EDITOR'S
NOTE:
This article originally appeared in
Foreign
Policy magazine in the September/October
2004 issue and is reprinted here with
permission.
How to Reform Saudi
Arabia Without Handing It to Extremists
By F. Gregory Gause III
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To
survive, the monarchy must battle the militants,
reassure the religious establishment, and
give the middle class a taste of democracy. |
TO: Crown
Prince Abdullah
FROM: F.
Gregory Gause III
RE:
Saving the Kingdom
The combination of the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, rising oil prices,
and the recent upsurge in violence in Saudi Arabia has
made your political system enormously important to the
rest of the world. Many observers in the West blame your
schools and mosques for anti-Western hatred in the Muslim
world. They portray your family's rule as both unstable
and impervious to reform. Much of what is said about you
outside the kingdom is, of course, uninformed or
exaggerated for political effect. But external pressure
will not disappear. Here are some steps you can take to
placate your critics and strengthen your regime:
The Political
Battle: Liberalize with Care
Security is your foremost challenge. Even after the
attacks of September 11, some in your government believed
you did not face an al Qaeda problem at home. The
murderous assaults in Saudi Arabia over the last 15 months
have given the lie to that view. Crushing the violent
Islamist opposition now must be the first priority. You
have embarked on a two-pronged policy that is conceptually
sound but in need of some tailoring and more vigorous
implementation.
The first element of your
policy is armed confrontation with your opponents. Your
June 2004 offer of limited amnesty to militants is
appropriate, as long as it is a last chance for violent
extremists to surrender, and not a gambit for negotiations
with them. As the escape of three terrorists during the
bloody May 2004 confrontation in Khobar indicates, your
security forces require immediate attention. If the
extremists have sympathizers in the security forces, you
must root them out. If competence and vigilance are the
problem, find more capable officers. The second element
involves using the country's religious establishment to
delegitimize the bin Ladenist message espoused by your
opponents. This essential effort has already borne fruit:
Last year, three prominent religious figures withdrew
their earlier fatwas condoning political violence.
However, you still must take several important steps to
survive politically.
- Win the Battle of
Ideas: The ideological battlefield in Saudi
Arabia has long been tilted toward extreme positions
that their proponents cloak in Islam. You need to
reverse that trend. Some figures on the fringes of the
religious establishment still want it both ways: They
claim loyalty to you but waffle on the issue of
violence against non-Muslims, particularly Americans.
They style themselves as "mediators" between
you and the extremists, implying that there is some
middle ground in this struggle. You know who these
sheiks are. Some of them have already spent time in
your jails. If they persist in their positions, they
should be reacquainted with those facilities.
Maybe they could even
take the cells currently occupied by some potential
allies in the ideological fight. Why are organizers of a
petition supporting a constitutional monarchy in custody
while you permit the authors of incendiary jihadist Web
sites to publish freely in the kingdom? You do not have
to accept all the reformers' proposals, but their voices
may at least help to stem the jihadist tide, which has
produced the violent opposition you now face. If an
activist eschews violence and does not advocate the
overthrow of the monarchy, why silence him?
- Resist Full-Scale
Democratization: Outside observers, some well
meaning and some Machiavellian, prescribe political
liberalization as the antidote to your domestic
terrorist problem. Don't take their word for it. An
immediate move to an elected parliament would do more
harm than good. Given their superior resources and
organization, Islamist activists would do very well in
these elections, which could complicate your security
strategy. Moreover, elections make the religious
establishment nervous, and with good reason.
Mainstream religious leaders know that elections will
end their monopoly on legitimate political discourse
in the kingdom. You need these leaders to play their
part in battling extremists; do not alienate them on
this issue.
While fending off rapid
democratization, you still must prepare for more
participatory politics down the road. It will be
important to reassure the Saudi middle class that their
desire for greater openness will not be forgotten in the
heat of the battle against militants. You can do so by
proceeding with the municipal council elections
scheduled for late this year. Only half of the seats on
these councils will be elected. Go further. Move swiftly
to fully elected membership. Give the councils genuine
power on municipal issues and a real budget. If Islamist
ideologues dominate the councils, let their constituents
get a small taste of life under extremist leadership.
