SAUDI SUPPORT FOR INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM:
BACKGROUND AND CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS
Testimony by Dr. Dore Gold, President
of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs
and former Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations
U.S. Senate Committee on Governmental
Affairs, Thursday, July 31, 2003
Nearly two years ago on September 11, 2001, most well-informed
observers about the Middle East were shocked to hear that
15 out of the 19 hijackers who carried out the attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were Saudi citizens.
It was equally surprising that the mastermind of the worst
terrorist attack on the United States in its history, Osama
bin Laden, was born and raised in Saudi Arabia. This curiosity
and wonder about the Saudi role in the attack came up once
more with the release of the September 11 report by the U.S.
Congress and its disclosure of "incontrovertible evidence"
linking Saudis to the financing of al-Qaeda operatives in
the United States.
For decades, terrorism had been associated with states like
Libya, Syria, or Iran. Saudi Arabia had been a pro-Western
force during the Cold War and had hosted large coalition armies
during the 1991 Gulf War. Saudi Arabia had not been colonized
during its history, like other Middle Eastern states that
had endured a legacy of European imperialism. This background
only sharpened the questions of many after the attacks:
What was the precise source of the hatred that drove these
men to take their own lives in an act of mass murder?
In a series of articles appearing in the Egyptian weekly,
Ruz al-Yousef (the Newsweek of Egypt), this past May, Wael
al-Abrashi, the magazine's deputy editor, attempted to grapple
with this issue. He drew a direct link between the rise of
much of contemporary terrorism with Saudi Arabia's main Islamic
creed, Wahhabism, and with the financial involvement of Saudi
Arabia's large charitable organizations:
"Wahhabism leads, as we have seen, to the birth of extremist,
closed, and fanatical streams, that accuse others of heresy,
abolish them, and destroy them. The extremist religious groups
have moved from the stage of Takfir [condemning other Muslims
as unbelievers] to the stage of 'annihilation and destruction,'
in accordance with the strategy of Al-Qa'ida - which Saudi
authorities must admit is a local Saudi organization that
drew other organizations into it, and not the other way around.
All the organizations emerged from under the robe of Wahhabism."
"I can state with certainty that after a very careful
reading of all the documents and texts of the official investigations
linked to all acts of terror that have taken place in Egypt,
from the assassination of the late president Anwar Sadat in
October 1981, up to the Luxor massacre in 1997, Saudi Arabia
was the main station through which most of the Egyptian extremists
passed, and emerged bearing with them terrorist thought regarding
Takfir - thought that they drew from the sheikhs of Wahhabism.
They also bore with them funds they received from the Saudi
charities."
(Middle East Media Research Institute, Special Dispatch Series
- No. 526 - Saudi Arabia, June 20, 2003)
Thus, while some Western commentators have sought to explain
the roots of al-Qaeda's fury at the U.S. by focusing on the
history of American policy in the Middle East or other external
factors, a rising number of Middle Eastern analysts have concentrated
instead on internal Saudi factors, including recent militant
trends among Saudi Arabia's Wahhabi clerics and the role of
large Saudi global charities in terrorist finance. This requires
a careful look at how Saudi Arabia contributed to the ideological
roots of some of the new wave of international terrorism as
well as how the kingdom emerged as a critical factor in providing
the resources needed by many terrorist groups.
Historical Roots
The particular creed of Islam practiced in Saudi Arabia,
which is known in the West as Wahhabism, emerged in the mid-18th
century in Central Arabia from the teachings of Muhammad ibn
Abdul Wahhab. This Arabian religious reformer sought to rid
Islam of foreign innovations that compromised its monotheistic
foundations and to restore what he believed were the religious
practices of the 7th century at the time of the Prophet Muhammad
and his immediate successors. He established a political covenant
in 1744 with Muhammad bin Saud, according to which he received
bin Saud's protection and in exchange legitimized the spread
of Saudi rule over a widening circle of Arabian tribes. This
covenant between the Saudi royal family and Wahhabism is at
the root of modern Saudi Arabia.
In retrospect, Wahhabism was significant for two reasons.
