THE (SAUDI) THEATRE OF THE ABSURD
MoA was the first to catch it - here is a slightly different enunciation:
The PM of Lebanon - who holds a Saudi passport - resigns under orders by the House of Saud Clown Prince MBS, in Saudi Arabia, on Saudi Arabian TV.
Yet In his House of Saud written resignation he accuses IRAN of meddling in Lebanese politics.
Western MSM Moronic Infernos buy the scam line, hook and sinker.
Beckett wouldn't have come up with a better plot.
--Pepe Escobar
The inside story of the Saudi night of long knives
Princes,
ministers and a billionaire are 'imprisoned' in the Riyadh
Ritz-Carlton while the Saudi Arabian Army is said to be in an uproar
Pepe
Escobar
6
November, 2017
The
House of Saud’s King Salman devises an high-powered
“anti-corruption” commission and appoints his son, Crown Prince
Mohammad Bin Salman, a.k.a. MBS, as chairman.
Right
on cue, the commission detains 11 House of Saud princes, four current
ministers and dozens of former princes/cabinet secretaries – all
charged with corruption. Hefty bank accounts are frozen, private jets
are grounded. The high-profile accused lot is “jailed” at the
Riyadh Ritz-Carlton.
War
breaks out within the House of Saud, as Asia Times
had anticipated back
in July. Rumors have been swirling for months about a coup against
MBS in the making. Instead, what just happened is yet another MBS
pre-emptive coup.
A
top Middle East business/investment source who has been doing deals
for decades with the opaque House of Saud offers much-needed
perspective: “This is more serious than it appears. The arrest
of the two sons of previous King Abdullah, Princes Miteb and Turki,
was a fatal mistake. This now endangers the King himself. It
was only the regard for the King that protected MBS. There are many
left in the army against MBS and they are enraged at the arrest of
their commanders.”
To
say the Saudi Arabian Army is in uproar is an understatement. “He’d
have to arrest the whole army before he could feel secure.”
Prince
Miteb until recently was a serious contender to the Saudi throne. But
the highest profile among the detainees belongs to billionaire Prince
al-Waleed Bin Talal, owner of Kingdom Holdings, major shareholder in
Twitter, CitiBank, Four Seasons, Lyft and, until recently, Rupert
Murdoch’s Newscorp.
Al-Waleed’s
arrest ties up with a key angle; total information control. There’s
no freedom of information in Saudi Arabia. MBS already controls all
the internal media (as well as the appointment of governorships). But
then there’s Saudi media at large. MBS aims to
“hold the keys to all the large media empires and relocate them to
Saudi Arabia.”
So
how did we get here?
The
secrets behind the purge
The
story starts with secret deliberations in 2014 about a possible
“removal” of then King Abdullah. But “the dissolution of the
royal family would lead to the breaking apart of tribal loyalties and
the country splitting into three parts. It would be more difficult to
secure the oil, and the broken institutions whatever they were should
be maintained to avoid chaos.”
Instead,
a decision was reached to get rid of Prince Bandar bin Sultan –
then actively coddling Salafi-jihadis in Syria – and replace the
control of the security apparatus with Mohammed bin Nayef.
The
succession of Abdullah proceeded smoothly. “Power was shared
between three main clans: King Salman (and his beloved son Prince
Mohammed); the son of Prince Nayef (the other Prince Mohammed), and
finally the son of the dead king (Prince Miteb, commander of the
National Guard). In practice, Salman let MBS run the show.
And,
in practice, blunders also followed. The House of Saud lost its
lethal regime-change drive in Syria and is bogged down in an
unwinnable war on Yemen, which on top of it prevents MBS from
exploiting the Empty Quarter – the desert straddling both nations.
The
Saudi Treasury was forced to borrow on the international markets.
Austerity ruled – with news of MBS buying a yacht for almost half a
billion dollars while lazing about the Cote d’Azur not going down
particularly well. Hardcore political repression is epitomized by the
decapitation of Shi’ite leader Sheikh Al-Nimr. Not only the
Shi’ites in the Eastern province are rebelling but also Sunni
provinces in the west.
As
the regime’s popularity radically tumbled down, MBS came up with
Vision 2030. Theoretically, it was shift away from oil; selling off
part of Aramco; and an attempt to bring in new industries. Cooling
off dissatisfaction was covered by royal payoffs to key princes to
stay loyal and retroactive payments on back wages to the unruly
masses.
Yet
Vision 2030 cannot possibly work when the majority of productive jobs
in Saudi Arabia are held by expats. Bringing in new jobs raises the
question of where are the new (skilled) workers to come from.
Throughout
these developments, aversion to MBS never ceased to grow; “There
are three major royal family groups aligning against the present
rulers: the family of former King Abdullah, the family of former
King Fahd, and the family of former Crown Prince Nayef.”
Nayef
– who replaced Bandar – is close to Washington and extremely
popular in Langley due to his counter-terrorism activities. His
arrest earlier this year angered the CIA and quite a few factions of
the House of Saud – as it was interpreted as MBS forcing his hand
in the power struggle.
According
to the source, “he might have gotten away with the arrest of CIA
favorite Mohammed bin Nayef if he smoothed it over but MBS has now
crossed the Rubicon though he is no Caesar. The CIA regards him
as totally worthless.”
Some
sort of stability could eventually be found in a return to the
previous power sharing between the Sudairis (without MBS) and the
Chamars (the tribe of deceased King Abdullah). After the death of
King Salman, the source would see it as “MBS isolated from power,
which would be entrusted to the other Prince Mohammed (the son of
Nayef). And Prince Miteb would conserve his position.”
MBS
acted exactly to prevent this outcome. The source, though, is
adamant; “There will be regime change in the near future, and the
only reason that it has not happened already is because the old King
is liked among his family. It is possible that there may be a
struggle emanating from the military as during the days of King
Farouk, and we may have a ruler arise that is not friendly to the
United States.”
‘Moderate’ Salafi-jihadis, anyone?
Before
the purge, the House of Saud’s incessant spin centered on a $500
billion zone straddling Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, on the
Red Sea coast, a sort of Dubai replica to be theoretically completed
by 2025, powered by wind and solar energy, and financed by its
sovereign wealth fund and proceeds from the Aramco IPO.
In
parallel, MBS pulled another rabbit from his hat swearing the future
of Saudi Arabia is a matter of “simply reverting to what we
followed – a moderate Islam open to the world and all religions.”
In
a nutshell: a state that happens to be the private property of a
royal family inimical to all principles of freedom of expression and
religion, as well as the ideological matrix of all forms of
Salafi-jihadism simply cannot metastasize into a “moderate” state
just because MBS says so.
Meanwhile,
a pile-up of purges, coups and countercoups shall be the norm.
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