“Foe Not Friend”: Saudi Arabia
comment by Jerry Gordon
Frank Gaffney, Jr., founder and President of the Center for Security Policy (CSP) is a leader in the fight against Saudi Wahhabism encroachment of American values. This Military.com op ed details instances of where Saudi Arabia has been more of a foe than an ally. Whether it is the 9/11 perpetrators, the funding in the billions of Wahhabi Mosques and Madrassas around the globe here in America and the lack of cooperation in the production of oil via the OPEC cartel, the Saudis are not our friends. This week, ACT! for America Virginia and Maryland volunteers led by Catherine Martin participated in a protest at the Islamic Saudi Academy (ISA) in Alexandria, Virginia along with stalwarts from the CSP like Christine Brim, Jim and Andrea Lafferty of Traditonal Values Coalition, John Cosgrove, United American Committee Virginia Chapter head. They were brought together by the Laffertys because of the violence and incitement to hate revealed in a report by the USCIRF concerning texts used by the Saudi Embassy-sponsored ISA in its Islamic Studies curriculum. We have posted on the issues and our involvement in this important demonstration. We have posted on the attempt by our State Department to protect our Saudi ‘friends’ in the ISA matter.
Note what Gaffney has to say about the ISA issue in this opinion piece:
That enmity can unmistakably be found, however, in textbooks the government of Saudi Arabia supplies religious schools (known as “madrassas”) around the world, including the Islamic Saudi Academy it operates in Alexandria, Virginia. Last week, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) revealed that these texts encourage children to regard non-Muslims and even other Muslims with hostility and hatred and suggests that it is permissible to take “their blood and treasure.” Jihad is described as “the pinnacle of Islam,” without clarifying the term’s meaning to be just a struggle of the spirit – rather than its typical interpretation: holy war.
Importantly, the USCIRF found itself thwarted at every turn by the U.S. Department of State. Foggy Bottom endlessly ran interference for the Saudis: State blithely assured the Commission that Saudi Arabia had promised to rewrite its teaching materials so as to eliminate offensive passages. It half-heartedly pressed Riyadh for copies of the textbooks actually used at the Academy, then withheld from the USCIRF the books it did receive.
The proof now in hand, no thanks to the State Department, makes clear the virulently intolerant nature of what the Saudis insist is the authoritative form of Islamic law or Shariah. It should be sufficient grounds for acting on an earlier recommendation by the Commission on International Religious Freedom: Close the Saudi embassy-run madrassa in our midst, once and for all.
That outcome will be the demand of community activists, champions of religious freedom and national security professionals who will be demonstrating at the Islamic Saudi Academy’s Alexandria campus at 8:00 a.m. this Tuesday morning. They are protesting a decision taken a fortnight ago by the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors to renew a county-held lease on this facility – a decision that was shameful and irresponsible then, and that is, in the wake of the USCIRF findings, utterly untenable now.
Amen! Gaffney is right on point. Saudi Arabia is not our friend. Rather it is an authoritarian regime bent on overthrowing our Western Judeo-Christian values and Constituion to enslave us in a Caliphate run by an Emir in accordance with Strict Wahhabi doctrine and Shari’a law. The sooner we wean ourselves away from our Saudi petroleum ‘fix’ , the better for all of us.
by Frank Gaffney, Jr. Military.com, June 16, 2008
The United States is in mortal peril from a false friend: the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The peril emanates from the totalitarian legal-religious-military-political code the Saudis call Shariah and their assiduous efforts to impose it worldwide. The danger is enormously exacerbated by the almost-complete failure of American officials at every level of government to acknowledge, let alone act to prevent, the Saudis’ true agenda.
Three examples are instructive:
A recent expose by New York Times reporter Philip Shenon of congressional and independent investigations of the murderous September 11, 2001 attacks describes evidence of financial, logistical and other material support by Saudi government personnel to the perpetrators of those acts of terrorism. In “The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation”, Shenon suggests that the Bush White House, the FBI and, not least, Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar went to considerable lengths to suppress such evidence.