First, it rejuvenated the idea of the militant jihad, or holy
war, which had declined as a central Islamic value to be applied
universally. Under the influence of Sufism, for example, jihad
had also evolved into a more spiritual concept. Second, Wahhabism
became associated with a brutal history of political expansion
that led to the massacre of Muslims who did not adhere to
its tenets, the most famous of which occurred against the
Shiites Muslims of Kerbala in the early 18th century and against
Sunni Muslims in Arabian cities, like Taif, during the early
20th century. These Muslims were labeled as polytheists and
did not deserve any protection. The highest spiritual authority
of Islam during this period, the Sultan-Caliph of the Ottoman
Empire, regarded the Wahhabis as heretics and waged wars against
them in defense of Islam.
Yet it would be a mistake to focus on Wahhabism alone as the
ideological fountainhead of the new global terrorism. Modern
Saudi Arabia in the 1950s and 1960s hosted other militant
movements that had an important impact, as well. For reasons
of regional geopolitics, King Saud, King Faisal, and their
successors provided sanctuary to elements of the radical Muslim
Brotherhood from Egypt, Sudan, Jordan, and Syria. Some were
provided Saudi stipends. Others were given positions in the
Saudi educational system, including the universities, or in
the large Saudi charities, like the Muslim World League, that
was created in 1962. For example, Egyptian President Abdul
Nasser had the Muslim Brotherhood ideologue, Sayyed Qutb,
executed in 1966; his brother, Muhammad Qutb, fled to Saudi
Arabia and taught at King Abdul Aziz University in Jiddah.
He was joined in the 1970s by one of the heads of the Muslim
Brotherhood from Jordan, Abdullah Azzam. In 1979, both taught
Osama bin Laden, a student at the university.
Saudi Arabia's global charities, like the Muslim World League,
permitted the spread of the new militancy that was forged
from the cooperation between the Wahhabi clerics and the Muslim
Brotherhood refugees. After 1973, these charities benefited
from the huge petrodollar resources dispensed by the Saudi
government, which undoubtedly helped them achieve a global
reach. Abdullah Azzam headed the office of the Muslim World
League in Peshawar, Pakistan, when it served as the rear base
for the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
He was joined by his student, bin Laden, who with Saudi funding
also set up the Mujahidin Services Center (Maktab Khadmat
al-Mujahidin) for Muslim volunteers who came to fight the
Red Army. After Moscow's defeat in Afghanistan, this office
became al-Qaeda.
Thus, the Saudi charities became instrumental for the continuing
global jihad. Bin Laden's brother-in-law, Muhammad Jamal Khalifa,
ran the offices of the International Islamic Relief Organization
(IIRO), a Muslim World League offshoot, in the Philippines.
Local intelligence agencies suspected that it served as a
financial conduit to the Abu Sayyaf organization. Muhammad
Zawahiri, brother of bin Laden's Egyptian partner, Ayman Zawahiri,
would eventually work for IIRO in Albania. Indeed, IIRO would
eventually be suspected of involvement in terrorist threats
in India, Kenya, and to Russian forces in Chechnya.
Ideological Roots of the New Terrorism
These developments seem far beyond the horizon of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, but not completely, for a careful examination of
the religious sources of some of the worst suicide bombings
against the State of Israel by the Hamas organization leads
also to Saudi Arabia. Looking at Hamas websites, this very
month, one finds Saudi clerics prominently featured as providing
the religious justification for suicide bombings. Of 16 religious
leaders cited by Hamas, the largest national group backing
these attacks are Saudis. The formal Saudi position on suicide
bombings, in fact, has been mixed. To his credit, the current
Saudi Grand Mufti, Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah Al al-Sheikh,
has condemned these acts. Yet at the same time, Saudi Arabia's
Minister for Islamic Affairs, Sheikh Saleh Al al-Sheikh, has
condoned them: "The suicide bombings are permitted...the
victims are considered to have died a martyr's death."
The Hamas-Saudi connection should not come as a surprise.
Hamas emerged in 1987 from the Gaza branch of Muslim Brotherhood
which, as noted earlier, had become a key Saudi ally during
previous decades. When Hamas spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed
Yasin was let out of an Israeli prison in 1998, he went to
Saudi Arabia for medical treatment and Crown Prince Abdullah
made a high-profile visit to his hospital bedside. Bin Laden
had made the fate of Sheikh Yasin an issue for his al-Qaeda
followers as well. In his 1996 "Declaration of War,"
he listed Sheikh Yasin's release from prison as one of his
demands or grievances.