But be careful how you set up the election system.
Insist on single-member districts, which encourage
moderation by requiring candidates to appeal to a
majority of voters.
- Give the
Consultative Council a Higher Profile: King Fahd
created the Consultative Council in 1993 to provide
public input into decision making. Although its
members are appointed, the council represents educated
and politically aware Saudis. Let it score some public
victories over government ministries and allow its
members to scrutinize a detailed government budget.
The money question is central to the credibility of
your governance. People want to know where state funds
are going, particularly the windfall of recent years.
Secrecy on money matters spawns rumors that are more
critical of your governance than reality probably
merits. Granting the council budget oversight will
complicate the work of your ministers but enhance the
credibility of this important representative
institution.
- Expand Religious
Tolerance: Saudi Arabia will always be a Wahhabi
state, and the religious establishment offers crucial
legitimacy for your family's political role. But in
the large cities such as Riyadh and in regions outside
of Najd, you should gradually permit greater public
expression of the various Muslim religious and
cultural traditions that the kingdom encompasses.
Including Shia and Sufis in the ongoing national
dialogue and allowing Shia to observe rituals publicly
in the Eastern Province this year were good first
steps. The limited decentralization produced by
municipal elections could also boost religious
tolerance. Although convincing the kingdom�s men of
religion will not be easy, these modest steps need not
challenge the establishment�s perks of power or its
primacy in interpreting the
"state religion."
Beyond Oil: The
Broader Economic Imperatives
High oil prices in the last few years spurred economic
growth and replenished depleted cash reserves, but this
temporary reprieve must not lead to complacency. Continue
encouraging private investment -- both domestic and
foreign -- in various economic sectors. The service
industry, in particular, could provide more jobs for
unemployed Saudi youth. Spend some of the surplus on
high-profile projects to improve the country's decaying
infrastructure, particularly in water and electricity. But
also focus on the following broader goals:
- Cut Birthrates:
In the long term, the kingdom's economic picture is
gloomy: Simply put, the country's burgeoning
population will soon outstrip your capacity to provide
for it. Neighboring Bahrain, whose oil resources are
almost depleted, now has a higher per capita income
than Saudi Arabia does. You encouraged population
growth for the past 30 years, and the kingdom now has
one of the highest birthrates in the region. It is
time to reverse course. You can learn from the many
successful family-planning programs in other Muslim
countries, such as Egypt and Iran, where government
initiatives have lowered birthrates.
- Reduce the Foreign
Workforce: Your society will not
indefinitely tolerate rising unemployment among
citizens while you host more than 6 million foreign
workers. Fortunately, your imminent accession to the
World Trade Organization (WTO) gives you an opening to
negotiate a "grand bargain" on the issue of
foreign workers in the kingdom. The WTO rules will
expose domestic industries to fierce competition and
may put them in a more conciliatory mood. In exchange
for private-sector cooperation in trimming the foreign
workforce, you could offer educational programs to
better prepare Saudi students for the job market. (If
inducements don't work, though, be ready to impose
taxes that increase the cost of foreign labor to
employers.) Introduce this program gently to avoid
shocking the private sector.
- Recast Social
Reform as Economic Reform: You should slide your
educational reform and women's rights initiatives
under the economic tent. The modest but encouraging
steps you have taken here include eliminating
egregious attacks on Christians, Jews, and Shia
Muslims from school textbooks, teaching English in
earlier grades, and easing women's entry into the
labor force. The best way to continue these
controversial social moves is to portray them as part
of economic reform, which is broadly popular in the
kingdom, rather than social liberalization to appease
foreign critics. Packaging these important changes as
economic reforms is smart politics and might keep the
religious establishment from intervening. You need to
be particularly cautious about women�s issues in the
short term, because nothing else could more quickly
alienate the religious leaders whose support you need
for the security fight.
