Whoa,
Ok I'm on my lunchbreak and trying very hard to go thru all the stuff in the thread. Not time to get to everything but I am so pleased at everybody who thanked me for bringing up my points. it has been my pleasure to offer whatever insight I have from my 8 years in the Mid-East. It is a VERY complicated situation.
I wanted to quickly post the following (portion) of a US Army assessment of current threats posed to the Saudi Arabia.
From the US Army?s Strategic Studies Institute Report 598 , dated March 2005
From the Section Entitled Saudi Security Concerns:
Doomsday scenarios to be avoided are:
? an assassination, or death and subsequent crisis in the royal
family leading to regime disintegration;
? a civil war between regime supporters and Islamist extremists,
and their respective tribal and familial allies;
? an unmanageable attack on the oil region; or
? a serious conflict with Saudi Arabia?s neighbors.
The danger of a civil war might arise from a situation in which
a segment of the Saudi government is radicalized from within. If
that were the case, then the alliances of security, military, or national
guard forces might be subverted, unlikely as this is at present. An
attack on the oil facilities is a serious concern. More than one-half
of Saudi Arabia?s oil reserves are located in just 8 of about 80 fields,
including Ghawar, which produces nearly half of the country?s
total production. Extremists attacked oil installations in 2004, and
Saudi security has foiled other and earlier attacks. The 2004 attacks
specifically targeted expatriates, but perhaps attacks will become
less specific as in Iraq where Iraqi crude exports were affected, and
pumping was deliberately halted in August 2004.125 Oil loading
facilities and the two main pipelines, the Petroline and the Abqaiq-
Yanbu natural gas liquids pipeline, as well as tankers, might also be
targeted. Strategic planners and military games must not predicate
easy victory; rather, the lessons of the Iraqi insurgency should be
carefully integrated into scenarios concerning the oil fields, which
are now protected by forces of over 30,000, and possess sophisticated
surveillance equipment. Still, the likelihood of infiltration by small
groups seeking to keep their cause alive or future coordinated
multiple attacks must be considered. Even the brief attack on the
U.S. consulate in Jeddah triggered a rise in oil prices, so the economic
impact of any such scenarios should also be assessed.
- I will let everyone digest that assessment and then we can discuss my opinion that Bush's md-east policies have increased the likelyhood of one of these scenarios occuring.