Saudi support for suicide bombings has wider repercussions.
Other militant Islamic movements cite Saudi clerics to justify
their activities - from the Chechen groups battling the Russians
to Iraqi mujahidin (al-jam'ah al-salifiyah) fighting the U.S.
army in western Iraq. In order to evaluate the significance
of these religious rulings, it is necessary to focus on the
stature of these various clerical figures.
For example, just after the September 11 attacks, it is true
that many Saudi government officials condemned them. But there
were other voices as well. Shortly thereafter a Saudi book
appeared on the Internet justifying the murder of thousands
of Americans, entitled The Foundations of the Legality of
the Destruction That Befell America. The Introduction to the
book was written by a prominent Saudi religious leader, Sheikh
Hamud bin Uqla al-Shuaibi. He wrote on November 16, 2001,
that he hoped Allah would bring further destruction upon the
United States. Al-Shuaibi's name appears in a book entitled
the Great Book of Fatwas, found in a Taliban office in Kabul.
Sheikh al-Shuaibi appears on the Hamas website, noted earlier,
as a religious source for suicide attacks. He appears on the
website of the Islamic militants fighting the U.S. army in
western Iraq as well. His ideas had global reach.
The question that must be asked is whether a religious leader
of this sort is a peripheral figure on the fringes of society
or whether he reflects more mainstream thinking. In fact,
al-Shuaibi had very strong credentials. Born in 1925 in the
Wahhabi stronghold of Buraida, he was a student of King Faisal's
Grand Mufti, Sheikh Muhammad ibn Ibrahim Al al-Sheikh. Al-Shuaibi's
roster of students read like a "Who's Who" of Saudi
Arabia, including the current Grand Mufti and the former Minister
of Islamic Affairs and Muslim World League secretary-general,
Abdullah al-Turki. When al-Shuaibi died in 2002, many central
Saudi figures attended his funeral. In short, he was mainstream.
His militant ideas about justifying the September 11 attacks
were echoed by Sheikh Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman Jibrin, who
actually was a member of the Directorate of Religious Research,
Islamic Legal Rulings, and Islamic Propagation and Guidance
- an official branch of the Saudi government.
Financial Support for the New Global Terrorism
As already demonstrated, Saudi Arabia erected a number of
large global charities in the 1960s and 1970s whose original
purpose may have been to spread Wahhabi Islam, but which became
penetrated by prominent individuals from al-Qaeda's global
jihadi network. The three most prominent of these charities
were the International Islamic Relief Organization (an offshoot
of the Muslim World League), the World Assembly of Muslim
Youth (WAMY), and the Charitable Foundations of al-Haramain.
All three are suspected by various global intelligence organizations
of terrorist funding.
It would be incorrect to view these charities as purely non-governmental
organizations. At the apex of each organization's board is
a top Saudi official. The Saudi Grand Mufti, who is also a
Saudi cabinet member, chairs the Constituent Council of the
Muslim World League. The Saudi Minister of Islamic Affairs
chairs the secretariat of WAMY and the administrative council
of al-Haramain. All three organizations have received large
charitable contributions from the Saudi royal family that
have been detailed in Saudi periodicals.
The earliest documented links between one of these charities
and terrorists was found in Bosnia. It is a handwritten account
on IIRO stationery from the late 1980s indicating the use
of this charity's offices for the support of militant actions.
But the strongest documented cases that demonstrate the ties
between Saudi Arabia's global charities and international
terrorism are related to Hamas. These ties were alleged already
in the mid-1990s when a Hamas funding group received instructions
to write letters of thanks to executives of IIRO and WAMY
for funds it had received. In 1994, President Clinton made
a brief stopover in Saudi Arabia during which he complained
about Saudi funding of Hamas. These charges about Saudi Arabia
bankrolling Hamas have become even more vociferous in recent
years.
The Saudis have been equally vociferous in their denials.
Crown Prince Abdullah's foreign policy advisor, Adel al-Jubeir,
asserted on CNN's "Crossfire" on August 16, 2002:
"We do not allow funding to go from Saudi Arabia to Hamas."
