|
Our focus is on
Wahabist Islam and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, excluding other
extremist factions and nations such as the interesting and
intriguing Shiite movement and many others. The Arabian Peninsula
is the original seedbed of Islamic extremism. Wherever one starts
searching for the roots of present-day Muslim ultra-fundamentalism,
the geographical trail eventually leads to Saudi Arabia and the
intellectual/theological trail leads to the Wahabist
ultra-fundamentalist interpretation of Islam.
It is already a fact
that certain sects would dearly love to oust the corrupt Saudi
royals and replace them with a Wahabist-inspired regime. May Yamani,
a Saudi political analyst with Islam Online says: "They are clamping
down not only on the jihadis but also on the reformists. If the [the
Saudi royal family doesn’t] win the support of the middle class –
the educated class in the country – there will be more and more
people who will throw themselves into the arms of the jihadis. The
royal family is losing control of the situation... They have no
solution for this violence."
The Saudi holy land
is the seedbed of Islamic extremism. “The rise of Islam is perhaps
the most amazing event in human history. Springing from a land and a
people alike previously negligible, Islam spread within a century
over half the earth, shattering great empires, overthrowing long
established religions, remolding the souls of races, and building a
whole new world – the world of Islam. … Arising in a desert land
sparsely inhabited by a nomad race previously undistinguished in
human annals, Islam sallied forth on its great adventure with the
slenderest human backing and against the heaviest material odds. Yet
Islam triumphed with seemingly miraculous ease….” (T. Lothrop
Stoddard, The Rising Tide of Islam.)
The arid Arabian Peninsula was home to Muhammad and the first
Muslims back in the 7th Century A.D. Geography and climate color the
theology of Islam. It was born in a harsh environment, and is an
ascetic severe and rigid desert faith. It is based on the Abrahamic
heritage of the Old Testament, but old pagan moon gods, Talmudic
Judaism, Gnosticism, and Christianity are part of the mix. Muhammad
was a clever and functional religious eclectic. He put together a
theological system, with its own unique book of holy writ, from many
and varied influences. By the beginning of the 8th Century, it ruled
the desert lands of Arabia.
During the time of Muhammad, Arabia was briefly the center of Islam,
but by the end of the 7th century, the area was disunited. While
Mecca and Medina retained their importance for pilgrims, Arabia was
the cultural center for only a short time. The real flowering of
Islamic culture found its expression in other locations ranging from
Moorish Spain (Al-Andalus; perhaps the apex of The Renaissance) to
Damascus and Baghdad. When Europe was in its dark ages, Islamic
mathematicians, astronomers, physicians, and scholars of all types
were not only preserving in Arabic the classical Greco-Roman
learning, but making new discoveries as well. The oldest continually
existing universities are not European, but those of the Islamic
world. But while all this was going on, Saudi Arabia, as it had done
for eons, continued to cook in the desert sun, and life changed
little for the hardy, ascetic desert tribes who lived in a land with
virtually no useable natural resources. Back in those days, they
knew nothing of the hidden petrol-billions in a land where water was
worth more than gold.
“Modern Saudi Arabia
owes its existence to Ibn Saud, an adherent of the puritanical [Wahabi]
Muslim sect. Beginning in 1902, he conquered Nejd, Al-Hasa and Hejaz
regions, and in 1932 he proclaimed himself King of a united Saudi
Arabia.” (Concise Columbia Encyclopedia, 1983, p. 732.) The Saudis
and their tribal allies eventually conquered and united most of the
peninsula by 1932, when ibn Saud, with British backing, proclaimed
himself monarch of a country named after himself and his clan.
The new nation was
one of the poorest countries in the world. When it officially began
in 1932, the new kingdom’s treasury had less than £35,000, but oil
reserves were located in 1936. Less than two years later, oil began
to flow out of the barren peninsula and a non-stop pipeline of money
began to flow back to the Saudi royals and their chosen aristocracy.
It is the duty of every Muslim to share as he can with others, a
duty of alms demanded by the Prophet himself, and the Saudi Arabian
people (numbering 27 million, with 60 percent under the age of 21)
also received benefits from the oil wealth. Life is good in the
paternalistic and outwardly benevolent kingdom — for select groups.
