This
week the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the
topic "Saudi Arabia: Friend or Foe in the War on
Terror." If you missed the televised session on
November 8, 2005, SUSRIS has compiled the witnesses' testimony on
SUSRIS.org. We are also pleased to share with you the
testimony of Doctor Anthony Cordesman, a frequent contributor to
the literature on Saudi-US relations and co-author, with Nawaf
Obaid, of the recently published book, "National
Security in Saudi Arabia: Threats, Responses and Challenges."
Links to all of the witnesses' testimony are below.
Testimony
United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary
Saudi Arabia: Friend or Foe in the War on Terror?
November 8, 2005
Anthony
Cordesman
Co-Director
Middle East Program - Center for Strategic and International
Studies
Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy
1800 K Street, N.W. � Washington, DC 20006
Phone: 1 (202) 775-3270 � Fax: 1 (202) 457-8746
Email: [email protected]
Anthony
H. Cordesman
Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy
Let me
begin my testimony with an important caveat. Saudi Arabia is no
more perfect than any other country. Like us, Saudi Arabia has
made many mistakes in dealing with terrorism, in foreign policy,
and managing its domestic affairs. There are many areas where
leading Saudis recognize that Saudi Arabia needs major reforms,
and these include education and ensuring that clerics recognize
their responsibility to preach tolerance, the value of other
faiths and branches of Islam, and the dangers of violence and
terrorism. I have spoken and written about these needs for reform
on many occasions over many years -- as, for that matter -- have
many Saudis.
I am
also all too aware of the level of anger and resentment against
the US and the West that the US sometimes finds in Saudi Arabia,
and that Saudi clerics and intellectuals can use extreme and
hostile rhetoric. It is one of the tragedies of the aftermath of
9/11 that both Saudis and Americans still lash out at each other,
posit conspiracy theories, and act out of fear and anger.
I would
remind the Committee, however, that US clerics, intellectuals, and
members of Congress have discussed Islam and Arabs in equally
regrettable terms. We have leading clerics that do not hesitate to
call for assassinations. We had two leading clerics who reacted to
the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon by
suggesting that God was inflicting a just punishment on the US for
its sins. A substantial number of Christian preachers tolerate
Judaism because they feel that the bible indicates that Israel is
the road to Armageddon and to rapture, and that the second coming
will, in any case, involve the conversion of all the Jews.
No
country has a monopoly on intolerance, foolish anger, and careless
words.
Looking
Beyond Saudi Arabia: The Real Challenge
What is
more important, is that both the West and moderates throughout the
Arab world and Islam face a very real struggle against Islamist
extremism and terrorism. This is a struggle we cannot win alone.
It can only be won by moderate Arabs and Muslims, and such allies
are essential to any victory in the war on terrorism.
It is
both dangerous and misleading to single out Saudi Arabia. We need
to remember that 9/11 was the exception and not the rule. Most of
the prior attacks and attempted attacks on the US were by North
Africans, Egyptians, and Arabs from the Levant. Long before we
confronted Islamic extremism and a "war on terrorism,"
nations like Egypt and Algeria were fighting major extremist
movements, and a different kind of Islamic extremism had come to
dominate Iran. No country in the Middle East or Islamic world is
free of this threat, and every moderate regime is under attack.
This is a clash within a civilization at which we are on the
margin.
The
anger against the US and the West in Saudi Arabia is scarcely
unique, and is not a product of Saudi Sunni Puritanism. Almost all
of the terrorist and extremist movements that threaten the US, the
West, and every Arab moderate regime are neo-Salafi and have their
ideological roots in movements coming out of Egypt, not Saudi
Wahhabi practices. This includes Bin Laden and Zarqawi. It was
President Zia of Pakistan, not Saudi Arabia, that was the leading
supporter of Pashtun Islamic extremism in Afghanistan and the
forces that created the Taliban. Khomeini and his more extreme
successors in Iran are Shi'ites.
Islamist
extremist movements represent a small fraction of Arabs and
Muslims. They can, however, feed on broad resentment of cultural
change and the impact of globalism throughout the Arab and Islamic
worlds. There is deep anger over the Arab-Israeli conflict, and
against the US because it is perceived as Israel's ally. The Iraq
War has compounded this anger, and it has led to high levels of
popular resentment of the US by the population of many of our
friends in the region.
These
trends are reflected all too clearly in the work of one of the
most respected polling organizations in the US, and are summarized
in the charts attached to this testimony. The Pew group reported,
�In the predominantly Muslim countries surveyed, anger toward
the United States remains pervasive.. Osama bin Laden is viewed
favorably by large percentages in Pakistan (65%), Jordan (55%) and
Morocco (45%). Even in Turkey, where bin Laden is highly
unpopular, as many as 31% say that suicide attacks against
Americans and other Westerners� are justifiable.
There
are many other surveys that deliver the same message, just as
there are many surveys of US and Western opinion that reflect
anger against terrorism, and hostility towards Islam and the Arab
world.
