washingtonpost.com
Saudi Crown
Prince To Carry Warning To Visit With Bush
U.S.-Israeli Alliance Frustrating Arab Leaders
By Howard
Schneider
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, April 24, 2002; Page A16
CAIRO, April 23 -- Crown Prince
Abdullah of Saudi Arabia headed to the United States today for his first
meeting with President Bush, bearing a swell of Arab indignation over the fate
of the Palestinians and growing worries among the United States' Arab allies
that their friendship with Washington is becoming a liability at home.
Disturbed by the continuing loss of
life in the West Bank and the Israeli siege around Yasser Arafat's West Bank
compound in Ramallah, Abdullah, his advisers and like-minded Arab leaders have
warned with increasing urgency over the past month that the situation is more
than a matter of right and wrong. The Bush administration's identification with
Israel, they say, has become so thorough in Arab eyes that the stability of
friendly governments is in question, with U.S. allies struggling to justify
their stands and radical groups and governments arguing that confrontation is
inevitable because of the American-Israeli alliance.
Only a month ago in Beirut,
Abdullah received what he regarded as a promise from the Bush administration to
lay the groundwork for political discussions over a peace offer that Abdullah
had originated and personally lobbied for with skeptical leaders like Syrian
President Bashar Assad. The proposal -- a commitment by Arab governments to
build normal relations with Israel in return for a Palestinian state in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip -- was swiftly overtaken by the offensive against West
Bank cities and refugee camps launched March 29 by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon.
As a result, while Bush calls on
Arab states to show "real leadership" by cracking down on terrorist
attacks and pressuring Arafat, the Palestinian leader, to do the same, Abdullah
is expected to counter that the United States must prove its good intentions by
cracking down on Israel. Failure to do so, Abdullah's advisers and other Arab
officials argue, will speed what they see as a decline in U.S. prestige and
credibility in the Persian Gulf and throughout the Arab world.
Abdullah's message, foreign policy
adviser Adel Jubeir said on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday,
"will be that America must be engaged, America must restrain Sharon,
America must put the peace process back in its proper track, because American
interests and American credibility and the credibility and interest of America's
friends and allies in the region are suffering tremendously as a
consequence."
According to the Saudis, the
perception of the United States as unwilling or unable to control Israel is
largely responsible for a new tide of extremist statements coming from Islamic
clerics whose voices were largely quieted after the Sept. 11 attacks in New
York and at the Pentagon. While Abdullah has told Saudi clerics there is no
room for extremism in a modern Islamic state, Israeli attacks in the West Bank
have fed the region's most vivid ideological and theological fears about
Jewish-Muslim conflict.
"We consider the United States
and its current administration a first-class sponsor of international
terrorism, and it along with Israel form an axis of terrorism and evil in the
world," a group of 126 Saudi scholars and writers said in a letter
released this week.
Such sentiments are likely to
occupy a prominent place in Abdullah's discussions with Bush. As the two
leaders head toward Bush's ranch in Texas, for instance, President Hosni
Mubarak of Egypt and King Abdullah of Jordan have been forced to deploy riot
police to control the streets of Cairo and Amman and protect Israeli embassies
there. Even in Saudi Arabia, where demonstrations are usually banned, protests
have been allowed this month so the public can let off steam.
The new pressures could not have
come at a worse time for the courtly Abdullah. As a result of King Fahd's
extended illness, he has assumed the day-to-day rule of a kingdom in the midst
of a critical transition, with Islamic and tribal systems being steadily, if
slowly, adapted to modern economics and an exploding population. Faced with the
claims of a religious elite that often resists change, and a Western-educated
middle class that demands it, Abdullah and other members of the royal family
will set policies in coming years that are bound to be shaped by their
relations with the West.
U.S. policy in the Arab world is
woven around Egypt -- the most populous Arab state, with the largest army and a
peace treaty with Israel -- and Saudi Arabia, the world's chief oil exporter
and steward of Islam's birthplace. While both are important, U.S. relations
with Saudi Arabia have been the most tenuous of late and questions about the
ability of the House of Saud to endure the most pointed. A collapse of the
royal family's authority, or a split among different family lines, could
reshape U.S. and Western standing throughout the region.
So far, Abdullah and others in the
aging clique of brothers who control the country have offered little insight on
issues that seem increasingly important to the outside world: the transfer of
power between generations, for example, or a strategy for controlling, feeding
and employing a population growing more than 3 percent annually.
The Saudi royals "get an
A-plus for surviving," said one Western diplomat in the region. "But
. . . "
That "but" has been
raised frequently since the Sept. 11 attacks provoked concern about local
support for Osama bin Laden, the son of a wealthy Saudi contractor. The reply
is far from clear for a ruling family that is at once intimately in touch with
its people, but is also seen as distant, aloof and profligate; that has managed
to survive several crises, but is seen as in danger of foundering in the future
along competing bloodlines and policy differences.
