This is last year’s report and
the population remains quiet for one good reason. A monthly stipend.
It will be instantly awful the
day the music ends and the Saudis wake up to rapidly declining oil incomes and
the need to end subsidies. I do not
think that woeful day is particularly far off.
Cheap energy is on the brink of been readily available and that ends it
for the Saudis.
You can be certain that the beneficiaries
will take flight long before the end of the monthly stipend but not much. It is far too easy to imagine a convincing reenactment
of the French Revolution in his one particular country.
Besides, they have the money and
will quickly leave as did the Iranian middle class on the fall of the Shah.
The loss of the stipend will tear
civil society apart unless some way is put in place to make the economy
productive and that is a forlorn hope at best.
In Saudi Arabis, the decadent rule the austere
National Post Mar 18,
2011 – 7:30 AM ET | Last Updated: Mar 18, 2011 12:16 PM ET
By Geoffrey Clarfield
The Arab world is in turmoil. The presidents of Egypt and Tunisia have been driven out of
office by people power. This week in Yemen , anti-government tribesmen
killed four people, despite their President’s pledge to step down. In Libya , a brief
civil war is reaching its bloody conclusion. Even the youth of fundamentalist Gaza have taken to the
streets with clubs. Clearly, the Arab masses are unhappy with their rulers.
This unrest now threatens to destabilize the formerly sleepy monarchies
of the Persian Gulf , oil terminal to the
world. Last week, during one disturbance, Saudi security forces shot three
protesters from Islam’s Shiite branch — who are a minority within the Sunni
nation, but the dominant group in the region of the country’s eastern oil
fields. In neighbouring (Shiite-majority) Bahrain ,
the Sunni-led government has declared a state of emergency and called in Saudi
troops to protect them from Shia protesters and possible Iranian intervention
(as the Iranians have claimed that Bahrain
is a historical part of Iran ).
The West has done little so far, except stand by and watch. But the stakes are
huge: An upheaval in the Gulf could radically change the balance of world
power.
Despite the wealth and apparent stability of the Saudi Kingdom ,
it is actually quite a fragile state, with a decadent ruling class that has
become estranged from its austere religious ideology. As we shall see, its
rise and (possibly imminent) fall epitomize the waxing and waning of Muslim
states since Mohammed’s time.
Today, the population is over 25 million, with a sky-high birthrate.
The state generally has found the money to satisfy their expanding economic
expectations. When the money has run dry, there have been protests and riots.
Saudi Arabia has a medieval social structure, comprising four
classes of people. The royal family is on top: It includes all the descendants
of the original Saudi rulers and their tribal allies. The family includes an
estimated 5,000 to 7,000 princes. Their yearly allowance generally is over a
million dollars each. Many get much more.
Second comes a smaller group of businessmen dependant on the
patronage of the Royal Family, followed by government employees. At the
bottom are the majority of commoners who are supported through the welfare
state. Oil revenues are treated as the personal property of the Saudi royal
family and distributed downward, as in any medieval society.
How did Saudi Arabia
become such an anachronism? The country is home to Mecca
and Medina , the bases from which the Prophet
Muhammad preached the new religion of Islam to the tribes of the Arabian Peninsula 14 centuries ago. When his descendants
left Arabia to conquer neighbouring lands, Arabia
lapsed into a tribal backwater. The centre of Islamic life moved to other
cities, in modern-day Iraq , Syria , Egypt ,
Iran , Turkey and Central Asia .
In the 13th century, when the eastern Arab empire was conquered by
Turks and Mongols, there arose an Islamic theologian named Ibn Taymiyya who
preached a fundamentalist version of Islam that marked a radical departure from
the previous six centuries of Islamic jurisprudence. He argued that anyone
deviating from the original practices of the Prophet and his companions were
not really Muslims but heretics, even infidels, and they could become the
targets of holy war.
In the early 1700s, when a theology student named Mohammad Abdel Wahab
returned to Central Arabia after studying the
works of Taymiyya, he married into the family of a tribal leader named Muhammad
Ibn Saud. Their allied lineages of priests and warriors started a holy war in Arabia based on the radical theology of Ibn Taymiyya.