Fortunately,
these trends do not yet reflect a consistent trend upwards and
there are significant downward trends in some countries. But,
members of the committee should look carefully at the data for
Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan, and Turkey. And, these are the figures
for friendly countries. It is not possible to conduct similar
surveys of the level of anger in countries whose regimes are
hostile to the US or where internal turmoil makes surveys
impossible.
There
are good reasons that President Bush gives a high priority to
helping Israel and the Palestinians agree on a peace settlement
and to making massive improvements in our public diplomacy. There
are good reasons to see the wart in Iraq as a political struggle
both for Iraqi hearts and minds and those of all the people in the
region.
We face
a political and ideological struggle that cuts across all of North
Africa and the Middle East; and ranges into Central, South, and
Southeast Asia. The forces involved are generational, and they can
only be made worse if we fall into the trap of attacking Islam or
the regimes that are fighting the same battle against terrorism
and extremism that we are.
The
forces of demographic change, and the other factors shaping
regional tensions and acting as a breeding ground for extremism
should caution us that reform and change have to be pushed forward
with care, that consistent efforts to work with local reformers
and that regimes to achieve evolutionary change are the only
alternative to revolution and upheaval.
There
is no single cause for Islamist extremism, and no easy correlation
between any given set of the region's problems and support for
violence and terrorism. Once again, some of the factors at work
are shown in the graphs and tables at the end of this testimony.
More broadly, virtually every expert would agree that the problems
that face this region include:
-
Weak
secular regimes and political parties have pushed the peoples
of the region back towards Islam and made them seek to
redefine the role of religion in their lives.
-
Massive
population increases: The Middle East and North Africa had a
population of 112 million in 1950. The population is well over
415 million today, and approaching a fourfold increase. It
will more than double again, to at least 833 million, by 2050.
-
A
�youth explosion,� where age 20-24s -- the key age group
entering the job market and political society -- has grown
steadily from 10 million in 1950 to 36 million today, and will
grow steadily to at least 56 million by 2050.
-
Some
36% of the total MENA population is under 15 years of age
versus 21% in the US and 16% in the EU. The ratio of
dependents to each working age man and woman is three times
that in a developed region like the EU.
-
A
failure to achieve global competitiveness, diversify
economies, and create jobs that is only partially disguised by
the present boom in oil revenues. Direct and disguised
unemployment range from 12-20% in many countries, and the
World Bank projects the labor force as growing by at least 3%
per year for the next decade.
-
A
region-wide average per capita income of around $2,200 versus
$26,000 in the high-income countries in the West.
-
A
steady decline in non-petroleum exports as a percentage of
world trade over a period of nearly half a century, and an
equal pattern of decline in regional GDP as a share of global
GDP.
-
Hyperurbanization
and a half-century decline in agricultural and traditional
trades impose high levels of stress on traditional social
safety nets and extended families. The urban population seems
to have been under 15 million in 1950. It has since more than
doubled from 84 million in 1980 to 173 million today, and some
25% of the population will soon live in cities of one million
or more.
-
Broad
problems in integrating women effectively and productively
into the work force. Female employment in the MENA region has
grown from 24% of the labor in 1980 to 28% today, but that
total is 15% lower than in a high growth area like East Asia.
-
Growing
pressures on young men and women in the Middle East and North
Africa to immigrate to Europe and the US to find jobs and
economic opportunities that inevitably create new tensions and
adjustment problems.
-
Almost
all nations in the region have nations outside the region as
their major trading partners, and increased intraregional
trade offers little or no comparative advantage.
-
Much
of the region cannot afford to provide more water for
agriculture at market prices, and in the face of human demand;
much has become a �permanent� food importer. Regional
manufacturers and light industry have grown steadily in
volume, but not in global competitiveness.
-
Global
and regional satellite communications, the Internet, and other
media, have shattered censorship and extremists readily
exploit these tools.
-
A
failed or inadequate growth in every aspect of infrastructure,
and in key areas like housing and education.
-
Growing
internal security problems that often are far more serious
than the external threat that terrorism and extremism pose to
the West.
-
A
failure to modernize conventional military forces and to
recapitalize them. This failure is forcing regional states to
radically reshape their security structures, and is pushing
some toward proliferation.
-
Strong
pressures for young men and women to immigrate to Europe and
the US to find jobs and economic opportunities that inevitably
create new tensions and adjustment problems.
Unlike
today�s crises and conflicts, these forces will play out over
decades. They cannot be dealt with simply by attacking today�s
terrorists and extremists; they cannot be dealt with by pretending
religion is not an issue, and that tolerance can be based on
indifference or ignorance.
We can
only win the "war on terrorism" if we accept the need to
work systematically and consistently with friendly regimes, and
moderates and reformers in the region, for evolutionary change. If
we posture for our own domestic political purposes, call on other
faiths and cultures to become our mirror image, or demand the
impossible -- we will further undercut our influence and breed
more anger and resentment.
