|
|
October 1 , 2003
Bush's Saudi Connections....
and why this is a crucial issue in 2004
Saudi Arabia is the wellspring of radical Islam, its primary source
of sustenance and inspiration. Yet, since September 11, the Bush administration
has consistently ducked the truth about Riyadh's role in nurturing terrorism
-- and concealed the truth as well. Given the many business and personal
ties binding the president, his family and his associates to the House
of Saud, George W. Bush's see-no-evildoer attitude toward the Saudis
is a vulnerability just begging to be exploited by the Democrats. And
they need to do so if they hope to recapture the presidency next year.
Unfortunately, apart from Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who has been
blasting the administration for months over its pusillanimous Saudi policy,
the Democrats appear largely oblivious to the opportunity staring them
in the eye. True, several Democratic presidential hopefuls, notably Howard
Dean, have recently begun to include Saudi Arabia in their bill of
particulars against Bush, but the criticism has been episodic and rather
tepid.
The Democrats are instead pinning their hopes on the economy. They really
seem to think it's 1992 redux, and that now, as then, rising unemployment
will prove to be the Bush-beater and their ticket back to the White House.
However, with the amount of stimulus in the pipeline, the economy may
not be all that weak a year down the road. And even if it is, the Democrats
will not be able to send this Bush packing merely by howling about the
number of jobs lost on his watch.
September 11 changed American politics. Voters care about foreign policy
in a way that they haven't in a long while. The Democrats had little
to say about terrorism and national security during last year's midterm
elections, and they paid dearly at the polls as a result. Karl Rove plainly
intends to wrap the president's re-election bid in the black crape of
9-11, and unless the Democrats can convince the public that they can
be trusted with homeland defense, they are almost surely headed for defeat.
That's the bad news. The good news is that the Saudi issue gives them
a chance to demonstrate their mettle -- at Bush's expense.
The incubatory role played by Saudi Arabia and the Wahhabite sect in
fostering Islamic extremism is well documented. The desert kingdom leads
the way in financing and inciting Muslim holy warriors the world over.
How much of this is done with the complicity of the Saudi regime is unclear,
but what is clear is that the royal family is a kleptocracy that has
forestalled its own inevitable demise by redirecting domestic unrest
outward. September 11 was a plot hatched by an exiled Saudi dissident,
and 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis.
In the two years since 9-11, the Saudis have been an obstacle, not an
ally, in the battle against Islamic terrorism. Sure, they've muzzled
a few firebrand clerics and rounded up some lumpen Islamicists. But they've
shown little inclination to stanch the flow of money from so-called charity
organizations to al-Qaeda and other militant groups, and they've kept
cooperation with the FBI and the CIA to a minimum.
The royal family's many American mouthpieces assure us that the May
12 suicide bombing in Riyadh was a watershed -- that the Saudis now understand
how dangerous al-Qaeda is and will henceforth be tripping over themselves
to help us. That hope is delusional and illogical. The royal family is
interested only in self-preservation, and joining the fight against terrorism
in any meaningful way would be an act of suicide.
John O'Neill, the sadly prescient FBI counterterrorism expert who perished
in the World Trade Center attack, understood long before 9-11 that the
problem of "Islamofacism" was chiefly a Saudi one. "All
the answers," he said, "everything needed to dismantle Osama
bin Laden's organization, can be found in Saudi Arabia." But that's
only if you're willing to look, which Bush clearly is not. Indeed, he
has protected the Saudis at every juncture.
The pattern was established within hours of the atrocities in New York
and Washington, when Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi ambassador (long
known as Bandar Bush because of his coziness with the first family),
was permitted to spirit members of the bin Laden clan out of the United
States before the FBI could properly interview them. Since then, the
Department of Justice has impeded the lawsuit filed against the Saudi
regime by the September 11 families; the White House blacked out the
portions of a congressional report that detailed the Saudi role in 9-11,
and everyone from the president on down has steadfastly insisted that
the Saudis are paid-up members of the anti-terrorism posse.
Bush can spew all the frontier rhetoric he wishes, but in the case of
the Saudis, his inaction speaks louder. Why he would rather undermine
the war on terrorism than confront Riyadh is an interesting question,
and it doesn't require a particularly active imagination to wonder if
there is more here than just oil and a bad case of realpolitik.
