http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\10\30\story_30-10-2011_pg3_4
Sunday, October 30, 2011
COMMENT: Al Saud: a despotic monarchy in decay —Lal Khan

 
During the 1950s and the 1960s when there was the rise of anti-imperialist Arab 
nationalism and left-wing currents were growing, the Saudi regime played a 
counter-revolutionary role 

At the funeral of Crown Prince Sultan we had the spectacle not only of the 
Saudi monarchs but most of the rulers who had flown in to attend the ceremony. 
Fear of the mass revolt that has been raging in the region was palpable at the 
gathering. The hesitation of the sick octogenarian King Abdullah and his 
camarilla in nominating the new crown prince reveals the lack of confidence of 
these rulers facing the revolt of the masses, and also the deep fissures and 
ferocious conflicts within the Al Saud family made up of more than 10,000 
princes and princelings that are involved in the massive plunder of the 
country’s wealth.
The unflinching support of the US and western Imperialism for this despotic 
regime is a blatant refutation of their charade of ‘democracy’ and ‘human 
rights’. The criminal silence on the Saudi invasion and brutalities in Bahrain 
by the so-called ‘international community’ and the ‘free’ media shows the 
extreme of their hypocrisy and treachery. But after all, this pseudo-state and 
the monarchy were fabricated by these very imperialist powers to impose their 
hegemony in the region and to plunder its oil wealth. In fact, they carved out 
different states, most of them artificial, at the beginning of the last 
century. The implanted rulers used these rentier states for their own loot and 
extravagant lavish lifestyles.


In a plea of subservience sent to C A Kemball, the British resident in the Gulf 
from 1900-1904, the founder of the present ruling dynasty in Saudi Arabia, Ibn 
Saud, said, “May the eyes of the British government be fixed upon us and may we 
be considered as your protégés.” After the Treaty of Darea in 1915 with the 
British representative Sir Percy Cox, Ibn Saud’s realm was fundamentally 
reduced to the status of a British protectorate. After the capture of Hijaz in 
1925, the monarchy was formally established with imperialist backing.


The Americans arrived in the 1930s. The businessman-philanthropist Charles 
Crane and oilman Lloyd Hamilton arrived with the ‘American invasion’ of Arabia 
in 1933. British business followed British colonialism, but with the Americans 
it was the oil companies. The American diplomats and politicians sought to 
initially accommodate local rulers to make money. Roosevelt did not smoke 
during his 1945 meeting with Ibn Saud, but the imperious Churchill would not 
refrain from doing so.


President Truman seconded the guarantee of the security of the royal family’s 
reign, originally proclaimed by President Roosevelt. This stipulation has 
prevailed till today. The US ceded the conduct of relations with Saudi Arabia 
to the oil companies. In 1947-48 the American government prevailed on ARAMCO 
(Arab American Oil Company) to expand its Government Relations Department and 
transferred crypto-diplomats and CIA agents to staff it. A tax break known as 
‘The Golden Gimmick’ was awarded to the oil conglomerate. The US military base 
at the oil city of Dhahran was expanded. Washington-based senior CIA officials 
went to the Kingdom in the 1950s and advised the King on everything from the 
use of fly killers to hiring public relations firm Hill & Knowlton. The process 
is more advanced now.


Ibn Saud and his sons who have been the kings slavishly carried out the 
dictates of imperialism in the Middle East and the so-called Muslim countries. 
During the 1950s and the 1960s when there was the rise of anti-imperialist Arab 
nationalism and left-wing currents were growing, the Saudi regime played a 
counter-revolutionary role. The Saudis opposed Nasser in Egypt and the 
left-wing governments that came to power in Syria, Iraq, Yemen and elsewhere. 
They used their money to prop up Wahabi Islam, which was the precursor of 
modern fundamentalism, from the Middle East to South East Asia to the South 
Asian subcontinent. They poured money into the Palestine Liberation 
Organisation (PLO) to curb the left-wing within the Palestinian movement.


This monarchy had tried to develop its own imperialist hegemony throughout the 
region. Said K Aburish writes in his book, The House of Saud, “Saudi actions in 
the Muslim world followed the same line. Pakistan was supported so long as it 
followed a Saudi line and did not try to act independently and lead. Pakistani 
president Ali Bhutto’s refusal to follow this formula saw Saudi Arabia provide 
his army with financial help and promises of more to overthrow him.”


Domestically it is perhaps the most brutal regime on the planet. Beheadings, 
amputation of limbs and summary executions without trial are being carried out 
to this day. The elimination of opponents can take hideous forms. King Feisal 
ordered 29 air force officers suspected of conspiracy to be ejected from planes 
without parachutes. The King of Saudi Arabia in the order of importance he 
assigns to his functions, is head of the Al Saud family, the prime minister and 
chief executive of the central government, the supreme religious Imam, 
custodian of the Holy Ka’aba, commander-in-chief of the armed forces and the 
chief justice. There is no real executive, legislative or judicial authority to 
question his decisions.


These monarchs are also notorious for their hedonistic lifestyles. According to 
the German magazine Stern, King Fahd lost around $ 20 million in one evening in 
Monte Carlo. Apart from numerous palaces on the ground, his flying Palace, a 
Boeing 747, was fitted with a sauna, a lift, chandeliers and gold bathroom 
fixtures, and his $ 50 million yacht was equally lavish. According to an Arab 
journalist the 42 sons of Ibn Saud had more than 1,400 wives.


The conditions of the masses are appalling, especially for the millions of 
immigrant workers from Pakistan and other Asian countries. The vicious Saudi 
nouveau riche labour suppliers trade mercilessly in human commodities. They are 
then retailed to others. Workers cannot change employment without release from 
the employer who imports them. The retailers charge them up to 50 percent of 
their salary just for visas. Sleeping in discarded shipping containers, they 
have no social security coverage. The sick expatriate worker is at the mercy of 
his employer. Women are oppressed in pre-medieval fashion. Like slave owners 
these bosses are callous to the nth degree.


The first political revolts came from the oil workers of ARAMCO in Dhahran in 
the 1950s. There have been innumerable strikes and protests unreported by the 
media ever since. Most were crushed in blood. Now growth and construction are 
rapidly declining. Military expenditure and spending on the luxury of the House 
of Saud are a drag on the economy. There have been budget deficits for years in 
spite of high oil revenues. Unemployment is rising fast.


Few predicted the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia. A revolutionary explosion 
in Saudi Arabia would smash the despotic monarchy and the capitalist system it 
is there to preserve. On this basis, the imperialist stranglehold on this 
region will be broken.

The writer is the editor of Asian Marxist Review and International Secretary of 
Pakistan Trade Union Defence Campaign. He can be reached at [email protected]


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