Home· Settings· Breaking · FrontPage · Extended · Editorial · Activism · News

Prayer  PrayerRequest  SCOTUS  ProLife  BangList  Aliens  HomosexualAgenda  GlobalWarming  Corruption  Taxes  Congress  Fraud  MediaBias  GovtAbuse  Tyranny  Obama  Biden  Elections  POLLS  Debates  TRUMP  TalkRadio  FreeperBookClub  HTMLSandbox  FReeperEd  FReepathon  CopyrightList  Copyright/DMCA Notice 

Monthly Donors · Dollar-a-Day Donors · 300 Club Donors

Click the Donate button to donate by credit card to FR:

or by or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC - PO Box 9771 - Fresno, CA 93794
Free Republic 4th Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $23,031
28%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 28%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: nayef

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Saudi King replaces Crown Prince in cabinet reshuffle

    04/28/2015 8:54:55 PM PDT · by tcrlaf · 62 replies
    AL Jazeera ^ | 4-29-2015 | Al Jazeera And Agencies
    audi King Salman bin Abdulaziz has sacked his younger half-brother as crown prince and appointed his nephew, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, as the new heir apparent, state television said. Al Jazeera's Mohamed Vall, reporting from Jizan in the country's south, said the reshuffle was announced by royal decree via state television early on Wednesday. SNIP-- Political earthquake' Khalil Jahshan, the executive director for the Arab Centre of Washington from Fairfax, Virginia, said that the reshuffle constitutes a "political earthquake of the greatest magnitude". "The Saudi Arabia we knew a few hours ago is no longer," Jahshan told Al...
  • The Iraq Effect? Muslim anti-Americanism is a reassuringly nuanced creed.

    12/07/2004 6:05:00 AM PST · by OESY · 10 replies · 726+ views
    Wall Street Journal ^ | December 7, 2004 | MICHAEL SCOTT DORAN
    ...Any serious evaluation of the war on terror must gauge the balance of power between the U.S. and its enemies, not the level of American popularity with the Arab public. It is a fatal miscalculation to treat the war as a zero-sum game, with every mistake by the Bush administration somehow translating into a victory for Osama bin Laden. In order to win the war, America need not be popular. In fact, it can afford to be hated. What it cannot tolerate is a global balance of power that favors al Qaeda, kindred groups, and rogue regimes that might be...
  • Trouble in Saudi Arabia: Al-Qaeda’s ‘Bum’ Assassination Attempt

    09/24/2009 10:40:32 AM PDT · by AJKauf · 13 replies · 1,201+ views
    Pajamas Media ^ | Sept. 24 | Annie Jacobsen
    Interior Minister Prince Nayef of Saudi Arabia and his son, Deputy Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, have many enemies. For decades, the powerful and unaccountable elder Prince Nayef has “overseen” the Saudi police force; Nayef once boasted that his law enforcement agency solves 100 percent of the kingdom’s annual crimes. Al-Qaeda was quick to take credit for the suicide bombing (according to SITE). After all, it was a major public relations coup. For starters, the royals had been tricked — promised surrender and instead given a Trojan horse. Saudi’s princes pride themselves on having impenetrable personal security systems. Instead,...
  • The Saudi Paradox

    12/23/2003 5:51:14 PM PST · by hotpotato · 6 replies · 659+ views
    Foreign Affairs ^ | 01/04 | Michael Scott Doran
    Summary: Saudi Arabia is in the throes of a crisis, but its elite is bitterly divided on how to escape it. Crown Prince Abdullah leads a camp of liberal reformers seeking rapprochement with the West, while Prince Nayef, the interior minister, sides with an anti-American Wahhabi religious establishment that has much in common with al Qaeda. Abdullah cuts a higher profile abroad -- but at home Nayef casts a longer and darker shadow. Michael Scott Doran is Assistant Professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University and Adjunct Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. THE DUAL MONARCHY When...
  • Saudi High Alert

    11/13/2003 12:38:14 AM PST · by kattracks · 3 replies · 111+ views
    FrontPageMagazine ^ | 11/13/03 | Michael Isikoff & Mark Hosenball
    Last weekend’s deadly suicide bombing of a residential compound in Riyadh is the latest in a series of deadly Al Qaeda-linked attacks inside Saudi Arabia that is beginning to resemble a civil insurrection, possibly fuelled by anger over the U.S. invasion of Iraq.Contrary to initial media reports, so far there have been no arrests in the bombing of the Al-Muhaya compound—a brazen attack for which Al Qaeda has taken credit. While two suicide bombers died, the other 13 appear to have gotten away despite a chase through the streets of Riyadh, Saudi sources said today.Even more alarming, U.S. officials say,...