This centuries-old strategic alliance remains the backbone of Saudi power — and
gives the state its modern name and its distinctively austere and
backward-looking school
of Sunni Islam
(“Wahabism”).
In the 1800s, the Saudi-Wahabi alliance conquered Mecca
and Medina , but
were eventually defeated by the Ottomans and the Egyptians. However, in the
early 20th century, when the Ottoman Empire
collapsed, the alliance regrouped. Within a few years of the end of the First
World War, they had re-conquered the peninsula. Then they struck oil, and their
erstwhile backwater become a powerful petro-state.
It is a nation with split personality: On one hand, it makes billions
selling oil to the West. On the other, its princes have done more than anyone
else to export jihadist ideology and finance terrorists — including Osama bin Laden,
himself the son of a Saudi construction magnate.
Massive oil wealth earned by the Saudi royal family led its members to
adopt lavish Western lifestyles in the privacy of their homes and European
properties — double lives, in other words. (A former Swedish soldier once told
me that while visiting a Saudi ambassador’s residence on business, he was
ushered in to his office. The ambassador changed out of his Saudi costume, and
then gladly shared a double whiskey while wearing jeans and a T-shirt.) It is this
hypocrisy and moral rot that eventually can be expected to help bring down the
regime.
In fact, the corruption and downfall of Muslim leaders is an
established subject within Islamic literature — including that of Ibn Khaldun,
a 14th-century Arab social theorist who believed that Islamic states rise and
fall according to a predetermined cycle. Scholar Caroline Stone has summarized
his theory succinctly:
“Ibn Khaldun perceives history as a cycle in which rough nomadic
peoples with high degrees of internal bonding and little material culture to
lose, invade and take resources from sedentary and essentially urban-based
civilizations. These urban civilizations have high levels of wealth and
culture but are self indulgent and lack both ‘martial spirit’ and the
concomitant social solidarity. This is because those qualities have become
unnecessary for survival in an urban environment and also because it is also
almost impossible for the large number of different groups that compose a
multicultural city to attain the same level of solidarity as a tribe linked by
blood, shared custom and survival experiences. Thus the nomads conquer the
cities and go on to be seduced by the pleasures of civilization and in turn
lose their solidarity and come under attack by the next group of rough and
vigorous outsiders and the cycle beings again.”
This description of “rough nomadic peoples with high degrees of
internal bonding and little material culture to lose” arguably describes not
only the original Saudi-Wahabi dynasty, but also other more modern ascensions
to power in the Arab and Muslim worlds — including that of Saddam Hussein, the
PLO and even Muammar Gaddafi.
But the Saudis are the ultimate case study in the dissolution caused
by wealth, which is why I am dwelling on them in this article. Decades of
British scandal sheets have highlighted the behaviour of Saudi princes in Europe drinking alcohol, cheating on their polygamous
wives and gambling away their billions. This explains the repulsion of
self-styled ascetics such as bin Laden, who has assumed the spiritual mantle of
Abd al Wahab and declared war on the Saudi royal family.
In another, more positive, variant, the same spirit of reform can be
found in the democratic-minded protestors who brought down Hosni Mubarak in
Egypt, in large part motivated by revulsion at the manner by which he used
power to enrich himself, his family and his cronies.
But the Saudi top dogs won’t go down without a fight. The country’s
military contains a special, private “Praetorian Guard” called the Sang — a
sort of army within an army that answers directly to the royals. If push ever
comes to shove, it might well square off against the rest of the military.
Amidst the resulting mayhem, tribal, regional and religious militias may fight
it out as they did in Iraq
after the fall of Saddam.
There is no evidence that the Saudi royal family will democratize to
avoid this likely meltdown. As the late King Fahd once said, “A system based on
elections is not within our Islamic creed.” Ibn Khaldun could have predicted
this more than six centuries ago.
Corrupt Islamic regimes, he saw, did not bend. They broke.
The pampered and softened Saudi elites will be overwhelmed by new
puritans who come from within or outside of their own borders. That day may be
closer than we imagine.
Perhaps Barack Obama should buy his own copy of Ibn Khaldun’s works to
understand what will come next.
National Post
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