In the end, what is known is principally circumstantial – notably, a seeming Saudi covert operative in Southern California housed and facilitated the movements of two of the 9/11 hijackers, was in frequent communication with a Wahhabi cleric working in the U.S. under Saudi diplomatic cover and received before the attacks funds drawn on an account Bandar’s wife used to support “charities.” It nonetheless seems reasonable to conclude that, had these leads been scrupulously pursued rather than covered up, we would have a far better appreciation of the enmity felt towards this country by all too many of our so-called Saudi “friends” and “allies.”
What is more, in a lawsuit brought by the insurance companies who paid out over $5 billion dollars to the victims of the 9/11 attacks, lawyers from the Philadelphia-based firm of Cozen O’Connor are uncovering details of Saudi government involvement in financing “foreign” jihad to keep it out of the Kingdom. Not surprisingly, they have uncovered connections missed by the 9/11 Commission.
That enmity can unmistakably be found, however, in textbooks the government of Saudi Arabia supplies religious schools (known as “madrassas”) around the world, including the Islamic Saudi Academy it operates in Alexandria, Virginia. Last week, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) revealed that these texts encourage children to regard non-Muslims and even other Muslims with hostility and hatred and suggests that it is permissible to take “their blood and treasure.” Jihad is described as “the pinnacle of Islam,” without clarifying the term’s meaning to be just a struggle of the spirit – rather than its typical interpretation: holy war.
Importantly, the USCIRF found itself thwarted at every turn by the U.S. Department of State. Foggy Bottom endlessly ran interference for the Saudis: State blithely assured the Commission that Saudi Arabia had promised to rewrite its teaching materials so as to eliminate offensive passages. It half-heartedly pressed Riyadh for copies of the textbooks actually used at the Academy, then withheld from the USCIRF the books it did receive.
The proof now in hand, no thanks to the State Department, makes clear the virulently intolerant nature of what the Saudis insist is the authoritative form of Islamic law or Shariah. It should be sufficient grounds for acting on an earlier recommendation by the Commission on International Religious Freedom: Close the Saudi embassy-run madrassa in our midst, once and for all.
That outcome will be the demand of community activists, champions of religious freedom and national security professionals who will be demonstrating at the Islamic Saudi Academy’s Alexandria campus at 8:00 a.m. this Tuesday morning. They are protesting a decision taken a fortnight ago by the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors to renew a county-held lease on this facility – a decision that was shameful and irresponsible then, and that is, in the wake of the USCIRF findings, utterly untenable now.
Even the Saudis’ reported, new-found willingness to increase oil production by half-a-million barrels per day should not be confused with acts of friendship. After all, twice in recent months King Abdullah contemptuously rebuffed pleas from President Bush for just such relief from the damage caused by soaring petroleum prices. Only when that damage appeared likely to trigger a renewed U.S. determination finally to end America’s “addiction to oil” have the Saudis seen any need to bring down prices at the pump.
Fortunately, the latest Saudi gambit may be too little, too late to perpetuate our present enslavement by OPEC, the Saudi-led oil cartel that has been waging economic warfare against the United States for decades and lately with increasingly devastating effects. Thanks to the likes of Robert Zubrin, author of the highly acclaimed “Energy Victory: Winning the War on Terror by Breaking Free of Oil”, Fox New’s popular prime-time host Bill O’Reilly and a growing number of legislators, the American people are awakening to the fact that we have an alternative: Flexible Fuel Vehicles – cars that at a nominal cost can use existing technology to run on alcohol-based fuels (such as ethanol, methanol or butanol), gasoline or some combination thereof. (More information about these “Freedom Fuels” and the Open Fuel Standard that will allow them to help end the dangerous tyranny of Saudi Arabia and OPEC is at www.SetAmericaFree.org.)
As the Saudis are not actually our friends, they will do everything possible to prevent such a development – just as they have assiduously sought to suppress information about other aspects of the seditious, totalitarian agenda they call Shariah. We can no longer pretend that Saudi efforts to impose that agenda, here as well as abroad, are consistent with our national security and other interests. And we can no longer tolerate actions by those in the U.S. government aimed at obscuring such behavior, when the practical effect of doing so is to enable it to advance our destruction.
June 18th, 2008 at 7:29 • opinion • Islamic Saudi Academy • Saudi Arabia • Frank Gaffney Jr • USCIFR study of ISA hate texts • Military.com • Center for Security Policy • 0 Comments •
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