Overview
Country, Middle East, southwestern Asia.
It occupies four-fifths of the Arabian Peninsula and is
bounded by the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf. Area: 830,000 sq mi
(2,149,690 sq km). Population (2005 est.): 23,230,000. Capital:
Riyadh. The people are predominantly Arab. Language: Arabic
(official). Religion: Islam (official; predominantly Sunni).
Currency: Saudi rial. The country is a plateau region, with
bands of imposing highlands rising from the narrow Red Sea
coast. More than nine-tenths is desert, including the world’s
largest continuous sand area, the Rubʿ al-Khali (“Empty
Quarter”). The largest petroleum producer of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and one of the leading oil
exporters in the world, Saudi Arabia has reserves that represent
one-fourth of the world total. Its other products include
natural gas, gypsum, dates, wheat, and desalinated water. It is
a monarchy; its head of state and government is the king,
assisted by the crown prince. Saudi Arabia is the historical
home of Islam. During premodern times, local and foreign rulers
fought for control of the region; in 1517 the Ottoman Empire
attained nominal control of most of the peninsula. In the
18th–19th century an Islamic reform group known as the Wahhābī
joined with the Saʿūd dynasty to take control of most of central
Arabia; they suffered political setbacks but regained most of
their territory by 1904. The British held Saudi lands as a
protectorate (1915–27), after which they acknowledged the
sovereignty of the Kingdom of the Hejaz and Nejd. The two
kingdoms were unified as the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932.
Since World War II (1939–45), the kingdom’s rulers have
supported the Palestinian cause in the Middle East and
maintained close ties with the U.S. In 2000 Saudi Arabia and
Yemen settled a long-standing border dispute.
Profile
Official name Al-Mamlakah al-ʿArabīyah as-Saʿūdīyah (Kingdom
of Saudi Arabia)
Form of government monarchy1
Head of state and government King
Capital Riyadh
Official language Arabic
Official religion Islam
Monetary unit Saudi riyal (SR)
Population estimate (2008) 24,780,000
Total area (sq mi) 830,000
Total area (sq km) 2,149,690
1Additionally, there is the Consultative Council consisting of
150 appointed members.
Main
arid, sparsely populated kingdom of the Middle East.
Extending across most of the northern and central Arabian
Peninsula, Saudi Arabia is a young country that is heir to a
rich history. In its western highlands, along the Red Sea, lies
the Hejaz, which is the cradle of Islam and the site of that
religion’s holiest cities, Mecca and Medina. In the country’s
geographic heartland is a region known as Najd (“Highland”), a
vast arid zone that until recent times was a rich pastiche of
warring and feuding Bedouin tribes and clans. To the east, along
the Persian Gulf, are the country’s abundant oil fields that,
since the 1960s, have made Saudi Arabia synonymous with
petroleum wealth. Those three elements—religion, tribalism, and
untold wealth—have fueled the country’s subsequent history.
It was only with the rise of the Saʿūd family (Āl Saʿūd)—a
Najdi group for which the country is named—and its eventual
consolidation of power in the early 20th century that Saudi
Arabia began to take on the characteristics of a modern country.
The success of the Saʿūds was due, in no small part, to the
motivating ideology of Wahhābism, an austere form of Islam that
was embraced by early family leaders and that became the state
creed. This deep religious conservatism has been accompanied by
a ubiquitous tribalism—in which competing family groups vie for
resources and status—that often has made Saudi society difficult
for outsiders to comprehend. Enormous oil wealth has fueled huge
and rapid investment in Saudi Arabia’s infrastructure. Many
citizens have benefited from this growth, but it also has
supported lavish lifestyles for the scions of the ruling family,
and religious conservatives and liberal democrats alike have
accused the family of squandering and mishandling the country’s
wealth. In addition, civil discontent increased after the
Persian Gulf War (1990–91) over the country’s close ties to the
West, symbolized notably by the U.S. troops stationed in Saudi
Arabia until 2005.
In the mid-20th century, most of Saudi Arabia still embraced
a traditional lifestyle that had changed little over thousands
of years. Since then, the pace of life in Saudi Arabia has
accelerated rapidly. The constant flow of pilgrims to Mecca and
Medina (vast throngs arrive for the annual hajj, and more
pilgrims visit throughout the year for the lesser pilgrimage,
the ʿumrah) had always provided the country with outside
contacts, but interaction with the outside world has expanded
with innovations in transportation, technology, and
organization. More recently, petroleum has wrought irreversible
domestic changes—educational and social as well as economic.
Modern methods of production have been superimposed on a
traditional society by the introduction of millions of foreign
workers and by the employment of hundreds of thousands of Saudis
in nontraditional jobs. In addition, tens of thousands of Saudi
students have studied abroad, most in the United States.
Television, radio, and the Internet have become common media of
communication and education, and highways and airways have
replaced traditional means of transportation.
Saudi Arabia, once a country of small cities and towns, has
become increasingly urban; traditional centres such as Jiddah,
Mecca, and Medina have grown into large cities, and the capital,
Riyadh, a former oasis town, has grown into a modern metropolis.
Many of the region’s traditional nomads, the Bedouin, have been
settled in cities or agrarian communities. The sedentary
population of the country views those few Bedouin who maintain
the traditional desert lifestyle with deep ambivalence. They
are, at the same time, the link to the country’s past and its
solid foundation. In the words of Sandra Mackey, an American
writer and traveler:
Psychologically, the Bedouin represents to the present-day
Saudi what the Western cowboy folk hero represents to an
American. And like Americans, the Saudis have created from the
Bedouin, idealized as a desert warrior, a powerful prototype
that influences their value system and their patterns of
behavior. No matter how much the various geographic regions of
Saudi Arabia may differ or how far a Saudi is removed from the
desert, the Bedouin ethos is the bedrock of the culture.
