Special Dispatch - Saudi Arabia
August 15, 2001
No. 256

Saudi Ambassador to London:  "Bush Has Complexes..."
'The Entire World Fears a Future in the Shadow of Dubya'

In a recent column, the Saudi ambassador in London and
occasional columnist for the London Arabic daily Al-Hayat,
Ghazi Al-Qusaibi, advised Arab regimes not to rule out the
possibility of waging war against Israel.  On August 9,
2001 he published a scathing attack on US President George
W. Bush.  Following are excerpts from the article(1):

"When George Bush Jr. came to the White House, after a long
period of ambiguity and confusion, it was clear from the
outset that his behavior stems from two enormous complexes.
His first complex is [an urge to] manage matters completely
differently than his predecessor, the popular and beloved
Bill Clinton.  His second complex is [an urge to] prove to
himself, to his family, and to the world, that he makes his
own decisions, and that his being the son of a former US
president has no effect whatsoever on his political
conduct."

"From the very beginning, it was obvious that little George
wanted to come out from under the shadow of big George (who
should have chosen a different name for his son)."

"The truth is that his complex was evident even before he
entered the White House, when he insisted on introducing
himself as George W., or 'Dubya,' as he pronounced it, so
that no one would confuse him with his father. His complex
became deeper when he needed the help of the old faces of
his father's administration. If we take into account the
Freudian problems of which no family is free � one example
of many is Dubya's past alcoholism and his father's
disappointment with him; another is the problem of the
widespread belief that his younger brother is smarter and
more talented than him � we will understand that his desire
to prove that he has come of age is uncontrollable."

"No one has the right to deal with someone else's personal
complexes as long as they are limited to his personal
affairs. But in this case, we are dealing with the most
powerful country on earth, and with a man whose decisions,
positive or negative, affect the entire world."

"If only the matter ended with these two complexes!  [But
in addition,] the new president has arrived from the depths
of domestic American politics with no experience whatsoever
in foreign affairs. It has been said that during his term
as governor of Texas he went abroad only twice � once to
South America and once to Israel. Anyone familiar with
[Midwest] America, remote from both liberal coasts, knows
that there is a '[Midwest] American' ideology that leaves
its mark on almost every politician from the depths of the
US."

"This ideology is based on simple principles which some may
view as naive.  It includes a solid belief that the entire
world needs the US, but the US does not need the world.
There is tremendous caution regarding 'entanglements' in
adventurism abroad. And there is ignorance about what is
happening in many regions in the world � first and foremost
in the Middle East."    

"Thus, the man who now carries the White House is a man who
carries these fundamental principles with him. [He is] a
man lacking in foreign affairs experience; a man who wants
to be different from his predecessor even when his
predecessor was right; a man who does not want to carry on
with the same policy as his father, even when that policy
was wise.  In a few months, this man has succeeded in
creating so many enemies for the US that he deserves a
prize that should be called: 'The Prize for Non-Stop
Turning of Friends into Enemies.'"

"Dubya began his term with talk of a new military program
that no American commentator calls anything less than
idiotic. This program - nicknamed 'Son of Star Wars' - is
based on the extremely bizarre idea that the source of
menace to the US is not the USSR, which no longer exists,
but a group of rogue states - Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. 
One of these states, if not all, has the capability to
develop nuclear warhead missiles that can reach the US. The
only way of dealing with this menace is to establish a
defense shield of missiles that will destroy every rogue
missile reaching American territory."  

"No one, not even Dubya himself, knows what the final cost
of this project will be - although no one doubts that it
will run in the hundreds of billions of dollars."

"With a single decision - one with no logical or strategic
basis - Dubya managed to push Russia into the arms of
China, and North Korea into the arms of Russia; to arouse a
great deal of fear in Europe; to strip of all [their]
content disarmament agreements over which every American
president since Eisenhower had toiled long and hard; and to
usher in a new era of a terrible arms race."