If we
are careless in our efforts, seek to impose them, or use threats,
we will aid the extremists. We will reinforce the impression that
is already all too common that we are "crusaders,"
"occupiers," and use reform as a tool create our own
puppet regimes, and that we are not sincere in acting as a force
for progressive change.
Saudi
Arabia as a Friend, Not a Foe
I
realize, however, that this hearing focuses on one key issue:
Whether Saudi Arabia is a friend or an enemy. The question we are
here to address is not whether Saudi Arabia has flaws or needs
reform, nor whether Saudi Arabia has a different culture and set
of values. The question is rather what Saudi Arabia's relations
with the US have been, are and will be.
In
spite of all the anger over 9/11, we need to consider the
following facts -- all of which the Committee can confirm and
supplement in far more detail at the classified level with
Administration witnesses:
Military
Cooperation
We
fought side by side during the Gulf War, and US forces operated
out of Saudi Arabia against Iraq until the end of the Iraq War.
Both countries failed, however, to appreciate the impact that a
continuing US presence had in focusing Bin Laden's attention on
the US and Saudi regime. Both nations were slow to take him
seriously as a threat and slower to take tangible action.
Saudi
Arabia did not support our invasion of Iraq at the political or
diplomatic level. The idea of such a war was (and is) very
unpopular among the Saudi people. Moreover, the foreign minister
warned us of the problems we would encounter in the aftermath of
such an invasion, and the Kingdom's fear it could destabilize the
region.
Nevertheless,
Saudi Arabia provided critical support to the US in the war
against Saddam Hussein, in spite of the fact the Saudis had strong
reservations about the war. Saudi Arabia opened up its airspace,
made available its airbases, and housed special forces when Turkey
reneged on basing US forces at the last moment. The town of Ar Ar
on the Saudi border, for example, virtually became a US base.
Unlike
Turkey, which was offered a $30 billion aid package for its
support, the Kingdom did not ask for any compensation. In fact, it
provided free and subsidized fuel to US forces. Saudi Arabia also
provided crude oil to Jordan to compensate for the loss of crude
oil Jordan was receiving from Iraq.
After
the invasion, the Kingdom sent relief supplies to Iraq, including
a field hospital that performed over 200,000 procedures when there
was no functioning hospital in Baghdad. Saudi Arabia also offered
loans and export guarantees worth over $ 1 billion to the Iraqis,
and offered to supply gasoline and diesel fuel when Iraq ran short
of both in the run-up to the elections in early 2004. It has
discussed forgiving both Iraq's debts and reparations obligations.
Saudi
Arabia has worked with the US to mobilize Iraq's neighbors in
support of Iraq. Last year, it floated the idea of sending
peace-keeping troops from Arab and Muslim countries not
neighboring Iraq to Iraq to help with security (The UN welcomed
the idea, the US was lukewarm). Currently, it is working within
the Arab League to try and bring Iraq's various factions together
to agree on a common future. This move has been welcomed by the
US.
While
US combat forces have left Iraq, the US remains Saudi Arabia's
principal military advisor, supplier, and source of technical
assistance. Work by Richard F. Grimmett of the Congressional
Research Service shows that Saudi Arabia signed $5.6 billion worth
of new arms transfer agreements between 2001 and 2004, and $3.8
billion (68%) came from the US.
War on Terrorism
We need to remember that that the United States put intense and
consistent pressure on Saudi Arabia to aid Islamist freedom
fighters in Afghanistan during the Cold War, and that the US then
saw Saudi support of Islamists as a counterbalance to communism.
We were both slow to see the risks of what we were doing and how
extremist might take advantage of such efforts -- just as Israel
once made the mistake of aid Islamists as what it hoped would be a
counterbalance to the PLO.
Like
the US, Saudi Arabia was slow to commit itself to the struggle
against terrorism and extremism, but it drove Bin Laden out of the
country in the mid-1990s and helped push him out of the Sudan.
Saudi
Arabia was slow in taking substantive action after 9/11 -- and
some Saudis lived (and still live) in a world of denial and
conspiracy theories. Nevertheless, Saudi leaders immediately
condemned terrorism after 9/11, as did leading Saudi clerics.
Saudi cooperation with the US has steadily improved over time, and
has become far closer since when Saudi Arabia came under attack in
mid-2003.
Saudi
Arabia is now actively involved in an internal battle with Al-Qa'ida
terrorists. Many such terrorists have been killed or captured, and
many Saudi security personnel have lost their lives in the line of
duty. This battle is being fought with considerable US support,
and US and Saudi cooperation has become much stronger in recent
years.
