nature of our mutual
interests and antagonisms and, taking both into account, of formulating
more effective policies to maximize the one and reduce the other.
The books also detract from the understanding of the nature of terrorism
and the new global terrorist threat that presumably was the motivating
factor in authoring them. Blaming Saudi Arabia and Wahhabism as the
single greatest source of support for global Islamist terrorism obscures
the many complex factors that contribute to terrorist behavior no matter
who the terrorists are and what cause they seek to further. Terrorism is
seldom a simple matter of brainwashing, as Gold claims. Studies of
terrorist behavior show that incendiary ideological rhetoric, written or
oral, is not in isolation likely to spawn terrorists. A predisposition
toward violence must generally be present to begin the shift toward
extremism. The causes of that predisposition are infinite psychological,
sociological, demographic, economic and political and vary with each
individual. Once that threshold is reached, religious, ethnic, national
or political ideology, or some combination of them, may then be used as
justification to commit acts that otherwise would seem reprehensible.
But rarely is an extremist interpretation of ideology so intellectually
compelling in the absence of a predisposition to violence as to result
in terrorist behavior.
In the 1960s, militant Wahhabi rhetoric was as incendiary as it is now,
but few were listening. Arab and Muslim youth predisposed to violence
listened to nationalist, socialist and Marxist rhetoric. Since then,
Islamist rhetoric has replaced socialist and Marxist rhetoric as the
vehicle for expressing political disaffection leading to violence, but
Wahhabism is only one of several sources of Islamist ideology; militant
jihad is not the exclusive property of Wahhabism. Many factors caused
the shift to militant Islamicism , including the discrediting of
Nasserism after the 1967 defeat, and in particular, the shared
experience of thousands of trained, multinational Muslim guerrillas, the
mujahidin, who fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan with the
support of the United States. In Central Asia, the collapse of the
Soviet Empire was a major factor.
What made Islamist terrorism a global threat, however, aside from the
revolution in communications, transportation and weapons technology, was
not ideology but the appearance of a charismatic leader with the
extraordinary vision and organizational skills: Osama Bin Laden. He
raised the consciousness level of discontented Muslim youth from local
political grievances to a global cause. Getting rid of him will not rid
the world of terrorism, but neither will fixating on one country and one
puritanical religious reform movement. Indeed, the means to commit
terrorist acts are too cheap, too available and too tempting ever to be
eradicated. The best we can do is to seek to keep this evil within
manageable proportions in order to provide basic security for all
people.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. David Long is a consultant on Middle East and Gulf affairs
and international terrorism. He joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1962
and served in Washington and abroad until 1993, with assignments in the
Sudan, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan. His Washington assignments
included Deputy Director of the State Department's Office of Counter
Terrorism for Regional Policy, a member of the Secretary of State's
Policy Planning Staff, and Chief of the Near East Research Division in
the Bureau of Intelligence and Research Bureau. He was also detailed to
the Institute for National Strategic Studies of the National Defense
University in Washington, 1991-92, and to the United States Coast Guard
Academy, 1989-91, where he served as Visiting Professor of International
Relations and in 1990-91 as Acting Head of the Humanities Department.
A native of Florida, he received an AB in history from Davidson College,
an MA in political science from the University of North Carolina, an MA
in international relations from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
and a Ph.D. in International Relations from the George Washington
University.
In 1974 -1975, Dr. Long was an International Affairs Fellow of the
Council on Foreign Relations and concurrently a Senior Fellow at the
Georgetown University Center for Strategic and International Studies.
While on leave of absence from the State Department, he was the first
Executive Director of the Georgetown University Center for Contemporary
Arab Studies, 1974-1975. In 1982-1983, he was a Senior Fellow of the
Middle East Research Institute and Adjunct Professor of Political
Science at the University of Pennsylvania, and in 1987-1989, he was a
Diplomat in Residence and Research Professor of International Affairs at
Georgetown.
Dr. Long has been an adjunct professor at several Washington area
universities, including Georgetown, George Washington and American
Universities and the Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced
International Studies. He has also lectured extensively in the United
States and abroad on topics relating to the Islam, the Middle East and
terrorism.
His publications include The Government and Politics of the Middle East
and North Africa (co-editor with Bernard Reich, 4th ed. 2002), Gulf
Security in the Twenty-First Century (co-editor with Christian Koch,
1998), The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (1997), The Anatomy of Terrorism
(1990), The United States and Saudi Arabia: Ambivalent Allies (1985),
Saudi Arabian Modernization (with John Shaw, 1982), The Hajj Today: A
Survey of the Contemporary Makkah Pilgrimage (1979), Saudi Arabia (1976)
and The Persian Gulf (1976, revised 1978).
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