What Craziness Is Going on in Saudi Arabia?
Eric Margolis • November 11, 2017 What’s going on in Saudi Arabia? Over 200 bigwigs detained and ‘illegal profits’ of some $800 billion confiscated.
The
kingdom is in an uproar. The Saudi regime of King Salman and his
ambitious 32-year old son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, claim it
was all part of an ‘anti-corruption’ drive that has Washington’s full
backing.
Utter
nonsense. I’ve done business in Saudi Arabia since 1976 and can attest
that the entire kingdom, with its thousands of pampered princes and
princesses, is one vast swamp of corruption. In Saudi, the entire
nation and its vast oil revenues are considered property of the extended
Saudi royal family and its hangers-on. A giant piggy bank.
The
late Libyan leader Muammar Khadaffi told me the Saudis are ‘an
incredibly rich bunch of Bedouins living behind high walls and scared to
death of their poorer neighbors.’
We
have just witnessed a palace coup in Riyadh caused by the violation of
the traditional desert ruling system which was based on compromise and
sharing the nation’s riches.
Young
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s appointment as heir apparent by his
ailing father, King Salman, who is reportedly suffering from cognitive
issues, upset the time-proven Saudi collegial system and provoked the
current crisis. Among the people arrested so far were 11 princes and 38
senior officials and businessmen, including the nation’s best-known and
richest businessman, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who owns important
chunks of Apple, Citigroup and Twitter. He’s being detained at Riyadh’s
swanky Ritz Carlton Hotel.
Also
arrested was Bakr bin Laden, chairman of the largest Saudi construction
firm, The Binladen Group, and former Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, a
bitter rival to the new Crown Prince Mohammed.
Interestingly,
there are no reports of senior Saudi military figures being arrested.
The Saudi military has always been kept weak and marginalized for fear
it could one day stage a military coup like the one led by Colonel
Khadaffi who overthrew Libya’s old British stooge ruler, King Idris.
For decades the Saudi army was denied ammunition. Mercenary troops from
Pakistan were hired to protect the Saudi royals.
The
Saudis still shudder at the memory of British puppets King Feisal of
Iraq and his strongman, Nuri as-Said, who were overthrown and murdered
by mobs after an Iraqi army colonel, Abd al-Karim Qasim, staged a coup
in 1958. Nuri ended up hanging from a Baghdad lamppost, leading Egypt’s
fiery strongmen, Abdel Nasser, to aptly call the new Iraqi military
junta, ‘the wild men of Baghdad.’
More
mysteries arose this tumultuous week. One of Saudi’s most influential
princes, Mansour bin Muqrin, died in a mysterious crash of his
helicopter, an ‘accident’ that has the smell of sabotage. Another key
prince, Miteb, was ousted. He was commander of the famed ‘White Guard,’
the Saudi Bedouin tribal army designed to protect the monarchy and a
former contender for the throne. Meanwhile, three or four other Saudi
princes were reportedly kidnapped from Europe and sent home, leading to
rumors that Saudi’s new ally, Israel, was involved.
It
appears that Prince Mohammed and his men have so far grabbed at least
$800 billion from those arrested to refill the war-depleted Saudi
coffers. Call this a traditional Arab tribal raid – except that no
women or horses were seized.
But
behind all this lies the stalemated Saudi war against wretched Yemen,
the Arab world’s poorest, most backwards nation. Saudi Arabia has been
heavily bombing Yemen for over two years, using US-supplied warplanes,
munitions, including cluster bombs and white phosphorus, and US Air
Force management. A Saudi blockade of Yemen, aided by the US, has
caused mass starvation and epidemics such as cholera.
When I first explored Yemen, in the mid 1970’s, it was just creeping out of the 12th century AD. Today, it’s been bombed back into the 6th Century.
In
spite of spending over $200 million daily (not including payoffs to
`coalition’ members like Egypt) the Saudis are stuck in a stalemated
conflict against Yemen’s Shia Houthi people. The US and Britain are
cheerfully selling bombs and weapons to the Saudis. President Donald
Trump has been lauding the destruction of Yemen because he mistakenly
believes Iran is the mainstay of the anti-Saudi resistance.
Yemen
is a horrible human rights disaster and scene of widespread war crimes.
It reminds me of the savagery inflicted on Afghanistan by the Soviets
in the 1970’s.
The
Saudis were fools to become involved in Yemen. Prince Mohammed was
going to show the tough Yemeni tribes who was boss. Now he knows, and
it’s not the Saudis.
The
Saudis appear to be planning military provocations against bad
neighbour Iran. These may include attacks in Lebanon against Hezbollah –
which might open the way for US attacks on Iran and its allies. The
Saudis are enraged over their defeat in Syria and want revenge.
Is
this the beginning of the collapse of the House of Saud? Or a Saudi
renaissance led by Prince Mohammed as he claims? Stay tuned.
(Republished from EricMargolis.com by permission of author or representative)
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