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Apply the Bush Doctrine to Saudi Arabia
CAPITALISM MAGAZINE.COM ^ | October 7, 2002 | Tym Parsons

Posted on 10/10/2002 2:29:14 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

Recent intelligence reports indicate that our desultory efforts abroad so far—and our fortress “homeland defense” mentality—will fail to prevent further horrendous attacks on the US. We’re losing because Bush has defaulted on the “Bush Doctrine”—the idea that you’re either with us, or for the terrorists. And he has defaulted most egregiously in continuing to treat the Saudis as allies, when they’re really against us.

Saudi Arabia is indisputably terrorism’s biggest bankroller, even if Iran is its largest sponsor overall. The Saudis persistently stonewall efforts to cut off terrorist funding, and they’ll never reliably change in that regard— too many powerful Saudis are fanatical terrorist sympathizers, due to their Wahabite fundamentalism. They actively hate us and everything that Western civilization stands for—e.g. separation of religion and state. Why do we go on tolerating the Saudis, even as it results in our own destruction? The answer is that multiculturalism is fundamentally to blame.

Multiculturalism says that all cultures are equally valid, no matter how anti-life and irrational they may be. In this view, Middle Eastern culture, say, is just as good as American culture. In other words, a culture characterized by:

Fatalistic mindless submission to deity—death-worshipping martyrs—fantastical conspiracy-mongering and ignorance—“honor” killings of young women—the burqa—centuries of tyranny, torture, bribery, teeming slums, choking pollution, and disease—

Is supposedly equal to one with:

Science—the Bill of Rights—sanitation—a middle-class that takes computers, cell phones, and MRIs for granted —Costco and Target—millions of people desperately trying to get in—and millions more around the globe clamoring for Marilyn Monroe and “The Titanic.”

We ought to conclude that multiculturalism is dishonest on its face. Even so, “multiculturalism” has always been implicit in our policy toward the Saudis—even before it became a buzzword.

In the beginning, we let the Saudis help themselves to oilfields created by Western capitalists from unused desert. Oil in the ground is useless; the capitalists did all of the work—prospecting, pumping, and refining the oil—that made it an indispensable value to the modern industrial world. Under the Western notion of private property, that means the oilfields belong to them, not the House of Saud.

The Saudis are parasites, having produced nothing themselves. They’re just thugs running a neighborhood protection racket. But that’s a part of their tribalistic culture; multiculturalists therefore insist that we have to respect their “right” to the oilfields.

Over the ensuing decades, Saudis have used their illicit oil wealth to fund steadily escalating terrorist attacks on US targets. And we have done nothing beyond giving them timorous reproofs, mindful that they have a foot on the world’s oil jugular—courtesy our acquiescence to their scam.

And now they’re holding our critically-needed campaign against Iraq hostage to the creation of a Palestinian state. Such a move threatens the existence of our ally Israel—the only outpost of Western civilization in the region. The Palestinians—like their Saudi patrons—are mired in a culture of tyranny and corruption. Many if not most Palestinians want to drive Israel into the sea, and giving them their own state would only further that aim. The Saudis would just love that.

Add to all of this that the Saudis have contributed heavily to Pakistani terrorism against our ally India—which in turn could trigger a horrendous nuclear holocaust in South Asia—and the prescription is clear: We have to take over Saudi Arabia.

The multiculturalists will naturally be horrified at this violation of Saudi “sovereignty,” which supposedly we must respect at all costs. But the Saudis are pointing a gun at us—which we gave them. We have a right to defend ourselves by taking that gun away from them.

Accordingly we are justified in seizing whatever we need from the Saudis in order to control the country, as well as bring the war to Iraq and Iran with all due dispatch. This includes seizing state-of-the-art Prince Sultan airbase that we so “generously” built and staffed for them, which use they have denied us for any campaign in the region. We should also:

- Seize the oilfields and restore them to the Western companies that made them possible, or let someone else responsibly operate them, under US commercial and military protection.
- Freeze Saudi assets and cut the umbilical to terrorist religious schools, mosques, “charities,” and Palestinian suicide bombers.
- Force the Saudis to hand over known key terrorist enablers in their country, for trial in US military courts.
- End the Saudis’ relentless pro-terrorist propaganda campaign, which spreads lies about the West and Israel across the Middle East.

All of this may necessitate deposing the despotic House of Saud altogether, confiscating its ill-gotten wealth, and instituting a government more conducive to individual rights—just as the US successfully did in Germany and Japan post-WWII. That policy includes such Western “biases” as emancipating women, separating religion and state—and for similar reasons—separating state and economy.

