https://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htterr/articles/20141107.aspx



*Counter-Terrorism: How The West Became Collateral Damage*



November 7, 2014: People in the West are greatly alarmed and concerned
about Islamic terrorism. This fear is largely misplaced and a product of
modern media, not the reality of what is going on in the Islamic world. The
fact is that well over 90 percent of Islamic terrorism victims are Moslems.
In 2013 that was more like 99 percent. Although there has been a huge
increase in Islamic terrorist activity since September 11, 2001, it has
mainly been directed at other Moslems. For the last century there has been
growing incidence of Islamic terrorism and this is largely the result of
the many ancient and unresolved religious disputes in Islam, plus modern
technology. The tech allowed Moslems to travel more freely and allowed
Moslem nations to do more business with the spectacularly successful
economies in the West. Finally, there is oil wealth, which makes it
possible for large numbers of Moslems to migrate from their poorly run
countries to the more prosperous and pleasant West. The last of these to
arrive was the oil wealth and that made it easy for Moslem rebels to blame
the West for “supporting” (by paying for the oil rather than just taking
it) the local Moslem tyrants. These threats led to some attacks in the most
notably the ones on September 11, 2001. But overall, the Islamic terrorism
was largely directed at other Moslems. There is much talk about attacking
the West but the vast majority of the attacks are still, as they have been
for over a thousand years, against fellow Moslems.

Looking at the Islamic terrorism situation as an historical event you see
that the current outbreak began in the 19th century, as Western influences
began to be felt throughout the Islamic world. There followed the collapse
of Turkish control in the Middle East, the rise of radical socialism
(fascism and communism) which were both attractive to many Moslem radicals.
Finally there were the efforts by the newly (in the 1970s) wealthy Saudi
kingdom to spread its own form of conservative Islam as far as possible.

At the core of this war is an Arabs family feud over which forms of Islamic
radicalism are acceptable and which are to be condemned as Islamic
terrorism, heresy or whatever. The main dispute is between those who
consider “moderates” like the Moslem Brotherhood an acceptable Islamic
conservative group and others (like Saudi Arabia) that identifies the
Brotherhood a terrorist organization. This is the continuation of a
centuries old struggle over what the most acceptable form of Islamic
conservatism is.

At the center of this dispute is Saudi Arabia and its effort to defend its
form of Islamic government. Saudi Arabia has long supported Islamic
conservative groups. Yet in 2013 the Saudis came out against the Moslem
Brotherhood in Egypt and against al Qaeda two decades earlier. At the same
time the Saudis have no problem supporting Islamic radicals in Syria,
including some who belong to al Qaeda.

What this demonstrates is how the Saud family only supports Islamic
radicals who agree that the Saud family should be in charge (of Saudi
Arabia and as a leader of the Islamic world). Islamic radicals that change
their minds about this arrangement became enemies of Saudi Arabia and its
many Moslem allies. Thus the Saudis supported al Qaeda until al Qaeda
decided that the Sauds were not Islamic enough to be in charge. That led to
a dispute in the 1990s that escalated in 2003 and, so far, the Sauds are
winning. The Moslem Brotherhood in Egypt has always been hostile to the
Sauds and that has been reciprocated. This was made worse by the fact that
the current head of al Qaeda was once a leader in the Egyptian Moslem
Brotherhood. This was made worse as the Egyptian Moslem Brotherhood won a
2012 election in Egypt and promptly got cozy with Iran, the archenemy of
Saudi Arabia and Sunni Moslems in general.

What was actually going on here was not a dispute over Islam but over
Egyptians showing how they should be the leader of the Islamic world and
not Saudi Arabia. Although Islam was founded by Arabs in what is now Saudi
Arabia, Egypt has always had the most Moslems, Islamic universities and
religious scholars. To the Egyptians the Saudis are a bunch of desert
bumpkins who got lucky with all that oil wealth and now believe that makes
them more deserving of a leadership role than the Egyptians.

