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  1. #1
    Former Member George L. Singleton's Avatar
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    Default Iran vs. Saudi Arabia: Hamas v. Hezbollah

    This 2007 Internet reference gives some good background but I am certain someone else on SWJ can post a more current dated citation on the same topic and invite you to do so.

    http://www.hudson.org/index.cfm?fuse...etails&id=5167

    My purpose in making this posting is to create discussion of the competition between Iran and Saudi Arabia's extremist elements to keep things agitated and stirred up between Israel and Palestine, competing power centers, Iran & Saudi, as I see them.

    Others more current tense info postings and commentary much appreciated.

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    Quote Originally Posted by George L. Singleton View Post
    My purpose in making this posting is to create discussion of the competition between Iran and Saudi Arabia's extremist elements to keep things agitated and stirred up between Israel and Palestine, competing power centers, Iran & Saudi, as I see them.
    Maybe a rambling comment that I made in another thread is more appropriate here. In regard to the latest Bernard Lewis piece in Foreign Affairs...

    Quote Originally Posted by Schmedlap View Post
    Starting on page 86, he writes “most Arab regimes belong to one of two categories: those that depend on the people’s loyalty and those that depend on their obedience. Loyalty may be ethnic, tribal, regional, or some combination of these… The regimes that depend on obedience are European-style dictatorships that use techniques of control and enforcement derived from the fascist and communist models. These regimes have little or no claim to the loyalty of their people and depend for survival on diversion and repression: directing the anger of their people toward some external enemy.”

    The recent order has been the loyalty regimes like Morocco and Saudi Arabia or the obedience regimes like Egypt or Syria (I presume).
    While Iran is not Arab, the same dynamic seems to apply. Saudi is the "loyalty" regime, whereas Iran is the "obedience" regime. Saudi Arabia, recognizing that the loyalty is quickly slipping away, in spite of the demographics, responds to the anti-Israeli sentiment of its people with limited help to Hamas. Iran's Mullahs, attempting to justify their rule and probably acting sincerely upon their ideology, cast themselves as the guardians of Islam / defense against enemies of Islam via their support of Hezbollah and activity in Iraq in order to make their repression seem less objectionable.

    I wonder if this is not so much a competition for power - merely for power's sake - but rather an attempt to amass power in the region so that the regime in each country can justify its existence. It seems that the Saudi people will soon wonder why they owe loyalty to a regime that, in spite of its oil wealth, doesn't seem to be doing much. The Iranians, sick of the BS from the Mullahs, are likely asking why they should accept repression if their country grows poorer by the day. If people are going to have freedoms denied or opportunities quashed, they need to believe that there is a good reason for it. At the moment, it seems that Saudi Arabia and Iran are scrambling to provide that justification to their people. Lacking the ability to jumpstart their economies or significantly improve future prospects for increases in their standards of living, Israel-bashing is always something that they feel comfortable falling back on.

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    Former Member George L. Singleton's Avatar
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    Default More commentary and analysis welcomed here...

    Good input and many thanks for same.

    Interested in other's takes on this theme...my personal agenda is to look for a disruption between Shias and Sunnis...recognizing that we now have two "theocratic" models, Iran, a Shi'a model, and of course Syria and Saudi Arabia, both Sunni models.

    I deliberately am not mentioning other nations models there in the Middle East but that does not stop anyone else here on SWJ from doing so.

    More discussion here. Understand I see Iran uniquely, to me uniquely, doing a cross over of support for both Hezballah and Hamas, Shi'a and Sunni, while at the same time Iran is an enemy of al Qaida and against them, at least that is what the world has been led to believe...until now???

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    Quote Originally Posted by George L. Singleton View Post
    Interested in other's takes on this theme...my personal agenda is to look for a disruption between Shias and Sunnis...recognizing that we now have two "theocratic" models, Iran, a Shi'a model, and of course Syria and Saudi Arabia, both Sunni models.
    Syria is very far from a Sunni theocracy, given that it is ruled by the (semi-secular, supposedly non-confessional) Ba'th Party, with the (non-Sunni, heterodox Shiite-offshot) Alawi minority exercising disproportionate influence in the Party and Army.

