December 3, 2007:
Saudi Arabia has arrested another
230 terrorists, and destroyed six terrorist cells. The raids also broke up
plans to attack oil installations. Earlier this year, there was another roundup
of 172 terrorism suspects. Shortly thereafter, tighter restrictions were put on
the purchase of explosives, or items, like nitrate based fertilizer, that could
be used to improvise explosives.
The most recent arrests included 18 foreigners, who
were involved in a plot to import eight missiles, for use in the attacks. Some
of the foreigners were from Yemen, which is also fighting hard against Islamic
terrorism.
Saudi Arabia began suffering al Qaeda attacks after
the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. Most Saudis promptly turned on the terrorists,
and most of these Islamic radicals fled the country. The Saudis have given
Interpol the names of these terrorists, and asked for help in tracking down
these men. The Saudis were not happy with the lack of cooperation from Syria
and Yemen in tracking down Islamic radicals. Yemen has since turned around, but
the Syrians, largely because of their alliance with Iran, have dragged their
feet. In the last four years, nearly two hundred people have died in Saudi
Arabia as a result of Islamic terrorism, and most Saudis are hostile to Islamic
radicalism because of this.
However, many Saudis blame the United States for
all this, seeing the invasion of Iraq as an opportunity for Islamic terrorists
to increase recruiting, and gain practical experience in carrying out attacks.
The surviving Saudi terrorists then come home, along with their deadly skills.
So far, the Saudis have been able to control the Islamic terrorists, and do not
see them as the principal threat. That would be the growing influence of Shia Iran
among the Shia Arabs of southern Iraq, and eastern Saudi Arabia (and the other
Arab Gulf states.) Saudi Arabia has always made it clear that it preferred
someone like Saddam Hussein (a Sunni Arab dictator) running Iraq, rather than a
democracy that would allow the Shia Arab majority to rule. This would have
provided a more reliable ally against
Iran, which is a nation of non-Arabs (Iranians are Indo-Europeans), who
practice a variant of mainstream Sunni Islam.
Saudis are also reluctant to admit that their
country is still a major source of support for Islamic terrorism. While the
Saudis have cracked down on Islamic radicals in schools and mosques, as well as
trying to prevent financial contributions to terrorist causes, much support for
Islamic radicals still comes from Saudi Arabia. The Saudis also downplay the
participation of young Saudis in terrorist operations in Iraq. The Saudis now
insist that earlier evidence, showing half the foreign terrorists in Iraq are
Saudis, was wrong. Saudi officials believe fewer than twenty percent of the
foreign terrorists in Iraq are Saudis. But recently captured al Qaeda records,
showing that 42 percent of recent foreign terrorists in Iraq were Saudi, has
give the anti-terrorist factions in the kingdom more clout. The Saudis have
recently shut down public preaching of some pro-terrorist clergy, and gone
after wealthy Saudis that were using their businesses to pass money on to
"Islamic charities" that were actually fronts for Islamic terrorist fund
raising.
Many Saudis still cannot believe that 79 percent of
the 911 terrorists were Saudis. The ruling family believes it, and is heavily
funding the Arab Reform Movement, which insists that the social, economic and
political problems in the Arab world are local, not the result of foreigners
interfering. This might appear to be an odd thing for the Saudi monarchy to get
behind. But the Saud family did not come to found the kingdom back in the
1920s, by ignoring reality. The Saudi royals may appear a bit medieval to
Westerners, but that's only because they must get along with some pretty
old-school groups. The Saudis believe that it's best to keep talking to your
enemies, even if you might have to turn around and kill them in the near
future.