The links between the House of Bush and the House of Saud are deep,
overlapping and notoriously opaque: the Saudi investment in the Carlyle
Group, the private equity firm whose rainmakers include George Bush Senior;
the Saudi bankrolling of Poppy's presidential library; the lucrative
contracts the Saudis doled out to Halliburton when Dick Cheney was at
the company's helm. The main law firm retained by the Saudis to defend
them against the 9-11 families is Baker Botts -- as in James Baker, the
Bush family consigliere. And, of course, there's oil, the black glue
connecting all these dots.
In short, the Bushies have profited mightily from a relationship with
a foreign government that can be indirectly, perhaps even directly, implicated
in the September 11 attacks and other terrorist incidents and that has
been the driving force behind a worldwide jihad.
The administration's coddling of the Saudis presents the Democrats with
an opening the size of Texas, and they need to seize it. Bush is never
more inarticulate and unconvincing than when on the defensive, and no
subject is going to set him on his heels faster, and keep him there longer,
than the Saudi question.
It wouldn't take much for the Democrats to turn this issue into a political
bonanza. Some sustained pot stirring by the presidential candidates and
various party organs would arouse the interest of the press. Soon enough,
all those media sleuths who so assiduously ransacked the lives of the
Clintons would be shamed into finally giving the Bush-Saudi nexus the
scrutiny it deserves, and in the flash of a news cycle, the president
would have a problem. Who knows where it all might lead? There are still
unanswered questions about the role Saudi money played in Bush Junior's
oil ventures; ditto the Iran-Contra scandal, which never quite caught
up with Bush Senior. The possibilities seem endless.
Playing the Saudi card would be a hardball move, setting the stage for
a bruising campaign. But Bush is no stranger to brass-knuckle tactics
(just ask John McCain), and Republicans have been sliming Democrats for
decades on issues of national security. A little retribution is long
overdue, and the Democratic faithful are clearly in a fighting mood;
using the Saudis as a cudgel to bash Bush would be a very effective way
of channeling all that rage.
Nor could anyone justly accuse the Democrats of demagoguery; the Saudi
issue is legitimate. The administration appears to have two sets of rules
in the war on terrorism: one for the Saudis and one for everyone else.
It's fair to ask why (plenty of conservatives are), to plant that question
in the minds of voters and to tell voters that things will be different
with a Democrat in the White House.
Things need to be different. It is imperative that the United States
end its dependence on Middle East oil and its dysfunctional relationship
with the Saudi regime, a medieval theocracy headed for the proverbial
dustbin, and rightly so. Robert Baer's new book, Sleeping With the Devil:
How Washington Sold Our Soul for Saudi Crude, meticulously details the
odiousness of the royal family, and it is a mark of enduring shame that
we ever crawled into bed with these characters.
Four more years of Bush will likely mean four more years of business
as usual -- four more years of ignoring Saudi Arabia's links to terrorism
and its egregious human-rights record. On the stump and on the airwaves,
the Democrats should be hammering home this point, giving the Saudis
the bashing they so richly deserve and promising the American public
a long-overdue reckoning with Riyadh.
Vilifying the Saudis would not just be good politics and good policy;
it would be good for the Democratic soul. In pledging to free the United
States from this pathetic entanglement, the Democrats would, in a sense,
be reclaiming Woodrow Wilson from the Republicans generally and the neocons
specifically. It used to be that the Democrats were the ethical standard-bearers
in American foreign policy, committed to ensuring that the United States
conducted itself in a manner consistent with its founding principles.
But they have ceded the high ground of late. Disinterest in global affairs
among the party's rank-and-file, coupled with the economic emphasis of
the Clinton years, has robbed the party of its traditional internationalist
voice.
Excoriating Bush over his handling of relations with the Saudis and
vowing to put abundant daylight between Washington and Riyadh would be
a way of regaining that voice -- of making the Democrats once again synonymous
with human-rights concerns and the quest for justice abroad. The Saudi
issue is a winning one on every count for the Democrats, and they need
to take advantage of it -- now.
- Michael Steinberger
source: The
American Prospect
|