Indonesia where Asad Ali, the recently retired deputy
head of Indonesian intelligence and former deputy head of Nahdlatul Ulema (NU),
one of the world’s largest Islamic movements that prides itself on its anti-Wahhabism,
professes in the same breath his dislike of the Wahhabis and warns that Shiites
are one of the foremost domestic threats to Indonesian national security.
Shiites constitute 1.2 percent of the Indonesian population, including the
estimated 2 million Sunni converts over the last 40 years. A fluent Arabic
speaker who spent years in Saudi Arabia as the representative of Indonesian
intelligence, this intelligence and religious official is not instinctively
anti-Shiite, but sees Shiites as an Iranian fifth wheel. In other words, the
impact of Saudi funding and ultra-conservatism is such that even NU is forced
to adopt ultra-conservative language and concepts when it comes to perceptions
of the threat posed by Iran and Shiites.
This book project on Saudi public
diplomacy using primarily the kingdom’s financial muscle has had a long
gestation. It focuses on the impact of various policies of the kingdom on Muslim
communities and nations across the globe.
In doing so, I will concentrate on
Saudi government policy and actions as well as those of senior members of the
ruling Al Saud family rather than wealthy individuals who may or may not be
associated with them. As a result, theological and ideological differences
between various expressions of Muslim ultra-conservatism fall beyond the
parameters of what I am looking at.
My thinking on this has evolved in
the past year despite having covered the Saudi efforts for many years from very
different angles and multiple geographies. The evolution of my thinking is
reflected in the fact that were I looking today for a title for these remarks,
I’d call it Saudi export of ultra-conservatism rather than Wahhabism. The
reason is simple: Saudi export and global support for religiously driven groups
goes far beyond Wahhabism. It is not simply a product of the Faustian bargain
that the Al Sauds made with the Wahhabis. It is central to Saudi Arabia’s
efforts to position itself internationally and flex its muscles regionally as
well as on the international stage and has been crucial to the Al Sauds’
survival strategy for at least the last four decades.
There is a lot of talk about Saudi
funding of Wahhabism, yet in the mushrooming of Islamic ultra-conservatism in
the last half century, Wahhabis as a group form a minority in the
ultra-conservative Muslim world. The reason for this is fairly straightforward:
For the Saudi government, support of puritan, intolerant, non-pluralistic and discriminatory
forms of ultra-conservatism – primarily Wahhabism, Salafism in its various
stripes, and Deobandism in South Asia and the South Asian Diaspora – is about
soft power and countering Iran in what is for the Al Sauds an existential
battle, rather than religious proselytization. One other important aspect is
that South Asia has been an important contributor to ultra-conservative
thinking for more than a century. Another significant element is the fact that
while the Saudi campaign focuses predominantly on the Muslim world, it also at
times involved ties to other, non-Muslim ultra-conservative faith groups and
right-wing political groups.
Saudi Arabia’s focus on
ultra-conservatism rather than only Wahhabism or quietist forms of Salafism
allowed the kingdom to not simply rely on export of its specific interpretation
of Islam but also to capitalize on existing, long-standing similar worldviews,
particularly in South Asia. South Asia is also where the Saudi effort that
amounts to the single largest dedicated public diplomacy campaign in post-World
War Two history, bigger than anything that the Soviet Union or the United
States attempted, had its most devastating effect.
The campaign is an issue that I have
looked at since I first visited the kingdom in the mid-1970s, during numerous
subsequent visits, when I lived in Saudi Arabia in the wake of 9/11, and during
a 4.5-year court battle that I won in 2006 in the British House of Lords, a
landmark case that contributed to changes in English libel law.
The scope of the Saudi campaign goes
far beyond religious groups because it is about soft power and geopolitics and
not just proselytization. It involved the funding of construction of mosques
and cultural institutions; networks of schools, universities and book and media
outlets, and distribution of not only Wahhabi literature in multiple languages
but also of works of ultra-conservative scholars of other stripes. It also
involved forging close ties, particularly in Muslim majority countries, with
various branches of government, including militaries, intelligence agencies and
ministries of education, interior and religious affairs to ensure that
especially when it came to Iran as well as Muslim minority communities like the
Ahmadis and Shiites, Saudi Arabia’s worldview was well represented.
