"His Islamist sympathies with Turkey and the Muslim Brotherhood (Ikhwan) were unmistakable. Forgotten or little known in the West is that during the Cold War the Saudis sponsored, funded, and nurtured the Muslim Brotherhood as a weapon against the progressive, secular camp led by Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser. Ikhwan controlled the Saudi educational system raising Saudi students to admire the Brotherhood. But Sep. 11 changed the Saudi calculus: the rulers wanted a scapegoat for their role in sponsoring Islamist fanaticism and the Ikhwan was the perfect target. That made Khashoggi suspect too.
Hints Against Him
Recent articles
in the Saudi press hinted that the regime might move against him. He had
lost his patrons but the notion that Khashoggi was about to launch an
Arab opposition party was not credible. The real crime was that
Khashoggi was backed alone by Ikhwan supporters, namely the Qatari regime and the Turkish government.
A writer in Okaz, a daily in Jeddah, accused
him of meeting with the Emir of Qatar at the Four Seasons Hotel in New
York and of having ties to “regional and international intelligence
services.” If true it may have sealed his fate. Qatar is now the number
one enemy of the Saudi regime—arguably worse than Iran.
Khashoggi
was treated as a defector and one isn’t allowed to defect from the Saudi
Establishment. The last senior defections were back in 1962, when
Prince Talal and Prince Badr joined Nasser’s Arab nationalist movement
in Egypt.
Khashoggi had to be punished in a way that would send shivers down the spine of other would-be defectors."
"As’ad
AbuKhalil is a Lebanese-American professor of political science at
California State University, Stanislaus. He is the author of the
Historical Dictionary of Lebanon (1998), Bin Laden, Islam and America’s
New “War on Terrorism” (2002), and The Battle for Saudi Arabia (2004).
He also runs the popular blog The Angry Arab News Service."
...........
No comments:
Post a Comment