Saudi Arabia’s binge of
head-choppings – 47 in all,
including the learned Shia cleric Sheikh Nimr Baqr al-Nimr, followed by a
Koranic justification for the executions – was worthy of Isis. Perhaps that was
the point. For this extraordinary bloodbath in the land of the Sunni Muslim
al-Saud monarchy – clearly intended to infuriate the Iranians and the entire
Shia world – re-sectarianised a religious conflict which Isis has itself done
so much to promote.
All that was missing was the video of the
decapitations – although the Kingdom’s 158 beheadings last year were
perfectly in tune with the Wahabi teachings of the ‘Islamic State’.
Macbeth’s ‘blood will have blood’ certainly applies to the Saudis, whose
‘war on terror’, it seems, now justifies any amount of blood, both Sunni and
Shia. But how often do the angels of God the Most Merciful appear to the
present Saudi interior minister, Crown Prince Mohamed bin Nayef?
For Sheikh Nimr was not just any old divine. He spent years as a
scholar in Tehran and Syria, was a revered Shia leader of Friday prayers in the
Saudi Eastern Province, and a man who stayed clear of political parties but
demanded free elections, and was regularly detained and tortured – by his own
account – for opposing the Sunni Wahabi Saudi government. Sheikh Nimr said that
words were more powerful than violence. The authorities’ whimsical
suggestion that there was nothing sectarian about this most recent bloodbath –
on the grounds that they beheaded Sunnis as well as Shias – was classic
Isis rhetoric.
After all, Isis cuts the heads of Sunni ‘apostates’
and Sunni Syrian and Iraqi soldiers just as readily as it slaughters Shias.
Sheikh Nimr would have got precisely the same treatment from the thugs of the
‘Islamic State’ as he got from the Saudis – though without the mockery of a
pseudo-legal trial which Sheikh Nimr was afforded and of which Amnesty
complained.
But the killings represent far more than just Saudi
hatred for a cleric who rejoiced at the death of the former Saudi interior
minister – Mohamed bin Nayef’s father, Crown Prince Nayef Abdul-Aziz
al-Saud – with the hope that he would be "eaten by worms and will suffer
the torments of hell in his grave". Nimr’s execution will reinvigorate the
Houthi rebellion in Yemen, which the Saudis invaded and bombed this year in an
attempt to destroy Shia power there. It has enraged the Shia majority in
Sunni-rules Bahrain. And Iran’s own clerics have already claimed that the
beheading will cause the overthrow of the Saudi royal family.
It will also present the West with that most embarrassing of Middle
Eastern problems: the continuing need to cringe and grovel to the rich and
autocratic monarchs of the Gulf while gently expressing their unease at the
grotesque butchery which the Saudi courts have just dished out to the Kingdom’s
enemies. Had Isis chopped off the heads of Sunnis and Shias in Raqqa –
especially that of a troublesome Shia priest like Sheikh Nimr – we can be sure
that Dave Cameron would have been tweeting his disgust at so loathsome an act.
But the man who lowered the British flag on the death of the last king of this
preposterous Wahabi state will be using weasel words to address this bit of
head-chopping.
However many Sunni al-Qaeda men have also just lost
their heads – literally – to Saudi executioners, the question will be asked in
both Washington and European capitals: are the Saudis trying to destroy
the Iranian nuclear agreement by forcing their Western allies to support even
these latest outrages? In the obtuse world in which they live – in which
the youthful defence minister who invaded Yemen intensely dislikes the interior
minister – the Saudis are still glorying in the ‘anti-terror’ coalition of 34
largely Sunni nations
The executions were certainly an
unprecedented Saudi way of welcoming in the New Year – if not quite as publicly
spectacular as the firework display in Dubai which went ahead alongside the
burning of one of the emirate’s finest hotels. Outside the political
implications, however, there is also an obvious question to be asked – in the
Arab world itself — of the self-perpetuating House of Saud: have the
Kingdom’s rulers gone bonkers?
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