Showing posts with label Saudi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saudi. Show all posts

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Yazidi warrior women

An Israeli news outlet reports on Yazidi women's uniting to join the Kurdistan peshmerga in fighting ISIS:

Yazidi Women Form All-Female Unit to Fight ISIS - Israel News


[For more on the Yazidi, see Yazidis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.]

The article is merely one of many detailing the horrors women suffer at the hands of ISIS.

Slavery is very old and is clearly supported by the Quran  (see Islamic views on slavery - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia) and the Christian Old Testament (see e.g., What the Old Testament says about slavery), though modern religious scholars emphasize passages more humane.

In spite of god's plain approval, all countries, with great reluctance and much bloodshed, gave up the practice of human slavery.  The Arabs were slower than most: the Saudis abolished slavery in 1962; Oman, the last Arab country, in1970.

 In spite of universal condemnation of slavery, it was revived by several Saudi-financed jihadist  groups in Syria early in the Syrian Civil War.

ISIS, a Sunni-Muslim ur-country hoping to become a new Grand Caliphate,  ISIS has institutionalized human slavery, based on Wahhabism, the guiding religion of Saudi Arabia.

ISIS is particularly intent on enslaving those women captured in war, in line with Aristotelian precepts.

If you respect Aristotle, you will think it just that that salves be enslaved.  If you respect Aristotle you deserve wha t you get.

All other people should condemn human slavery.

ISIS's ability to enslave others should be brought to an end. Every effort should be expended to end the ability to enslave another human being.  Since ISIS is peculiarly Sunni Arab creation, Sunni Arabs should take the on-the-ground lead in the fight.

The brave Yazidi women deserve the support of all nations. Americans, call your Senators.

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Images from the Web of women enslaved by ISIS:










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Saudi military crossing into Yemen, when it should be crossing into Iraq to engage ISIS.  Brutal, pointless, and supported by Britain, France, and the US.






Friday, July 10, 2015

More predictions of Saudi doom from ISIS



BBC does not think the border between Anbar and Saudi Araabia is vulnerable; and it does think that the Saudi are vulnerable to isis.  BBC's views are worth considering.

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Islamic State sets sights on Saudi Arabia
By Frank Gardner
BBC security correspondent
  • 14 November 2014
Islamic State rejects the authority of Saudi King Abdullah, pictured centre

The leadership of Islamic State (IS) has no intention of standing still.

In a 17-minute audio message, purportedly from its elusive leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the group sets its sights firmly on Saudi Arabia, birthplace of Islam and the world's largest oil producer and exporter.
The speaker does not refer to it as Saudi Arabia, since this is a name derived from the ruling tribe, the al-Saud, whose authority IS does not accept.
Instead he calls it "the land of Haramayn", the land of the two holy places, meaning Mecca and Medina.
Reaching out to IS's growing number of Saudi followers, he sets out a target list for attack, starting with the Shia who make up a minority of Saudi nationals, living mostly in the oil-rich Eastern Province, and whom hardline Salafi radicals view as heretics.
So deep are the sectarian divisions opened up in the Middle East by the insurgency in Iraq that many Saudis view IS not as a marauding band of terrorists but as brave defenders of Sunni Islam against the encroaching forces of Iran and its Shia allies.
Saudi Arabia is home to Mecca, pictured, and Medina, the burial place of the Prophet Muhammad

Saudi officials have long been warning that their country is the primary target of IS.
Having declared itself a caliphate this summer, it was inevitable that sooner or later the group would turn its attention to the largest and most important country in the region.
Saudi Arabia's supreme religious authority, the grand mufti, has branded IS as the "greatest enemy of Islam".
A recent op-ed written in the New York Times by Saudis close to the government said: "Saudi Arabia is the only authority in the region with the power and legitimacy to bring IS down."

Rejecting blame

Yet many blame the Saudi authorities for the rapid rise of IS, accusing them of funding and exporting an intolerant version of Islam that has become a stepping stone towards violent jihad.