Certainly some women and dissidents of various types severely
disagree with the regime. But many live a satisfied life, and the
thousands of royals and their relatives hope to keep it that way.
But not so far
beneath the surface, a stew-pot of extremist beliefs cooks on,
slowly approaching an eventual boiling point — under the right
conditions. The bloated, pompous, hypocritical and morally corrupt
Saudi royals and their entourage could be replaced – and they know
it. The visage of the Shah of Iran, another worldly monarch
dethroned by fundamentalists, looms ominously over the not-so-old
House of Saud.
FAST-GROWING WAHABISM
While OPEC nations
supply (in 2002) 57 percent of U.S. oil, Saudi Arabia only provides
about 10 percent. Nonetheless, it controls a fourth to a third of
the world’s known oil supplies. Europe has practically no strategic
reserves, so Saudi Arabia and other oil suppliers are crucially
important. Oil-poor Europeans are dependent on Saudi oil reaching
them smoothly.
As we see, even a
slight change in production levels drastically affects world prices.
Our crucial, but uncomfortable (for both sides) alliance causes the
Saudi royals to abet our support of the Israeli ministate and its
state-sponsored terrorism toward Palestinians. Yet this is only one
element of our foreign policy and our dechristianized Western
culture that devout Muslims oppose.
However, up to now,
Saudi police and security forces have suppressed this opposition.
Conversely, our dependence on Saudi oil and stable prices causes us
to overlook a whole host of things: like the Saudi treatment of
women (ranking near the bottom); restrictive laws and punishments
for Christians; severe Sharia “justice” such as floggings and
beheadings; a Saudi princess lost hers a few years ago. She was an
adulteress; in 2007, a rape victim is to be flogged; few if any
Saudis do menial work with hordes of indentured servants, virtual
slaves, from the Philippines, Malaysia, etc.; there’s more,
including Saudi covert (and sometimes not so covert) moral and
financial support for what we call terrorism.
As we see in recent events, decapitation appears to be a particular
predilection for Islamist extremists. Naturally, the Saudi monarchy
works hard to keep the lid on the extremist boiling pot mostly out
of fear, hence purchasing “anti-terrorism insurance” against an
extremist actions in their own country. But who are these Islamic
purists, the fundamentalists who both so frighten and fascinate the
aristocratic Saudi oil lords?
Extreme Wahabism is
a Saudi Arabian religious phenomenon. “The first spark [of modern
Islamic revival] was fittingly struck in the Arabian desert, the
cradle of Islam. Here, at the opening of the 19th century, arose the
Wahabi movement for the reform of Islam, which presently kindled the
far-flung Mohammedan Revival, which in its turn begat the movement
know as Pan-Islamism.” (T. Lothrop Stoddard in The Rising Tide of
Islam.) “Wahabi [or Wahabism; also Wahhabi): …the religion of the
ruling family of Saudi Arabia… founded by Muhammad ibn al-Wahab
(c.1702-1792) who converted the Saud tribe. He taught that all
accretions to Islam after the 3rd century of the Muslim Era, i.e.,
after c.950, were spurious and must be expunged. The movement,
although centered in Arabia, has also spread eastward to India
[hence Pakistan, Central Asia and western China], and Sumatra and
westward to North Africa and the Sudan.” (Columbia Desk
Encyclopedia, p. 902.)
Ibn Abdul Wahab was born near present-day Riyadh, becoming a revered
and expressive Koranic scholar. In a little over 200 years, Wahab’s
strict and rigid interpretation of Islam gained far-reaching and
widespread acceptance throughout the Muslim umma, or world
community. Wahabism is rigid, intolerant and fanatical to the core,
as well as hyper-aggressive and ultimately violent. It is the
official doctrine of all the Arabian peninsular states, but its
theological, intellectual and political influence is worldwide.
As an example of severity, look at doctrinal disputes with fellow
Muslims. Wahabism sternly opposed Shia Islam and the Sufi mystical
movement. Both were reform movements and thus rivals of Wahabism.
Both sects made more than a few innovations, regarded as
illegitimate by the Wahabis. “Among those [Shiite] innovations was
the reverence given to dead saints as intercessors with Allah, and
the special [metaphysical, mystical] devotions of the Sufi orders.