Land
The country occupies about four-fifths of the Arabian
Peninsula. It is bordered by Jordan, Iraq, and Kuwait to the
north; by the Persian Gulf, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and
Oman to the east; by a portion of Oman to the southeast; by
Yemen to the south and southwest; and by the Red Sea and the
Gulf of Aqaba to the west. Long-running border disputes were
nearly resolved with Yemen (2000) and Qatar (2001); the border
with the United Arab Emirates remains undefined. A territory of
2,200 square miles (5,700 square km) along the gulf coast was
shared by Kuwait and Saudi Arabia as a neutral zone until 1969,
when a political boundary was agreed upon. Each of the two
countries administers one-half of the territory, but they
equally share oil production in the entire area. The controversy
over the Saudi-Iraqi Neutral Zone was legally settled in 1981 by
partition, yet conflict between the two countries persisted and
prevented final demarcation on the ground.
Relief
The Arabian Peninsula is dominated by a plateau that rises
abruptly from the Red Sea and dips gently toward the Persian
Gulf. In the north, the western highlands are upward of 5,000
feet (1,500 metres) above sea level, decreasing slightly to
4,000 feet (1,200 metres) in the vicinity of Medina and
increasing southeastward to more than 10,000 feet (3,000
metres). Mount Sawdāʾ, which is situated near Abhā in the south,
is generally considered the highest point in the country.
Estimates of its elevation range from 10,279 to 10,522 feet
(3,133 to 3,207 metres). The watershed of the peninsula is only
25 miles (40 km) from the Red Sea in the north and recedes to 80
miles (130 km) near the Yemen border. The coastal plain, known
as the Tihāmah, is virtually nonexistent in the north, except
for occasional wadi deltas, but it widens slightly toward the
south. The imposing escarpment that runs parallel to the Red Sea
is somewhat interrupted by a gap northwest of Mecca but becomes
more clearly continuous to the south.
Toward the interior, the surface gradually descends into the
broad plateau area of the Najd, which is covered with lava flows
and volcanic debris as well as with occasional sand
accumulations; it slopes down from an elevation of about 4,500
feet (1,370 metres) in the west to about 2,500 feet (760 metres)
in the east. There the drainage is more clearly dendritic (i.e.,
branching) and is much more extensive than that flowing toward
the Red Sea. To the east, this region is bounded by a series of
long, low ridges, with steep slopes on the west and gentle
slopes on the east; the area is 750 miles (1,200 km) long and
curves eastward from north to south. The most prominent of the
ridges are the Ṭuwayq Mountains (Jibāl Ṭuwayq), which rise from
the plateau at an elevation of some 2,800 feet (850 metres)
above sea level and reach more than 3,500 feet (1,100 metres)
southwest of Riyadh, overlooking the plateau’s surface to the
west by 800 feet (250 metres) and more.
The interior of the Arabian Peninsula contains extensive sand
surfaces. Among them is the world’s largest sand area, the Rubʿ
al-Khali (“Empty Quarter”), which dominates the southern part of
the country and covers more than 250,000 square miles (647,500
square km). It slopes from above 2,600 feet (800 metres) near
the border with Yemen northeastward down almost to sea level
near the Persian Gulf; individual sand mountains reach
elevations of 800 feet (250 metres), especially in the eastern
part. A smaller sand area of about 22,000 square miles (57,000
square km), called Al-Nafūd (nafūd designating a sandy area or
desert), is in the north-central part of the country. A great
arc of sand, Al-Dahnāʾ, almost 900 miles (1,450 km) long but in
places only 30 miles (50 km) wide, joins Al-Nafūd with the Rubʿ
al-Khali. Eastward, as the plateau surface slopes very gradually
down to the gulf, there are numerous salt flats (sabkhahs) and
marshes. The gulf coastline is irregular, and the coastal waters
are very shallow.
Drainage and soils
There are virtually no permanent surface streams in the
country, but wadis are numerous. Those leading to the Red Sea
are short and steep, though one unusually long extension is made
by Wadi Al-Ḥamḍ, which rises near Medina and flows inland to the
northwest for 100 miles (160 km) before turning westward; those
draining eastward are longer and more developed except in
Al-Nafūd and the Rubʿ al-Khali. Soils are poorly developed.
Large areas are covered with pebbles of varying sizes. Alluvial
deposits are found in wadis, basins, and oases. Salt flats are
especially common in the east.
Climate
There are three climatic zones in the kingdom: (1) desert
almost everywhere, (2) steppe along the western highlands,
forming a strip less than 100 miles (160 km) wide in the north
but becoming almost 300 miles (480 km) wide at the latitude of
Mecca, and (3) a small area of humid and mild temperature
conditions, with long summers, in the highlands just north of
Yemen.
In winter, cyclonic weather systems generally skirt north of
the Arabian Peninsula, moving eastward from the Mediterranean
Sea, though sometimes they reach eastern and central Arabia and
the Persian Gulf. Some weather systems move southward along the
Red Sea trough and provide winter precipitation as far south as
Mecca and sometimes as far as Yemen. In March and April, some
precipitation, normally torrential, falls. In summer, the
highlands of Asir (ʿAsīr), southeast of Mecca, receive enough
precipitation from the monsoonal winds to support a steppelike
strip of land.
Winters, from December to February, are cool, and frost and
snow may occur in the southern highlands. Average temperatures
for the coolest months, December through February, are 74 °F (23
°C) at Jiddah, 58 °F (14 °C) at Riyadh, and 63 °F (17 °C) at
Al-Dammām. Summers, from June to August, are hot, with daytime
temperatures in the shade exceeding 100 °F (38 °C) in almost all
of the country. Temperatures in the desert frequently rise as
high as 130 °F (55 °C) in the summer. Humidity is low, except
along the coasts, where it can be high and very oppressive. The
level of precipitation is also low throughout the country,
amounting to about 2.5 inches (65 mm) at Jiddah, a little more
than 3 inches (75 mm) at Riyadh, and 3 inches at Al-Dammām.
These figures, however, represent mean annual precipitation, and
large variations are normal. In the highlands of Asir, more than
19 inches (480 mm) a year may be received, falling mostly
between May and October when the summer monsoon winds prevail.
