Wahhabis are known to lie through their teeth. Almost everybody knows that Saudi Arabia's royal family is human garbage. They don't even know how worthless they are. However, when the so-called civilized western world associates with these human garbage, one realizes how low the westerns have gone.
Saudi Arabia's superficial reforms won't mask ugliness of Wahhabism
RT : 30 Mar, 2018
As Saudi Arabia's crown prince tours the United States on what
has been dubbed a "charm offensive," the US media has gone into
propaganda overdrive, whitewashing Mohammad Bin Salman as a "reformer"
who is modernizing the kingdom.
As he meets with a roster of high-level politicians and A-list celebrities like Oprah,
front and center of his celebrated reforms has been his decision to
allow women to drive, and opening movie theaters in Saudi Arabia, which
were banned until now.
"With the ascent to power of young
Prince Mohammad bin Salman, the kingdom has seen an expansion in women's
rights including a decision to allow women to attend mixed public
sporting events and the right to drive cars from this summer,"said Reuters.
"His rise to power has been accompanied by a loosening of
restrictions on women's dress and an expansion of their role in the work
force,"reported the New York Times.
The Times went on to casually mention at the very end of the article that "Prince
Mohammad is expected to ascend to the throne after his father, King
Salman, dies. If that happens, given his young age, he could rule Saudi
Arabia for 50 years."
This positive press is no coincidence. Saudi Arabia has spent millions on a vast lobbying apparatus
that includes a network of think tanks and public relations firms to
push for a war on Iran, while combating negative press related to
Riyadh's autocratic government and its US-backed war on Yemen, which has
led to famine and a cholera outbreak of epic proportions that kills a Yemeni child every 10 minutes.
Most of the spin has focused on presenting bin Salman as heroic reformer, particularly when it comes to women's rights.
Putting lipstick on Wahhabism
Yes, soon women in Saudi Arabia will have the right to drive
– something they were banned from doing under the strict religious
edicts of Wahhabism. While it's certainly a good thing that Saudi Arabia
has chosen to enter the 21st century (sort of), the repeal of the
driving ban is largely superficial as it does nothing to address Saudi
Arabia's discriminatory male guardianship system,
which treats women as children. Under this system, women must seek
permission from a male relative to travel, apply for a passport, study
abroad, get married, and so on.
Even if Saudi Arabia were to give
equal rights to women tomorrow, it wouldn't change the destructive
impact the Saudis have had in the Middle East, the most important being
the intentional spreading of Wahhabism – a toxic and hateful religion
practiced in Saudi Arabia.
Wahhabism is a puritanical and ultra-conservative form of Sunni Islam that emerged in the 1700s and has been a major source of inspiration for Salafi jihadist groups like Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State, or ISIS.
It is difficult to explain why ISIS uses Saudi textbooks to indoctrinate children, why 15 of the 19 hijackers on 9/11 were Saudi, and why Saudi nationals make up the largest number of foreigners in ISIS, without an understanding of Wahhabi theology.
Many of the Islamophobic tropes peddled by anti-Muslim bigots are based on practices inherent in Wahhabism and carried out in Saudi Arabia and areas controlled by ISIS, such as stoning of adulterers, amputating the limbs of thieves, and death by beheading.
Spreading hate
The Middle East wasn't always plagued by regressive fundamentalism. Salafi jihadist groups like Al-Qaeda were not popular in the region and they still aren't. They have been violently imposed on people thanks in large part to the actions of Saudi Arabia in partnership with the US, which has a longstanding pattern of backing religious fundamentalists to further its geopolitical ambitions.
As far back as the 1950s, the CIA teamed up with the Muslim Brotherhood, which was then backed by Saudi Arabia, to weaken secular Arab nationalism and communism.
With US backing, Saudi Arabia has spent tens of billions of dollars spreading Wahhabism throughout Sunni Muslim communities around the world.
By building Wahhabi-influenced mosques, schools and Islamic centers,
Saudi Arabia seeks to remake Sunni Islam in its image. Areas of the
world where this tactic has paid off – Kosovo, Albania, and South Asia – have provided fertile recruiting pools for Salafi jihadist fighters. In South Asia, Saudi Arabia has also funded Deobandi
(an ultra-conservative version of Islam similar to Wahhabism) schools
and mosques, the kind from which the original generation of the Taliban
emerged.
The most significant chapter in the US-Islamist love
affair came in the 1980s, when the US armed the Mujahedeen to bleed the
Soviet Union in Afghanistan. It was the largest and longest-running covert operation in US history. People like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, an Osama bin Laden associate whose claim to fame was splashing acid in the faces of unveiled schoolgirls at Kabul University, were the top recipients of CIA funds.
After
the Soviet Union fell, some elements who fought alongside the
American-armed Mujahedeen groups evolved into Al-Qaeda. Not long after
that, Al-Qaeda pulled off an attack that killed 3,000 people in New York
City and its existence has been invoked to justify endless war and the
curtailing of civil liberties ever since. (Afghanistan, where the US is
still at war, remains the world's second-largest producer of refugees.)
The
US has played a similarly dirty game in Syria over the last six years,
knowingly arming rebel groups linked to Al-Qaeda to weaken the Syrian
government.
In spite of its role in spreading an ideology that
inspires terrorism, Saudi Arabia continues to receive special treatment
in Washington, first and foremost because it is an arm of US imperialism
in the Middle East, but also because its leaders use their vast oil
wealth buy friends in high places.
Buying hearts and minds
What I've always been most struck by is the genuine adoration American officials seem to have for their Saudi partners. In my experience, behind closed doors American officials despise working with the Israelis. They speak kindly of them publicly because they must, for geostrategic purposes and fear of ruining their careers by offending powerful pro-Israel lobby groups. But in the case of Saudi Arabia, American officials seem to genuinely like the Saudis.
This may have something to do with Saudi Arabia's approach to Western officials, which is to lavish them with expensive gifts. And it shows.
During
a private meeting at the State Department in September 2016, nearing
the end of the Obama administration, I expressed frustration about the
US allowing Saudi Arabia to spread
its toxic Wahhabi ideology, which serves as a primary inspiration for
Salafi jihadist groups like Al-Qaeda and ISIS, around the world. Before I
could finish, a senior-level official in the Department of Near Eastern
Affairs interrupted me to defend the Saudis.
"Saudi Arabia
isn't exporting terrorism, they're exporting religion and we can't get
into the business of policing religion. It's a free speech issue," said the official. "The Saudis are a very important geostrategic ally. And they are changing. They've worked very hard to reform their textbooks," the official added.
The official then brought up the jihadist textbooks printed by the US and disseminated
to Afghan school children in refugee camps in Pakistan in the 1980s.
The textbooks encouraged violence against infidels, communists and the
Soviet Union in the name of Islam and helped inculcate an entire
generation. These US-printed textbooks can still be found in Taliban-run
schools today.
The senior State Department official insisted that, in the end, printing them was "worth it" because "we got rid of the Soviet Union."
The
official's response was reminiscent of former US National Security
Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of the architects of the US policy to
arm the Afghan Mujahedeen. Asked in 1998 if he regretted supporting
Islamic fundamentalists, Brzezinski replied: "What
is most important to the history of the world? The Taliban or the
collapse of the Soviet empire? Some stirred-up Muslims or the liberation
of Central Europe and the end of the cold war?"
This sort of
thinking continues to dominate Washington's approach to the region with
ever more disastrous consequences. Giving women in Saudi Arabia the
right to drive, while a welcome development, won't change that.
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