Successful Attack On Aramco Possible Only With Help
Inside The Kingdom
Saeed Naqvi
In a world
where the victor’s narrative prevails, there is not even grudging acceptance of
the truth that the ‘confident and over lusty’ Saudi’s were trounced in the oil
fields of Aramco in the eastern province. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who peers
through his binoculars 24X7, instantly raised his finger: “Iran”.
If Iran was
the source from where the drones came, where were all the $ trillions worth of
defensive batteries sold by the US to protect the very citadel of world oil? Or
is it even more humiliating to accept reversal at the hands of an impoverished,
ill equipped adversary? Asymmetric victories as in David and Goliath, are
demoralizing for arms merchants. In such success, ingenuity trumps vast
arsenals.
In recent years,
the west has quite unambiguously placed, Houthis, Zaidis, indeed, Yemenis in a huge
pile called Shias. The Shia-Sunni faultline has been attempted by East-Coast
strategists eversince the Ayatullahs ousted the Shah in 1979 and the Saudis
began to have palpitations at the sight of a rival pole in Tehran, as a result
of a fracture in the Ummah.
The external
fracture was severely compounded by an internal one when extremists opposed to
Wahabism occupied the holy mosque at Mecca, demanding that the House of Saud
vacate the holy shrines. In the ensuing battle, over 130 people were killed.
American and French military help was needed. It must be put down to obsequiousness,
a worship of Saudi petro dollars that details of how the West helped lift the
siege of Mecca have been removed from the narrative.
It is common
knowledge that Saudis do not allow non-Muslims in the city of Mecca, leave
alone the great mosque. How then did western, Christian soldiers enter the
mosque? Regular Mullahs were mobilized to help them recite the “Kalima”, an
essential pre condition for conversion to Islam. Faiths were changed to save
the mosque and the face of the House of Saud.
While the
revolution in Iran and in Mecca took place simultaneously in 1979, it is the
latter event which gives the Saudis nightmares to this day. The enunciation of
the Shia-Sunni faultline became possible after the revolution in Tehran. This is
supposed to have subsumed the Israel–Palestinian faultiline a turn that is
useful to Tel Aviv and Riyadh.
In contemporary
diplomacy, where propaganda is all, Israeli publicity lists Hamas in the nasty
Iran, Hezbollah, Syria (Alawi) Shia axis when everybody knows that Hamas is 100
percent Sunni. What worries Riyadh and Tel Aviv is something more fundamental.
Hamas is Mulsim Brotherhood with deep links in Egypt, Qatar and Turkey.
If Yemen is Shia,
why was Prince Naif bin Abdel Aziz, present King Salman’s brother, busy
building up a Mujahideen force in Yemen at the same time he was creating such a
power in Afghanistan? What was the link?
American expertise,
Saudi money and huge Pakistani logistical help created the Mujahideen in
Afghanistan who helped expel the Soviets in 1989. It is a measure of the low
esteem in which sub continental Muslims are held by the Saudi ruling class,
that Naif considered religious zeal being instilled in the Afghan-Mujahideen as
a temporary requirement. For the long term, thoroughbred Arabs had to be trained
in Yemen because here too there was a real and present “Soviet danger”, in the
context of the Cold War.
Aden and Southern
Yemen had in 1967 come under Egyptian-Nasserite, and therefore Soviet
influence. Naif’s countermove is the origin of the Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
When Crown
Prince Mohammad bin Salman rained bombs on Sanaa, past four years, he may not
be aware that he was bruising a city continuously inhabited for 2,500 years. Prophet
Mohammad sent his cousin and son-in-law, Ali, as the Qazi of Sanaa. The old
city of Sanaa reminded me of Jaisalmer, its narrow lanes hemmed in by multistoryed
structures. The facades of these high structure have exquisite geometrical
designs. Suited to Jaisalmer’s harsh summers, on the other hand the façade,
without colourful design, is easy on the eye because it does not reflect any
light.
The Shia-Sunni
narrative in Yemen is not straightforward. When Mustafa Kemal Pasha, Ataturk
disbanded the Khilafat after World War-I, a system of Imamate continued in
Yemen until 1962. A system of Imams leading the community is internal to Shias
who may be segregated between those looking upto twelve or seven or an endless
line of Imams. Iranian, sub continental, Lebanese, Kuwaiti or Bahrain Shias are
known as Isna Ashari or twelvers.
Zayd Ibn Ali, brother
of Muhammad al Baqir, the fifth Imam, did not accept the twelve system and
shifted base to Yemen giving rise to a whole Zaidi sect. This unique Imamate
lasted till 1962.
Since Ali, the
first Imam, was the Qazi of Sanaa in 630 where he built a handsome mosque, Zaid
could claim that affiliation too. But Yemen was constantly in the eye of the storm
because of the shifting Saudi politics. Its personality was riven between its
innate Shia roots and external Wahabi pressures.
This was the confusing
maze, when MbS, his fingers burnt in Syria, embarked on a war in Yemen. Americans
gleefully encouraged the war to sell arms to the prince of all narcissists. The
war has been a disgraceful stalemate for the Crown Prince. Doggedly battling
uneven odds the Houthis (Zaidis who derive their name from their leader Abdul
Malik al Houthi) are improving by the day as warriors, fighting for their
ancient land, and their faith, which in these four years has by association
with the Iranians, been more firmed up with Shias. The Saudis have thrown into
the battle money and mercenaries even from such far off places as Colombia and
Peru. After the attack on Abqaiq, Aramco, Houthi armed forces duly claimed responsibility:
“This operation came after an accurate intelligence operation and advance
monitoring and cooperation of honorable and free men within the Kingdom.”
Phrase “within
the Kingdom” will give Riyadh sleepless nights for months to come.
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