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SAUDI-US RELATIONS INFORMATION SERVICE
NEWSLETTER ARCHIVE - ISSUE 18August
4-10, 2003
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PHOTO OF
THE WEEK 
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Crown Prince Abdullah
receives U.S. Deputy National Security Advisor.
Click
Here for
Photo Library
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WHAT'S NEW
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>
Saudi-US Relations Information Service (SUSRIS)
Launched
Visit the web site for more information on the SUSRIS
features. [more]

> New
Saudi-American Forum Essays/Items of Interest:
"Saudi
Government Counterterrorism - Counter Extremism
Actions," by Anthony H. Cordesman
"The
Crucibles: 9/11, Afghanistan and the Fashioning of a
Foe [Part I]," by Gregory J. H. Dowling
"Internet
May Lubricate Politics and Economies in Arab World,"
by Jim Landers
"Common
Enemy: U.S. and Saudi Arabia Unite Against
Terrorists," by John Duke Anthony
"Getting
Back on Track: Saudi Study in the U.S.," by
Grant F. Smith
"Saudi
Arabia: A Relationship in Transition," by Hugh
Renfro
"The
Children of Saudi-American Marriages," by Muddassir
H. Siddiqui
"Tribal
Traditions and Modern Culture: A Review of The
Belt," by Isabel Cutler
"Imagined
Kingdoms: Islamic Militancy and Opposition in Saudi
Arabia," by Gregory J. H. Dowling
"Winds
of Change," by Massoud Derhally
"Pumping
Up Online Resources to Fuel Saudi-U.S. Relations," by
Molouk Y. Ba-Isa
"Remember
Khobar Towers," by Louis J. Freeh
"Saudi
Arabia: Don't Let Bin Laden Win!," by Anthony
Cordesman
"The
Approaching Turning Point: The Future of U.S.
Relations with the Gulf States," by F. Gregory Gause,
III
"In
the Eye of Yet Another Storm: US-Saudi Relations and the
Iraq Campaign," by Gregory J.H. Dowling
"Saudi
Arabia: Winds of Change in the Desert," by Sandra
Mackey
"US-Saudi
Ties Prove Crucial in War," by Michael Dobbs
"The
Prince," by Elsa Walsh
"Baer's 'Fall of the
House of Saud' and the Stakeholders in the Saudi-American
Relationship," by Kevin Taecker
"Wahhabism: A Christmas
Eve Talk," by Abdalla Musa Tayer Mohammed
"Myths
and Realities About Unemployment in Saudi Arabia,"
by Kevin Taecker
"Saudi
Arabs, Americans and Oil,"
by Robert L. Norberg
"The
Role of the Extended Family in Saudi Arabia," by
David E. Long
[more]

> Saudi-US
Relations Information Service (SUSRIS) Current
Discussion Topics
o US-Saudi
Relations...
o Defense
and Security...
o Business
and Economics...
o Regional
Peace Issues...
o Energy
and Resources...
[more]
Click to visit... then sign in as a New
User to join the dialogue.
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AN
ITEM OF INTEREST FROM SUSRIS |
Saudi
Government Counterterrorism-
Counter Extremism Actions
By Anthony H.
Cordesman |

Crown
Prince Abdullah quickly addressed
Saudi Arabians following the May
bombings in Riyadh, condemning those
responsible and vowing to bring them
to justice.
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I do not wish
to be an apologist for Saudi Arabia. It has
made many mistakes, and it faces major
challenges to its stability. I do, however,
find that the present flood of charges being
made by people with little or no real
experience in the country and often are based
on unsourced or suspect data. What should be
serious articles and media coverage is often
filled with financial guesstimates that cannot
be validated, and loose chains of guilt by
association that confuse Saudi government
carelessness with the deliberate support of
terrorism. Far too many charges are being made
by people who have never read a Saudi budget
or five-year plan, never really talked to
Saudi clerics, or examined the progress the
Kingdom has actually made.
[more]
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to top

