http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/ND06Ak01.html
Apr 6, 2012 


Saudi Arabia's Syrian jihad
By Joshua Jacobs 

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to 
have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing.

If there was any doubt as to Saudi intentions in Syria, that veil was ripped 
away on Sunday at the Istanbul "Friends of Syria" conference. The Saudis and 
their Gulf allies spearheaded an effort to create a formalized pay structure 
for the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and privately ruminated on the possibility of 
setting up official supply conduits to forces fighting Syrian President Bashar 
al-Assad. This decision went much further than what the West, or even 
neighboring Turkey, seemed willing to embrace. But while the United States and 
her allies are wary of seeing Syria become a sectarian battleground, the power 
brokers in Riyadh are enthusiastically hurtling towards it.

When the Syrian uprising began last March, Saudi Arabia was in a state of 
panic. The revolution in Egypt, the uprising in Bahrain, and the bubbling civil 
war in Yemen consumed attention and cultivated a manic siege mentality. This 
fear and clarion call for stability stymied any potential efforts at exploiting 
the regional chaos. However as the Saudi domestic and geopolitical situation 
began to stabilize, they began to look hungrily at the potential opportunity in 
Syria.

The shift onto the offensive began in early August when King Abdullah tested 
the waters by staking out a position as the first Arab leader to castigate the 
Assad regime. While the Saudis escalated their rhetoric and began lobbying in 
Arab diplomatic circles, they also began to unchain their clerical soft power. 
A steady stream of firebrand clerics and senior religious officials began to 
take to the airwaves with official Saudi sanction to excoriate the Assad regime 
and encourage pious Muslims to strive against it. Clerics like Sheikh Adnan 
al-Arour, a Syrian-born Salafist preacher who has called for a jihad against 
the Assad regime have been given prime time coverage. The influence of these 
clerics and the increasing connection between them and fighters in Syria is 
evidenced by communiques from armed groups like the 'Supporters of God Brigade' 
in Hama which declared allegiance to al-Arour.

To experienced Saudi watchers the escalating religious rhetoric being 
encouraged in the Kingdom may seem perplexing. For much of the past decade the 
Saudi government has worked to muzzle and regulate the ability of clerics to 
make calls for jihad, reinforcing the doctrine that such an action is only 
valid if endorsed by the King and his senior religious authorities. This was 
done to suppress the flow of recruits not only to al-Qaeda but to insurgent 
groups in Iraq and Yemen. However the Saudi decision is a sign that they are 
once again willing to embrace one of the most potent weapons in the Kingdom's 
arsenal, state directed jihad.

It is one of the most tried and true weapons the Kingdom possesses having 
utilized it to fight Nasser in Yemen, the Serbs in Bosnia, and of course the 
Soviets in Afghanistan to name just a few. The Saudis have clearly made the 
calculus that the potential fruits of toppling Assad, and enthroning a Sunni 
aligned regime in Damascus are well worth the political risk.

While the Istanbul conference marked what could arguably be termed the 
beginning of an overt state of conflict between Riyadh and Damascus, the signs 
have been building for months that the covert war has been in full swing. 
Reports that Saudi agents have been working in Jordan and Iraq to finance 
smuggling routes appear to have a substantial amount of circumstantial 
evidence, and is certainly a view endorsed by those taking part in such 
activities on the ground. While unsubstantiated and likely untrue accusations 
that Saudi Arabia has played a role in the spate of suicide attacks in Damascus 
belie a more likely fear that the Kingdom is strengthening its ties amongst 
Islamist groups in Syria.

The danger of course is that while Saudi Arabia embarks on its jihad to topple 
Assad, it will get free reign in picking the winners and losers amongst the 
opposition. This will have the effect of distorting the movement by 
strengthening ideologically allied Islamist groups at the expense of moderates 
and secularists. Indeed there is a worrying precedent in Afghanistan where the 
Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence agency altered the political landscape by 
controlling who did or did not receive support. If the Western powers, Turkey 
included, voluntarily stand aside and let Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies 
unilaterally control the process of arming the opposition, then they might find 
themselves appalled at the result.

The international community as a whole should be cautious in the manner that it 
approaches intervention in Syria. Footing responsibility to Saudi Arabia and 
her allies risks ideologically poisoning the opposition movement as Sunni 
religious groups receive disproportionate support and other groups adapt their 
message to receive support. If the United States and her Western allies are 
committed to supporting the Syrian revolution, they cannot afford to sit back 
and do it through intermediaries.

Joshua Jacobs is a Gulf Policy Analyst at the Institute for Gulf Affairs.

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to 
have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing.

(Copyright 2012 Joshua Jacob)

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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