Along with Qatar and Kuwait, the Saudi authorities are struggling to prevent donations from private individuals ending up with IS
The Saudi government emphatically rejects any blame for the growth of IS, pointing out that it is a function of the chaos engendered by the Syrian civil war and the discriminatory policies towards Iraqi Sunnis practised by the Shia-led government in Baghdad.
The Saudis also point out that they fought and won a bitter three-year insurgency by al-Qaeda inside their country that cost hundreds of lives.
Today the Saudis find themselves in an extremely uncomfortable position.
Their air force has joined the US-led coalition in conducting numerous air strikes against IS positions in Syria, yet this is deeply unpopular with many Saudis.
A prince who has flown sorties against IS in an F15 jet has reportedly received death threats.
More than 2,000 Saudi nationals are estimated to have joined the ranks of IS, bringing with them an extreme brand of "takfiri" ideology that views large portions of the population with suspicion and intolerance.
An audio message, purportedly from Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, sets IS sights on Saudi Arabia

Along with Qatar and Kuwait, the Saudi authorities are struggling to prevent donations from private individuals ending up with IS.
On top of this, security has deteriorated rapidly on the southern border with Yemen, where a number of Saudi extremists have joined al-Qaeda after being released from rehab programmes where they pledged to renounce violence.
Saudi Arabia is unlikely to face a direct military invasion by IS.
It has a well-marked and patrolled northern border with Iraq and a military equipped with billions of dollars' worth of Western weapons.
Instead, it faces a growing threat of isolated violence within its borders, likely to manifest itself as occasional bombings, shootings and kidnappings that will test the resources of its domestic intelligence service.


Thursday, July 9, 2015

Saud kingdom at risk: II



King Salman's short rule may be cut shout by any one of five easily predicted events, and Salman seems not to protect against them.

The Saud Kingdom's slaughter of Yemeni who are defenseless and who pose it no harm is damaging the willingness of the World Community to protect the kingdom when it comes under attack.

A second danger to the Kingdom is ISIS and its own clergy, which is more Wahhabist that the Kingdom has been; more dedicated to enforcing Literal Sharia that is the Kingdom itself.

Thee danger is the take-over of Makkah and and Madinah, the heart of the Muslim world, by ISIS from Anbar Province in Iraq or by its clergy or by the two working in collusion.

Here are authoritative words about that danger:

Several speakers at the Atlantic Council event warned that Saudi Arabia was risking its own security by overreacting to the Houthi advance in Yemen and seeking to bomb that country into submission. 
Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, said that “the potential for blowback in the kingdom is significant.” He warned that IS would seek to seize control of the holiest sites of Islam, which are located in Saudi Arabia. 
“If you call yourself a caliphate, you cannot accept a country that controls Mecca and Medina,” Haass said. “It’s a question of when, not if” IS attacks.
Saab said that the Saudis were well aware of the internal threat posed by IS but face other challenges. 
In his report, he wrote that “until the Arab world charts a path forward and starts addressing its rampant political decay, religious hubris, and economic mismanagement, regional security will remain scarce, and challenges such as [IS], Iran’s destabilizing behavior in the region and the growth of violent extremism — to just name a few — will continue to present themselves and possibly worsen with time.”

From al Monitor

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The border between Iraq's Anbar Province and the Arabia:




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The Grand  Mosque of Makkah -- the holiest of holy Muslim places -- was seized by Wahhabists in 1979.  The House of Saud was able to reclaim it, with much killing.  See, e.g., Grand Mosque seizure - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saudi soldiers fighting their way into the Qaboo Underground beneath the Grand Mosque of Mecca, 1979

The surviving insurgents under custody of Saudi Authorities. c. 1979.



Sunday, May 3, 2015

US ad Saudis use cluster bombs in Yamen


 The New York Times reports today that the Saudis and the UAE are using cluster munitions in Sanaa and other cities in Yemen.  It also reports that the US had fired cluster munitions from ships upon targets that include Yemeni civilians, even though we are not at war with the people or country fired upon.  Saudi-Led Group Said to Use Cluster Bombs in Yemen - NYTimes.com




ACTION NEEDED:
Respectfully request that President Obama fire advisors who have for years mislead US presidents about our interests in Yemen, following the lead of the bloodthirsty and fearful Saudis.  The US provides ample protection to the Saudis from both ISIS and the Houthi.  There is no need for the slaughter and pain inflicted on the staving Yemeni.





The bloodthirsty nations -- the Persian Gulf Dictatorships, the uSA, Russia, China -- and the fearful nations, especially Pakistan, have not signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

The United States gets bad advice from its military commanders:  killing multitudes of civilians years after hostilities have ceased makes one a pariah; the US, along with the other bloodthirsty nations, have become that to the civilized world: outcasts, though very powerful ones.