In the Rubʿ al-Khali, a decade may pass with no precipitation at
all.
Plant and animal life
Much of Saudi Arabia’s vegetation belongs to the North
African–Indian desert region. Plants are xerophytic (requiring
little water) and are mostly small herbs and shrubs that are
useful as forage. There are a few small areas of grass and trees
in southern Asir. Although the date palm (Phoenix dactylifera)
is widespread, about one-third of the date palms grown are in
Al-Sharqiyyah province.
Animal life includes wolves, hyenas, foxes, honey badgers,
mongooses, porcupines, baboons, hedgehogs, hares, sand rats, and
jerboas. Larger animals such as gazelles, oryx, leopards, and
mountain goats were relatively numerous until about 1950, when
hunting from motor vehicles reduced these animals almost to
extinction. Birds include falcons (which are caught and trained
for hunting), eagles, hawks, vultures, owls, ravens, flamingos,
egrets, pelicans, doves, and quail, as well as sand grouse and
bulbuls. There are several species of snakes, many of which are
poisonous, and numerous types of lizards. There is a wide
variety of marine life in the gulf. Domesticated animals include
camels, fat-tailed sheep, long-eared goats, salukis, donkeys,
and chickens.
People
Ethnic groups
Although the country’s tribes are often considered “pure”
Arabs—certainly they are the descendants of the peninsula’s
original ethnic stock—a certain degree of ethnic heterogeneity
is evident among both the sedentary and nomadic populations of
Saudi Arabia. Variations have developed because of a long
history of regionalism and tribal autonomy and because some
localities have been subjected to important outside influences.
Thus, the proximity of sub-Saharan Africa along the Red Sea
littoral and the constant historical influx of peoples from
Iran, Pakistan, and India along the Persian Gulf coast have left
traces of the physical types characteristic of those peoples
among the native population. Likewise, the hajj to Mecca has
long brought hundreds of thousands of people annually from
various ethnic groups to the country. About half of all pilgrims
travel from Arab countries and half from African and Asian
countries. A small number of such visitors have settled in and
around the holy cities throughout the years, either out of
religious devotion or because penury prevented their return
home.
Since the 1960s, an increasing number of outsiders have
entered and left Saudi Arabia. By the early 21st century, the
estimated number of foreign workers was between one-fourth and
one-fifth of the country’s total population, despite efforts by
the Saudi authorities to encourage citizens to occupy positions
typically held by foreigners. At first, most expatriated workers
were Arab, such as Yemenis, Egyptians, Palestinians, Syrians,
and Iraqis. Increasing numbers of non-Arab Muslims such as
Pakistanis have been employed, as have large numbers of
non-Muslim Koreans and Filipinos, who have been hired under
group contracts for specified periods. Most specialized
technical workers are Europeans and Americans.
Languages
Arabic is a Semitic language of numerous vernacular dialects
that originated on the Arabian Peninsula. There are three main
dialect groups in Saudi Arabia—in the eastern, central, and
western parts of the country—though these are not always clearly
discernible from one another because of the pervasiveness of
local variations. There are various degrees of mutual
intelligibility among dialect groups, but some differences are
quiet pronounced. The written language, Modern Standard Arabic,
is derived from Classical Arabic, the language of the Qurʾān,
and is used as a literary koine within the kingdom and
throughout the broader Arab world. Various dialects of Arabic
from other regions are also spoken by expatriate workers, as are
numerous other non-Arabic languages such as Persian, Urdu,
Pashto, Tagalog, and Korean. English is widely understood.
Religion
Saudi Arabia is the birthplace of Islam, and most of its
natives are adherents of the majority Sunni branch. In modern
times, the Wahhābī interpretation of Sunni Islam has been
especially influential, and Muslim scholars espousing that
sect’s views have been a major social and political force.
Wahhābism, as it is called in the West (members refer to
themselves as muwaḥḥidūn, “unitarians”), is a strict
interpretation of the Ḥanbalī school of Islamic jurisprudence
and is named for Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb (1703–92), a
religious scholar whose alliance with Ibn Saʿūd led to the
establishment of the first Saʿūdī state. The current government
of Saudi Arabia (i.e., the Saʿūd family) has largely relied on
religion—including its close and continuing ties to Wahhābism
and its status as the custodian of Mecca and Medina, the two
holy cities of Islam—to establish its political legitimacy. The
king is supposed to uphold Islam and apply its precepts and, in
turn, is subject to its constraints. But at times he and the
royal family have come under criticism for failing to do so.
Shīʿites, adherents of the second major branch of Islam, make
up a small portion of the population and are found mostly in the
oases of Al-Hasa and Al-Qaṭīf in the eastern part of the
country. Most are Ithnā ʿAsharī, although there remain small
numbers of Ismāʿīlīs. The only Christians are foreign workers
and businessmen. The country’s once small Jewish population is
now apparently extinct. Other religions are practiced among
foreign workers. Public worship and display by non-Muslim faiths
is prohibited. Public displays by non-Wahhābī Muslim groups,
including by other Sunni sects, have been limited and even
banned by the government. Sufism, for instance, is not openly
practiced, nor is celebration of the Prophet’s birthday
(mawlid). Shīʿites have suffered the greatest persecution.
Settlement patterns
Four traditional regions stand out—the Hejaz, Asir, Najd,
and Al-Hasa (transliterated more precisely as Al-Ḥijāz, ʿAsīr,
Najd, and Al-Aḥsāʾ, respectively). The Hejaz, in the northwest,
contains Mecca and Medina, as well as one of the kingdom’s
primary ports, Jiddah. Asir is the highland region south of the
Hejaz; its capital, Abhā, lies at an elevation of about 8,000
feet (2,400 metres). Subregions in Asir are formed by the oasis
cluster of Najrān—a highland area north of Yemen—and by the
coastal plain, the Tihāmah. Najd occupies a large part of the
interior and includes the capital, Riyadh. Al-Hasa, in the east
along the Persian Gulf, includes the principal
petroleum-producing areas.
