August 2, 2005

Mideast Power Switch

Standard: King's Death Is Chance For Change In Saudi Arabia

  • Play CBS Video Video Saudi King Fahd Dies

    The king had been relegated to the status of figurehead since suffering a stroke in 1995. His half-brother, Crown Prince Abdullah, takes over the throne, Mark Phillips reports.

  • Video King Fahd Buried

    CBS News RAW: Muslim leaders and Saudi princes bade farewell to King Fahd, saying prayers in a packed Riyadh mosque and burying one of the world's richest monarchs in an unmarked desert grave.

  • Sons of the late Saudi King Fahd carry his body, wrapped in a plain brown cloth on a wooden plank, into the Imam Turki bin Abdullah mosque in Riyadh for his pre-burial service. Photo

    Sons of the late Saudi King Fahd carry his body, wrapped in a plain brown cloth on a wooden plank, into the Imam Turki bin Abdullah mosque in Riyadh for his pre-burial service.  (AP Photo/Saudi TV)

(Weekly Standard)  This column was written by Stephen Schwartz.
King Fahd Bin Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia has died in Riyadh at 84, after 10 years in a coma. Crown Prince Abdullah, Fahd's half-brother and himself aged 81, has taken the throne.

We may expect a flood of praise from credulous Westerners for Fahd, hailing him as a friend of the United States and a moderate. In reality, the 10-year vegetative state in which Fahd survived was characterized by the opposite of either sincere friendship with the West or Islamic moderation.

It is true that Fahd's partner in power, defense minister Prince Sultan, enriched himself on American arms deals while reassuring the United States of his and his cohort's undying love for their Western protectors. But the reign of Fahd also saw the militant eruption of al Qaeda, the terrorist conspiracy linked to the Saudi monarchy and the Wahhabi cult that is its state religion.

Regarding domestic affairs, Ali al-Ahmed of the Washington-based Saudi Institute, a human-rights monitoring group, commented, "I will not miss Fahd, who was an oppressive dictator. I was imprisoned, my family members were killed, reformers were arrested, and the economy went in crisis under Fahd."

The death of Fahd was no surprise to Saudi-watchers. He had been hospitalized two months ago, and the recent replacement of the long-serving Saudi ambassador to Washington, Bandar bin Sultan (Fahd's nephew), by Prince Turki ul-Faisal was interpreted as an indicator of an imminent succession. Fahd, Sultan, and Bandar all came from the hard-line faction of the royal family known as the Sudairis, who have pursued the classic Saudi strategy of appeasing Western rulers with one hand while promoting Wahhabism with the other.

Turki ul-Faisal and his faction, as well as Crown Prince Abdullah, have been reputed to prefer a more moderate line, which would curb the power of Wahhabism. Abdullah himself has long been rumored to detest Wahhabism, which he considers dangerous for Islamic and Arab unity. In a surprising development, Crown Prince Abdullah appeared at the funeral of Syed Mohamed Alawi Al-Maliki, a non-Wahhabi cleric, late last year, praising al-Maliki for his devotion to Islam and to the welfare of the nation. Al-Maliki, a devotee of Sufism as well as a leading Sunni jurist, had previously suffered heavy repression under the Riyadh authorities.

Continued



By Stephen Schwartz
© Copyright 2005, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.

Video and Galleries from Opinion

  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs