What a difference six months can make. In April of this year, it seemed neither media nor politicians could get enough of the then-golden child of Middle East geopolitics, Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, “MBS” for short, during his tour of the US. As I wrote for Crikey at the time:
MBS has received no shortage of positive coverage on his tour. In The New Yorker, Dexter Filkins unquestioningly relayed the Trump administration’s desire to reshape the Middle East, as if determining the political and social structures of other countries is the most natural thing in the world for the US to be doing (ahem).
The prince even booked out the entire Four Seasons in Beverley Hills ahead of a lavish dinner with Rupert Murdoch and Hollywood elites including Morgan Freeman and Michael Douglas. According to Vanity Fair, before eating, guests listened to a speech from the prince in which he “touched on his hope to return Saudi Arabia to a more open, moderate form of Islam (the Crown Prince has blamed Iran for Saudi Arabia’s long history of fostering extremism).”
The crowning moment of cringe came with the fawning 60 Minutes interview that proved to be prescient in an altogether different manner than intended. When journalist Norah O’Donnell exclaimed at the prince, “You are 32 years old. You could rule this country for 50 years! Can anything stop you?”, MBS replied, “Only death.”
Well, he didn’t say whose death, did he? Fast forward six months later and MBS is at the centre of global outrage following the gruesome murder of an exiled Saudi dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Since details of the journalist’s disappearance and death have emerged, media has been frantically backtracking in their effusive praise. Whereas in April, Filkins had cautiously skirted around a reformer-or-ruthless-power-grabber narrative to conclude “his supporters in both Washington and Riyadh feel that, whatever his faults, the alternative would be worse,” in his latest piece for the New Yorker, he bluntly states, “The truth is that MBS’s violent, impulsive character was visible early on … if there is any lesson to be learned from this terrible affair, it’s how blind so much of official Washington and the American press were to MBS’s true nature.”
You don’t say. Or, more to the point, if only Filkins had been willing to say sooner.
Likewise, The Atlantic published a softball interview in which Jeffrey Goldberg congratulated the “putatively reformist crown prince” for having “made all the right enemies,” as well as for his stance on Israel, “a country about which Prince Mohammed did not have a bad word to say”. In stark contrast, as if this were an episode of Scooby Doo and the villain had been unmasked, the same magazine gloomily announced this week that MBS is “no longer the long-awaited reformer, but yet another authoritarian”.
Who are these journalists kidding? Regardless of whether or not they themselves bought the “reformist modernising prince” narrative, the truth remains that they pushed it, or, at the very least they didn’t question it when it mattered most.
Many journalists still retain a belief in an adversarial role for journalism, one that prescribes them the duty of holding power to account. At the same time, the media relies upon political actors for access, and this, unfortunately, can often mean less speaking truth to power and more sucking up to it.
For those of us who have been calling out not only MBS but the Saudi-West relationship in general, including Australia’s weapons deals, it is bizarre, to say the least, to witness political journalists backtracking in audacious ways to distance themselves, not only from MBS but from the previous adulation the media showered upon him.
How many lives in Yemen could have been saved if our media has spoken out sooner? Would Khashoggi himself still be alive? On that we can only speculate, but what is certain is that MBS is a symptom, not the cause of the problems in Saudi Arabia. He has been heir apparent since 2017, and while true that in this time the war on Yemen has escalated and women’s rights activists have been imprisoned, it is also true that the frantic rewriting of history on the part of a media desperate to save face is obscuring an important truth; such injustices were already occurring long before MBS came on the public scene. As I also wrote in that same Crikey piece:
Saudi Arabia — and MBS has admitted this — funded the Afghan mujahideen that would become the Taliban, telling The Atlantic he would do it all again. The Saudi kingdom is also known for, in addition to its decimation of Yemen, sending tanks to literally squash Bahrain’s short-lived “Arab Spring”, bankrolling Islamist militant groups in Syria and elsewhere, funding mosques in countries all across the world in the proviso they preach the kingdom’s strict and sectarian branch of Sunni Islam, Wahhabism (which the prince curiously claims does not exist), executing political prisoners including Shia clerics on bogus charges, oppressing its Shia population, persecuting atheists, and imprisoning, lashing, and beheading journalists and bloggers.