The
full scale of this cooperation, like Saudi cooperation with the US
in the Iraq War, is highly sensitive. I have discussed this
cooperation at length with US and Saudi officials in Saudi Arabia,
however, I would urge the Committee to seek a briefing on the
details from the Bush Administration in closed session, on why the
State Department praised Saudi Arabia for its internal and foreign
efforts to fight terrorism in the annual report on "Patterns
in Global Terrorism" that it issued in April 2004. Ambassador
J. Cofer Black, Coordinator for Counter-Terrorism, stated in his
introductory remarks that: �I would cite Saudi Arabia as an
excellent example of a nation increasingly focusing its political
will to fight terrorism. Saudi Arabia has launched an aggressive,
comprehensive, and unprecedented campaign to hunt down terrorists,
uncover their plots, and cut off their sources of funding.�
There
are, however, a number of examples that are a matter of public
record. At the initiative of then Crown Prince, now King Abdullah,
Saudi Arabia and the US established two task forces; one to combat
terrorism, the other to combat terror financing. Officials from
both countries now work side-by-side in the war on terror, and
these task forces have become models for international
cooperation.
Saudi
Arabia has strengthened liaison relationships with other
countries. Saudi Arabia held an International Counter-Terrorism
Conference in Riyadh in February of this year. Over 50 nations
sent high-level representatives who were experts in the area,
including the US, which sent a delegation headed by Fran Townsend,
Adviser to the President for Homeland Security. The resulting
report and Riyadh declaration has called upon the UN to create a
new international center to fight terrorism as well as on all
countries to strengthen their cooperation and national efforts.
In
addition, Saudi Arabia regularly reports to the United Nations
Security Council Committees on its actions to against terrorism,
and has complied with key UNSCR regulations. These include
freezing the financial assets of the Taliban regime (Resolution
1267) and funds of listed individuals (Resolution 1333). It has
signed the International Convention for Suppression and Financing
of Terrorism (Resolution 1373), and implemented Resolutions 1390
and 1368
The Financing of Terrorism
Saudi Arabia can still do more to fight terrorist financing --
although US Treasury experts have come to praise Saudi cooperation
when they initially condemned it. We should understand, however,
that governmental efforts to control terrorist financing have
sharp limits, and have probably reached the point of diminishing
returns.
Individuals in Saudi Arabia, and many other Arab and Islamic
countries, will continue to support such organizations or their
fronts, and regional governments can only do so much to limit such
funding. Merrill Lynch estimates that the capital controlled by
wealthy individuals in the Middle East rose by 29% during
2003-2004, to a level of approximately $1 trillion dollars raises
serious questions about how much governments can do. Much of this
capital is in private accounts outside the region, terrorist
operations are only moderately expensive, and Merrill Lynch
projects a further 9% annual rise in such holdings from 2004 to
2009.
Yet, Saudi Arabia began to try to control such funding in the
1990s -- long before most of the states in the region. It froze
Bin Laden's assets in 1994. SAMA and the Ministry of Commerce
issued guidelines to the Kingdom�s financial and commercial
sectors for combating money-laundering activities, and began to
create units to counter money laundering in the Ministry of
Interior, in SAMA and in commercial banks in 1995.
Saudi
Arabia has since taken the following steps:
-
Required
all Saudi banks on September 26, 2001 to identify and freeze
all assets relating to terrorist suspects and entities in
response to a list issued by the United States government.
-
Issued
rules �Governing the Opening of Bank Accounts� and
�General Operational Guidelines� in order to protect banks
against money-laundering activities in May 2002,
-
SAMA
began to implement a major technical program to train judges
and investigators on legal matters involving terrorism
financing and money-laundering methods, international
requirements for financial secrecy, and methods followed by
criminals to exchange information in May 2003.
-
Council
of Ministers approved new legislation that puts in place harsh
penalties for the crimes of money laundering and terror
financing in August 2003.
-
Created
a Joint task force on terror financing. American and Saudi
officials work side-by-side in this area. The US is providing
training programs for Saudi officials in this area.
-
Saudi
Arabia has frozen all charitable activity outside the Kingdom.
Charities cannot withdraw cash from their accounts.
-
Charities
cannot collect cash donations in public places.
-
Saudi
Arabia has implemented the 40 recommendations of the Financial
Action Task Force (FATF) of the G-8 on money laundering and
the 8 recommendations on terror financing. FATF conducted a
mutual evaluation of the Kingdom's mechanisms in the Fall of
2003 and found them in line with international standards. The
Kingdom is today a member of FATF.
-
FATF
found the Kingdom's laws on money laundering and terror
financing to be in line with best practices, and pointed to
examples of successful prosecutions in the Kingdom.
-
The
Kingdom has set up a Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) and is
in the process of joining the Egmond Group. The US Treasury
Department has been assisting the Kingdom in this process,
which should be completed in the near future.
-
The
Kingdom has put in-place regulations for taking cash from or
into the country.