Nomadism, the form of land use with which the kingdom is
traditionally associated, has become virtually nonexistent, and
the pattern of extensive land use traditionally practiced by the
nomadic Bedouin has been supplanted by the highly intensive
patterns of urban land use. More than four-fifths of Saudi
Arabia’s total population live in cities, and almost all of the
rest live in government-supported agricultural enterprises.
The major areas of population are in the central Hejaz, in
Asir, in central Najd, and near the Persian Gulf.
The largest towns are cosmopolitan in character, and some are
associated with dominant functions: Mecca and Medina are
religious, Riyadh is political and administrative, and Jiddah is
commercial. Dhahran (Al-Ẓahrān), near the Persian Gulf coast in
Al-Sharqiyyah province, is the administrative centre of Saudi
Aramco (Arabian-American Oil Company), and nearby Al-Khubar and
Al-Dammām are important commercial coastal towns. Al-Jubayl on
the Gulf and Yanbuʿ on the Red Sea are the terminus points of
oil and gas pipelines, and large petrochemical industrial
complexes are located in both. Other large cities include
Al-Ṭāʾif, Al-Hufūf, Tabūk, Buraydah, Al-Mubarraz, Khamīs
Mushayṭ, Najrān, Ḥāʾil, Jīzān, and Abhā.
Demographic trends
A major demographic theme since the early 20th century has
been the government’s policy of settling the Bedouin. This
practice has largely been successful, though sedentary Bedouin
remain strongly attached to their tribal affiliation. A second
major theme has been an influx of foreign workers (first foreign
Arabs and later workers from other regions) since the 1950s; no
exact numbers are available, but it is generally agreed that
these foreign workers have numbered in the millions. Some Arabs,
particularly early arrivals, have been naturalized, but most are
temporary, albeit often long-term, residents. Moreover, most of
these are unaccompanied males who have left their families in
their native land; this situation is particularly true for
lower-paid workers. Although large numbers of Saudi citizens
travel abroad for school or holiday, the number of those
settling abroad is relatively small.
Thanks partly to the government’s policies promoting large
families and partly to its large investment in health care, the
country’s birth rate is well above the world average. The
national death rate is markedly below the world standard. As a
result, Saudi Arabia’s overall rate of natural increase is more
than twice the world average, and its population is extremely
young, with roughly two-thirds under 30 years old and about
two-fifths younger than 15. Life expectancy averages about 75
years.
Economy
Fueled by enormous revenues from oil exports, the economy
boomed during the 1970s and ’80s. Unlike most developing
countries, Saudi Arabia had an abundance of capital, and vast
development projects sprung up that turned the once
underdeveloped country into a modern state. During that time,
unemployment was all but nonexistent—large numbers of foreign
workers were imported to do the most menial and the most highly
technical tasks—and per capita income and gross domestic product
(GDP) per capita were among the highest in the non-Western
world.
Long-range economic development has been directed through a
series of five-year plans. The first two five-year plans
(1970–75 and 1976–80) established most of the country’s basic
transport and communications facilities. Subsequent plans sought
to diversify the economy; to increase domestic food production;
to improve education, vocational training, and health services;
and to further improve communications routes between the
different regions of the country. But the economic boom was not
without a price. As world oil prices stagnated in the 1990s,
government policies encouraging larger families led to a marked
increase in population. GDP per capita actually began to fall in
real terms, and the kingdom’s young, highly educated workforce
began to face high rates of unemployment and underemployment for
the first time. However, those trends reversed as oil prices
again rose. In addition, five-year plans were directed toward
increasing the share of private enterprise in the economy in an
effort to move away from dependence on oil exports and to
generate jobs.
Agriculture
At its founding, the kingdom inherited the simple, tribal
economy of Arabia. Many of the people were nomads, engaged in
raising camels, sheep, and goats. Agricultural production was
localized and subsistent. The kingdom’s development plans have
given domestic food production special attention, and the
government has made subsidies and generous incentives available
to the agriculture sector. Agriculture now contributes only a
small fraction of the Saudi GDP and employs a comparable
proportion of the workforce.
Less than 2 percent of the total land area is used for crops.
Of the cultivated land, about half consists of rain-fed dry
farming (mostly in Asir), two-fifths is in tree crops, and the
remainder is irrigated. Most of the irrigated areas—in the
districts of Riyadh and Al-Qaṣīm, for example, and near Al-Hufūf
in Al-Sharqiyyah province—utilize underground water.
The kingdom has achieved self-sufficiency in the production
of wheat, eggs, and milk, among other commodities, though it
still imports the bulk of its food needs. Wheat is the primary
cultivated grain, followed by sorghum and barley. Dates, melons,
tomatoes, potatoes, cucumbers, pumpkins, and squash are also
important crops.
Two major constraints on cultivation are poor water supply
and poor soil. Concrete and earth-filled dams have been built,
primarily in the southwest, to store water for irrigation and as
a means of flood control. Agricultural expansion has been great
in irrigated areas, while the amount of land given to rain-fed
farming has decreased. Substantial resources of subterranean
water have been discovered in the central and eastern parts of
the country and exploited for agriculture; however, these
underground aquifers are difficult to renew.
Resources and power
Petroleum
The economy of Saudi Arabia is dominated by petroleum and
its associated industries. In terms of oil reserves, Saudi
Arabia ranks first internationally, with about one-fifth of the
world’s known reserves. Oil deposits are located in the east,
southward from Iraq and Kuwait into the Rubʿ al-Khali and under
the waters of the Persian Gulf.
The discovery of oil changed the entire economic situation of
Saudi Arabia. As early as 1923, Ibn Saʿūd granted an
oil-prospecting concession to a British company, but this
concession was never exploited. Although oil was discovered in
1938, World War II curtailed oil-producing activities until near
its end. The Ras Tanura refinery was opened in 1945, and rapid
expansion of the oil industry followed to meet increasing
postwar demand.