The reformers made an alliance with Muhammad ibn Saud, ruler [tribal
chieftain] of a small market town, Dir’iyya, and this led to the
formation of a state which claimed to live under the guidance of the
Sharia Islamic law code and tried to bring the pastoral tribes all
around it under its guidance too. … By the first years of the 19th
century the armies of the new (Wahabist) state had expanded; they
had sacked the Shi’a shrines in southwestern Iraq and occupied the
holy cities of Hejaz (1926).” (Hourani, Albert, A History Of The
Arab Peoples, Harvard: 1991, p. 258.)
Actually, what most
devout Muslims ultimately want is an Islamic World Order under
Sharia law. This is seen by many as not only inevitable, but the
rightful and natural successor to the outmoded and dysfunctional
nation-states of the Western world order. Some devout ones maintain
that the world has not yet seen a truly Islamic government, so
differences exist as to precisely how this is to be carried out.
Some moderates say that individual believers must establish the
Islamic way in their hearts and lives, so that this personal regime,
with hope and prayer, someday spreads over the world.
In this
interpretation, the effort within oneself is a struggle, a jihad.
First, it is established in the person, then in his family, then in
the tribe and state, and later to the whole world. Suffice it to
say, this is not the only interpretation. Jihad by war may be
employed when all else fails, or more importantly, in response to
attacks on Muslims and Islam.
Most of the 1.25+
billion Muslims believe the West is finished, in the last stages of
decay. Are they right? Only time will tell, but the events of the
early 21st century do not bode well. “The Western Age Is Finished.”
(Sayyid Qutb.) “The path to the creation of a truly Muslim society
[begins] with individual conviction transformed into a living image
in the heart and embodied in a program of action. Those who accept
this program would form a vanguard of dedicated fighters, using
every means, including Jihad, which should not be undertaken until
the fighters had achieved inner purity, but it should then be
pursued, if necessary, not for defense only, but to destroy all
worship of false gods and remove all obstacles which prevent men
from accepting Islam. The struggle should aim at creating a
Universal Muslim Society in which there are no distinctions of race,
and one which was worldwide. The western age is finished’: it could
not provide the values which were needed to support the new material
civilization. Only Islam offers hope to the world.” (Hourani,
p.446.)
Wahabism is the
direct ideological inspiration for Osama bin Laden and other
extremist movements. Wahabi-influenced and inspired organizations
include Al Qaeda networks, the USS Cole bombers, the Khobar Towers
bombers in Saudi Arabia, the Egyptian radicals who slew Anwar Sadat
and later massacred the European tourists at Luxor, Algerian
fundamentalists, the first World Trade Center bombers led by Ramzi
Yusef and the Blind Sheik, Abdul Rahman (whose son is with Al-Qaeda)
all the way to the Taliban (means seminarians or religious students)
of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
AN ‘HONORABLE’ FORM OF SUICIDE
While the Taliban
were in power, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan gained diplomatic
recognition from only three states: the United Arab Emirates,
Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia, all of them directly inspired by
Wahabism. It is lavishly supported by many Saudis, including the bin
Laden family and every other rich family in the country, including
the numerous wealthy and prolific royals (there are hundreds of
them) and assorted sheiks of the aristocratic caste. Through private
banking, these wealthy families can transfer all the funds they want
to whomever they want and never be challenged or traced. When the
various pundits talk about tracing terrorist funds, it is rarely
mentioned that Saudi Arabia, for its entire existence, has
consistently refused to allow any probe into its arcane financial
connections and murky dealings.
Wahabist influence
is intense and worldwide as it controls and dominates Islam’s
holiest shrines. Ironically, as they oppose most modern
developments, the fortunes of doctrinaire Wahabism rose with the
development of cruise ships and airlines. From shortly after the
death of Muhammad, the holy places of Islam were controlled by the
sophisticated, educated elites in Damascus, Baghdad and Istanbul. In
1926, the Saud family and the militant Wahabi sect seized control of
Mecca and Medina.
From then on, this desert sect has controlled the holy sites. They
use these prominent pulpits to impress a single, extremely limited
and intolerant version of Islam on the millions of pilgrims who
come. Until the 19th Century, the pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca was
limited to those with time to walk there, or with time and money to
go by sailing ship. Pilgrims were counted only in the thousands.