-
The
Kingdom is in the process of establishing a National
Commission for Charitable Activities Abroad through which all
private charitable activities will take place. Until such time
as this commission is established, no Saudi charity can send
funds abroad. Exceptions were made during for the Tsunami and
the tragedy in Darfur under strict oversight by the Saudi Red
Crescent Society, an arm of the Saudi government. In some
other cases, funds are delivered by Saudi government
institutions to legitimate recipients (for example, aid to the
Palestinians; the case is made that Saudi charities raise
money for suicide bombers and deliver them. The Saudi Red
Crescent Society no longer provides funds directly to entities
in the territories. Funds going to the Palestinians are sent
to the PA via official channels.
Energy
For all the noise over energy independence, the fact remains that
over 60% of the world's proven conventional oil reserves are in
the Gulf and 25% are in Saudi Arabia. Furthermore, the EIA
estimates that the "best case" limit US energy policy
can put on our percentage of dependence on oil imports through
2025 is to keep it constant, and the reference case shows a major
increase.
Saudi
Arabia has historically maintained a production cushion of 2-2.5
mb/d for use during shortfalls in production elsewhere. It tapped
into that cushion after the fall of the Shah in 1979, during the
first Gulf War in 1990-91 when there was a shortfall in Kuwaiti
and Iraqi production, in the run-up to the war with Iraq in early
2003, and today as a result of various factors (Iraqi shortfalls,
political instability in Nigeria and Venezuela, Yukos in Russia,
natural disasters).
Unlike
many oil powers with more limited reserves, Saudi Arabia had long
sought to keep prices moderate to ensure consistent long-term
demand. It has responded to the recent rapid increases in world
energy demand, and lack of surplus crude oil and refinery
capacity, by investing over $50 billion in its oil sector over the
next seven years.
This in
part responds to US calls for an increase in its oil production to
12.5 million barrels/day. Saudi Arabia has also talked about the
possibility of increasing output to 14-16 million barrels a day.
It almost certainly can never reach the absurdly high levels
called for in some theoretical models -- which call for an
increase from around 11 million barrels a day today to 22-26
million barrels by 2025. These models, however, are theoretical
demand-drive econometric models. No country, and no major US or
Europe oil company, has ever found such models to be credible.
Education and the Role of the Clergy
There are many areas where both our countries need to do a far
better job of educating ourselves about other nations, cultures,
and religions. There is no question that Saudi Arabia long focused
on building schools, and measures like teacher to student ratios,
and did little to modernize its curriculum, or review the nature
and quality of what was being taught. It tended to pay little
attention to what its clerics said as long as this did not have an
internal political impact, and much of what some said was the
mirror image of hate literature in the West.
I know
how extreme these attitudes can be from my own talks to Saudi
students, educators, and clerics inside Saudi Arabia. In general,
few societies are friendlier and more polite. Yet, I have been
attacked to my face simply for being an American, and behind my
back for being a tool of Israel. People have tried to discredit me
simply by saying I am Jewish -- something I would be proud to be
but am not. I have read sermons and literature at the margins of
Saudi society and culture that should never have had broad
circulation without active protest and rebuttal.
More
broadly, we are two very different societies and cultures. Saudi
Arabia has a population and mix of clerics that are much more
conservative than its ruling family, the Al Shaikh family (the
descendents of Muhammad al Wahhab), and most top Saudi officials,
intellectuals, and businessmen. The stereotype of political
development in the West -- a progressive people pushing against
the resistance of a conservative regime -- does not fit this
society. Saudi Arabia also is very much a consensus society, and
this means progress is often slow and indirect.
Having
Saudi Arabia as an ally does not mean that Saudi culture is going
to become Western, that it will not be a puritanical Islamic
state, or that we will not differ sharply over the rate of
progress in an Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
At
best, Saudi Arabia will take years to make the kind of progress
that took decades in the West. Popular support for open religious
activities by other faiths may well be a matter of decades. Saudi
Arabia also is going to have to re-educate some of its clergy and
find better teachers -- eliminating Egyptian and Jordanian
Islamist teachers in the process.
Nevertheless,
Saudi Arabia should not be judged by the literature it issued back
in the 1990s, or by its worst sermons, literature, and teaching
aids today. No society can be judged by its worst performance, and
real progress is taking place. Saudi Arabia is, after all, a
nation whose Crown Prince -- and now King -- not only took the
risk of publicly calling for a comprehensive peace with Israel,
but helped win agreement on such proposals from the Arab League.
Saudi
Arabia is in the midst of a three-year program to overhaul its
educational system. Materials deemed offensive are being purged
from textbooks, new teaching methods are being introduced, and
programs to retrain public school teachers are being put in place.
This is a multi-year effort, and is extremely politically
sensitive and difficult. Some outside pressure helps. Too much
outside pressure fuels resistance and efforts by Islamic
extremists.
Similarly,
the Ministry of Islamic Affairs is in the midst of a program to
put in-place better monitoring of what is taught at religious
schools, and what is said in mosques. To date, Saudi Arabia
reports that over 2,000 imams have been disciplined or dismissed
for preaching extremism and intolerance. Saudi Arabia might well
be able to take more action and take it more quickly, but my
visits to Saudi Arabia -- and talking to US embassy officials and
critics of the government -- confirm that the effort is real.
