Mid-East Realitieswww.middleeast.org

The Coming Arab Crash

October 19, 2001

If the Saudi and other pro-western regimes are lined up against Bin Laden, they will fall

The popularity of the pro-west [Arab] leaders is so thin that any material move to hitch their fate to the anti- Bin Laden coalition will create an irreversible march towards disaster.

By Said Aburish*
[Thursday October 18, 2001 - The Guardian, London]: The west's most important friends in the Arab Middle East - Fahd of Saudi Arabia, Abdullah of Jordan, Mubarak of Egypt and the PLO's Yasser Arafat - are probably the world's most vulnerable political quartet. It is likely that endemic problems and the Islamic fundamentalist tide gripping their countries will bring an end to their regimes within the next five years. Though Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt and the Palestinian Authority have many problems in common, the likelihood is that Saudi Arabia will be the Middle East's next trouble spot among the pro-western countries. This is because King Fahd, 79, is ailing and his death is likely to produce several contenders for the kingship at a time of mounting economic problems and growing Islamic opposition.

For now, all might seem outwardly quiet in Saudi Arabia. But a closer look reveals serious problems. Since Fahd bin Abdel Aziz, fifth king of modern Saudi Arabia, succeeded to the throne in 1982, the economy has shrunk drastically. Even by historical standards corruption is completely out of control. With oil income down to $40bn, most of the country's people are suffering. In 1993, annual per capita income was $5,000, barely one third of what it was in the early 1980s. By some estimates, it has since fallen still further. And politically, all this has aided Islamic fundamentalism, which has grown at an alarming rate because it is the only popular movement which the government cannot outlaw. Widespread anti-western feeling means there is a danger of internal unrest and more violence against western interests.

Corruption and the suffering of the average Saudi provide a fertile background for the emergence of a popular Islamic opposition and the coming of age of a generation of educated Saudis who reject the absolute ways of the monarchy. Fahd and his family are identified with the west. The misdeeds of the royals, including allowing the stationing of American forces on holy Muslim soil, is doing the west more harm than good. These elements combined are driving more and more Saudis to join militant Islamic movements and reducing the monarchy's already small popular base.

A fight over the succession could produce an alliance between Muslim fundamentalists and the army against the royals - or some dissident royals forging an alliance with the army or security forces against their relations. This is a difficult time for the House of Saud to join the west against fellow Muslims: there is no direct threat to Saudi Arabia and Bin Laden's criminal actions appeal to many Muslims.

In Jordan, the situation is no better. Young and untried King Abdullah is in serious trouble. More than two thirds of his country's population is Palestinian and sympathise with any anti-American action because of America's support for Israel. King Abdullah's open support for action against Bin Laden and his militant supporters has done nothing but diminish his popularity. At present the opposition to Abdullah is unorganised and no groups are openly asking for his overthrow. But there is a strong and vocal Islamic fundamentalist opposition, which at one point controlled a quarter of the seats in the Jordanian parliament. As in Saudi Arabia, there are very few who favour supporting the west against fellow Muslims. Even those who do blame Abdullah for maintaining the peace treaty with Israel and attempting to please the west at the expense of local feeling.

Jordan's troubles have a regional component in them. Syria, traditionally anti-west, has considerable influence with the Jordanians. Jordanians approve of Syria's hard line against Israel and are full of admiration for the semi-socialist politics of their northern neighbour. Moreover, Saddam Hussein is extremely popular in Jordan. Seen as a modern day Saladin who stood up to the west, his popularity is widespread.

Overall, the anti-western feeling of the Jordanian people, be they secular or Islamist, is extremely strong. Any Jordanian help for the west, even if strictly diplomatic, is likely to backfire and exacerbate King Abdullah's chronic problems. Yet, Jordan's dependence upon America's economic aid has already forced its government to adopt this unpopular stance.

