Zakir
Naik’s Fortunes and Loss Of Saudi Clout
Saeed Naqvi
Zakir Naik, Islamic evangelist with rock
star ratings, could be only temporarily in trouble. Come November and he may be
able to find apologists in the NDA government.
What has November got to do with the
government? Because, like the rest of the world, New Delhi is waiting for the
outcome of the US elections. A Hillary Clinton victory will end the nail biting
suspense globally, and in Israel and Saudi Arabia there may be celebrations. Naik’s
patrons in Saudi Arabia are perhaps low today, but they could bounce back with
a Clinton victory.
Islamic Research Centre and The Clinton Foundation
have another link: considerable sums for their respective Foundations have come
from Saudi Arabia.
Naik has been officially in the business
of evangelism since 1991 when IRF was established. That year Manmohan Singh’s
New Economic Policies brought New Delhi in line with the US. George Bush Sr.
was the President. The Bush family’s extraordinary interests in Saudi Arabia
continued during the Clinton years.
An economically “reformed” New Delhi
looked at Washington for almost every foreign policy lead. Since the Saudis
could do no wrong in US eyes, New Delhi adopted the same public stance towards
Riyadh. Zakir Naik preached in the Salafi-Wahabi idiom, favoured by the House
of Saud. Little wonder, successive Indian Prime Ministers were advised to look
the other way. During days of breathless adoration for the US, particularly
when the nuclear deal was being negotiated, what registered in South Block was
an unstated message from Washington: tolerate Saudi Arabia and its interests.
Zakir Naik had Saudi protection. Therefore, his evangelism was acceptable to India
for the past 25 years. Wahabism-Salafism was kosher when, on cue, New Delhi was
voting against Iran in Vienna.
Naik has fallen on bad days because the
West and their clients like Saudi Arabia have badly bungled in Syria. Jointly
and singly they financed and armed all manner of extremist groups. Their search
for a “moderate opposition” remained a pipe dream.
The blowback from the Syrian, Libyan (earlier
Iraqi and Afghan misadventures) continued to plague the Saudis. Ultimately, to
run away from themselves, they leapt into the bubbling Yemen cauldron.
Destroyed countries and civilizations
created a migration problem, an Exodus of Biblical proportions, causing Europe
to shuffle out of its old coil. Two party political structures, secured a long
time ago, began to crumble.
As if all of this were not unsettling enough,
the Americans have just come up with an unconvincing Republican nominee for
President and a Democratic nominee who is by her own admission “unloved”. Even The
Economist, that pillar of the western-liberal establishment has pulled out from
the dictionary adjectives of an extreme nature to describe Hillary Clinton:
“dishonest”, “untrustworthy”.
In brief, the West has its own crises to
worry about. The Saudis had already come down a notch or two when the Iranian
nuclear deal was signed. And now, the mess in Europe and the US, has pushed
Saudis away from the West’s attention radar.
New Delhi, which keeps a steady gaze on
Washington and its changing moods, has shrewdly noticed Riyadh’s fall from
grace. Naik can now be taken to task. The change of heart on the evangelist
also signals something important: New Delhi now feels secure in the thought
that Sufism and mild Hanafi Sunnism most characterize Indian Muslims.
Wahabism-Salafism is remote from the wider Islamic practice among India’s
Sunnis.
Riyadh maybe down, but it would be
premature to count it out. After all, should Hillary Clinton enter the White
House, who knows what might she not do for “Israel’s security”. Her email
released by Wikileaks confirmed that the Obama administration had deliberately
provoked the civil war in Syria as “the best way to help Israel”.
In an earlier email she said: “the best
way to help Israel deal with Iran’s growing nuclear capability is to help the
people of Syria overthrow the regime of Bashar Assad.”
“Overthrowing Bashar Assad” was the one
point theme former Saudi Spy Chief, Prince Bandar bin Sultan had been
instructed by the late King Abdullah to pursue. Typical of Prince Bandar’s
theatrical style of diplomacy, he turned up at the Kremlin on a secret mission.
He promised Putin a “terror free” Sochi Olympic games if only he could have
Assad’s head on a platter. Bandar was sidelined because he could not deliver on
Syria.
So long as the Israeli military point of
view is part of Western strategic thinking, a regime change in Damascus must re
surface as a Washington priority, should Hillary Clinton win.
Such an operation would require co
ordination with the Saudis as well. In other words the current nosedive in
Saudi saliency maybe quite as dramatically arrested. Zakir Naik’s protectors in
Riyadh may yet be able to stiffen their sinews and summon up the blood. Good
for Naik. Also Delhi will then have to place Bangladesh Prime Minister, Sheikh
Hasina’s concerns in the balance. Apparently Naik’s evangelical mesmerism is
causing concerns in Dhaka where acts of terror have picked up in frequency,
allegedly influenced by his eloquence.
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