On April 25, 2005 President George Bush hosted
King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz, then the Crown Prince, in a summit
meeting at the Western White House in Crawford, Texas. The
summit joint
statement addressed a host of issues fundamental to the
decades old partnership. Among them was the concern that:
"Our future relations must rest on a foundation of broad
cooperation. We must work to expand dialogue, understanding, and
interactions between our citizens." The first step in
expanding the understanding and interaction between Americans and
Saudis was said to be increasing the number of young Saudi
students traveling and studying in the United States." Many
thoughtful commentators saw the meeting as a milestone in
restoration of the relationship, damaged in the wake of the 9/11
attacks.
Two months later Secretary of State Condoleeza
Rice was visiting Saudi Arabia and, with US Ambassador James
Oberwetter, took questions
from the media. The issue of visas for students and others was
raised. The question about long lines and processing times was
fielded by the Ambassador, "First, here in the Kingdom, in
particular, we are working with a reduced staff, and because we
have a reduced staff at the consulate windows, we're not able to
accommodate all of the interest that we have. The second part to
that is our new procedures that we use when one applies for visas.
It used to be a very easy thing, but we learned a very hard lesson
about that." Secretary Rice added, "I guess the good
news is that people are trying to go, and we'll try to deal with
it."
A few days after the Rice visit the Ministry of
Higher Education announced a grant for scholarships for Saudi
students to study in the US, as a direct result of the Crawford
summit discussions. However, the availability of funding and the
desire of Saudi students for US higher education are not the only
hurdles to be overcome. The issuance of visas for Saudis to travel
and study in the United States is a major impediment. In November
the process was stalled by the closing of the visa office at the
US Consulate in Jeddah for security reasons. The frustrations
experienced in obtaining visas were highlighted by Raid Qusti writing
in Arab News on December 8, 2005. Today Joel Brinkley,
writing in the New York Times, provided an overview of
Saudi student travel to the US and the troubles in processing
visas. It is reprinted here for your consideration.
More Saudi Students in U.S.
By Joel Brinkley
WASHINGTON, Dec. 17 - Urgently trying to
improve relations with the United States, the Saudi Arabian
government has been promoting a scholarship program that has more
than doubled the number of Saudi enrollments at American colleges
and universities since last year.
The program, aimed in part at reducing
widespread hostility in the Saudi public toward the United States,
has reversed a steady plunge in Saudi students here that started
immediately after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.
The Saudi government offered 5,000 students
full four-year scholarships, complete with living allowances.
About two-thirds of the 5,000 students enrolled in American
schools this fall, the State Department said, and the number would
have been higher had the United States been able to process all
the visa requests.
The academic relationship between the countries
has been an area of concern for senior officials. James
Oberwetter, the United States ambassador to Saudi Arabia, said in
an interview that the drop "in exposure the population has
had to the United States" was not helpful for the Saudis
"at a time when they need to be looking outward instead of
inward."
The United States had long been the nation of
choice for wealthy Saudis to educate their children. Prince Turki
al-Faisal, the Saudi ambassador to Washington and a graduate of
Georgetown University, noted that two-thirds of his nation's
cabinet ministers had been educated in the United States. "We
have a kind of umbilical relationship" with American
universities, he said in an interview.
Still, after the Sept. 11 attacks and the
revelation that 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi, stories of
mistreatment and hostility toward Saudis in the United States
began flowering in the Saudi press and in public discussions. They
continue today. An article last week in the Arab News, an
English-language Saudi newspaper, said that in Riyadh, an American
Embassy employee had called Saudis waiting in line for visas
"animals." And most Saudis who have traveled here in
recent years tell stories about long delays and hard-edged
questioning upon arrival.
The number of Saudi students arriving to study
here dropped from more than 4,000 in 2001 to a low of just 1,008
last year, according to a State Department count of new education
visas. In a broader reflection of the tensions between the
nations, the total number of visiting Saudis fell from 46,636 in
2001 to about 12,000 last year.
"The relationship was nearly
destroyed," Mr. Oberwetter said.
In April, however, Abdullah, then the crown
prince, visited President Bush at his ranch in Crawford, Tex., and
among the issues they mentioned in a joint statement was a desire
to "increase the number of young Saudi students to travel and
study in the United States."