    If "theocracy" is understood to be a system where men of religion rule directly, then Saudi Arabia isn't quite one—for all its Wahhabi piety, it is the royal family and not the ulama who rule.

    Iran is one, albeit limited by both a written constitution and quasi-elective components (the majlis and the presidency).
    They mostly come at night. Mostly.


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    If we are to accept that Syria or Saudi Arabia are theocracies - I think Rex makes a good case against it - but, for the sake of argument, Iran seems to be a very different breed of theocracy. I think the Mullahs really believe in their state-sanctioned-twelver-Khomeini-BS and truly feel an obligation to impose it on the country. I think the House of Saud, on the other hand, would grasp for anything that gave them legitimacy. If the Saudi Arabian people suddenly stopped caring about Islam and only cared about soccer, then the House of Saud would be swapping their traditional garb for Manchester United jerseys and turning Mecca into a giant soccer stadium. Divine right is almost always an excuse to rule, not a geniune belief. I think Iran is that rare exception.

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    Former Member George L. Singleton's Avatar
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    Rex and Schmedlap you are both in the ballpark and here is a citation/literal copy of commonly understood meaning of the term "Islamic Republic" which is the terminology I might have better used as found on the Internet at

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_republic:

    Islamic Republic is the name given to several states in the Muslim world including the Islamic Republics of Pakistan, Iran, Afghanistan and Mauritania. Pakistan adopted the title under the constitution of 1956. Mauritania adopted it on 28 November 1958. Iran adopted it after the 1979 Islamic Revolution that overthrew the Pahlavi government. Afghanistan adopted it after the 2001 overthrow of the Taliban. Despite the similar name the countries differ greatly in their governments and laws.

    The term "Islamic republic" has come to mean several different things, some contradictory to others. Theoretically, to many religious leaders, it is a state under a particular theocratic form of government advocated by some Muslim religious leaders in the Middle East and Africa. It is seen as a compromise between a purely Islamic Caliphate, and secular nationalism and republicanism. In their conception of the Islamic republic, the penal code of the state is required to be compatible with some laws of Sharia, and not a monarchy as many Middle Eastern states are presently. In other cases, it is merely a symbol of cultural identity, as was the case when Pakistan adopted the title under the constitution of 1956. In fact many argue that an Islamic Republic strikes a middle path between a completely secular and a theocratic (and/or Orthodox Islamic) system of government.

    Iran's Islamic republic is in contrast to the semi-secular state of the Republic of Pakistan (proclaimed as an Islamic Republic in 1956) where Islamic laws are technically considered to override laws of the state, though in reality their relative hierarchy is ambiguous.

    Pakistan was the first country to adopt Islamic prefix to define its republican status under the otherwise secular constitution of 1956. Interestingly enough, despite this definition, the country did not have state religion until 1973, when a new constitution, more democratic but less secular, was adopted. Pakistan only uses the "Islamic" name on its passports and visas. All government documents are prepared under the name of the Government of Pakistan, however, Islamic republic is specifically mentioned in the Constitution of 1973. As per the Constitution of Pakistan, part IX, article 227 " All existing laws shall be brought in conformity with the Injunctions of Islam as laid down in the Quran and Sunnah, in this Part referred to as the Injunctions of Islam, and no law shall be enacted which is repugnant to such Injunctions "[1].

    Today, the creation of an Islamic State is the rallying cry for many Muslims, including those described as Islamists, all over the world. However the term itself has different meanings among various people. Many advocate the abolition of the monarchies of the Middle East, regimes which they believe to be overly authoritarian or otherwise repressive to Islam, in some cases, to be replaced with a unified and monolithic Caliphate[2] and in other cases Islamic Republics along national lines.
    At present the Sunni radicals/terrorists are persecuring/murdering the Shi'as in Northern Pakistan and in Afghanistan. You and others may want to comment on this.

    There have long been distinctions/differences origninating from the death of Muhammad and how his sucessor(s) were and are viewed since that time which of course created and cause today the differences between Shi'a and Sunni, and allow for more moderate sub-sects such as that of HRJ the Agha Khan and his followers, which are a Shi'a off shoot sometimes referred to as Islamis.

    Other comments, critiques most welcome.

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