More recently, Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal told
the Saudi daily Arab News on June 23, 2003, that since the
establishment of the PLO as the sole legitimate representative
of the Palestinian people, the Saudi Kingdom only sends funding
through the PLO. He denied that the Saudis finance Hamas.
Yet during Israel's Operation Defensive Shield last year,
a whole array of documents was uncovered which show these
repeated Saudi denials to be completely baseless. One of the
strongest pieces of evidence came from a handwritten letter
written in Arabic by the current Palestinian Prime Minister,
Mahmud Abbas (Abu Mazen), on December 30, 2000, to Prince
Salman, governor of Riyadh and a full brother of King Fahd.
Abbas complained that Saudi donations in the Gaza Strip are
going to an organization called al-Jamiya al-Islamiya (the
Islamic Society), which Abbas explained "belongs to Hamas."
He wanted the funds for Fatah.
Al-Jamiya al-Islamiya was not just a Hamas front, supporting
positive social programs and secretly diverting funds to military
activity. Even its showcase activities were reprehensible.
For example, at a kindergarten graduation involving some of
its 1,600 Palestinian pre-schoolers, children wore uniforms
and carried mock rifles. Others re-enacted the lynching of
Israelis or other terrorist attacks. Thus, the Saudis were
not only funding the current generation of terrorism but also
the next generation as well.
There were other documents linking Saudi institutions to
terrorist financing. An actual IIRO document was found that
detailed how $280,000 was to be allocated to 14 Hamas front
groups. Checks made out to well-known Hamas fronts from the
corporate account of al-Rajhi Banking and Investment at Chase
Manhattan Bank were also uncovered. Al-Rajhi Banking and Investment
was one of the largest Saudi banking networks which serviced
the Saudi charities. Its head, Sulaiman al-Rajhi, headed the
family that established the SAAR (the acronym for his name)
foundation in Herndon, Virginia, which was raided last year
by U.S. federal agents because of suspected terrorist links.
There were other conduits for terrorist funding that were
disclosed. Spreadsheets of the Saudi Committee for Aid to
the al-Quds Intifada were found. These lists, that detailed
the movement of moneys to the families of suicide bombers,
were significant. Saudi spokesmen tried to distance themselves
from this activity by arguing that they helped these families
through international aid organizations. Yet it became clear
from the spreadsheets that these contributions were given
through a specifically Saudi organization that was headed
by the Saudi Minister of the Interior Prince Naif. Indeed,
at the top right-hand side of the spreadsheet found in the
West Bank, the name "Kingdom of Saudi Arabia" stands
out. In the words of Secretary of State Colin Powell, this
kind of support "incentivized" the suicide terrorist
attacks.
The Hamas case demonstrated the mode of operation of Saudi
charities in support of terrorism. It was significant for
those investigating other cases of global terrorism, including
al-Qaeda, since very often these groups shared the same funding
mechanisms. As a case study, it is particularly useful, since
it is the best-documented case of how the Saudis used their
charities to back militant activities.
Current Situation
Most of the documents discovered in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip were dated from the year 2000. Saudi diplomats argued
that after September 11, 2001, they had turned over a new
leaf. For example, in October 2002, the Royal Embassy of Saudi
Arabia in Washington released a statement detailing the steps
they had taken to keep better track of what the charities
were doing. The Saudi statement asserted that since September
11, 2001, "charitable groups have been closely monitored
and additional audits have been performed to assure that there
are no links to suspected groups."
Yet, the very same month the newest Saudi assurances were
provided in Washington, one of the top leaders of Hamas, Khaled
Mashal, was invited to Riyadh for a WAMY conference. So while
in Washington the press corps was told that there were no
longer any ties between the Saudi charities and suspected
groups, in Riyadh, one of the three main Saudi charities was
hosting the leader of one of the suspected groups, Hamas,
that had been labeled by the U.S. government as an international
terrorist organization. According to a captured Hamas document
that detailed Khaled Mashal's visit to Saudi Arabia, he actually
had been invited by Crown Prince Abdullah himself. While Hamas
had refused at the time to stop its suicide attacks, nonetheless,
Saudi officials reassured Mashal of continuing support.