Soon after the Wahabi conquest, modern transportation enabled
increasing numbers of pilgrims, many funded by the Saudi state.
There are now two million or more pilgrims each year. Increasingly,
a large number are non-Arabs who read little or no Arabic and come
from non-Arabic traditions, yet they are taught the strict Wahabi
way, often taking the message home with them.
Severe Islamic
fundamentalist militancy often seems baffling, especially if one
cannot transcend cultural boundaries a bit. For instance, most
Westerners do not understand the concept of Shahada, or active
martyrdom. In the face of almost insurmountable public opinion, and
ignorance, Islamist martyrs do not commit suicide in our Western
sense of the term. Some Wahabis and related sects teach that Islam
is justified in using Jihadist tactics because the West has attacked
Islam, not only by aiding, abetting and enabling (we provide money,
weapons and equipment) the atrocities against the Palestinians, but
through our pagan, consumerist self-centered, sexually exploitative
culture, which they see us forcing upon the world.
The believers, especially the impressionable young, are told that
those who choose Shahada make a crucial contribution to the divine
jihad, and will receive the greatest heavenly rewards. Westerners
just do not “get” this concept. Just as hara-kiri is seen as an
honorable and brave death by the Shinto Japanese, Shahada is never
viewed as a disgraceful death, but as an act of supreme and
glorious, hope, dignity, and deep faith. Even in the West, we make
exceptions. Consider that Judaism celebrates and now teaches the
doctrine of “Jewish Holocaust martyrs” in holy awe, and we must not
forget the numerous martyr-saints of the Roman Catholic tradition.
On top of that, the West has seen political and military martyrs (JFK,
WWII heroes, etc.) at various times.
And, while I know
some don’t want to hear it, one might call the Shaheeds brave. We
respect and honor military heroes from many wars. In reality, how
does this differ? Our cultural blindness and deafness is why we do
not understand this supreme sacrifice and dedication. What does
Western civilization have that any of us would die for any more?
Will you give your life for Wal-Mart, McDonald’s, the now so gay and
liberal Christian churches, the Democrat and Republican parties? The
list could go on, but the point is clear. Other than our unfortunate
military personnel, whom we allow to die for our rather curious way
of life, only a miniscule few or willing to die or greatly sacrifice
for anything at all!
Moreover, how long
will we accept the civilian deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan? We seem
so aware of military deaths, yet we think nothing of the innocent
victims, including children, we have killed — or helped kill — in
Afghanistan, Iraq and Palestine. The Islamists see us with blood on
our hands.
But more importantly, how do we intellectually and physically defend
against such dedicated – and brave, if I may so opine — foes? They
are willing to pay the ultimate price, relying that, in the long
run, we will not stay the course. Suicide martyrdom has become an
effective and useful tactic. Dedicated and serious Muslims are
willing to die for principles they believe should govern the world.
Christians once felt this way, but that is but a distant and faded
memory. Stay the course, indeed! Who even knows where we were/are
going?
“Islam is the
solution” is the cry of the Wahabist-inspired modern-day
international Islamic renaissance and revival movement. Billions of
people have heard, are presently hearing, and will continue to hear
this entrancing message. What is our reply? What does Western
culture have to offer as an alternative? And if, sadly and
regrettably, we have no viable alternatives, what does this mean for
our eventual fate in this “war on terrorism”? Are we really in “for
the long haul”, as our leaders tell us? If not, then the most
dedicated and faithful ones, the resistance forces with
determination and patience, will eventually triumph. We do not
demonstrate staying power – they do. Who cares how long it takes if
you are devoted to a cause that has already triumphed over many
obstacles. Frankly, it doesn’t look promising.
This should be
genuinely frightening, not only to my dear readers, but to our
leaders. Since U.S. foreign policy will probably continue in its
already well-established, arrogant, blundering and deadly paradigm,
the sparks that light fires in the eyes of the Shahada martyrs will
grow white-hot many more times. The next generation of Mujahadeen is
already in place, and so is the one after that.