Keep the United
States on Your Side
Your relationship with the United States can't be as close
as it was in the decade between the 1991 Gulf War and the
September 11 attacks. Washington's persistent pressure for
domestic reform in your country will only increase the
tension. But there remain two common interests on which
you can build a new and mutually advantageous
relationship: fighting extremists and keeping the oil
flowing. The jihadists are as much your enemy as
America's, and you have the same interest in oil-market
stability at bearable prices as the United States. Your
recent steps have helped in Washington, but the U.S.
public will scrutinize Saudi behavior to see if you fully
implement your promises.
- Bring Your
Charities Home: You seem to recognize that some
of the Muslim institutions your oil money built have
become conduits for material and ideological support
to terrorists. This development was the unintended
result of lax oversight on your part. (And let's not
forget that the United States not long ago encouraged
you to spread your version of Islam to counter both
Soviet communism and Iran's revolutionary Shiism.) But
the world has changed, and your role in the Muslim
world must change with it. The countries in which your
charity is spent must have a greater role in choosing
the personnel who will operate the institutions and
lead the mosques you build, even if they will not be
as "Wahhabi" as some in your religious
establishment might like. As you have said publicly,
more of your charity should be directed at home, where
needs exist that were unanticipated in the heady days
of the oil boom.
Unfortunately, you have
sent some confusing signals on charity reform recently.
Adel al-Jubeir, your foreign-policy adviser, came to
Washington in June 2004 to announce the closure of the
Al-Haramain Charitable Foundation, which funneled money
to al Qaeda and its sympathizers. Just three days after
Jubeir's visit, however, the head of Al-Haramain told
reporters that he received no order from your government
to close his offices or dissolve his foundation. Get
everybody on the same page.
- Recall Prince
Bandar: You should reconsider your representation
in the United States. Prince Bandar, your ambassador
in Washington, was the right man for the job when
Saudi-U.S. relations were conducted only at the
highest levels and outside public view. Now you need
someone who can sell Saudi Arabia as a reliable
partner to the American public. Prince Bandar wrote an
excellent article in the Saudi press this year calling
for a new seriousness in your strategy toward violent
domestic opponents. He could help coordinate that
strategy at home, while a new ambassador in Washington
begins to rebuild Saudi Arabia's reputation in the
United States.
- Pump Up the Volume:
Oil, of course, is the other key issue with the United
States. It has always been the basis of the
relationship and remains the source of your global
economic influence. Unfortunately, your oil minister
made a huge miscalculation at the beginning of 2004.
Believing prices would decline after the winter, he
pushed the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) to reduce production quotas. Instead,
demand boomed and prices skyrocketed. As you know, the
thrill of getting $40 per barrel is nothing compared
to the long-term health of the world economy, upon
which oil demand is based.
Given the uncertainties
about future supply and demand, you can reassure the
world oil market by increasing your production capacity.
Doing so would be costly, but it would also signal your
commitment to help stabilize the market. Your moves to
increase Saudi production and push OPEC quotas back up
are a good start. Now try to nudge prices down toward
$30 per barrel -- and make sure the U.S. public knows
about your efforts. Affordable oil is good for the world
economy and in your long-term interests. And the more
responsible you are on oil issues, the more likely it is
that the United States will have an interest in the
stability of your government.

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F.
Gregory Gause, III is an Associate Professor
of political science at the University of Vermont,
and Director of the University's Middle East
Studies Program. He was previously on the faculty
of Columbia University (1987-1995) and was Fellow
for Arab and Islamic Studies at the Council on
Foreign Relations in New York (1993-1994). |
His research
interests focus on the international politics of the
Middle East, with a particular interest in the Arabian
Peninsula and the Persian/ Arabian Gulf. He has published
two books: Oil
Monarchies: Domestic and Security Challenges in the Arab
Gulf States (Council
on Foreign Relations Press, 1994) and Saudi-Yemeni
Relations: Domestic Structures and Foreign Influence
(Columbia University Press, 1990). His scholarly articles
have appeared in Foreign Affairs, Middle East Journal,
Washington Quarterly, Journal of International Affairs,
Review of International Studies and in other journals
and edited volumes. He has testified on Gulf issues before
the Committee on International Relations of the U. S.
House of Representatives.
Professor Gause
received his Ph. D. in political science from Harvard
University in 1987, and studied Arabic at the American
University in Cairo and Middlebury College.
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