Citizens of pariah nations should do what they can  to effect regime change.




From Wikipedia:

Convention on Cluster Munitions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia









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You can speak to your leaders more effectively that this youngman can.  Speak!  Raise your voice!



Thursday, April 23, 2015

The bombing in ¥emen hasen't stopped, and neither have the Houthi


Well, in spite of Obama’s intervention, the bombing hasn’t ended in Sana’a or Taiz and naval bombardments on Aden continue unabated.  The air bombings have lessened in San’a.

For illuminating  tweets from Yemeni collected by The Times, see 


   
If you don’t know Taiz, also on the Red Sea, here are some images.  The bomb bursts are from the last 24 hours.







 


Many more on line.

Bombs bursting at night gave proof to our troops, years age, that American's flag still flew.  Bombs bursting at night give young Yemeni a determination to take control of their government, at any price.  



In Arabic, for my self:

أنا اليمنية [I am Yemeni!]

In German, as paraphrased from Kennedy:

Ich bin ein jemenitischen!

And, damn it,   you and I are also Saudi: kith and kin, no more than six degrees of separation. And yes, Houthi, oo.   

And we also, if born into a  Christian, Jewish, or Muslim tradition, in theory, respect the Holy Prophet Abraham.

Yours for victory in Yemen!  

d

Saturday, March 8, 2014

The Saudi, the Qatari, the GCC, and the West

This Reuters analysis of GCC infighting is interesting and long over-due.The most important question it raises is this:  if the Saudi don't want to relay on the Wet for protection, why should the West spend billions protecting he Saudi?  If there are geopolitical reasons why  the West should spend billions protecting the Saudi from price competition from Iran, shouldn't the West get a significant break in oil prices?

The Saudi, first among all the rich countries in the world, have resisted the Enlightenment's discovery that the people should be sovereign in theirs own country.  Saudi object to any group that supports the election of rulers.  That is the reason the Saudi engineered the ouster of he admittedly-inept Muslim Brotherhood from Egypt, and is at odds with Turkey, a democratic Muslim state.

[Oman is a Socratic Muslim dictatorship, viewed from the middle of the Pacific Ocean, and the only one of the Gulf States I would support.]


There can be no peace in the Middle East so long as the Saudi remain dominant.  I would not support Qatar's support for an regime change in Syria, and I am happy to see it push for an elected regime rather than one imposed by the Saudi.


Durell




Qatar rift is pivotal test for disunited Gulf families

Thu, Mar 6 2014
By Angus McDowall and Sylvia Westall

RIYADH/KUWAIT (Reuters) - A breach between Qatar and some of its Gulf Arab neighbors is a pivotal test for a three-decade-old union of monarchies formed to stand united when threatened by common enemies.

The six neighbors have struggled for years to transform their alliance from a simple security pact into an integrated economy. But plans for a customs union, integrated power grids and a joint military command remain unfinished or unrealized.

Critics of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) blame its inadequacies on petty jealousies, border disputes, or the perceived dominance of its biggest member, Saudi Arabia.

If the allies can no longer reach broad agreement on how to navigate the political troubles afflicting the region, then the main point of their partnership is in question, say analysts.

Born more out of fear than greed, the GCC, which also includes Kuwait, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Oman, has managed to present a united front at times of threat ranging from Iranian revolution to Iraqi invasion..

The club was born in 1981 to counter the revolutionaries who had toppled Iran's Shah, a fellow dynast familiar to Gulf Arab leaders, two years earlier. As Iran and Iraq embarked on an eight-year war, survival became the watchword for the GCC.

Now, even as most Gulf Arab economies are booming and the GCC touts itself as a rare outpost of stability in a turbulent region, the member countries have never appeared more divided.

"Will the GCC kill itself?" ran Thursday's headline in Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Rai.

Wednesday's statement by Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain that they were withdrawing ambassadors from Doha and all but accusing Qatar of undermining their internal stability was unprecedented as a public display of divisions.

BROTHERHOOD

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are incensed by Qatar's support for the Muslim Brotherhood, which they regard as a dangerous political enemy. They are also cross about Doha's backing for more radical Islamist groups in Syria.

The UAE summoned the Qatari ambassador in February after Qatar-based Brotherhood cleric Youssef al-Qaradawi condemned the UAE as was against Islamic rule, a remark the UAE described as insulting and shameful.