So, are you sure we’re in for the long haul? Or is it time to
consider some form of détente? That could be most meaningfully
manifested by getting our troops out of the Muslim holy land, but
most markedly by a fair and unbiased policy to obtain genuine peace
in Palestine. Scrap the failed and so-called “Road Map to Peace”,
which was nothing more than the old, embedded and entrenched neo-con
and pro-Zionist interests that are solidly aligned for Israel, not
for the USA. Get honest, be fair, involve all parties, and something
creative might happen. Americans must be spiritual and recapture our
older values, or the next line is truth. “No one is more distant
than the Americans from spirituality and piety”, said Sayyib Qutb,
after living in the U.S., 1948-50. What would he say now! Look at
the vast cultural changes in just the last 50 years. Only a
concerted effort and change of heart will prove him wrong.
Another media
misrepresentation is to imply that Islamic warriors are ignorant
peasants, trained in Madrassah schools, which are just
“indoctrination centers”. While this is true in some cases, it again
turns a blind eye to the 21st century Islamic renaissance. Since
most Westerners know nothing of this, let’s take a quick look. In
the 1930’s, an era of political and cultural change movements of all
kinds, radical Islam began to chafe under the colonialist yoke. Many
of the writings and movements begun in those days are still with us,
but one need not look to writers long gone. Probably not one
Westerner in a thousand could name any of these men (no women), yet
they are household names in Islamic world communities.
AN UN-NATURAL ALLIANCE
When Islamic Jihad
assassinated Anwar Sadat in 1981, a small 54-page document was
found, entitled “The Neglected Duty.” This is apparently one of
those explosive little books that pop up at various times and places
when revolution and upheaval are in the air. While Islam, like
Christianity, teaches subservience to rulers, the anonymous author(s)
say it is the duty of good Muslims to overthrow a ruler who has
abandoned true Islam. It is this philosophy, and resulting actions,
that so frighten Islamic leaders who have sold out to the West – and
Israel - like the Saudi royals, or those who have become
inextricably and compromisingly entangled with the infidels, as are
the rulers of Egypt, Pakistan, etc.
This all goes back
to a medieval movement called Salafiyya, which gave rise to later
Wahabism. Not only did Salafis believe hypocritical Islamic rulers
should be overthrown, but that the Western, Christian world is
equivalent to the state of barbarism (Jahiliyya) that existed before
Muhammad manifested as the Prophet, and which he ordered Muslims to
overthrow and displace.
A major exponent of
this belief, and a spiritual godfather to Osama and many others, is
Sayyib Qutb, executed in Egypt in the mid-1960s. His best-known work
is Signposts On The Road. An influential theologian, Ibn
Taymiyya, who lived in Damascus in the 13th and 14th centuries, was
an inspiration for Qutb. Also circulating are pamphlets by the blind
sheik, Abdul Rahman, now imprisoned for the 1993 World Trade Center
bombing, and in 1996 A Declaration Of War Against America was
released by Osama bin Laden.
Did you know that 80 percent or more of U.S. mosques and Islamic
societies are controlled by Wahabist Imams, according to U.S. Sheik
Muhammad Hisham Kabbani at a State Department forum held in 1999? We
must assume similar conditions in Europe. More than a little of the
money given to both legitimate charities and fronts that fund
radical networks come from American Muslims. Funds are transferred
both legitimately and through the underground network of informal
Halawa Islamic money brokers, and over the Internet. This is not to
say that all American Muslims support such groups, but it does beg
the question of how many contribute alms - remember it is a
religious duty - to organizations that are largely unaccountable,
contributing to an ignorance-is-bliss mentality. The Saudi
government provides millions each year. Where does it all go? Given
our close relationship with the Saudis, does anyone in the chambers
of power seriously care?
Will policies toward
our unfriendly Saudi friends ever change? The royals don’t think so.
"I summon my blue-eyed slaves anytime it pleases me. I command the
Americans to send me their bravest soldiers to die for me. Anytime I
clap my hands a stupid genie called the American ambassador appears
to do my bidding. When the Americans die in my service their bodies
are frozen in metal boxes by the US Embassy and American airplanes
carry them away, as if they never existed. Truly, America is my
favorite slave." (King Fahd Bin Abdul-Aziz, 1993, in Jeddah.)