In 1951 the Arabian American Oil Company (Aramco) discovered
the first offshore field in the Middle East, at Raʾs
Al-Saffāniyyah, just south of the former Saudi Arabia–Kuwait
neutral zone, and oil was discovered in the zone itself in 1953.
Al-Ghawār, just south of Dhahran and west of Al-Hufūf, is one of
the world’s largest oil fields. The first portion of the
Al-Ghawār oil field was discovered at ʿAyn Dār in 1948.
Intensive exploration of the Rubʿ al-Khali began in 1950, and
oil fields were finally discovered in the area in the 1970s.
In 1950 Aramco put into operation the Trans-Arabian Pipe Line
(Tapline), which ran from Al-Qayṣūmah in Saudi Arabia across
Jordan and Syria to its Mediterranean terminal at Sidon,
Lebanon. The line was in operation only sporadically during the
1970s, and in 1983 it ceased to function beyond supplying a
refinery in Jordan. In 1981 Petroline, built to carry crude oil,
was completed from Al-Jubayl on the Persian Gulf to Yanbuʿ on
the Red Sea, and this greatly shortened the distance to Europe
and obviated navigation through the gulf and the Strait of
Hormuz. Petroline was built by the General Petroleum and Mineral
Organization (Petromin), a government-owned corporation. Aramco
constructed a massive gas-gathering system and, parallel to
Petroline, a pipeline for transporting natural-gas liquids,
which reached Yanbuʿ in 1981.
During the 1970s and early ’80s, Saudi Arabia gradually
acquired complete ownership of Aramco, and in 1984 Aramco had
its first Saudi president. In 1988 the company was renamed Saudi
Aramco.
Other resources
Other mineral resources are known to exist, and the
government has pursued a policy of exploration and production in
order to diversify the economic base. Geologic reconnaissance
mapping of the Precambrian shield in the west has revealed
deposits of gold, silver, copper, zinc, lead, iron, titanium,
pyrite, magnesite, platinum, and cadmium. There are also
nonmetallic resources such as limestone, silica, gypsum, and
phosphorite.
Scarcity of water is a perennial problem in the kingdom.
Saudi Arabia has the largest single desalination program in the
world, which meets most domestic and industrial needs.
Underwater aquifers provide a limited amount of potable water,
and a great deal of energy has been committed to constructing
dams for water storage and to developing water-recycling plants.
The kingdom has relied increasingly on electricity, and
electrical production has grown rapidly since the 1970s.
Originally highly decentralized, electrical production was
slowly centralized under state control during the latter half of
the 20th century. In 2000 electrical production was consolidated
under a single corporation in an effort to develop a
comprehensive national grid. Most of the kingdom’s generators
are powered by natural gas and diesel fuel.
Manufacturing
The manufacturing sector has expanded widely since 1976,
when the government established the Saudi Basic Industries
Corporation (Sabic) in order to diversify the economy. Its
initial goal was to expand the manufacturing potential of
sectors of the economy related to petroleum. Since then
manufactures, many associated with Sabic, have included rolled
steel, petrochemicals, fertilizers, pipes, copper wire and
cable, truck assembly, refrigeration, plastics, aluminum
products, metal products, and cement. Small-scale enterprises
have included baking, printing, and furniture manufacturing.
Finance
The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) was established in
1952 as the kingdom’s central money and banking authority. It
regulates commercial and development banks and other financial
institutions. Its functions include issuing, regulating, and
stabilizing the value of the national currency, the riyal;
acting as banker for the government; and managing foreign
reserves and investments. As an Islamic institution, it has a
nonprofit status. Under Islamic law, banks cannot charge
interest, but they do charge fees for lending and pay commission
on deposits. Money supply and the tempo of business are
dominated by government economic activity, though the government
has increasingly favoured expansion of the private sector.
A number of commercial banks operate in the country, some of
which are joint ventures between Saudi citizens and foreign
banks. (Like all enterprises, banks doing business in the
country require a Saudi partner.) Others, however, are wholly
owned by Saudis. Banking regulations traditionally have not been
stringently enforced, and private banks have shown great
flexibility and creativity in interpreting Islamic banking
regulations. Moreover, despite the ubiquity of banks in the
country, large numbers of citizens and expatriates continue to
rely on money changers, both for their convenience and for the
anonymity that they provide.
Trade
Exports consist almost entirely of petroleum and petroleum
products. Major imports are machinery and transport equipment,
foodstuffs and animals, and chemicals and chemical products. The
principal trading partners are the United States, Japan, South
Korea, and China. The principal sources of imports are the
United States, Japan, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and
Taiwan.
Services
The service sector grew dramatically in the second half of
the 20th century with the influx of revenue derived from
petroleum sales and because of large levels of government
spending. Nearly three-fifths of workers are engaged in
service-related occupations, including civil administration,
defense, wholesale and retail sales, and hospitality and
tourism. These sectors of the economy account for roughly
one-fourth of GDP.
The hospitality industry has traditionally been strong only
in and around the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, with the
annual influx of pilgrims. However, in the 1960s, large numbers
of expatriates—some with their dependents—began to arrive in the
country, and facilities began to spring up to meet their needs.
Only in the late 20th century did the government actively seek
to attract tourists to Saudi Arabia with the construction of a
number of coastal resorts and a relaxation of visa requirements
for entering the country. Tourism unassociated with religious
observance, however, remains an extremely small part of GDP.
Labour and taxation
The kingdom has traditionally relied on large numbers of
foreign labourers, who, at the height of their influx, accounted
for roughly two-thirds of the labour force. Most of these have
been unskilled or semiskilled workers from other parts of the
Middle East and from South Asia, while Westerners, particularly
Americans, have filled the most highly skilled positions in the
country. Workers in Saudi Arabia have few legal rights, and they
are not permitted to organize and do not have the right to
strike.
Rapid population growth since the late 20th century has
increased the number of native Saudis entering the labour force.
Beginning in the 1990s, the government responded by encouraging
a policy of “Saudi-ization” (in which employers were required to
hire fewer migrant workers), but highly educated young Saudis
seemed unwilling to engage in occupations that had been
traditionally filled by expatriates and were therefore
considered menial. Female citizens traditionally have had
limited employment opportunities outside the home, with most
occupations being restricted to men. Many foreign women have
been employed as domestic servants.