"This decision alone is enough to make the world - the
entire world - fear a future in the shadow of Dubya. But
little George didn't stop there. Without consulting anyone,
he decided to have the US bow out of the international
treaty [i.e., Kyoto protocol] against environmental
pollution, which had taken many long years to draft. With
the same ease, he decided that the US would exit the
negotiations on biological weapons disarmament.  He decided
to simply let loose the war criminal [Ariel] Sharon, who
immediately embarked upon daily acts of massacres.  As an
afterthought, Dubya added an implied threat to OPEC
countries not to dare to intervene in oil affairs."

"Doubtless the new president's advisors are telling him
now, as he holidays at his Texas ranch, that there is no
reason to worry, no reason to spoil his vacation
atmosphere. Russia won't rebel against the American 'Santa
Claus.'  China needs huge American investments, and never
forgets it. Britain is ready to follow Dubya into each and
every bear den in Texas. And Europe will quickly realize
that it cannot resist any American initiative." 

"The Palestinian intifada will be ended next month, by the
blood-letter, and negotiations will begin - negotiations
that will not finish before the end of Dubya's second term.
There is nothing to fear from Arab reactions:  from the
moderate states - starting with Egypt - which cannot forgo
American financial aid, to the Gulf states, which cannot
renounce American military aid in the face of the 'Monster
of Baghdad,' none will do more than publish harmless
declarations..."

"But Dubya's advisors, headed by [National Security Advisor
Condoleezza Rice] - whose legs the war criminal Sharon
lusted after, thus proving that he is just as good at
vulgarity as he is at genocide - would do well to offer
their president, in addition to this rosy report, also a
brief including the 'worst case scenario.'"     
        
"In this regard, let me suggest to those advisors that they
remind Dubya of a few facts. Regarding Russia, it would be
a clear mistake to confuse [former] President Yeltsin - who
barely roused himself from vodka fumes before succumbing to
the influence of drug fumes - with his successor [Putin],
the young wrestler and graduate of the Soviet KGB
school."            

"With regard to the Middle East, the American president's
advisors should remind him of a solid historical fact that
many prefer to ignore:  every military coup in the Arab
nation, without exception, has been directly linked to
Palestine. Syria's upheavals were the result of the defeat
of 1948, and had no connection to domestic reform. The
Egyptian coup of 1952 was carried out by a small group of
officers formed only after the war with Israel, and its
primary goal was to wash away the shame clinging to the
Egyptian military. The Egyptian-Syrian unity, a real
revolution in Arab politics, would not have come about had
it not been for the Palestine problem. The Iraqi revolution
of 1958 was less against the monarchy than against Nuri
al-Sa'id, who was considered Israel's ally.  The logic of
the Arab revolutions has been that all Arab capitals must
rebel so that the free revolutionaries could all invade
Palestine. The Imam Khomeini aroused the public by means of
his continued attacks on Israel, no less than his attacks
on the Shah. Even the cursed invasion of Kuwait was not
free of attempts at 'Palestinization'...  Finally, the
American president's advisors should remind him that the
credit for leaving the 'Monster of Baghdad' in charge of
the regime must go primarily to American policy, which
rains billions of dollars on Tel-Aviv while it bombards
Baghdad with missiles."             

"If any of the American president's advisors is an Arabic
speaker, he might summarize the position of the Arab world,
from one end to the other, with its moderates and
extremists, with a verse from the famous poem that,
disregarded, led to the fall of the Ummayad empire:  'I see
[beneath] the ashes a spark of flame. And I fear that the
blaze will take hold.'"

"We hope and pray that Dubya will return from his vacation
relaxed and rejuvenated, and that in addition to
self-satisfaction, he also has a modicum of apprehension.
For in international politics, nothing is more frightening
than a man who fears nothing." 

Endnote:

(1) Al-Hayat (London-Beirut), August 9, 2001.

************************
The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) is an
independent, non-profit organization that translates and
analyzes the media of the Middle East.  Copies of articles
and documents cited, as well as background information, are
available on request.

The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI)
P.O. Box 27837, Washington, DC 20038-7837
Phone: (202) 955-9070
Fax: (202) 955-9077
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.memri.org


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