September15, 2008:
Al Qaeda and the Saudi
government went head-to-head over the last five years, and the terrorists lost.
After three years of terrorist violence, and police operations, which left over
200 dead, for the last two years, al Qaeda was left unable to carry out any
attacks. The al Qaeda defeat was not a sure thing.
The fighting
between the government and al Qaeda was triggered by the U.S. invasion of Iraq
in 2003. Before that, the Saudi government and al Qaeda had what amounted to a
truce. Despite the events of September 11, 2001, Saudi Arabia did not tear the
country apart to root out all al Qaeda supporters. The problem was that there
were so many al Qaeda supporters in the country, and the majority of the
population supported al Qaeda and Islamic terrorism. On September 11, 2001
there were spontaneous pro-terrorist demonstrations all over the country.
But the Saudi
government, and a significant minority of the population, realized that Islamic
terrorism was a dead end, and were desperately seeking a way to stem the
growing popularity of the Islamic radicals. This has been a problem for
centuries in Arabia, but with the September 11, 2001 attacks, the anger in the
Western nations could get out of control, and bring down a catastrophe on Saudi
Arabia and the Arab world. This fear even percolated down to most of the Saudi Islamic radicals, and there
developed an informal truce, where the terrorists did not launch attacks in
Saudi Arabia, while the government did not press their search for al Qaeda
supporters, particularly if those pro-terrorism Saudis were discreet and not
too open in their activities. But this meant that al Qaeda fund raisers still
quietly circulated and took care of business. Pro-terrorist preachers continued
to exhort Moslems to support the violence.
Then the
U.S. went into Iraq. This was too much for the Islamic radicals in Saudi
Arabia. The truce was tossed aside and al Qaeda began carrying out attacks. But
the Islamic terrorists misjudged the resources of the government, and the depth
of public support for Islamic violence. The al Qaeda attacks turned public
opinion against the terrorists, and the police proved capable of using this
shift to obtain tips and chase down the bomber cells. But the government went
even further than that over the next three years. Needed personnel changes were
made in the government, especially in the security forces, replacing
"family favorites" with more competent officials. Because Saudi Arabia
is a monarchy, members of the large royal family are favored for key jobs. That
custom was suspended for a while.
The
government had other resources that the terrorists underestimated. Since Islam
is the state religion, the government closely supervises the vast clerical
bureaucracy. The king and his key aides spend a lot of time maintaining close
personal relationships with key clerics. When the king called on the clergy to
preach against Islamic terrorism, most complied. And those who did not were coerced
to comply, or retire. The clergy were also recognizing the shift in public
opinion. Basically, a lot of Saudis were OK with Islamic terrorism as long as
it happened somewhere else. But when the bombs began going off nearby,
attitudes changed.
Still, it
took three years for al Qaeda to be shut down in the kingdom, and the police
are still arresting hundreds of al Qaeda fans each year. The Saudi
counter-terror effort has also benefitted from the thousands of young Saudis
who went off to Iraq to join the fight, and get killed, or come back
disillusioned. Very few came back as "hardened terrorists." Despite
all this, Islamic terrorism remains popular among many young Saudis. They have
to operate covertly, otherwise they will get arrested and sent off to a
rehabilitation facility (endless hours of lectures from anti-terrorism clerics
and interminable discussions with counselors until there is convincing evidence
of a change in attitude.) The rehabilitation often works, but it fails
frequently enough to maintain the population of potential terrorists.
The police,
and particularly the intelligence specialists, have changed their methods
greatly in the last five years. The cops are quicker and more effective when
they have to carry out raids. The intel people have developed elaborate
informant networks, as well as Internet monitoring systems. Many Saudis fear
that these new capabilities will make it even more difficult to introduce
reforms in the kingdom. It's a lot harder now, to do anything the government
does not approve up. Meanwhile, two years of no terror attacks has allowed
pro-terrorism attitudes to return. Many Saudis still approve of Islamic
radicals killing "infidels" (non-Moslems), and don't care if al Qaeda
is doing it. What is unpopular is Islamic radicals attacking fellow Moslems. Al
Qaeda justifies this by asserting that any Moslem that does not agree with them
is actually not a Moslem (and is thus an infidel). Many Moslems disagree with
this logic, but not so much in Saudi Arabia. So while al Qaeda may be down in
Saudi Arabia, it is not out.