An example of this is Indonesia
where Asad Ali, the recently retired deputy head of Indonesian intelligence and
former deputy head of Nahdlatul Ulema (NU), one of the world’s largest Islamic
movements that prides itself on its anti-Wahhabism, professes in the same
breath his dislike of the Wahhabis and warns that Shiites are one of the
foremost domestic threats to Indonesian national security. Shiites constitute
1.2 percent of the Indonesian population, including the estimated 2 million
Sunni converts over the last 40 years. A fluent Arabic speaker who spent years
in Saudi Arabia as the representative of Indonesian intelligence, this
intelligence and religious official is not instinctively anti-Shiite, but sees
Shiites as an Iranian fifth wheel. In other words, the impact of Saudi funding
and ultra-conservatism is such that even NU is forced to adopt
ultra-conservative language and concepts when it comes to perceptions of the
threat posed by Iran and Shiites.
In waging its campaign, Saudi Arabia
was not alone. It benefitted from governments eager to benefit from Saudi
largesse and willing to use religion opportunistically to further their own
interests that cooperated with the kingdom wholeheartedly to the ultimate
detriment of their societies.
Much of Saudi funding in the last
half century, despite the more recent new assertiveness in the kingdom’s
foreign and defense policy, was directed at non-violent, ultra-conservative
groups and institutions as well as governments. It created environments that
did not breed violence in and of themselves but in given circumstances greater
militancy and radicalism. Pakistan is probably the one exception, the one where
a more direct comparison to Russian and Communist support of liberation
movements and insurgencies in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s is most relevant.
In many ways, the chicken is coming
home to roost. The structure of the Saudi funding campaign was such that the
Saudis ultimately unleashed a genie they did not and were not able to control,
that has since often turned against them, particularly with a host albeit not
all militant Islamist and jihadist groups, and that no longer can be put back
into the bottle.
The government, to bolster its
campaign created various institutions including the Muslim World League and its
multiple subsidiaries, Al Haramain, another charity that ultimately pos-9/11
was disbanded because of its militant links, and the likes of the Islamic
universities in Medina, Pakistan and Malaysia. In virtually all of these instances,
the Saudis were the funders. The executors were others often with agendas of
their own such as the Brotherhood with the Muslim World League or in the case
of Al Haramain, more militant Islamists, if not jihadists. Saudi oversight was
non-existent and the laissez-faire attitude started at the top. Saudis seldom
figure in the management or oversight of institutions they fund outside of the
kingdom, the International Islamic University of Islamabad being one of the
exceptions.
This lack of oversight was evident
in the National Commercial Bank (NCB) when it was Saudi Arabia’s largest
financial institution. NCB had a department of numbered accounts. These were
all accounts belonging to members of the ruling family. Only three people had
access to those accounts, one of them was the majority owner of the bank,
Khaled Bin Mahfouz. Bin Mahfouz would get a phone call from a senior member of
the family who would instruct him to transfer money to a specific country,
leaving it up to Bin Mahfouz where precisely that money would go.
In one instance, Bin Mahfouz was
instructed by Prince Sultan, the then Defence Minister, to wire US $5 million
to Bosnia Herzegovina. Sultan did not indicate the beneficiary. Bin Mahfouz
sent the money to a charity in Bosnia, that in the wake of 9/11 was raided by
US law enforcement and Bosnian security agents. The hard disks of the
foundation revealed the degree to which the institution was controlled by
jihadists.
At one point, the Saudis suspected
one of the foundation’s operatives of being a member of Egypt’s Islamic Jihad.
They sent someone to Sarajevo to investigate. The investigator confronted the
man saying: “We hear that you have these connections and if that is true we
need to part ways.” The man put his hand on his heart and denied the allegation.
As far as the Saudis were concerned the issue was settled until the man later
in court testimony described how easy it had been to fool the Saudis.
