Posted on 02/22/2006 6:14:51 AM PST by xzins
Saudis Bemoan Poor Image in U.S. By JIM KRANE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JIDDAH, Saudi Arabia (AP) -
On Sept. 11, 2001, Sonia Puopolo, an American Airlines flight attendant, lost her life when terrorists, four of them Saudis, hijacked her plane and slammed it into the World Trade Center in New York.
Last week, Puopolo's daughter Tita Puopolo spoke to a conference packed with Saudi business leaders and asked them to try and repair something else that died in the attacks: the U.S.-Saudi friendship.
"Many people ask me, 'Why would you visit Saudi Arabia after what happened to your mother?'" said Puopolo, speaking at the Jiddah Economic Forum in a black abaya and headscarf that slipped from her blond hair.
But Puopolo said her mother, a former ballet dancer who was 58 when she died, told her to "leave the world a better place" than she found it.
Puopolo's gesture of reconciliation was a rare occurrence for Saudis, who have watched with growing alarm as the kingdom's image in America has plummeted.
Although the two governments remain allies, the kingdom's elites say the country has been unfairly and relentlessly bashed by U.S. lawmakers, ordinary people and some media, who call the country a haven for religious extremists where oil revenues bankroll terrorists.
President Bush was seen by Saudis to be piling on last month, when he called in his State of the Union speech for an end to the United States' dependence on Mideast oil.
At the conference last week, many Saudis asked how it was possible that a country that, in their view, has adopted so much of the American way of life - especially American fast food, cars and education - could find itself so reviled.
"People here are a bit perplexed by what they're seeing in the United States. We know what it's like over there. We lived in the U.S.," said Omar Ziyad, chief operating officer of Gulf One Investment Bank. "The way we're being portrayed in the media over there - it's not the reality."
Many Americans, of course, see wide divisions between their society and Saudi Arabia's, which forbids the practice of any religion except Islam and demands strict segregation of the sexes, including barring women from driving, many jobs or even traveling without a male relative's permission.
Ziyad, speaking flawless English in his white dishdasha robe, also said there was "no factual basis" for allegations that Saudi oil money was funding terrorists.
U.S. Treasury Department investigators have in the past accused Saudi charities of funding al-Qaida. But they have said recently that the kingdom's efforts to crack down on such funding is succeeding.
Americans had good reason to be angry with Saudi Arabia, said Rachel Bronson of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.
Saudis' confrontation with terrorism in the country wasn't spurred by the Sept. 11 attacks that targeted the United States, but rather by the al-Qaida attacks inside the kingdom that started 18 months later, said Bronson.
Until the kingdom itself came under attack, the Saudi government was in denial about its role permitting the growth of extremism in the country, she said.
Now, she said, Saudi leaders accept some responsibility.
Ziyad and others argue that Saudi Arabia has spent much of its oil wealth to fight al-Qaida-linked extremists who have killed Westerners and Saudis in several attacks since 2003.
Saudis say they, too, are victims of al-Qaida, and believe they still get little credit for their crackdown.
"We are suffering from terrorism," said Sager Nadershah, 38, a manager at the National Commercial Bank in Jiddah. "A member of my family was killed in Saudi Arabia by a bomb. Why should we support terrorism?"
Speakers at the conference here say the Saudi image has withered, in part, because no one dares speak up on the kingdom's behalf. Some pointed a finger at what they called pro-Israel bias by Jewish writers or politicians in the United States.
Americans at the conference, like New Yorker magazine writer Larry Wright, said Saudis are particularly vulnerable to attack because they don't export their culture. Academic freedom is circumscribed in Saudi society, resulting in few books being written, and the country has no film industry because of a government ban.
"You can't control the story if you don't tell your story," Wright said. "As long as this is true, others will define who you are."
The Saudi image gets little help from Riyadh's behind-the-scenes approach to diplomacy, Ziyad acknowledged. "Our culture doesn't put a value on speaking out and being loud," Ziyad said.
The Saudi government did recently, however, embark on a public relations campaign in the United States and send its ambassador and others to spread the Saudi point of view among American civic groups.
The Saudis have a few unlikely allies: One is Gregory Payne, a communications professor at Yale and Tufts universities, who arranges student tours of Saudi Arabia. Student exchanges used to be a hallmark of the relationship between the two countries, but most were canceled after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Payne said his tours now have become oversubscribed by curious American students.
He screened a film documenting a visit by Harvard and Yale students who described their initial fears of visiting the kingdom, and the difference they felt after experiencing Saudi hospitality.
One desperate audience member at the conference asked Peter Robertson, vice chairman of Chevron Corp., why American oil executives weren't defending the kingdom.
"I'm not sure what Saudi Arabia needs in the United States is the oil companies standing up for it," Robertson said. "I'm not sure we'd help you that much."
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On the Net:
Jiddah Economic Forum: http://www.jef.org.sa
http://www.soniapuopolo.com
http://www.saudiamericanexchange.org
If the Saudis would only stick to their #2 export, then everything would be fine.
Problem is oil isn't there number one export.
THanks.
If they did that, they would all be beheaded within hours.
It's always the JOOZ fault!
FRmail me to be added or removed from this Judaic/pro-Israel/Russian Jewry ping list.
Warning! This is a high-volume ping list.
>The war is not over until the House of Saud falls.
to be replaced with what? the Taliban? This statement makes
no sense.
I just knew that had to be in there somewhere...
It's the Joooooz fault!!!
See #25.
It's like a Jewish woman wearing an SS auxiliary uniform to tour Nuremberg in 1950.
Its probably just that whole "paying people to kill us" thing that puts people off.
The Saudis are just being fiendly..
"...many Saudis asked how it was possible that a country that, in their view, has adopted so much of the American way of life..."
How about adopting ELECTIONS?
...except when Islam is offended.
Hint: When Saudis get as worked up over a homicide bomber splattering innocent Jewish children all over the street as they do over cartoons of Muhammad, they'll have much better relations with US citizens.
That would be a good start. Even better would be to allow the open practice of Christianity, including the possibility that some will convert to it.
Their rep would improve much if they would just get behind solving the palestinian/Israel problem. Israel is there to stay and they should get that through their thick heads already.
Just think if the Saudis were to come out and say enough already. We recognize Israel's right to exist. And as for the palestinians, this what you get take it or get nothing.
I cannot wait for the day we find a substitute for oil, so the Saudis choke on their reserves.
There are no Islamic radicals being funded by Saudi oil money! We will roast the stomachs of people spreading these stories in hell!
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