spot_img

The Saudi’s incoregible behaviour


Abd al-Wahhab’s teachings are a double edged sword for the Saud regime in the 20th century, which no longer controls the fundamentalists who believe in them

Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

Abd al-Wahhab’s teachings are a double edged sword for the Saud regime in the 20th century, which no longer controls the fundamentalists who believe in them

If one had to sum up the relationship between the Saudi Arabian state and the Wahhabite doctrine in two words, the two words would be “symbiosis” and “ambiguity”. A symbiosis that dates back to the Twenties, when the Al-Saud family decided to embark on a campaign to reconquer the Arab Peninsula after the debacle suffered by its clan at the beginning of the 19th century. Like his ancestors a century earlier, the leader and future sovereign Abdulaziz al-Saud had managed to unite his followers by placing the Wahhabite doctrine as a cornerstone of his right to power. An ideology based on the concept of the Tawhid – “the unity” – of believers around a single leader in the service of the only true faith. Abdulaziz was surrounded by an elite unit of Bedouin warriors, the “Ikhwan” (the ‘brothers’, though they bear no relation to the Muslim Brotherhood), a group of fanatical veterans who would turn out to be fundamental to the conquest of Arabia. The relationship between the ambitious leader and his praetorians however came unstuck once the invasion had been completed. During their conquests the Al-Saud clan had banished the Hashemites from the Mecca (a clan whose descendants now rule over Jordan), who were allied at the with the British Empire. London reacted cautiously, sending representatives out to sound Abdulaziz’s intentions.

This content if for our subscribers

Subscribe for 1 year and gain unlimited access to all content on eastwest.eu plus both the digital and the hard copy of the geopolitical magazine

Subscribe now €45

Gain 1 year of unlimited access to only the website and digital magazine

Subscribe now €20

RELATED POSTS

Iran and Libya: war and peace

ART - An artist of these times

BOOKS - Brexit and the British

No peace for Kashmir

Italy back in Europe

rivista di geopolitica, geopolitica e notizie dal mondo