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America, we are coming for you!
Briefing Depicted Saudis as Enemies
Ultimatum Urged To Pentagon Board
By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, August 6, 2002; Page A01
A briefing given last month to a top Pentagon advisory board described Saudi
Arabia as an enemy of the United States, and recommended that U.S. officials
give it an ultimatum to stop backing terrorism or face seizure of its oil
fields and its financial assets invested in the United States.
"The Saudis are active at every level of the terror chain, from planners to
financiers, from cadre to foot-soldier, from ideologist to cheerleader,"
stated the explosive briefing. It was presented on July 10 to the Defense
Policy Board, a group of prominent intellectuals and former senior officials
that advises the Pentagon on defense policy.
"Saudi Arabia supports our enemies and attacks our allies," said the
briefing prepared by Laurent Murawiec, a Rand Corp. analyst. A talking point
attached to the last of 24 briefing slides went even further, describing
Saudi Arabia as "the kernel of evil, the prime mover, the most dangerous
opponent" in the Middle East.
The briefing did not represent the views of the board or official government
policy, and in fact runs counter to the present stance of the U.S.
government that Saudi Arabia is a major ally in the region. Yet it also
represents a point of view that has growing currency within the Bush
administration -- especially on the staff of Vice President Cheney and in
the Pentagon's civilian leadership -- and among neoconservative writers and
thinkers closely allied with administration policymakers.
One administration official said opinion about Saudi Arabia is changing
rapidly within the U.S. government. "People used to rationalize Saudi
behavior," he said. "You don't hear that anymore. There's no doubt that
people are recognizing reality and recognizing that Saudi Arabia is a
problem."
The decision to bring the anti-Saudi analysis before the Defense Policy
Board also appears tied to the growing debate over whether to launch a U.S.
military attack to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq. The chairman of
the board is former Pentagon official Richard N. Perle, one of the most
prominent advocates in Washington of just such an invasion. The briefing
argued that removing Hussein would spur change in Saudi Arabia -- which, it
maintained, is the larger problem because of its role in financing and
supporting radical Islamic movements.
Perle did not return calls to comment. A Rand spokesman said Murawiec, a
former adviser to the French Ministry of Defense who now analyzes
international security affairs for Rand, would not be available to comment.
"Neither the presentations nor the Defense Policy Board members' comments
reflect the official views of the Department of Defense," Pentagon
spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said in a written statement issued last night.
"Saudi Arabia is a long-standing friend and ally of the United States. The
Saudis cooperate fully in the global war on terrorism and have the
Department's and the Administration's deep appreciation."
Murawiec said in his briefing that the United States should demand that
Riyadh stop funding fundamentalist Islamic outlets around the world, stop
all anti-U.S. and anti-Israeli statements in the country, and "prosecute or
isolate those involved in the terror chain, including in the Saudi
intelligence services."
If the Saudis refused to comply, the briefing continued, Saudi oil fields
and overseas financial assets should be "targeted," although exactly how was
not specified.
The report concludes by linking regime change in Iraq to altering Saudi
behavior. This view, popular among some neoconservative thinkers, is that
once a U.S. invasion has removed Hussein from power, a friendly successor
regime would become a major exporter of oil to the West. That oil would
diminish U.S. dependence on Saudi energy exports, and so -- in this view --
permit the U.S. government finally to confront the House of Saud for
supporting terrorism.
"The road to the entire Middle East goes through Baghdad," said the
administration official, who is hawkish on Iraq. "Once you have a democratic
regime in Iraq, like the ones we helped establish in Germany and Japan after
World War II, there are a lot of possibilities."
Of the two dozen people who attended the Defense Policy Board meeting, only
one, former secretary of state Henry A. Kissinger, spoke up to object to the
anti-Saudi conclusions of the briefing, according to sources who were there.
Some members of the board clearly agreed with Kissinger's dismissal of the
briefing and others did not.
One source summarized Kissinger's remarks as, "The Saudis are pro-American,
they have to operate in a difficult region, and ultimately we can manage
them."
Kissinger declined to comment on the meeting. He said his consulting
business does not advise the Saudi government and has no clients that do
large amounts of business in Saudi Arabia.
"I don't consider Saudi Arabia to be a strategic adversary of the United
States," Kissinger said. "They are doing some things I don't approve of, but
I don't consider them a strategic adversary."
Other members of the board include former vice president Dan Quayle; former
defense secretaries James Schlesinger and Harold Brown; former House
speakers Newt Gingrich and Thomas Foley; and several retired senior military
officers, including two former vice chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
retired admirals David Jeremiah and William Owens.
Asked for reaction, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi ambassador to the
United States, said he did not take the briefing seriously. "I think that it
is a misguided effort that is shallow, and not honest about the facts," he
said. "Repeating lies will never make them facts."
"I think this view defies reality," added Adel al-Jubeir, a foreign policy
adviser to Saudi leader Crown Prince Abdullah ibn Abdulaziz. "The two
countries have been friends and allies for over 60 years. Their relationship
has seen the coming and breaking of many storms in the region, and if
anything it goes from strength to strength."
In the 1980s, the United States and Saudi Arabia played major roles in
supporting the Afghan resistance to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan,
pouring billions of dollars into procuring weapons and other logistical
support for the mujaheddin.
At the end of the decade, the relationship became even closer when the U.S.
military stationed a half-million troops on Saudi territory to repel
Hussein's invasions of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Several thousand U.S. troops
have remained on Saudi soil, mainly to run air operations in the region.
Their presence has been cited by Osama bin Laden as a major reason for his
attacks on the United States.
The anti-Saudi views expressed in the briefing appear especially popular
among neoconservative foreign policy thinkers, which is a relatively small
but influential group within the Bush administration.
"I think it is a mistake to consider Saudi Arabia a friendly country," said
Kenneth Adelman, a former aide to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who
is a member of the Defense Policy Board but didn't attend the July 10
meeting. He said the view that Saudi Arabia is an adversary of the United
States "is certainly a more prevalent view that it was a year ago."
In recent weeks, two neoconservative magazines have run articles similar in
tone to the Pentagon briefing. The July 15 issue of the Weekly Standard,
which is edited by William Kristol, a former chief of staff to Quayle,
predicted "The Coming Saudi Showdown." The current issue of Commentary,
which is published by the American Jewish Committee, contains an article
titled, "Our Enemies, the Saudis."
"More and more people are making parts of this argument, and a few all of
it," said Eliot Cohen, a Johns Hopkins University expert on military
strategy. "Saudi Arabia used to have lots of apologists in this country. . .
. Now there are very few, and most of those with substantial economic
interests or long-standing ties there."
Cohen, a member of the Defense Policy Board, declined to discuss its
deliberations. But he did say that he views Saudi Arabia more as a problem
than an enemy. "The deal that they cut with fundamentalism is most
definitely a threat, [so] I would say that Saudi Arabia is a huge problem
for us," he said.
But that view is far from dominant in the U.S. government, others said. "The
drums are beginning to beat on Saudi Arabia," said Robert Oakley, a former
U.S. ambassador to Pakistan who consults frequently with the U.S. military.
He said the best approach isn't to confront Saudi Arabia but to support its
reform efforts. "Our best hope is change through reform, and that can only
come from within," he said.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company
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