UAE media quoted Qatari Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiyah as saying the comments did not reflect Qatar's views. Sources close to the cleric said he would not stop speaking his mind.

Qaradawi told Reuters Saudi Arabia was backing those who "are far from God and Islam" in Egypt - the military-backed authorities that overthrew an elected Islamist president.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar are leading backers of rival Syrian rebel groups, and they and other Gulf states are the principal external forces supporting key players in Egypt and Yemen.

Acting together they could effect regional change. Apart, they risk dragging the Gulf into the post-Arab Spring quagmire.
A Gulf Arab diplomat said the decision to recall the envoys was taken after a meeting of GCC foreign ministers on Tuesday at which it became clear Qatar would not change its approach.

"After this meeting they decided - the Saudis, the Emirates and Bahrain - to take this kind of step," the diplomat said.
"It is a very negative step in our experience as a group, in this organization."

There have been plenty of previous rifts among the six dynasties, which sometimes appear to regard each other as rivals rather than partners, but they have never involved such an airing of dirty linen or come at such a dangerous time.

Unlike in the past, the Gulf states cannot count on strong Arab allies with large armies to see off external threats.

Gulf citizens see their region as the last bastion of security in the Arab world, with Iraq and Syria in conflict, Yemen and Libya in chaos, Egypt destabilized and Lebanon and Jordan undermined by turmoil in neighboring states.

SIBLING RIVALRY

Critics of the GCC deride its failure to fulfill its promises, such as a currency or border union. Despite big arms purchases, all its members remain dependent for their defense on alliances with Western powers, principally the United States.

The Gulf countries refer to each other in official statements as "full brothers", the closest blood relationship in a society traditionally built upon large polygamous families.

But they have often nursed sibling rivalries in disputes ranging from border demarcation and foreign policy to occasionally unflattering portrayal of rulers in each other's state media.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar in particular have had a series of disputes, including border clashes in 1992 that led to several deaths and a five-year period from 2002 when Riyadh had no ambassador in Doha after arguments about al-Jazeera broadcasts.

Qatar and the UAE also fell out in the 1990s when Dubai gave refuge to a former Qatari emir who was ousted in 1995, and Doha has crossed swords with Bahrain. Smaller-scale rows have periodically flared up between Saudi Arabia, Oman and the UAE.

At root, these spats and the GCC's slow pace in creating a stronger union have often resulted from the fundamental imbalance among a group of countries in which Saudi Arabia has a bigger population than the other five combined.

Political analysts say some in the smaller countries have seen the GCC as a ratification instrument for Saudi policies.

"Becoming a mediating power in the region has upset a lot of governments who think we are too small. But we are here to say we are not small, we believe in our role and will continue it," said a source close to the Qatari government.

SAUDI FRUSTRATION

For Saudi Arabia in particular, the disunity is a source of frustration. Riyadh has pushed hard since late 2011 for the GCC to forge a closer union on a shared foreign and security policy.

The personal initiative of King Abdullah, the idea emerged as a response to the Arab Spring and fears of Iranian interference and represents an important building block of Saudi efforts to become less dependent on the West.

But in December Oman said outright it did not want to be part of such a union, weeks after angering Riyadh by facilitating secret U.S.-Iranian talks that the Saudis fear will reduce international pressure on Tehran.

Kuwait stayed above the fray this week, talking of acting as a mediator when its emir returns from a medical trip overseas, but refraining from joining the pressure on Doha.

"The Saudis are strongly committed to the unity of the Gulf states, and they want other states to take their share of responsibilities towards the people of the Gulf," said Saud al-Sarhan, director of research at the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies in Riyadh..

"Saudi Arabia is taking control of regional and Arab security, and slowly bringing to an end the era of reliance on foreign partners for strategic priorities," he added.

(Additional reporting by Amena Bakr in Doha and Rania el Gamal and Yara Bayoumy in Dubai; Editing by William Maclean and Andrew Roche)

__________________

Web images follow:

Saudi Arabia:







Qatar






Kuwait










United Arab Emirates

A sand storm engulfs Dubai
Dubai








Bahrain


U.S. military bases in Bahrain


The Royal Family


Other families




Saudi causeway to Bahrain playgrounds





Oman

 Suntan Sultan Qaboos bin Said,whom I think, 
viewed from a Polynesian Island
in he middle of the Pacific Ocean
reflects Socratic virtues.