http://english.pravda.ru/opinion/columnists/29-08-2012/122018-saudi_arabia_iran-0/

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The endless war: Saudi Arabia goes on the offensive against Iran
29.08.2012 
By Felix Imonti

Saudi Arabia has gone on the offensive against Iran to protect its interests. 
Their involvement in Syria is the first battle in what is going to be a long 
bloody conflict that will know no frontiers or limits.

Ongoing Disorders in the island kingdom of Bahrain since February of 2011 have 
set off alarm bells in Riyadh. The Saudis are convinced that Iran is directing 
the protests and fear that the problems will spill over the twenty-five 
kilometer long COSWAY into  oil rich Al-Qatif, where The bulk of the two 
million Shia in the kingdom are concentrated. So far, the Saudis have not had 
to deal with demonstrations a serious as those in Bahrain, but success in the 
island kingdom could encourage the protestors to become more violent.

Protecting the oil is the first concern of the government. Oil is the sole 
source of the national wealth and it is managed by the state owned Saudi Aramco 
Corporation.  The monopoly of political power by the members of the Saud family 
means that all of the wealth of the kingdom is their personal property. Saudi 
Arabia is a company country with the twenty-eight million citizens the 
responsibility of the Saud Family rulers.

The customary manner of dealing with a problem by the patriarchal regime is to 
bury it in money. King Abdullah announced at the height of the Arab Spring that 
he was increasing the national budget by 130 billion dollars to be spent over 
the coming five years. Government salaries and the minimum wage were raised. 
New housing and other benefits are to be provided. At the same time, he plans 
to expand the security forces by sixty thousand men.

While the Saudi king seeks to sooth the unrest among the general population by 
adding more government benefits, he will not grant any concessions to the eight 
percent of the population that is Shia. He takes seriously the warning by King 
Abdullah of Jordan back in 2004 of the danger of a Shia Crescent that would 
extend from the coast of Lebanon to Afghanistan. Hezbollah in Lebanon, Assad in 
Syria, and the Shia controlled government of Iraq form the links in the chain.

When the Arab Spring reached Syria, the leaders in Riyadh were given the weapon 
to break the chain. Appeals from tribal leaders under attack in Syria to 
kinsmen in the Gulf States for assistance could not be ignored.  The various 
blinks between the Gulf States in several Syrian tribes means that Saudi Arabia 
and its close ally Qatar have connections that include at least three million 
people out of the Syrian populations of twenty-three million. To show how deep 
the bonds go, the leader of the Nijris Tribe in Syria is married to a woman 
from the Saud Family.

It is no wonder that Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said in 
February that arming the Syrian rebels was an "excellent idea." He was 
supported by Qatari Prime Minister Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani who said, "We 
should do whatever necessary to help [the Syrian opposition], including giving 
them weapons to defend themselves." The intervention has the nature of a family 
and tribal issue that the prominent Saudi cleric Aidh al-Qarni has turned into 
a Sunni-Shia War by promoting Assad's death.

The Saudis and their Qatar and United Arab Emirate allies have pledged one 
hundred million dollars to pay wages to the fighters. Many of the officers of 
the Free Syrian Army are from tribes connected to the Gulf. In effect, the 
payment of wages is paying members of associated tribes.

Here, the United States is not a welcomed partner, except as a supplier of 
arms.  Saudi Arabia sees the role of the United States limited to being a wall 
of steel to protect the oil wealth of the Kingdom and the Gulf States from 
Iranian aggression. In February of 1945, President Roosevelt at a meeting in 
Egypt with Abdel Aziz bin Saud, the founder of modern Saudi Arabia, pledged to 
defend the kingdom in exchange for a steady flow of oil.

Since those long ago days when the U.S. was establishing Pax Americana, the 
Saudis have lost their trust in the wisdom or the reliability of American 
policy makers. The Saudis urged the U.S. not to invade Iraq in 2003 only to 
have them ignore Saudi interests in maintaining an Iraqi buffer zone against 
Iran. The Saudis had asked the U.S. not to leave a Shia dominated government in 
Baghdad that would threaten the Northern frontier of the Kingdom, only to have 
the last American soldiers depart in December 2011. With revolution sweeping 
across the Middle East, Washington abandoned President Mubarak of Egypt, Saudi 
Arabia's favorite non royal leader in the region. 

Worried by the possibility of Iranian sponsored insurrections among Shia in the 
Gulf States, the Saudis are asserting their power in the region while they have 
the advantage. For thirty years, they have been engaged in a proxy war with the 
Islamic Republic of Iran. Syria is to be the next battlefield, but here, there 
is a critical difference from what were minor skirmishes in Lebanon, Yemen, and 
elsewhere. The Saudis with the aid of Qatar, and the UAE is striking at the 
core interests of Tehran; and they have through their tribal networks the 
advantage over an isolated Islamic Republic.

Tribal and kinship relations are being augmented by the infusion of the Salafi 
vision of Islam that is growing in the Gulf States. Money from the Gulf States 
has gone into the development of religious centers to spread the fundamentalist 
belief. A critical part of the ideology is to be anti-Shia.

Salafism in Saudi Arabia is promulgated by the Wahhabi School of Islam. The 
Wahhabi movement began in the eighteenth century and promoted a return to the 
fundamentalism of the early followers of the Faith.

The Sauds incorporated the religious movement into their leadership of the 
tribes. When the modern state of Saudi Arabia was formed, they were granted 
control of the educational system and much else in the society in exchange for 
the endorsement of the authoritarian rule.  

When the Kingdom used its growing wealth in the 1970s to extend its interests 
far from the traditional territory in the battle against the atheistic Soviet 
Union, the Wahhabi clergy became missionaries in advancing their ideology 
through religious institutions to oppose the Soviets. More than two hundred 
thousand jihadists were sent into Afghanistan to fight the Soviet forces and 
succeeded in driving them out.

There is no longer a Soviet Union to confront. Today, the enemy is the Islamic 
Republic of Iran with what is described by the Wahhabis as a heretical form of 
Islam and its involvement in the Shia communities across the region. For 
thirteen centuries, the Shia have been kept under control. With the hand of 
Iran in the form of the Qud Force reaching into restless communities that 
number as many as one hundred and six million people in what is the heart of 
the Middle East, the Saudis see a desperate need to crush the foe before it has 
the means to pull down the privileged position of the Saud Family and the 
families of the other Gulf State rulers.

The war begins in Syria where we can expect that a successor government to 
Assad will be declared soon in the Saudi controlled tribal areas even before 
Assad is defeated. The territory is likely to adopt the more fundamentalist 
principals of the Salafists as it serves as a stepping stone to Iran Itself.  
It promises to be a bloody protracted war that will recognize no frontier and 
will know no limits by all of the participants.

Felix Imonti

Oilprice.com

The article originally appears on Oilprice.com


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