Roughly three-fourths of government revenues are derived from
the proceeds of oil exports. Remaining revenues are raised
through tariffs, licensing fees, and the proceeds of government
investments. Foreign companies are required to pay an income
tax, but exemptions are often granted. Saudi citizens are
required to pay the zakāt, an obligatory tax on Muslims that is
used to help the less fortunate in society.
Transportation and telecommunications
The country’s roads are all paved, and the automobile is a
common form of transport. Taxis are found in cities and most
large towns. Women are not permitted to drive. The first
coast-to-coast road connection, from Al-Dammām on the gulf to
Jiddah on the Red Sea, by way of Riyadh, was opened in 1967; it
includes a spectacular descent of the western escarpment from
Al-Ṭāʾif to Mecca. A causeway, opened in 1986, connects the
kingdom with the island nation of Bahrain. A railroad passing
through Al-Hufūf connects Riyadh and Al-Dammām.
Seaport capacity has been greatly expanded. Major cargo ports
are Jiddah, Yanbuʿ, Ḍibā, and Jīzān on the Red Sea and Al-Dammām
and Al-Jubayl on the gulf. The country has many small airports
and airfields. The national airline, Saudi Arabian Airlines
(formerly Saudia; founded 1945), provides both domestic and
international service. The chief international airports are at
Dhahran, Riyadh, and Jiddah.
Radio broadcasts began in the kingdom in 1948, and the first
television station was established in 1965. All broadcasts are
operated by the state, and programming focuses on religious and
cultural affairs, news, and other topics that are viewed as
edifying by the government. Radio and television services are
widely accessible, as is telephone service. The government has
invested significant resources in updating and expanding the
country’s telecommunications infrastructure, and large portions
of the telephone grid have been digitized. Cellular telephone
service is widespread, and access to the Internet is available
in all major population centres.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Saudi Arabia is a monarchy ruled by the Āl Saʿūd, a family
whose status was established by its close ties with and support
for the Wahhābī religious establishment. Islamic law, the
Sharīʿah, is the primary source of legislation, but the actual
promulgation of legislation and implementation of policy is
often mitigated by more mundane factors, such as political
expediency, the inner politics of the ruling family, and the
influence of intertribal politics, which remain strong in the
modern kingdom.
The kingdom has never had a written constitution, although in
1992 the king issued a document known as the Basic Law of
Government (Al-Niẓām al-Asāsī lī al-Ḥukm), which provides
guidelines for how the government is to be run and sets forth
the rights and responsibilities of citizens. The king combines
legislative, executive, and judicial functions. As prime
minister, he presides over the Council of Ministers (Majlis
al-Wuzarāʾ). The council is responsible for such executive and
administrative matters as foreign and domestic policy, defense,
finance, health, and education, which it administers through
numerous separate agencies. Appointment to and dismissal from
the council are prerogatives of the king. The Basic Law of
Government paved the way in 1993 for the establishment of a new
quasi-legislative body, the Consultative Council (Majlis
al-Shūrā), which includes many technical experts; all members
are appointed by the king. The Consultative Council has the
power to draft legislation and, along with the Council of
Ministers, promote it for the king’s approval.
In the end, however, all major policy decisions are made
outside these formal apparatuses. Decisions are made through a
consensus of opinion that is sought primarily within the royal
family (comprising the numerous descendants of the kingdom’s
founder, Ibn Saʿūd), many of whom hold sensitive government
posts. Likewise, the views of important members of the ʿulamāʾ
(religious scholars), leading tribal sheikhs, and heads of
prominent commercial families are considered.
Local government
The kingdom is divided into 13 administrative regions
(manāṭiq), which in turn are divided into numerous districts.
Regional governors are appointed, usually from the royal family,
and preside over one or more municipal councils, half of whose
members are appointed and half elected. With their councils, the
governors are responsible for such functions as finance, health,
education, agriculture, and municipalities. The consultative
principle operates at all levels of government, including the
government of villages and tribes.
Justice
The Sharīʿah is the basis of justice. Judgment usually is
according to the Ḥanbalī tradition of Islam; the law tends to be
conservative and punishment severe, including amputation for
crimes such as theft and execution for crimes that are deemed
more severe (e.g., drug trafficking and practicing witchcraft).
In 1970 the Ministry of Justice was established; its work is
assisted by a Supreme Judicial Council consisting of leading
members of the ʿulamāʾ. There are more than 300 Sharīʿah courts
across the country. Rapid changes since the mid-20th century
have produced circumstances—such as traffic violations and
industrial accidents—not encompassed by traditional law, and
these have been handled by the issuance of royal decrees. These
decrees have evolved into a body of administrative law that is
not directly drawn from Islamic precepts. Avenues of appeal are
available, and the monarch is both the final court of appeal and
the dispenser of pardon.
Political process
Participation in the political process is limited to a
relatively small portion of the population. There are no
elections for national bodies, political parties are outlawed,
and women have few political rights. Power rests largely in the
hands of the royal family, which governs through a process
that—despite the political and economic changes since the late
20th century—differs little from the traditional system of
tribal rule. Tribal identity remains strong and is still an
important pillar of social control; despite the existence of a
modern state bureaucracy, political influence is frequently
determined by tribal affiliation. Tribal sheikhs, therefore,
maintain a high degree of authority within the tribe and a
considerable degree of influence over local and national events.
The tribal hierarchy in the country is complex. There are a
number of smaller, less-influential tribes and a handful of very
influential major tribes. The Saʿūd family, although not a tribe
strictly speaking, behaves like one in many respects. Although
the ruling family came to power largely through its martial
skill and religious ties, its continued hegemony has been based
on the traditional view in Arabian society that leaders owe
their positions to their ability to manage affairs. Just as the
tribal sheikh leads the tribe, so has the Saʿūd family ruled the
country—by placating rival factions, building a broad consensus,
and squelching extreme voices. (Early Orientalists used the
Latin phrase primus inter pares, “first among equals,” to refer
to such an arrangement.) The medium for this process is the
traditional dīwān, an informal council in which the senior male
(whether he is a sheikh at the tribal level or the king at the
national) hears outstanding grievances and dispenses justice and
largess. In theory, any male citizen may make his voice heard in
the dīwān.