Iran is especially feared by the Saudis because the Iranians are not Arabs
(but rather Indo-European, like most Europeans and Indians) and are openly
hostile to the majority (80 percent) form of Islam (Sunni) espoused by the
Saudis. The Iranians are Shia, a smaller (about 10 percent of Moslems) sect
that conservative Sunnis consider heretics. After several major wars over
the issue there was something of a truce and for the last few centuries
Moslem leaders have played down this antagonism. But the mutual hatred
remains, and in the last few decades Iranian Shia leaders have become
increasingly aggressive in claiming that Shia should control the Moslem
holy cities of Mecca and Medina, as well as all that oil the Arabs now
possess.

The two holy cities are in Saudi Arabia and have been administered by the
Saud family for nearly a century. Saudi Arabia also contains the largest
oil reserves in the world. The Sauds want to keep things the way they are
and have been increasingly aggressive in blocking Iranian moves against
Saudi dominance. That’s why the Saudis support Islamic radicals in Syria,
even though many of these Islamic terrorists want more radical Moslems
running Saudi Arabia (and removing “Saudi” from the name of Arabia).
Despite all this opposition the Sauds continue to hold firmly onto power.
This is all because of one man.

Saudi Arabia was very much the creation of Abdul Aziz ibn Saud. Born in
1876, his father Abdul Rahman (1855-1928) and the rest of the Saud clan
were driven from the Saud hometown of Riyadh in 1891 by a rival clan.
Taking refuge in Kuwait, Abdul Aziz eventually organized a small group of
followers and retook Riyadh in 1902. This pleased his father immensely and
Abdul Aziz was given more power and control over the family’s fortunes.

Abdul Aziz not only acted like the founder of a kingdom, he also looked the
part. Standing nearly two meters (nearly seven feet) tall, he had an
athletic build, a hypnotic gaze, and an endearing demeanor. His
hospitality, bravery, and diplomacy were legendary. He dispensed justice in
a fair and wise manner. He was the kind of leader the Bedouin had little
trouble following. Abdul Aziz also had a knack for turning enemies into
allies. More importantly, in this part of the world, Abdul Aziz was a
devout Moslem. This was his key asset in uniting the many tribes and clans
of Arabia. Islam was the only thing all these, often antagonistic, groups
could agree on. Moreover the Sauds had been followers of the strict Wahhabi
sect of Islam since the 1700's and Abdul Aziz was strict enough in his
religious practices to win the approval of the most orthodox Moslems. That
changed in the 1970s.

Early in the 20th century one of the more conservative Moslem groups was a
warrior brotherhood called the Ikhwan. This group had been prominent in the
early history of Wahhabism but had died out by the late 1800's. The
original Ikhwan was drawn from settled Arabs. The early 20th century
revival was among the nomadic Bedouin. When the new Ikhwan came to Abdul
Aziz's attention, he first checked them out to make sure they were the real
thing and then provided money, weapons, and other aid. With the support of
the powerful and popular Abdul Aziz, the Ikhwan became the Saudi shock
troops. The Ikhwan warriors were fierce and disdainful of death. They
behaved as if they were reincarnations of the 7th century Arab warriors who
spread Islam from the Atlantic to the Pacific. By furnishing land (or,
rather, oases and their invaluable water) for the Ikhwan warriors to build
their fortified mosques, Abdul Aziz soon had (by 1917) 200 Ikhwan
settlements populated by 250,000 people (60,000 of them warriors). But the
fervor of the Ikhwan could get out of hand. The orthodoxy of the Ikhwan
rejected most modern devices. Everything that was not mentioned in the
Koran was suspect and subject to destruction by the Ikhwan zealots. The
rifle was a curious exception. The Ikhwan provided the glue that kept the
Saudi alliance together during the 1920's as the Saudis conquered the
remaining independent tribes and clans of Arabia.