A new context for the issue of Saudi funding of terrorist
groups was created when President Bush issued the "Roadmap
to a Permanent Two-State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict" on April 30, 2003. Besides requiring difficult
measures by Israelis and Palestinians alike, the new Bush
administration plan specifically called on Arab states in
its first phase to "cut off public and private funding
and all other forms of support for groups supporting and engaging
in violence and terror." In short, Saudi Arabia had to
come under the roadmap, as well. Meeting the leaders of Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, and Bahrain at Sharm el-Sheikh on June
3, 2003, President Bush announced that they had committed
themselves to use all means to cut off assistance to any terror
group.
It might have been expected that Saudi Arabia would adhere
to this firm U.S. policy. On May 12, 2003, Saudi Arabia itself
was struck by a triple suicide bombing that led to 35 fatalities,
including 9 Americans. Having denied that there was an al-Qaeda
presence in the Saudi kingdom, the Saudi government began
uncovering al-Qaeda cells and munitions in Riyadh, Mecca,
Medina, Jidda, and in the northern al-Jawf area. Having provided
the ideological and financial basis for the growth of al-Qaeda
and its sister organizations, including Hamas, Saudi Arabia
found that the fire they had ignited was coming back to burn
them as well.
Unfortunately, while the Saudis appear to be taking their
own domestic threat seriously, there is no indication that
they have scaled back their support for Hamas. The Israeli
national assessment is that Saudi Arabia today funds more
than 50 percent of the needs of Hamas and the Saudi percentage
in the total foreign aid to Hamas is actually growing. Saudi
Arabia continues to aid the families of suicide bombers. It
helps dual-use charities and charities that funnel funds directly
to military activities against Israel.
At present, Hamas has agreed to a temporary truce with Israel
called a hudna, but it is vigorously seeking to rebuild its
operational infrastructure, including an effort to increase
the quantity and quality of Qassam rockets launched against
Israelis towns. Muslim writers have argued in the past that
a hudna is to be maintained until the balance of power improves
for the Muslim side. Funding Hamas today jeopardizes the present
cease-fire between Israel and the Palestinians and increases
the likelihood that Hamas will return to militant action.
It is instructive to recall that in 1995, Saudi Arabia's
National Guard headquarters was struck by pro-bin Laden forces,
as well. Domestic threats in the mid-1990s did not cause the
Saudis to halt their assistance to jihadi groups abroad, like
Hamas or the Taliban, in the past. Riyadh appears able to
draw a distinction between acts of domestic subversion and
international terrorist activities, which are seen as part
of the global jihad.
Conclusions
This testimony was intended to disclose the critical role
of Saudi Arabia in providing ideological and financial support
for the new terrorism. While most of the evidence presented
here comes from the specific case of Hamas, the modus operandi
adopted in the Hamas case is probably applicable to other
parts of the global terrorist network as well. This is especially
true of the critical role of Saudi Arabia's global charities
in sustaining many similar militant organizations from Indonesia
to central Russia. While Saudi spokesmen have provided repeated
assurances that they have cleaned up these activities, their
denials with respect to terrorist funding do not stand up
against the documented evidence that has accumulated in the
last two years.
The Saudi government faces hard dilemmas. It has recently
taken disciplinary action against some of its most extreme
religious leaders. But traditionally, the Saudis need the
backing of their clerics to legitimize their regime; that
is the heart of the Saudi-Wahhabi covenant that dates back
to the 18th century. Yet the Saudis also need the ultimate
protective shield provided by the United States. In order
to sustain this, they have spent huge sums of money for public
relations firms and influence-brokers. But the time has come
to tell the Saudis that they have to make a choice. After
September 11, there has to be zero tolerance for terrorist
funding and other forms of terrorist support.
The stakes involved are not just a question of public relations
or Arab-Israel point-scoring in Washington. The West needs
to come to an understanding with the Islamic world based on
mutual respect and tolerance. The radicalization of the Middle
East being promoted by the Saudis undermines that goal and
threatens to substitute instead a vision of perpetual militancy
and conflict. For that reason, what is at stake is nothing
less than the security of the United States and its allies,
as well as the question of whether the Middle East moves in
the direction of hope and peace or relapses into a state of
continuing strife.
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