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Saudi
plan to send Muslim troops to support US in Iraq confirms their irredeemable illegitimacy
The
fact that the Saudi monarchy is among the most corrupt regimes in the
Muslim world, and remains in power only because they serve the interests
of the US rather
than because of any legitimacy among Muslims, has long been generally
accepted throughout the Ummah.
It is only the enemies of Islam and ignorant Western commentators
who imagine that they have any meaningful standing or influence because
of their Islamic pretensions and the fact that they control the territory in which the Haramain are located. Nonetheless,
the US in particular seems to think that Saudi support or involvement can
bestow some degree of credibility on American plans; hence the pressure
on the Saudis to sponsor a plan by which troops from Muslim countries
would be sent to Iraq to support US troops there.
The
plan, described as a Saudi initiative, was announced by US and Iraqi officials
on July 29, after meetings between US secretary
of state Colin Powell and Iraqi prime minister
Iyad Allawi in Jeddah. Although Saudi officials tried to play the idea
down, saying the plans were at an early stage, they were heavily talked
up by US officials, eager to create the impression that their occupation
of Iraq was
endorsed by other Arab states. It
quickly became clear, however, that the plans were not practical. For one thing, the Saudis were only sponsoring
the plan, but the troops were expected to come from opther countries, including Egypt, Yemen, Pakistan
and Bangladesh, none of which was particularly anxious to get involved. There were also differences about what the troops’
role would be. While US officials
insisted that they would operate under US command, doing jobs that US
troops did not like to do, such as patrolling Iraqi cities where they
were both highly visible and vulnerable to attack, Saudi officials --
trying to put the proposal in as positive a light as possible for Muslims
-- suggested the plan would be the first step of a US withdrawal.
Little wonder, then, that the plan came
to nothing; perhaps few slightly positive Iraq-related headlines was all
that the Bush regime really expected from it.
For
Muslims, however, the fact that the Saudi government is so beholden to
the US -- and perhaps to the Bush regime in particular, given the close
business and other links between the Bush family and Aal-e
Saud -- that they can be forced into such posturing
is yet another sign of their irredeemable illegitimacy.
Cosmetic
political reforms, by which the Saudis and their US allies hope to make the kingdom appear more ‘democratic’, cannot change
this. The Saudi authorities announced
on August 9 details of the municipal elections to be held later this year,
the first in the country since the 1970s.
The elections will be held in three phases, beginning after Eid al-Fitr and continuing after
Eid al-Adha. The polls, which will elect half the members
of municipal councils -- the other half will continue to be appointed
by the government -- will hardly dent the Saudis’ total hold on real power;
the phenomenon of al-democratiyya al-shakliyya
-- ‘facade democracy’, behind which the powers of authoritarian regimes
remain undiminished, is well established and widely recognised in the
Arab world.
Muslims
around the world know, and the Saudis know that they know, that only the
removal of the regime will truly liberate the Haramain
and the heartland of Islam.
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