Page added on January 15, 2008
In Saudi Arabia, Bush encounters a force more powerful than democracy.
…None of this would have happened had it not been for the petro-dollar. The Saudis would have stayed obscure Bedouins and Wahhabism little more than a cult. But because of their oil wealth, the Saudis were able to spread Wahhabism’s seed worldwide, making it far more mainstream than it would have been otherwise. As one Egyptian intellectual described it me, “It’s as if Jimmy Swaggart had come into hundreds of billions of dollars and taken over most of Christianity.”
Saudi Arabia was always the problem, and not just because 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were Saudi. It is because of the rise of petro-Islam in this troubled land. And as oil climbs in value, and research lags on alternative energy sources, this pathological family concern known as Saudi Arabia only grows. Even now no one is really doing anything about this critical problem. Bush was right when he said in his second inaugural address, “The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands.” If only he had taken himself seriously on this trip. Perhaps next time he ought to insist on seeing a few dissidents.
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