The impact and fallout of the Saudi
campaign is greater intolerance towards ethnic, religious and sexual minorities,
increased sectarianism and a pushback against traditional as well as modern
cultural expressions in countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Mali and Bosnia Herzegovina.
It creates a wasteland that Saadat
Hasan Manto, a Muslim journalist, Indian film screenwriter and South Asia’s
foremost author of short stories, envisioned as early as 1954 in an essay, ‘By
the Grace of Allah.’ Manto described a Pakistan in which everything – music and
art, literature and poetry – was censored. “There were clubs where people
gambled and drank. There were dance houses, cinema houses, art galleries and
God knows what other places full of sin … But now by the grace of God,
gentlemen, one neither sees a poet or a musician… Thank God we are now rid of these
satanic people. The people had been led astray. They were demanding their undue
rights. Under the aegis of an atheist flag they wanted to topple the
government. By the grace of God, not a single one of those people is amongst us
today. Thank goodness a million times that we are ruled by mullahs and we
present sweets to them every Thursday…. By the grace of God, our world is now
cleansed of this chaos. People eat, pray and sleep,” Manto wrote.
The fallout of Saudi- and
government-backed ultra-conservatism has been perhaps the most devastating in
Pakistan. There are a variety of reasons for this including,
the fact that Pakistan was founded
as a Muslim state rather than a state populated by a majority of Muslims,
the resulting longstanding intimate
relationship; between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia that long before the Afghan
jihad against the Soviets in the 1980s led to constitutional amendments against
the Ahmadis and every Pakistani applying for a passport being forced to
effectively sign an anti-Ahmadi oath;
the devastating impact of the jihad
itself on Pakistan; and
Pakistan’s use of militant Islamist
and jihadist groups to further its geopolitical objectives.
To be sure, the Saudi campaign
neatly aligned itself with the manipulation of religiously-inspired groups by
governments as well as the United States to counter left-wing, communist and
nationalist forces over the decades.
Pakistan had however from the Saudi
perspective additional significance. It borders on Iran and is home to the
world’s largest Shiite minority that accounts for roughly a quarter of
Pakistan’s 200 million people.
The result is that with the
exception today of Syria and Iraq and Bosnia in the 1990s, Pakistan is the only
country where Saudi funding strayed beyond support for non-violent groups. In
Pakistan, the Saudis were at the birth of violent groups that served their
geopolitical purposes, many of which are theoretically banned but continue to
operate openly with Saudi and government support, groups whose impact is felt
far and wide, including here in Britain as was evident with the recent murder
of an Ahmadi in Glasgow. These groups often have senior members resident in
Mecca for many years who raise funds and coordinate with branches of the Saudi
government.
These groups as well as Pakistani
officials have little hesitation in discussing Saudi Arabia’s role as I found
out recently during a month of lengthy interviews with leaders and various
activists of groups like Sipaha-e-Sabaha, Aalmi Majlis Tahaffuz
Khatm-e-Nubuwwat, the remnants of Lashkar-e-Janghvi whose senior leadership was
killed in a series of encounters with Pakistani security forces,
Lashkar-e-Taibe and Harakat al Mujahedeen as well as visits to their madrassas.
I want to conclude by suggesting
that the Saudi campaign may be coming to the end of its usefulness even if its
sectarian aspects remain crucial in the current environment. Nonetheless, I
would argue that the cost/benefit analysis from a Saudi government perspective
is beginning to shift. Not only because of the consequences of
ultra-conservatism having been woven into the fabric of Pakistani society and
government to a degree that would take at least a generation to reverse and
that threatens to destabilize the country and the region.
But also because identification of
Saudi-backed ultra-conservatism with jihadists like the Islamic State has made
the very ideology that legitimizes the rule of the Al Sauds a target witness
debates in countries like the Netherlands and France about the banning of
Salafism. Bans will obviously not solve the jihadist problem but as
Saudi-backed ultra-conservatism increasingly is in the crosshairs, efforts to
enhance Saudi soft power will increasingly be undermined.
Thank you
Saudi are our best friends and the CIA trained ISIS in Jordan. Israel fixes them up in their hospitals. This is all documented. We're the problem.
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