The
Crucibles: 9/11, Afghanistan and
the Fashioning of a Foe
[Part I]
By Gregory J. H.
Dowling
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EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
The
events of 9/11 have altered our vision of the
future and they have done the same for our
perception of the past. Our psychological
inability to associate al Qaeda with CIA
influences in its creation has forced us,
mostly through the mainstream media, to link
the organization with another nation:
Saudi Arabia
. However, the purported links between the
Kingdom and al Qaeda can be either dismissed
or explained differently once an informed,
objective perspective is used. Furthermore,
the alleged association between al Qaeda and
the Kingdom�s government is even more absurd
when one realizes that the Saudi government
and al Qaeda are equally and fundamentally in
combat against each other. So, while many may
point to Saudi participation in the Afghani
conflict as evidence of its willingness to
promote extremist Islam, their role was, in
fact, a defensive one aimed at protecting
itself from just such militancy.
In
"The Crucibles: 9/11, Afghanistan and the
Fashioning of a Foe," Gregory Dowling
examines these important perceptions and links
that shape the current dialogue on US-Saudi
relations.
[more]
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FROM
THE HISTORY OF SAUDI-U.S. RELATIONS |
Statement
by President Reagan's Principal Deputy Press
Secretary Speakes on Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia
May 6,
1986
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Statement by
President Reagan's Principal Deputy Press Secretary
Speakes on Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia
May 6, 1986
This week Congress will
turn to consideration of a missile sale to Saudi Arabia.
On April 8 President Reagan notified the Congress of his
intent to sell these air and sea defense missiles to the
Saudis. These weapons are not new to Saudi Arabia; all
have been sold previously and are already in the Saudi
inventory.
The United States has
vital interests in the Persian Gulf. They include
supporting the security of friendly moderate States,
countering radical forces, preventing Soviet expansion,
and maintaining the free flow of oil. The sale will
protect and advance our own interests in the following
specific ways:
-- It supports Saudi air
defense into the 1990's.
-- It continues a
bilateral security relationship which has been supported
by every President since Franklin D. Roosevelt and which
remains the key to Gulf defense, to cooperation
throughout the region, and to the search for peace.
-- Completing the sale
now, even though the missiles will not be delivered for
several years, makes clear that we support Saudi
self-defense.
The missile numbers have
been calculated by the U.S. Air Force as necessary to
meet realistic threat projections in the period when
they will be delivered. They present no threat to Israel
and in no way undercut the absolute determination of the
United States to preserve Israel's qualitative military
edge in the region. These missiles are subject to
stringent security safeguards. The Saudis have an
outstanding record in this regard and have never allowed
any U.S. weapon to fall into unauthorized hands.
Moreover, if the United States fails to help the Saudis
in this important area, they are certain to get the
weapons they need from other sources who are unlikely to
share America's concern for Israel's security.
The United States and
Saudi Arabia have many similar interests beyond the
Gulf, and our actions are often mutually supportive.
They have helped in U.S. efforts to support moderate
governments in Egypt, Jordan, and Sudan, and have worked
quietly in the search for peace in Lebanon, in the
Arab-Israeli conflict, and in the Iran-Iraq war. We are
engaged in a critical struggle against Libyan-supported
state terrorism. Saudi Arabia has consistently worked
behind the scenes to discourage terrorism from any
source.
Saudi Arabia is a firm
friend of the United States. Our own interests require
us to help Saudi Arabia meet its legitimate security
needs in the face of growing regional threats.
Therefore, the President strongly urges the Congress to
support this important sale.
Source: Ronald
Reagan Presidential Library
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DISCUSSION
FORUM |
Look
Who's Talking... The Saudi-US
Relations Information Service web site features
a discussion forum for you to post your ideas,
opinions and questions. To sign on
and speak up Click
Here. Among the posts in current
threads:
"There
is no inherent animosity between the American
and Saudi peoples. The Bush administration
appears to understand this. It is well past time
to better inform the natural constituency for
constructive relations between our two peoples
on the nature of our relationship."
Sign
up for the forum and contribute to the
dialogue.
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Doctors
for the Kingdom
The
work of the American Mission Hospitals
in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
By
Dr. Paul L. Armerding
(Chief Medical Officer,
American Mission Hospital
,
Bahrain
)
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Book
Description
Doctors
for the Kingdom
is a fascinating read, the dramatic
and inspiring true story of how
missionary doctors entered Arabia -
more than 100 years ago - determined
to bring healing through their the
skilled hands and dedicated hearts.
Following
the lives of many doctors who served
with the Bahrain-based American
Mission Hospital, this
beautifully-illustrated book taps
extensively into the memoirs and
recollections of those doctors who
were privileged to travel from their
new homeland into Saudi Arabia to
apply their skills not just to the
ordinary people of the country but
also to the King's Court during the
period 1913-1955.
This
184-page book, part of the Reformed
Church in America Historical Series,
captures the heart-warming and often
dramatic events faced by the doctors
and, at a deeper level, reveals the
rapport and trust built between
Christians and Muslims as a result of
their travels over the years.
With
the hospital celebrating its
Centennial year in 2003, the author
also takes the opportunity to look at
the continuing work of the American
Mission Hospital today, the ongoing
trust placed in it by the local and
expatriate population, and the
challenges facing the hospital to
ensure it can continue to operate as a
not-for-profit healthcare service for
another 100 years.
[more]
Ordering
Information
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WHAT
IS THE SAUDI-U.S. RELATIONS INFORMATION SERVICE?
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The Saudi-US Relations
Information Service (SUSRIS) provides you information
resources and interactive features through a web site
and weekly newsletter -- all designed to enhance your
understanding of the historic relationship between the
United States and Saudi Arabia.
The Saudi-US Relations Information Service is a public
service of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations
as an element of its mission to educate Americans about
Arab countries, the Middle East, and the Islamic world.
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Saudi-US Relations Information Service
A Public Service of the National
Council on U.S.-Arab Relations
1140 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036
eMail: [email protected]
Web: http://www.Saudi-US-Relations.org
Photo Credits
Saudi Press Agency, Patrick W.
Ryan, CIA World Factbook, U.S. Defense Dept., Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library
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