Saudi
Arabia has vetted its Islamic Affairs Departments at its Embassies
abroad and severely curtailed their numbers and activities. For
example, the Saudi Embassy in Washington had over two dozen
officials at its Islamic Affairs Department during the 1990's.
Today, there is only one official, and he is a Foreign Service
Officer, not an employee of the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, or
one of the Islamic Universities.
Saudi
Arabia began efforts to warn its public about extremists back in
the late 1990s at a low level and reinforced them after 9/11 and
May 2003. It launched a large-scale national public awareness
campaign early in 2005 which focused on the fact Islamist
extremists are "deviationists" and the message to Saudis
that terrorism and extremism, for any reason, are not part of the
Islamic faith.
This
campaign included advertisements on billboards and TV,
documentaries, and seminars at schools and mosques. Throughout the
month of Ramadan, for example, programs dealing with extremism and
intolerance, were broadcast during the prime viewing hours on
Saudi television.
Various
government ministries have carried out internal campaigns to build
awareness of the threat posed by terrorism and extremism, and have
organized lectures and exhibitions in schools, universities and
public areas. Saudi-based businesses and organizations include
counter-terrorism messages in their communications with customers,
including ATM transactions, utility bills and text messages.
While I
have no way to evaluate the exact level of activity taking place,
Saudi Arabia began a campaign in February 2005 to educate the
society at large, with different series produced for children and
adults:
-
Full-length
documentaries that examine different aspects of terrorism and
religious tolerance, such as �Religious Dialogue,� a
multi-series program that identifies the rise and expansion of
Islamic extremism throughout the Muslim world and demonstrates
the ways in which terrorism defies Islamic values;
-
Short
films that inform the public about steps the government is
taking to fight terrorism, including �The Secure Land,�
which focuses on the different branches of Saudi security
(e.g. Border Patrol, Customs, National Guard, etc) and
demonstrates how the Kingdom�s security forces cooperate to
defend Saudi Arabia from acts of terror;
-
Cartoons
that inspire moderation and nationalism, including �My
Town,� a children�s series that reinforces the tolerance
intrinsic to Islam and encourages patriotism as a means to
fight terrorism;
-
Interview
programs that broadcast the opinions of academics and
terrorism victims, such as �Why?,� a series that
introduces the nation to families of security forces killed
during terrorist attacks as well as religious scholars who
condemn the reasoning communicated by terrorists as
justification for their acts;
-
TV
dialogue programs that encourage critical thinking and debate
about issues related to terrorism, such as �The Discourse of
Mind and Logic,� in which academics and specialists analyze
the atrocities committed in the name of religion and examine
different ways to fight the spread of terrorism and terror
ideology.
It is
also carrying out a advertising campaign with advertisements on a
number of Arabic satellite networks including Al-Arabiya, MBC and
Future Television, as well as on Saudi TV channels. This campaign
began in early 2005, and has three phases:
-
Phase
I � The first phase of the advertising campaign aims to stir
public emotion by presenting victims of terrorist acts and to
personalize the horrors of terrorism. This phase is
exemplified by an ad in which a father looks through photos of
his son, whose life was taken by terrorism.
-
Phase
II � The second phase of the advertising campaign seeks to
reinforce the notion that terrorism is wrong and in no way
represents Saudi values or the tenets of Islam. This message
is demonstrated in an ad where a man is seen building an
explosive device, and then realizes that such work is
destructive to humanity at large.
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Phase
III � The third phase of the advertising campaign aspires to
promote national unity in the fight against terrorism. The
message of this phase is illustrated by an ad in which
thousands of Saudis are seen carefully placing rocks in a
particular structure; as the camera pans away, the audience
sees that the assemblage of Saudis have recreated the map of
Saudi Arabia in stone.
Since
9/11, the Saudi government has also sponsored a number of internal
dialogues on reform and modernization, and international dialogues
on religion, cultural differences, and the need for tolerance. The
King Faisal Foundation is one such organization sponsored by
leading members of the royal family.
In
September 2005, Saudi Arabia convened a conference of Islamic
scholars at the initiative of King Abdullah. Representatives came
from all over the world, including the US to discuss such issues
as "extremism, intolerance, dealing with the other, the role
of a Muslim minority in a non-Muslim state, the issuing of fatwas,
terrorism, etc."
The
recommendations of the scholars will form the basis of the
Extraordinary Summit of members of the OIC, which will be held in
Makkah in early December 2005. This event is an important
milestone in shaping thinking in the Muslim world about these
issues, because Saudi Arabia, as the Custodian of the Two Holy
Mosques, is the most important Islamic nation.
Other
Aspects of the US Saudi Relationship
Economic relations are not always a measure of friendship, but
Saudi Arabia is one of our largest trading partners. It is our
largest market in the Middle East, and American companies are
among the largest foreign investors in the Kingdom. Saudis, in
turn, are still among the largest foreign investors in the US, and
the Saudi government has been one of the largest buyers of US debt
instruments.
