Ten
Ways Israel Is Just Like Saudi Arabia
by Medea Benjamin,
May 12, 2016
Antiwar.com
On the
surface, it would seem that Saudi Arabia and Israel would be the worst of
enemies and indeed, they have never had diplomatic relations. After all, the
Saudis have championed the cause of the Palestinians, who are oppressed by the
Israelis. Israelis say they are besieged by Muslim extremists, and many of
these extremists are motivated by the intolerant, Wahhabi ideology born and
bred in Saudi Arabia.
But beneath
the surface, these two old adversaries actually have a lot in common and have
become the strangest of bedfellows.
Rumors about the budding relationship have been circulating for
the past few years, with gossip that the two countries have been holding secret
meetings and exchanging intelligence. In 2015, former Saudi and Israeli
officials confirmed that
they had, indeed, held a series of high-level meetings to discuss shared
concerns such as the growing influence of Iran in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and
Lebanon, as well as Iran’s nuclear program. Shimon Shapira, an Israeli
representative who participated in secret meetings with the Saudis, said: “We discovered we have the same problems and same
challenges and some of the same answers.”
On May 5, Prince Turki bin Faisal, Saudi Arabia’s former intelligence
chief and one-time ambassador to Washington, and retired Israeli Major General
Yaakov Amidror, former national security advisor to Prime Minister Netanyahu,
spoke together in Washington DC at an event hosted by the policy wing of the
Israel lobby AIPAC. The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, The event, broadcast live online, showed that Saudi Arabia and Israel have
finally come out of the closet – together.
Here are
some traits Saudi Arabia and Israel have in common.
1. Both
oppress the non-dominant groups living in their borders. Israel oppresses
Palestinians, building settlements on their land and surrounding their villages
with apartheid walls and heavily-armed soldiers. Saudi Arabia has set up a
political and judicial system that oppresses everyone who is not Sunni (like
Shia and non-Muslims), as well as women and millions of migrant workers. Both
nations respond to political dissidents in similar ways, using excessive force,
arbitrary and indefinite detention, impunity, intimidation, and torture.
2. Israel
and Saudi Arabia have invaded neighboring lands, killing thousands of
civilians. Israel has been invading and bombing Gaza since 2008; in 2014 alone
the Israeli military killed 2,104 people, mostly civilians, destroyed 17,200
homes and left 475,000 living in emergency conditions. The Saudis have
interfered in the internal affairs of neighboring Yemen. In March 2015, they
launched a vicious bombing campaign, killing over 6,000 Yemenis, mostly
civilians, hitting markets, schools, hospitals, residences and wedding parties,
and displacing over 2.5 million people. Both use weapons that have been
internationally banned: Israel used white phosphorus in Gaza; Saudis used
cluster bombs in Yemen.
3. Religion
plays a key role in the politics of both nations. Israel is considered the
homeland for the Jewish people and the Basic Laws of Israel that serve in place
of a constitution define the country as a Jewish State. Jews get preferential
treatment, such as the right for Jews anywhere to immigrate to Israel and
automatically become citizens while Muslims face daily discrimination and are
treated as second-class citizens. In Saudi Arabia, Mecca is the holiest city
for Muslims and the Saudi kingdom considers itself the global center of Islam.
Only Muslims can become Saudi citizens and the non-Muslims are treated like
second-class citizens.
4. Both
export “products” that promote violence. Israel is a major exporter of weapons
and trains police in other countries (including the US) in repressive
techniques. The Saudis export the extremist Sunni ideology called Wahhabism all
over the Middle East and North Africa. Wahhabism is the ideological basis of Al
Qaeda and the Islamic State.
5. If the
enemy of my enemy is indeed my friend, than it is the hatred of Iran that is
bringing these adversaries together. Both view Iran as an existential threat
and fear Iran’s growing influence in the region. They both opposed the Iran
nuclear deal that was such a great win for diplomacy over war, and they are
determined to stop the United States from getting any closer to Iran.
6. Both
nations supported the military coup in Egypt, led by General Adbul Fattah el
Sisi, that overthrew a democratically elected government and led to a brutal
wave of repression that put 40,000 dissidents in prison. The Saudis have
stepped in with billions of dollars to fill the Sisi regime’s coffers, and
Egypt has collaborated with Israel in Israel’s continued siege on Gaza.
7. Israel and Saudi Arabia have been supporting extremist groups
in Syria like Al Nusra, which is an al-Qaeda affiliate, as they both are more
concerned with overthrowing Assad (who is aligned with Iran) than defeating the
Islamic State. The Saudis have sent weapons and money to Al Nusra; Israel has
been treating woundedAl Nusra fighters in Israeli hospitals and
then sending them back to battle the Syrian army. Israel also killed Lebanese-Iranian advisers who were assisting Assad’s government
in fighting against Al Nusra.
8. Both nations lock up thousands of political prisoners,
including minors. In February 2016,
Israel had 6,204 Palestinians in prison, 438 of them minors. Many of the minors
are imprisoned for throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. Saudis have beheaded
minors, and presently have three prisoners facing execution who were arrested
as juveniles for nonviolent protests.
9. They both
spend many millions of dollars to influence US policy. The Israeli government
is aligned with the U.S. lobby AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs
Committee), which is the most influential foreign policy lobby group in the
United States. The Saudis have just started their own version called SAPRAC
(Saudi American Public Relations Affairs Committee). For years they have been
buying influence by contracting influential public relations and law firms like
the Podesta Group, and donating to the Clinton Foundation, the Carter
Foundation and dozens of think tanks and Ivy League universities.
10. They are
both longtime allies of the United States. US administrations have supported
Israel since its founding in 1948; they have also supported an array of Saudi
kings since the founding of that nation in 1932. The US has helped guarantee
the security of both nations. US taxpayers give over $3 billion a year to
support the Israeli military; the US military guards the Persian Gulf for the
Saudi royalty, and Saudi Arabia is the number one purchaser of US weapons.
Some say it
is good for Israel and Saudi Arabia to bury the hatchet and find common ground.
But peace in the Middle East will not be furthered by Israeli-Saudi
collaboration. Israel has to make peace with the Palestinians; Saudi Arabia has
to come to terms with Iran. Otherwise, Saudi-Israeli collusion will only be a
fatal embrace that causes more heartbreak for the region.
Medea Benjamin is the
co-founder of the peace group CODEPINK and the human rights organization Global
Exchange. She is the author of a forthcoming book about Saudi Arabia entitled
“The Unjust Kingdom” and is the author of “Drone Warfare: Killing by Remote
Control.”
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