Abdullah is a half-brother to King
Fahd, born of the same father -- the late King Abdulaziz, founder of the modern
Saudi state -- but a different mother. That sets him apart from Fahd and Fahd's
full brothers, the so-called "Sudeiri Seven," named after their
mother's powerful Sudeiri tribe. They include such figures as the interior
minister, Prince Nayef, and the defense minister, Prince Sultan.
In recent interviews in the
kingdom, Saudi princes from three eras rebuffed any talk of dynastic conflict,
contending that the West has been predicting the Sauds' downfall for decades.
Upcoming decisions about royal succession and other issues will be no more
tumultuous, and no less manageable, than earlier ones, the royal family members
said.
"The whole system will
collapse. No one can hold the balance of power. The tribal state will fall
apart," said Prince Faisal bin Salman, 31, recounting the assessment
British diplomats forwarded to London in the 1950s, just after the death of
Abdulaziz.
Abdulaziz's son and successor, King
Saud, was a spendthrift who after a decade in power was deposed by an alliance
of tribal and religious leaders. His replacement was his brother Faisal. Faisal
was assassinated in 1975. That, along with the Islamic revolution in Iran four
years later, prompted U.S. analysts to echo the British conclusions of 20 years
before.
"Saudis are now talking almost
openly about the end of the House of Saud, and the inevitability -- even the
desirability -- of a bloody revolution," former ambassador James Akins
wrote to the White House in 1979.
The path to the throne is intended
to run through all the sons of Abdulaziz, and there are more than 20 remaining.
Upon Fahd's death, Abdullah, 77, will almost certainly become king. After
Abdullah, Saudi analysts and diplomats in the country say that only a few of
the remaining sons are considered credible contenders, including Sultan, 74,
Nayef, 67, and the longtime governor of Riyadh, Prince Salman, 65 -- all full
brothers of the Sudeiri line.
By law the king is allowed to
appoint a crown prince with no restrictions, a fact that could let any of
Fahd's successors promote a member of the next generation. Jockeying has
already begun. Sultan and Nayef have positioned their sons as successors over
the interior and defense ministries, while one of Fahd's sons, Mohammed bin
Fahd, has become prominent as governor of the Eastern Province.
The choice comes through what bin
Salman calls a process of "inter-family social Darwinism," an
informal and little understood competition that weeds out those considered less
capable. While influenced by issues like matrilineal bloodlines and rivalries,
he said, the process as it has worked in Saudi history puts a premium on
consensus and the family's endurance as a governing institution.
"If you are born to the
family, you have a certain status, but it does not guarantee political
power," he said. "Some wash out." From the top job down, he
added, "there is an acceptance that competition stops when it affects the
coherence of the state."
The House of Saud's 5,000 princes
and princesses have become academics and astronauts, financiers and fighter
pilots, philanthropists and diplomats. But they have also skipped out on bills,
wasted public funds, killed one another and slapped around the domestic help,
with little public accountability exercised over how their power and money are
used.
Nayef, Abdullah and others
regularly open their homes and offices to petitioners, to people seeking a job,
a chat or a meal, but hundreds of less influential relatives have, through
family influence, insinuated themselves into public commissions, private boards
and other institutions. So extensive is the family's grip on the country, one
young Saudi professional quipped, that the options for career advancement are
either "to become 'khawy' " -- slang for a royal sycophant --
"or a terrorist."
The military also has provided an
important instrument of rule. Along with a U.S.-trained army and air force
under Sultan's command, there is a national guard under Abdullah's direction, a
tribal militia run by the families that helped unite the country under the Saud
banner and Nayef's Interior Ministry. According to a recent U.S. Embassy
analysis, the government spends about 40 percent of its approximately $50
billion annual budget on defense and security.
A burgeoning protest movement in
the early 1990s, spawned by bin Laden sympathizers and others, lost momentum
after the arrest of a few dissident clerics. Some observers saw its demise as
evidence that the unease Saudis may feel about the royal family's alliance with
the United States and unquestioned control over the country's resources is
difficult to translate into mass political action.
The fact that those issues are
being revived by U.S. support for Israel is a concern, Saudi officials argue,
that the Bush administration should share equally with them.
If the Israelis would pull back in
the West Bank, "the peace process would pick up and we wouldn't have to
listen to views like this," Jubeir, the foreign policy adviser, said,
referring to the anti-American and anti-Israeli rhetoric that has been pouring
from Saudi mosques over the past month.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company