Refleksi : Apakah  NKRI akan mengirim sukarelawan  untuk membela raja apabila 
seandainya terjadi demonstrasi besar-besaran di Arab Saudia seperti apa  yang 
terjadi di Tunisia, Mesir dan, Bahrain? 

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MB19Ak01.html

Feb 19, 2011 

Next stop: The House of Saud
By Pepe Escobar 


Here's a crash course on how one of "our" - monarchic - dictators treats his 
own people during the great 2011 Arab revolt. 

The king of Bahrain, Hamad al-Khalifa, has blood on his hands after his 
mercenary security forces - Pakistani, Indian, Syrian and Jordanian - with no 
previous warning, attacked sleeping, peaceful protesters at 3 am on Thursday at 
the Pearl roundabout, the tiny Gulf country's version of Cairo's Tahrir Square. 

In the brutal crackdown, at least five people have been killed - including a 
young child - and 2,000 injured, some by gunshots, two of these in critical 
condition. Riot police targeted doctors and medics and prevented ambulances and 
blood donors from reaching the Pearl roundabout. A doctor at Salmaniya hospital 
told al-Jazeera there was a refrigerated truck outside the hospital, which he 
fears the army has used to remove more dead bodies. 

The resourceful Maryama Alkawaka of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights was 
there; "It was very violent, [the police] were not showing any mercy." An 
avalanche of tweets from Bahrainis denounced an "Israeli-style" sneak attack 
and shoot-to-kill approach. And many have denounced al-Jazeera for not having 
kept a live satellite link as it had in Cairo, and for implying that this was 
only a Shi'ite protest. The Pearl roundabout is now surrounded by nearly 100 
tanks at every entrance and exit. Downtown Manama has been turned into a ghost 
city. 

The Shi'ite opposition described it as "real terrorism". Reem Khalifa, senor 
editor at the opposition newspaper al-Wasat, said, "The regime forces just came 
and massacred a crowd of people as they slept." They had been "chanting 
together, shouting 'neither Sunni nor Shi'ite but Bahraini'. We have not seen 
this before. And this is what annoyed the government agents the most - they are 
always trying to divide the people ... And now the regime is spreading lies 
about me and other journalists who are trying to say what is happening." 

Khalifa had the courage to stand up and harshly confront Bahrain's foreign 
minister at a press conference, totally debunking his version of events (he 
called the deaths "regrettable" but insisted protesters were sectarian, and 
armed). 

The Gulf Cooperation Council - the scandalously wealthy club of local kingdoms 
which holds over US$1 trillion stashed away in foreign reserves and almost 50% 
of the world's proven oil reserves still underground - issued, what else, a 
bland statement supporting Bahrain. 

Kill them, but with a velvet glove 
Is Washington remotely outraged by all this? The record speaks for itself. 
United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed "deep concern", 
according to the State Department, and "urged restraint". The Pentagon said 
Bahrain was "an important partner"; later Secretary of Defense Robert Gates 
called Bahrain's Crown Prince Salman - certainly to make sure everything was 
dandy with the US Navy's 5th Fleet and its 2,250 personnel housed in an 
isolated compound inside 24 hectares in the center of Manama. 

Even the New York Times was forced to acknowledge that US President Barack 
Obama had "yet to issue the blunt public criticism of Bahrain's rulers that he 
eventually leveled against President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt - or that he has 
repeatedly aimed at the mullahs in Iran". But he can't; after all, Bahrain's 
I-shot-my-people king is another usual suspect, a "pillar of the American 
security architecture in the Middle East", and "a staunch ally of Washington in 
its showdown with Iran's Shi'ite theocracy". 

Under these strategic circumstances, it's hard to dismiss Lebanese political 
scientist and blogger at the Angry Arab website As'ad AbuKhalil, when he 
stresses, "The US had to plot the repression of Bahrain to appease Saudi Arabia 
and other Arab tyrants who were mad at Obama for not defending Mubarak to the 
every end." 

Incidentally, Saudi Arabia's prince Talal Bin Abdulaziz - father of the 
billionaire darling of the West prince Al Waleed bin Talal - told the BBC 
there's a danger the protests in Bahrain could spill into Saudi Arabia. 

It's never enough to stress Bahrain is all about Iran vs Saudi Arabia (see All 
about the Pearl roundabout Asia Times Online, February 18). 