The death of Khashoggi has inflamed anger and passions in the US from those who were willing to overlook all the above. As such, it’s hard not conclude this is because they have taken his murder personally. The Saudi-born dissident was a US permanent resident and columnist at one of the US media’s most prestigious legacy titles, The Washington Post. As the Lowy Institute’s Rodger Shanahan writes, “expect the issue to stay a live one in the corridors of Washington and other Western capitals.” Even The Wall Street Journal, ever mindful of economic imperatives, is now speculating as to how Trump “can punish the kingdom without jeopardising an alliance he spent two years cultivating.”
The bad news for Yemen and for those of us aching to see meaningful political and social change in the Middle East is that the downfall of MBS — if it eventuates — won’t really change a thing. As much as MBS is now being made to wear all the sins of his father’s kingdom, most of them preceded him and they will likely outlive him. With him gone things may well go back to “normal”, which, in the contemporary Middle East still means war against poverty-stricken populations, restrictions on political and press freedom, persecution of minorities and women, and alliances between draconian Arab governments and oil-hungry Western regimes.
Unless our media is willing to live up to its own professed principles and hold power to account, it’s difficult to see any “punishment” of MBS and Saudi Arabia having any positive impact where it is needed most.
Oh wow, who’d have thunk that lavishing praise on a dictatorial religious extremist would come back to bite the media on the butt.
On an instinctive level, I reckon MBS (they’re initials to conjour with) has a frightening face with eyes that could laser your liver out at two paces. But hey, he’s kinda exotic, mega rich and wields the power of a despot; that’s as sexy as hell and sells.
the problem is that the expectations of the press were proven very wrong & thats wherein the problem lies…hopefully a lesson is learned…as most people understand the apple generally doesn’t fall far from the tree…which is very appropriate in this case..surely Syria would prove this point…the middle east a mess & it has been for years…but that’s the way the Saudi’s have been playing it..
On an instinctive level, I reckon MBS (they’re initials to conjour with) has a frightening face with eyes that could laser your liver out at two paces. But hey, he’s kinda exotic, mega rich and wields the power of a despot; that’s as sexy as hell and sells.
Well yes that sexy thing would sell for a while..but ”you can only fool all of the people some of the time…” it’s a game MBC thought he may be able to play for a bit longer (I would suspect)…but the assassination of Khashoggi & the very public denial then, the admission then ”hunt for those responsible,” I would suggest has proven his expectations around this & how the world media would handle this has very much come unstuck…the Saudi’s have held such a firm hand in the middle east since WWII & the formation of Israel, it expects that wealth & power can protect it from pretty well everything….which may yet change, depending on the US & it’s alliance country’s …..
Well said Ruby. Don’t always agree with your takes but can’t quibble with any of this. Journalists sucking up to their subjects rather than holding them to account (until they crash and burn, then the journalist moves to another source to cultivate with ass-kissing) is a blight across the field.
Yes it’s a problem…the sucking up thing..hopefully there are enough investigative journo’s out there, that don’t fit that mould & want to find out what’s really going on behind the ”mask’s of civility,” these people’s, facades that are purposely set in place…
Watching him on that panel yesterday – what’s with his left nostril? To much Pepsi …. or whatever it is that does that to you?
I don’t understand the Saudi/West relationship at all. We chased Saddam down, who I think was a Sunni like saudis, and fight shi’ites in Iran whom we installed in Iraq to replace Saddam. Obviously more to it but…..
The established sect in Saudi Arabia calls itself Sunni but strictly speaking it isn’t. I don’t want to bore you with theology but basically the sect founded by Ibn Abdul Wahhab, commonly referred to as the Wahhabi sect, is opposed to both the orthodox Sunni school of thought and the Shia. When my wife and I were standing opposite the grave of the Prophet and reciting blessings on him, as Sunni Muslims do, a student from the local Saudi religious college approached us and lectured us about why that was a bad thing to do. Of course there are many orthodox Sunni Muslims in Saudi Arabia but they don’t control the religious establishment. There are also Shia in the east of the country.
For all of his faults, Hussein most definitely had no truck with religious extremists. Hence why Al Qiada cheered the day the US overthrew him, as it was an open invitation for them to set up shop inside Iraq.
Meanwhile, the House of Saud are the biggest financial backers of both ISIL & Al Qiada…..yet western leaders/media bend over backwards to kiss their collective @$$es.