In this system, succession to the throne is not directly
hereditary, though, under the Basic Law of Government, the king
must be a son or grandson of Ibn Saʿūd. Traditionally the heir
apparent, who is also deputy prime minister, has been determined
by a consensus of the royal family, but since 1992 he has been
appointed by the king (confirmation by the family occurring only
after the monarch’s death). In the same way, through consensus,
the family may depose the monarch, as was seen in King Saʿūd’s
deposition in 1964.
The family has also relied heavily on its long relationship
with the Wahhābī religious hierarchy to maintain social and
political control. The crown appoints all major religious
functionaries, who are almost exclusively selected from Wahhābī
ʿulamāʾ; in turn it is supported by that sect. Most major
threats to the political status quo have come either from
dissident factions within the religious community or from groups
that appeal in some way to Islamic values. Many of these groups
have operated abroad, and a number have been involved in
political violence.
Security
Military service is voluntary. The army accounts for about
three-fifths of the total military force. It experienced rapid
modernization especially after the Arab-Israeli War of 1967. The
air force was equipped largely by the British until the 1970s,
when the kingdom began to buy aircraft from the United States.
It is now one of the best-equipped forces in the region, with
several hundred high-performance aircraft; likewise, ground
forces have large numbers of state-of-the-art main battle tanks.
Army officers are trained at King ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz Military Academy
just north of Riyadh. Major air bases are at Riyadh, Dhahran,
Ḥafar al-Bāṭin (part of the King Khālid Military City) near the
border with Iraq and Kuwait, Tabūk in the northwest near Jordan,
and Khamīs Mushayṭ in the southwest near Yemen. All three armed
services—army, air force, and navy—are directed by the defense
minister, who is also the second deputy prime minister.
The National Guard, which has roughly the same troop strength
as the army, is essentially an internal security force, though
it can support the regular forces for national defense. One of
its primary peacetime tasks is to guard the country’s oil
fields. It is administered separately, and its commander reports
to the crown prince. The armed forces employ expatriate
personnel in support and training positions.
The kingdom has several internal security organs, including
the Coast Guard, Frontier Force, and a centralized national
police force. All of these organizations report to the Ministry
of the Interior, which also supervises the country’s
intelligence and counterintelligence bodies. Police interaction
with civilians, particularly with foreigners, has often been
described as heavy-handed, but reports of human rights abuses
are far less numerous and severe than those reported in other
countries of the region. There is also a religious police force
attached to the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the
Prevention of Vice. Known as the Muṭawwaʿūn (colloquially,
Muṭawwaʿīn), this force operates in plain clothes and enforces
such Islamic precepts as ensuring that women are properly
veiled, that shops close during prayer, and that the fast is
kept during Ramadan. Imposing impromptu corporal punishment for
infractions is an accepted part of their duty.
Health and welfare
A great deal of attention has been given to health care, and
the numbers of hospital beds, physicians, and nurses have
increased greatly. In addition to numerous health institutes,
hospitals, and health centres, a network of dispensaries serving
communities of 10,000 or more people has been set up,
complemented by a system of mobile health services reaching
small communities and the remaining nomadic populations. The
government has also begun to train Saudis to replace foreign
medical personnel. Of serious concern are a high rate of
trachoma and occasional outbreaks of malaria, bilharzia
(schistosomiasis), and cholera. Outbreaks of serious diseases
such as meningitis have occurred during the hajj.
Housing
Because of the kingdom’s geographic diversity, a wide
variety of traditional housing types were embraced. These ranged
from the conventional black tents of the Bedouin and mud-brick
dwellings of agrarian villages to the lofty, ornate townhouses
found in urban centres along the coast. Since the advent of oil
wealth, the government has invested heavily in housing
construction. It provides low-interest or interest-free loans to
citizens wishing to purchase or build homes. Homes in newer
areas are equipped with standard utilities (such as water,
sewerage, and electricity) as well as many technical
conveniences, such as Internet access and cable and satellite
television. Towns in some rural areas, however, remain far
removed from power and water networks.
Education
Education is free at all levels and is given high priority
by the government. The school system consists of elementary
(grades 1–6), intermediate (7–9), and secondary (10–12) schools.
A significant portion of the curriculum at all levels is devoted
to religious subjects, and, at the secondary level, students are
able to follow either a religious or a technical track. Girls
are able to attend school (all courses are segregated by
gender), but fewer girls attend than boys. This disproportion is
reflected in the rate of literacy, which exceeds 85 percent
among males and is about 70 percent among females.
Higher education has expanded at a remarkable pace.
Institutions of higher education include the King Saʿūd
University (formerly the University of Riyadh, founded in 1957),
the Islamic University (1961) at Medina, and the King ʿAbd
al-ʿAzīz University (1967) in Jiddah. Other colleges and
universities emphasize curricula in sciences and technology,
military studies, religion, and medicine. Institutes devoted to
Islamic studies in particular abound, and schools for religious
pedagogy are located in several towns. Women typically receive
college instruction in segregated institutions. Many foreign
teachers are employed, especially in technical and medical
schools. Large numbers of students travel abroad for university
study.
In an effort to improve Saudi Arabia’s status as a regional
scientific hub and to help it compete in the sciences on an
international level, in September 2009 the King ʿAbd Allāh
University of Science and Technology was opened near Jiddah. The
campus hosted state-of-the-art laboratories, virtual reality
facilities, and one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers.
The coed university—many of whose students were drawn from
abroad—strove to provide a comparatively liberal environment
relative to the rest of Saudi society: women were permitted to
drive on campus and were free to veil or unveil at their
discretion.