The Saudis never allowed us direct access to the alleged Khobar
Towers bombers, who were beheaded, making further interrogation a
bit difficult. Did they merely round up “the usual suspects”? This
same scenario was repeated with the June 2004 beheading of an
American contractor. It seems reasonable to say that if all Saudi
funding and moral support for extremist Islamic groups were cut off,
the problem would ease considerably.
This will likely
never happen because the corrupt royals know they would be signing
their own death warrants. Indeed, radical Islamists in the Kingdom
are already boldly striking out. The Saudi royals are not real
friends as the history of this ill contrived nation shows. First, it
is against the Koran to be friends to either Jews or Christians (Sura
5:51) and secondly, they are not going to suffer and die for the
corrupt and depraved West. But more importantly, if the regime is to
survive at all, it must not be perceived by their subjects as being
any worse than the willing lackeys they already are. Given this
mindset, meaningful change from the Saudis is unlikely. Given our
dependence on Saudi good will to keep the pipelines open and the
prices from skyrocketing, it is unlikely we will put any significant
pressure on them. Business as usual continues.
We must be even more
wary than ever of excessive energy dependence on, among others, this
unreliable and ill-intentioned “partnership”. They do not like us
nor approve of our culture. If they could withdraw without
consequences, and if they were able to raise the same money through
sales strictly to the Islamic world, they would do so, and turn
their vast resources against us.
However, they are
somewhat afraid. Osama predicted that if Western infidel troops came
to the holy Arabian lands, they would never leave - and they have
not. They are, of coarse, there to protect the oil, but is this
guaranteed always and forever to include bailing out the royals if
an Islamic revolution sweeps over them? Remember, we betrayed the
Shah. This is the root of their fears. After all, an American-led
blitzkrieg with naval and air power could seize the strategic
Arabian Peninsula without much trouble. And we could oust the
royals, renting local armies and political blocs as in Afghanistan.
But they are more afraid of their own fundamentalist Islamic people,
who, without the presence and threat of Western military action,
might overthrow the fat cat, fake, self-appointed royals and set up
a strict Islamic state.
The Saudi “petrol
pashas” exist in a rich, opulent - albeit increasingly uncomfortable
- nether world, drifting precariously between the worldly West and
the eternal asceticism of their desert Wahabi faith. Will this
Humpty Dumpty kingdom eventual fall from its precarious wall and
shatter? As we know, revolutionary events sometimes happen in the
blink of an eye.
Under the two Bush
regimes, even deep in the midst of “wartime”, the same winking
dealmakers play cozy bedfellow games, as they always have. The rich
Bushes, their Halliburton allies, the bloated Saudis and their
protégés, such as the bin Laden family, grow richer and richer while
the larger Islamic world is left in the economic backwaters. And all
the while, the American people/sheeple get stupider and stupider,
believing the lies and con games thrown at them 24 hours a day in
the media, the schools and the churches. No one among The Powers
That Be is really serious about alternative energy, and Europe is
even more vulnerable. For the foreseeable future, we seem solidly
and irrevocably wed to these odd - but perhaps not so inscrutable -
oriental bedfellows. The facts are there – if you want to see them.
Are there solutions?
Is it all too brief and simplistic to say that peace in the Middle
East is not that difficult to understand? It’s a two-part plan. Get
our troops out of Islamic countries, especially the Saudi holy
places, and then bring a fair, genuine and lasting peace to
Palestine. Hey, I said it was short and simple, not easy! But, the
badly needed foreign policy changes regarding either Palestine or
Saudi Arabia is unlikely to come from what some are calling a
pro-Zionist, Judeo-centric American government. Albeit unlikely,
freedom and fairness in Middle Eastern policies could, indeed, work
wonders. However, without major regime change in certain Western
governments, this is unlikely to happen.
# # #
Dr. Harrell Rhome,
an investigative writer and researcher, contributes to print and
on-line publications, including The Nationalist Times newspaper,
www.anu.org.
He is a Contributing Editor for The Barnes Review historical
journal,
www.barnesreview.org,
and also an English-language contributor on Tsunami Politico, a
multilingual on-line nationalist magazine out of Buenos Aires. See
articles on rather diverse topics at
www.tsunamipolitico.com/truth9.htm
Comments and
questions are welcome:
EagleRevisionist@aol.com.
|