Saudi
Arabia quietly donated over $100 million to help the victims of
Hurricane Katrina. The supplies are bought in the US and
distributed directly to those who need them. In some cases, this
aid arrived before Federal or State aid arrived.
A US
Strategy for Saudi Arabia and the Region
For all
of these reasons, I see the Saudi Accountability Act as the kind
of US posturing that will do far more to aid Bin Laden and
extremism than put meaningful leverage on Saudi Arabia or any
other friendly Arab and Muslim country. It will simply reinforce
all of the regional stereotypes and conspiracy theories that the
US does not understand the region, cares little about its people
and a great deal about its own interests, and is trying to impose
its values and create puppet regimes for its own purposes.
The Bush Administration has almost certainly been correct in
stating that the Arab world and Middle East can only achieve
stability through reform. Terrorism and extremism can only be
defeated at the ideological, political, economic, and social
level. Without such action, military and internal security efforts
will fail -- sometimes quickly as in the case of Iraq and
sometimes slowly as in the case of today's more successful
"one man" regimes.
The Need for the Right Kind of US Reform Effort
Where the US, the Bush Administration, and the Congress need to be
careful to avoid acting on the assumption that reform can come
from the outside, that the same largely American or Western
solution can work in all Arab and Islamic states, and that
"democracy" is somehow a magic word that transforms
entire societies.
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The
fact is that meaningful religious reform can only come from
within Islam, the region, and individual states. The US and
the West cannot fight Islam's battle for the soul of Islam.
This is a struggle that can only be fought and won within the
region. If it is left to outsiders, or dealt with through
denial, it is a struggle that will go on indefinitely and
sometimes be lost. It is a struggle that every Middle Eastern
intellectual, and every government, needs to face.
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The
most outsiders can do is point out the obvious: This struggle
is the most important single strategic priority for virtually
every Middle Eastern and Islamic state. It is necessary and
unavoidable, and interacts with the broader struggle for a
tolerant global society based on mutual respect and human
rights.
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More
broadly, the US, the Bush Administration, and the Congress
need to be careful to adopt realistic time scales for
evolutionary change, and to avoid focusing on
"democracy" as if a simple political fix could be
encouraged or imposed on every nation from the outside and at
the nearly the same time.
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At
a minimum, workable "democracy" means taking the
time to create government with strong checks and balances. It
means priority for human rights and the rule of law over the
simple act of voting. It means creating functional political
parties capable of both serving the nation and looking beyond
one man, one vote, one time. Pure democracy has never worked
in any state. Sufficiently crude democracy is little better.
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Both
development, and regional strategic stability, will occur one
nation at a time, and at different rates and in different
ways. They will be driven either by local reformers and by
political evolution, or will often collapse into forms of
revolution that may be worse than the status quo.
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The
real world priority for reform also has to give equal balance
to economic reform, employment, education, social services,
and reducing population growth rates. It means finding
solutions to ethnic and religious divisions, and social
change. It means giving at least as much priority to the
economic role of women as the political role; creating a broad
and globally competitive labor force.
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This
kind of evolutionary reform can only occur at a different pace
and in a different way in each state in the region. Like
religious reform, it can only come from within and must be
driven by local reformers. It cannot be driven by US public
diplomacy, or by seeking to makeover every state in something
approaching the form of the US or Europe. We are not talking
about a few years; we are talking a decade and sometimes
decades.
If we
are to avoid letting extremists like Bin Laden drive us into a
true clash of civilizations, we need a realistic strategy for
reform on both sides. Saudi Arabia, the Arab world, and other
Islamic states cannot deal with their needs for reform through
denial, through complaining about outside states and forces,
complaining about US and other external calls for reform, or
waiting for the solutions to the region's other strategic
problems. The US cannot deal with the issue by demanding mirror
images, instant action, and all the other aspects of its
traditional initial solution to every problem: "simple,
quick, and wrong."
The Saudi and Arab Side of the Effort
The Middle East and Arab world will succeed, if and when, it
starts to solve its problems one nation at a time, honestly, and
without waiting for outside aid or solutions to all the region's
ills. It is also important to note that it now has a unique window
of opportunity.
The resources for action are also much greater today. The current
projections of the EIA indicates that MENA oil export revenues
will rise from a recent low of around $100 billion in 1998 in
constant 2004 dollars to over $500 billion in 2005 � reaching or
exceeding the former peak of some $500 billion reached in 1980.
The
question is whether MENA governments will act upon this window of
opportunity, whether the wealthier states will look beyond their
own needs, and whether the poorer states will actually move
towards effective development and reform. No nation has developed
since World War II that did not develop itself, and solve
virtually all of its own problems. If Asian states like Taiwan,
South Korea, Japan, or other Asian states had waited for peace or
regional solutions, Asia would be another Middle East.
