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Empty Words: Saudi Blustering and US-Saudi Realities
by Dr. Joshua Teitelbaum
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The Saudis are truly angry at the Obama Administration, and are threatening to turn away from their alliance with
As the British might say, Prince Turki al-Faisal, former Saudi Ambassador to
In June he published an op-ed in the Washington Post excoriating President Obama for his support of Israel and abandonment of the Palestinians in his May 19 speech (which many pro-Israel forces believed was anything but pro-Israel). But the Arabs also have a word for what Prince Turki and some other Saudi talking heads have been saying lately: kalam fadi -- empty words.
With challenged by the “Arab Spring” and accused of leading the counter-revolutionary forces, Turki sought to boost the legitimacy of the Saudi ruling family by taking up the Palestinian cudgel and waving it at the . In doing so he was following a time-honored practice of Arab leaders: divert attention from domestic shortcomings by talking up the Palestinian issue.
According to Turki, was a “bulwark of the Middle East”; if Americans thought that was an indispensible ally, “[t]hey will soon learn that there are other players in the region…. The game of favoritism toward has not proven wise for
“There will be disastrous consequences for U.S.-Saudi relations if the
Turki’s op-ed came about a month after Saudi security consultant Nawaf Obaid ominously declared that , angered over American’s “ill-conceived response” to the Arab protests and support for , had brought the “oil for security arrangement” between the countries to an end. Obaid works for Turki at the
So what’s going on here? Basically, the Saudis are upset about the handling of the Arab unrest, and the lack of support for the Saudi move into to hold down majority Shiite protests again the ruling minority Sunni Al Khalifa family. They view the as ungrateful when the chips are down for its main Arab ally.
Turki has often taken an abrasive approach to the , as has his employee Obaid. In answer to a question about religious persecution of Christians in at the Council on Foreign Relations in 2006, Turki parried, choosing instead to suggest that Christians accept Muhammad as a prophet and the Koran as divine. Which means, if you know something about Islam, that they would become Muslims. According to Turki then, Christians should either convert to Islam or shut up.
When the was discussing drawing down in , Turki and Obaid struck again, warning the against a withdrawal: “Since America came into Iraq uninvited, it should not leave Iraq uninvited,” Turki told a conference in 2006. Obaid threatened that Saudi Arabia would intervene on the side of the Sunnis should a withdrawal leave the Shiites on top.
Turki also had no compunction about attacking policy in as inept.”
The problem is the Saudis are all bark and no bite. They have been complaining openly about policy in the Middle East since before the establishment of , but did not hesitate to reassure US officials privately that these policies would not jeopardize the relationship with
The reason? Defense and energy relations are simply so deep that petulant Saudi princes and their minions cannot take them apart.
First,
As oil prices climbed to over $120 a barrel in May-June, Saudi and
To be sure, the Saudis are particularly exasperated this time around. But although and the are neither friends nor allies, they have shared interests with regard to oil and security for many decades, leading to economic and military relations that are unlikely to change in the foreseeable future. Therefore, despite occasional public “outrage” from Saudi officials about policy regarding the Arab unrest, , , , or ,
Dr. Joshua Teitelbaum is a senior lecturer in Middle Eastern History, and a research associate at the
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