Abdul Aziz proved himself once more when it came time to get the Ikhwan to
follow orders. By 1926, the Saudi forces had defeated all those who stood
in the way of Arabian unification (at least in terms of Saudi Arabia’s
current borders). The holy cities of Mecca and Medina were taken, along
with the Red Sea coast. Abdul Aziz judged it imprudent to attempt the
conquest of the more populous Yemen, or the British protected emirates
along the Persian Gulf coast. Kuwait was left alone because of the aid the
Kuwaitis had provided when the Saud clan was in need. The British also
guaranteed (and guarded) the borders of Jordan, Syria, and Iraq. The Ikhwan
cared nothing for these restrictions. In response to that disdain, Abdul
Aziz spent two years fighting the Ikhwan, eventually bringing them to heel
without leaving lasting tensions in the kingdom.

One of the principal means of keeping the orthodox Muslims on his side was
to enforce a strict brand of orthodoxy in the kingdom. The "religious
police" Westerners hear about are the modern day Ikhwan. But instead of
riding off, rifle in hand, to destroy the non-religious, the modern day
Ikhwan swing canes at anyone rash, or careless, enough to appear
irreligious in public. These latter day Ikhwan are becoming more
troublesome and very unpopular with most Saudis. If the Sauds decide to
act, after consulting religious and tribal leaders, they will suppress the
“Ikhwan” once more. In the meantime, the Saudis have placed more limits on
the power of the religious police.

In 1932 Abdul Aziz declared the Saudi controlled lands to be the kingdom of
Saudi Arabia. For the first time in over a thousand years Arabia was, more
or less, firmly united. Yemen and the Persian Gulf emirates, protected by
the British, were acknowledged as free from any further attempts at Saudi
conquest. For the next twenty years Abdul Aziz prepared his 20 sons
(eventually to number 43, including those who died as infants) to carry on
his work. This work, then as now, consisted primarily in safeguarding the
Moslem holy places and keeping the Saud family in power.

Abdul Aziz conquered his kingdom as a religious act and it was as a servant
of Allah that the Sauds would continue to hold it. At the official founding
of the kingdom in 1932 there was as yet no oil wealth for the Saudis to
contend with. The major oil discoveries did not come until the late 1930's,
and significant oil wealth did not appear until a decade later (after World
War II). Huge wealth did not arrive until the 1970s, when a newly formed
(with Saudi assistance) oil cartel jacked up the price of oil and kept it
high. At that point things began to change in unexpected ways.

It was up to Abdul Aziz's sons to contend with the mixed blessings of oil
riches while still maintaining the religious foundations the house of Saud
was built on. It's up to the senior members of the Saud family to decide
who the next king is and the choice will say much about where the kingdom,
and Islam, is headed. The Sauds are expected to continue being the best
friends and worst enemies of Islamic terrorists.

All this is tolerable to the Egyptians when it just involves ruling Saudi
Arabia, but the Egyptians do not agree with the idea that an Arab king
should be the head of Islam simply because he has a lot of oil wealth and
administers the most holy Islamic shrines. Both the Sauds and Moslem
Brotherhood agree that Moslem nations should be run using Islamic (Sharia)
law. The problem is that the Saudis have been doing so since the 1930s
while the Moslem Brotherhood (or any of their fellow Islamic radicals) has
not been able to establish their form of Islamic government anywhere.
That’s because most Egyptians (and Moslems) oppose it and there are always
some factions within the Moslem Brotherhood that support the use of
violence (terrorism) to impose Islamic rule on Egypt. The Sauds agree that
Egypt needs Islamic government, they don’t agree with the use of terrorism
to achieve that goal, if only because many Islamic terrorists want to use
terrorism to replace the Sauds with a more radical Islamic government.

At the moment most Arabs back Saudi Arabian attitudes towards the Moslem
Brotherhood and other Islamic conservatives and radicals. At the same time
most of these Arabs tolerate the Islamic terrorist groups fighting for (and
sometimes against) the Syrian rebels or in support of other local
interests. The Saudis, as conservative as they are, have attracted the ire
of a growing number of even more radical groups. This is an ancient problem
in the Islamic world and despite attempts to drag in outsiders, the
bloodshed will continue to be largely among Moslems.




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Posted by: "beowulf" <[email protected]>
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