This summer, the Saudi Education Ministry
announced the scholarship program and for the first two weeks,
specified in newspaper advertisements that they were for study in
the United States. Later, the ministry authorized scholarships to
other nations' schools as well.
But the visa problem has been significant. The
visa offices at the American Embassy in Riyadh Saudi Arabia were
overwhelmed by applications from scholarship students, in part
because staff had been reduced for security reasons.
Last December, attackers stormed the heavily
guarded United States Consulate in Jidda, killing five local
employees before four of the five gunman were shot dead. Because
of continuing security concerns, the consulate stopped offering
visa services last month, reducing the number of visa stations
open for business.
Mr. Oberwetter is in Washington this week, and
one of his missions, he said, is to get approval to install more
visa officers. The State Department does not want to put more
personnel into Saudi Arabia at a time when foreigners there are
targets of attack.
As it is, Mr. Oberwetter announced in Riyadh
last week that students would have to wait eight weeks to get an
appointment for a visa interview, and he urged them to "plan
well ahead."
The Saudi Embassy's cultural and educational
mission in Washington manages the scholarship program, and on
Thursday, Mazyed I. Almazyed, the cultural attach�, waved toward
some 15 staff members charged with processing applications and
scholarships, saying: "We are at a standstill. Because of the
visa problem, everything is stopped."
Maura Harty, the assistant secretary of state
for consular affairs, noted that visa approval times, once the
application has been taken, had been reduced from several months
to no more two weeks. As for the eight-week appointment delay, she
said the closure at Jidda and the sudden crush of applications had
combined to overwhelm the embassy.
On Thursday and Friday, 45 Saudi students
arrived in Washington. Prince Turki visited with them at the
embassy on Friday morning. They sat quietly in their new winter
coats and stocking caps as he told them they were ambassadors with
"the message that Saudi Arabia is hoping for a better future
where the Saudi people will enjoy the benefits of your education
here."
He urged the students, most of them recent high
school graduates, not to socialize only among themselves but to
get to know Americans. "Learn the ways of American
life," he told them. "The American people are friendly
and hospitable."
Mr. Almazyed said many Saudi students arrived
with preconceptions that were less generous. He lectures them to
"forget all that." Usually he visits students a few
weeks after they have enrolled; he recalled one typical encounter
this fall.
" 'This is not what I expected,' " he
said the student had told him.
"In what way is it different?" Mr.
Almazyed asked him.
"'Oh, well, you know,'" was all the
student would say. But he was smiling.
Source: New
York Times
Reprinted with permission.
- US-Saudi
Summits - Special Reports Section - SUSRIS
- Secretary
Rice Roundtable with Saudi Media - SUSRIS IOI - Jun. 21, 2005
- Treat
Us Like Human Beings, Saudi Reporter Tells US Ambassador -
Arab News - Dec. 8, 2005
- Education
Official Calls on US to Simplify Student Visa Procedures -
Arab News - May 3, 2005
- The
Need for Education Reform - "Saudi System is the
Problem" by Rachel Bronson and Isobel Coleman - SUSRIS
IOI - Mar. 31, 2005
- Crises
and Opportunities in U.S.-Saudi Relations - Ambassador Robert
Jordan Interview - SUSRIS Interview - Sep. 4, 2004
- "Never
Hate in Plurals": US-Saudi People-to-People Relationships
- Khaled Al Maeena at the Hampton Roads World Affairs Council
- SUSRIS IOI - Nov. 24, 2004
- The
Fight Against Extremism and the Search for Peace - Prince Saud
Al Faisal - SUSRIS IOI - Sep. 28, 2005
- HRH
Prince Saud Al-Faisal - Foreign Minister of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia at the U.S.-Arab Economic Forum - SUSRIS IOI -
Sep. 30, 2003
- The
Prospects for Stability in Saudi Arabia in 2004 [Part I] -
Reducing the Threat of Terrorism - By Anthony H. Cordesman -
SUSRIS IOI - Feb. 23, 2004
- Saudi
students surge at Florida Tech - Florida Today - Nov. 25, 2005
- Open Doors
On-line
- Foreign
Students' Toughest Test: Getting In By Susan Taylor Martin -
SAF/SUSRIS - IOI - Feb. 24, 2004
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