In Egypt, economic conditions are much worse than in Saudi Arabia and Jordan. The damage to tourism brought about by the September 11 disaster is likely to be severe. Tourism is the country's major industry and top foreign currency earner. Moreover, lower oil tanker traffic through the Suez canal will make the situation worse. This comes at a time when the fever of opposition to President Mubarak is catching.

Until recently, opposition to Mubarak's army-backed regime was confined to Islamic fundamentalism. This is no longer the case. The press reacted angrily to laws aimed at restricting its freedom. The bourgeoisie accused Mubarak of spending too much on foreign and regional affairs and not enough on Egypt's internal problems. Stories about corruption and nepotism abound. The growing impatience with Israel and the US has meant Mubarak's popularity is at an all time low. Egypt's economic decline - interrupted by the cancellation of billions of dollars of debt during the Gulf war in return for an anti-Saddam stand - has resurfaced as the country's major problem. Egypt owes more than $30bn, its population is increasing by more than a million a year and money sent back from workers in oil-producing countries issharply reduced as countries need fewer guest workers. And Egypt cannot expect a debt-cancellation bonus this time.

Meanwhile the calm surface concealing Islamist activity is deceptive - infiltration of the army is at an all time high. Because Mubarak has failed to create a popular base for his government, there are no political movements to oppose the Islamists. Joining the west in an alliance against fellow Muslims is so unacceptable to Egyptians that it could well lead to upheaval and Mubarak's eventual departure.

Arafat, the west's newest friend, confronts the same political and economic problems as Fahd, Abdullah and Mubarak. His Islamic opposition is armed and willing to wage a guerrilla war against both him and Israel. He has failed to create a political entity acceptable to his people. Because the Oslo peace accord and the subsidiary agreements which followed it have failed to satisfy Palestinian aspirations, the people of the occupied territories are turning to Hamas, Islamic Jihad and smaller Islamic groups. Totally opposed to the west and disparaging of Arafat's subservient behaviour, these groups have made no secret of their tacit approval of Bin Laden's actions.

With nothing to show after years of depending on the US to play honest broker, Arafat has never been this unpopular and his use of the secret police has already inflamed the Palestinians. Along with press censorship, it has eroded his credentials. He no longer speaks for the Palestinians and the Islamists are likely to add to his problems.

It is difficult to see what could save Arafat. The standard of living among Palestinians is at an all time low. Unemployment is over 30% and higher among university graduates. Arafat's inner circle has been tainted with corruption and nepotism. Given that the Sharon government is unlikely to be generous enough to save Arafat, the prospects for a Palestinian civil war are growing by the day. The unthinkable may come to pass, an Arafat-Israel alliance against Hamas and other Palestinian Islamic groups.

The threats to Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt and Arafat are real. What makes the present situation worse than ever before is America's determination to involve Arab leaders in an alliance against fellow Muslims. The popularity of the pro-west leaders is so thin that any material move to hitch their fate to the anti-Bin Laden coalition will create an irreversible march towards disaster.

* Said K Aburish, is a well-known and respected Arab political analysis living in London. He is author of The Rise, Corruption and Coming Fall of the House of Saud (Bloomsbury); and A Brutal Friendship, The West and the Arab Elite (St. Martin's Press).

ARAFAT'S DESPERATION

BAGHDAD, Oct 19 (AFP) - Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat called today in a letter to his Iraqi counterpart for a united Arab front to counter Israel's "barbaric war" against the Palestinians, a newspaper reported Friday.

"In these dangerous circumstances endured by our nation and in light of the Zionist aggression against our Palestinian people ... we need a solid and united Arab front to face this barbaric war launched by Israel," he said.

"These aggressions aim at Judaizing the Christian and Muslim holy sites (in Jerusalem) and destroying the aspirations of the Palestinian people," said Arafat's letter to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein published in Ath-Thawra.

The Iraqi president said at the end of September that the Palestinians had "honored" the Arabs by launching their intifada, or uprising against Israel, in September 2000.
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Source: http://www.middleeast.org/articles/2001/10/476.htm