The US naval base in Manama translates as a cop on the (Persian Gulf) beat. 
Moreover, 15% of Saudi Arabia's population is Shi'ite, living in the eastern 
provinces, where the oil is. That makes it very hard for Bahrainis - Shi'ite 
and even Sunni - to threaten the ruling, Sunni, al-Khalifa dynasty, as the 
House of Saud will immediately rush in with all sorts of logistical and 
military support. 

Moreover, Saudi Arabia has huge leverage over Bahrain's oil, which comes from 
the shared Abu Saafa oilfield, explored by Saudi Aramco and shared with a 
Bahraini refiner. 

Bahrain is far from swimming in oil. According to International Monetary Fund 
figures, in 2010 Saudi Arabia produced roughly 8.5 million barrels of oil a 
day; the United Arab Emirates 2.4 million barrels; Kuwait 2.3 million barrels; 
and Bahrain only 200,000 barrels. 

According to Moody's, to balance its budget the Bahrain government needs oil at 
$80 a barrel, "one of the highest budgetary 'break-even' points in the region", 
says the Financial Times. As a Barclays Capital report puts it with typical 
corporate contortionism, "The announcements of street protests, concessions by 
the government at the cost of a deteriorating fiscal position and simmering 
political tensions have created a backdrop that has clearly caused investors to 
view Bahrain with increased caution." 

So if protesters really want to hit the al-Khalifa where it hurts, they should 
aim at the nexus oil business/financial sector. It will be an extraordinary 
uphill struggle against a nasty police state crammed with mercenaries - 
especially Jordanian military consultants (the "master torturer" of the 
Mukhabarat is a Jordanian) and now also counting on "help" from Saudi tanks and 
troops. Moreover, the riot police and special forces don't speak the local 
dialect, and in the case of Balochis from Pakistan, don't even speak Arabic. 

Prospects are bleak. The inside dope in Manama is of a split within the royal 
family. The dreaded, sectarian Khalid bin Ahmed, responsible for the policy of 
naturalizing "imported" Sunnis to alter the demographic balance and dilute even 
more the voting rights of the indigenous Shi'ite population, would be on one 
side; and the king plus Crown Prince Salman (Gates' pal) would be on the other. 
The king may be losing control. And in this case Saudi Arabia would be lobbying 
for bin Ahmed to take over and get one of the king's sons, Nasir Bin Hamed to 
be crown prince. This does make sense if seen under the angle of the brutal 
crackdown. 

Time to cross the bridge 
What Bahrain's Shi'ites can certainly accomplish is to inspire Shi'ites in 
Saudi Arabia in terms of a long fight for greater social, economic and 
religious equality. It's wishful thinking to bet on the House of Saud reforming 
itself - not while enjoying extraordinary oil wealth and maintaining a vast 
repression apparatus, more than enough to buy or intimidate any form of 
dissent. 

Yet there may be reasons to dream of Saudi Arabia following the winds of new 
Egypt. The average age of the House of Saud trio of ruling princes is 83. Of 
the country's indigenous population of 18.5 million, 47% is under 18. A 
medieval conception of Islam, as well as overwhelming corruption, is under 
increasing vigilance on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. 

The middle class is shrinking. 40% of the population actually lives under the 
seal of poverty, has access to virtually no education, and is in fact 
unemployable (90% of all employees are "imported" Sunnis). Even crossing the 
causeway to Manama is enough to give people ideas. 

Once again, talk about an extraordinary uphill struggle - in a country with no 
political parties - or labor unions, or student organizations; with any sort of 
protests and strikes outlawed; and with members of the shura council appointed 
by the king. 

The Arab News newspaper anyway has already warned that those winds of freedom 
from northern Africa may hit Saudi Arabia. And it may all revolve around youth 
unemployment, at an unsustainable 40%. There's no question; the great 2011 Arab 
revolt will only fulfill its historic mission when it shakes the foundations of 
the House of Saud. Young Saudi Sunnis and Shi'ites, you have nothing to lose 
but your fear. 

Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan: How the Globalized World is 
Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble Books, 2007) and Red Zone Blues: a snapshot 
of Baghdad during the surge. His new book, just out, is Obama does Globalistan 
(Nimble Books, 2009). 

He may be reached at [email protected]

(Copyright 2011 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please 
contact us about sales, syndication and republishing )

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



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