The US and Western Side of the Effort
The US and Europe, however, need patience, a balanced approach to
reform, strong country missions capable of encouraging local
governments and reformers, and the understanding that different
societies and cultures will often take a different path. In
practice, this means a very different strategy based on
persuasion, partnership, and cooption rather than pressure and
conversion:
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Implement
a broadly-based reform strategy: Social, economic, and
political reforms should be supported, but in an evolutionary
sense. The US and Western states, however, cannot be seen as
pushing these reforms in ways that discredit local officials
and reformers. Outside pressure for change will be resisted
even if the reforms are necessary, and too much overt pressure
is counterproductive.
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One
size does not fit all. The Arab and Islamic worlds are not
monolithic. Each country requires different sets of reforms
and needs. Some need help in reforming their political
process, others need economic aid, and others need special
attention to their demographic dynamics and population
control. The West, therefore, must avoid any generalized
strategy of dealing with the Arab-Islamic world as one entity.
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Work
on a country-by-country approach and rely on strong country
teams, not regional approaches: Regional polices, meetings and
slogans will not deal with real world needs or provide the
kind of dialogue with local officials and reformers, tailored
pressure and aid, and country plans and policies that are
needed. Strong country teams both in Washington and in US
Embassies are the keys to success.
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Recognize
that the pace of reform will be relatively slow if it is to be
stable and evolutionary, and dependent on partnership and
cooption. Artificial deadlines and false crises can only lead
to failed tactics and strategies. Outside support for reform
must move at the base countries can actually absorb, and shift
priorities to reflect the options that are actually available.
History takes time and does not conform to the tenure of any
given set of policymakers.
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Carefully
support moderate voices: �Moderates� in the region do need
the support of the West, but obvious outside backing can hurt
internal reform efforts. Moreover, �moderate� must be
defined in broad terms. It does not mean �secularist� and
it does not necessarily mean �pro-American.� It also,
however, does not mean supporting voices that claim to support
freedom and democracy, but are actually the voice of
extremism.
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Democratization
is only part of reform and depends on creating a rule of law,
checks and balances and a separation of powers, protection for
minorities and human rights, and effective political parties.
Trying to force or "rush" democracy on Middle
Eastern countries is impractical and counterproductive. The
goal should be to help MENA countries develop more pluralistic
and representative governments that respect the rights of
minorities.
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Recognize
that the key to effective action is local political action,
dialogue, education, efforts to use the media, and public
diplomacy: The West and the US cannot hope to win a struggle
for Islam and reform from the outside. It is the efforts of
local governments, reformers, educators, and media that will
be critical. Encouraging and aiding such efforts is far more
important than advancing the image of the US or Western states
or trying to shape local and regional attitudes through
Western public diplomacy.
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Avoid
generalizing about Muslims: generalizing Islam as a source of
violence and discriminating against Muslims in the west can
alienate �uncommitted� Muslims.
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Demonizing
any part of Islam will aid extremists: The problem of
terrorism is not the problem of �puritan� or �Wahhabi�
Islam, but the attitude of violence and intolerance of
politically motivated groups that exploit religious teaching
to gain legitimacy in the eyes of their recruits and
followers. To defeat these groups, their motivations need to
be understood and fought at their roots. E.g. Al-Qa'ida's goal
of ruling the �Arabian Peninsula.�
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Avoid
supporting �secularism� against �traditionalism:� The
region has seen its share of failed governance systems. Most
efforts to secularize have failed and the US should not be
seen as a driving force behind what may be assured failure.
Moreover, the word �secularism� translate into
�elmaniyah� is often intermingled with �atheism.�
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Don�t
try to divide and conquer: The West should stay clear of
issues like Sunni-Shiite frictions, and taking sides with
ethic and sectarian groups. It does not serve anyone when they
are played against each other. The Iran-Iraq War was a perfect
example of how interfering can backfire. The US should avoid
playing any role that could encourage such divisions,
particularly given the current environment in Iraq.
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Liberalism
vs. counter-terrorism: The liberty democratic societies afford
people is sometimes the same tool extremists use to spread
their hateful ideology. The west must be careful in advocating
immediate liberalization and freedom of speech of the Middle
East.
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Apply
a single set of standards to Western and regional
counterterrorism: Do what you preach and preach what you do.
The West and specifically the US should void being seen as
supporting violation of human rights and abusive security
measures in counter-terrorism, which advocating human freedom.
Violence by states against civilians be it Russia, Egypt, or
Israel should be equally condemned.
In short, any effective strategy to deal with terrorism and
extremism means addressing two key strategic issues that go
far beyond the so-called war on terrorism. One is whether the
Arab world can recognize the need for reform and achieve it.
The second is whether the West, and particularly the US, can
learn to work quietly with nations for effective reform,
rather than seek to impose it noisily, and sometimes
violently, on an entire region. [Additional
materials (tables, etc.) posted at SUSRIS.org (click
here)] Source:
US
Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing Web Site
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