We’re fighting for our lives. We can win against the terrorists and their enablers, if there is a huge public outcry for Bush to consistently act on his professed principles. Seizing control of Saudi Arabia inevitably follows from that. Then we must press on to Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, and other places to finish the job.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; Israel; Philosophy
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To: weikel
Whatever that means.

As for Wahabis, the hijackers weren't Wahabi, they were radicalized America-haters who drank and went to strip bars thinking their deaths would get them to paradise automatically

Use your brain and quit regurgitating every factoid you read in the press.

There is not a government more pro-American than the Saudi's. And like Jordan's royal family, Qatar, UAE and many others, they walk a fine line between their, sometimes silent, support for us and their radical population.

If the Saudi royal family falls, what will take their place? A representitive democracy? Get a clue.

41 posted on 10/10/2002 10:41:33 PM PDT by Deb
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Apply the Bush Doctrine to Saudi Arabia

OK, I will.

First Iraq (because it presents the most immediate danger), and then....

Saudi Arabia, Iran, Syria, and No. Korea (in no particular order).

42 posted on 10/10/2002 10:44:28 PM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: Deb
There is not a government more pro-American than the Saudi's.

Pro-American, eh? A gov't that knowingly harbors al Qaeda (our gravest enemies), and pays them off not to overthrow them A gov't that damn well knew what was going down on 9/11/01, and didn't tell us. A gov't that puts out truckloads of anti-American propaganda to placate their Wahhabist/terrorist populace.

Yeah, they're our good buddies.......and Islam is a religion of peace.

43 posted on 10/10/2002 10:51:27 PM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: Rye
What is it with you morons who can't understand the difference between the government and the people?

Not a single thing you said is true. You have no sources and are confusing about a dozen different elements. Quit drinking and go to bed, then wake up and try the sports sites. Politics and international issues are too complex for you.

44 posted on 10/10/2002 11:12:48 PM PDT by Deb
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To: Deb
Did you forget your prozac, Deb, or is it that time of the month...again? Does that pea-brain of yours actually entertain the thought that the House of Saud is wholly separable from the Wahabbist populace, and that the insanity of the latter isn't a natural and inevitable consequence of the encouragement and sanction of the former?
45 posted on 10/11/2002 7:09:09 AM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: steve-b
>>You may now return to your bong.

Pass the Bong, dude, don't bogart it!

46 posted on 10/11/2002 9:30:36 AM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: Rye
>>Quit drinking

Why stop now?
47 posted on 10/11/2002 9:31:14 AM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: Deb
That's all you can do.

Call people potheads, drunks and morons.

When you take your lips off the Saudi butt, then maybe you'll wake up.
48 posted on 10/11/2002 9:32:57 AM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: Deb
I have no problem with the government of Jordan or the UAE Qatar hosted Al Jazeera so im suspicious of them. Your not going to convince me the Saudis are not our enemies because its not true so don't try the fact is they fund radical islam and 15 of the 19 Saudis were hijackers I don't need to know more than that.
49 posted on 10/11/2002 9:40:48 AM PDT by weikel
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To: Brad Cloven
I don't dispute you.

I hope Bush has the time and the moral courage to confront the Saudi royal family. I like Bush, but I doubt it, given the extended Bush family's three-generation-old relationship with the Al Sabah clan, and to a lesser extent the Saud clan.

A large chunk of the U.S. ruling class does business or is receiving fees from the Sauds. Accordingly, appeasement of them is reminscent of America First and the Japanese and Germans in 1940.

It would take an effective President not tied to the Sauds, or a horrendous terrorist attack tied to them -- a nuclear detonation or smallpox pandemic -- to eliminate them. Trust me, they will be somewhat more circumspect for a time regarding support for Al-Qaeda if we take Saddam down. The reason Mideast regimes are opposed to summary U.S. action is that they are all totalitarian states, more or less.

50 posted on 10/11/2002 10:13:11 AM PDT by Man of the Right
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To: alpowolf
If they band together, it stops being a walk-over.

However, did European states unite to oppose Hitler?

They went down one at a time.

We can handle 2 theater wars simultaneously, if it came to it. Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya simultaneously, no problem. One theater war. If the Palestinians and Lebanese militias want to sign on, the more the merrier.

Cuba, no problem. That's a week's bombing, no ground invasion necessary.

North Korea, a second theater war.

China, not without full national mobilization and extended preparation. The Communist regime was on the ropes in '89. Should have done them then. However, their prosperity is based on a $80B annual favorable trade balance with us. A trade embargo puts them back in the '30s.

It would be better to eliminate these regimes now, rather than risk a nuclear attack later or endure a half-century cold war.

Look at our economy and the stock market. They recover when the threat is eliminated.
51 posted on 10/11/2002 10:23:34 AM PDT by Man of the Right
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