Cultural life
Cultural milieu
The cultural setting is Arab and Muslim. To preserve the
country’s purist religious position, many proscriptions of
behaviour and dress are enforced. Alcoholic beverages are
prohibited, for example, and there is no theatre or public
exhibition of films. Educated Saudis are well informed on issues
of the Arab world, the Muslim world, and the world at large, but
public expression of opinion about domestic matters is not
encouraged. There are no organizations such as political parties
or labour unions to provide public forums.
Daily life and social customs
Saudi Arabia’s population has traditionally been composed of
nomads, villagers, and townspeople. Pervading this triad,
however, is the patrilineal kinship principle, and superimposed
on all is the administrative organization centred on the royal
family. The kinship principle is pervasive in Saudi society, and
the extended family is a strong social unit. Villages constitute
local service centres and contain members from more than one
tribal affiliation, though one group may tend to be dominant.
Cities are not tribally organized, though the importance of
kinship affiliation endures, and local affairs tend to be
dominated and administered by a few families. Social
stratification is more clearly developed in the cities than
elsewhere. Before the effects of oil were felt on the economy,
status was a matter of lineage and occupation rather than of
wealth; with the development of the oil industry, however,
wealth and material position have acquired an additional social
value. The new technology and industry have produced a growing
middle-income economic group of technocrats that is increasingly
aware of the widening gap between the ruling families and the
rest of the population. This has led to discontent and, in some
cases, outbreaks of civil unrest.
Most Saudis continue to dress in a traditional fashion. For
men this consists of an ankle-length shirt known as a thawb (or
dishdashah), which is usually woven of white cotton. The
traditional head cover is the kaffiyeh (sometimes known as a
ghuṭrah), a broad cloth folded and held in place by a camel’s
hair cord known as an ʿiqāl. The time-honoured dress for women
consists of a thawb beneath which is worn a loose fitting pair
of slacks known as a sirwāl. In public women are expected to be
fully veiled, however, and a long black cloak known as an
ʿabāyah is worn. A veil called a ḥijāb covers the head, and
another known as a niqāb covers the face. Among Bedouin, women’s
clothing is often quite ornate and has traditionally consisted
of a beautiful panoply of handcrafted silver jewelry.
Cuisine in Saudi Arabia is broadly similar to that of the
surrounding Persian Gulf countries, and Turkish, Persian, and
African cultures have heavily influenced culinary tastes.
Islamic dietary customs are closely observed; for instance, pork
is not consumed, wine is eschewed, and even ritually licit
animals such as lambs must be slaughtered in a prescribed
fashion. A dish consisting of a stuffed lamb, known as khūzī, is
the traditional national favourite. Kebabs are also popular, as
is shāwarmah (shwarma), a marinated meat dish of lamb, mutton,
or chicken that is grilled on a spit and served either as an
entrée or a sandwich. As in the countries of the Persian Gulf,
makhbūs (machbous), a rice dish with fish or shrimp, is
extremely popular. Flat, unleavened bread is a staple of
virtually every meal, as are all varieties of fresh fruit.
Dates, either fresh or candied, are ubiquitous. Coffee, served
strong and hot in the Turkish style, is the traditional
beverage.
In accordance with the Wahhābī interpretation of Islam, only
two religious holidays are publicly recognized, ʿĪd al-Fiṭr and
ʿĪd al-Aḍḥā. The celebration of other Islamic holidays, such as
the Prophet’s birthday (see mawlid) and ʿĀshūrāʾ—an important
holiday to Shīʿites—are tolerated only when celebrated on a
small scale at the local level but are otherwise condemned as
dangerous innovations. Public observance of non-Islamic
religious holidays is prohibited, with the exception of
September 23, which celebrates the unification of the kingdom.
(It is also the only holiday celebrated on the Western
calendar.)
The arts
For a thousand years, artistic expression usually
perpetuated ancient forms. From the 18th century onward, the
strict Wahhābī religious outlook discouraged intellectual
deviation from accepted purist positions. With the advent of the
petroleum industry came exposure to outside influences, such as
Western housing styles, furnishings, and clothes, and, at the
same time, local craftsmen found themselves in competition with
imported goods.
Music and dance have always been part of Saudi life. Native
music, of which there are several types, is generally associated
with poetry and is sung collectively. Instruments include the
rabābah, an instrument not unlike a three-string fiddle, and
various types of percussion instruments, such as the ṭabl (drum)
and the ṭār (tambourine). Of the native dances, the most popular
is a martial line dance known as the ʿarḍah, which includes
lines of men, frequently armed with swords or rifles, dancing to
the beat of drums and tambourines.
Native Bedouin poetry, known as nabaṭī, is extremely popular.
It has similarities to the classical qaṣīdah, or ode, of which
the central and eastern regions of the country are the
traditional birthplace. Many of the great masters of pre-Islamic
Arabic poetry dwelt in what is now Saudi Arabia, and the two
styles, qaṣīdah and nabaṭī, differ largely in the former’s use
of Classical Arabic as a medium. Nabaṭī poetry is composed in
the vernacular and has a strong musical quality.
Visual arts are dominated by geometric, floral, and abstract
designs and by calligraphy, the latter a sophisticated and
learned enterprise. Not much diversity is seen in traditional
architecture; typical features are decorative designs on doors
and windows and wide use of crenellated walls. The wave of
change starting in the 1960s influenced architectural styles,
and stark linear motifs became common in office and residential
buildings. The spectacular airport terminals at Jiddah and
Riyadh, however, are testimony to the persistence and worth of
traditional styles.
Cultural institutions
The King Fahd National Library (founded 1968) is located in
Riyadh, as is the National Museum (1978). There are a number of
smaller libraries and museums throughout the country, mostly in
the larger towns and cities. The Society for Arts and Cultures
was founded in 1972 to coordinate and support traditional
Arabian art forms. The King Fayṣal Foundation (1976) supports
literary, educational, and cultural programs. The annual
Jinādiriyyah Heritage and Cultural Festival brings together
thousands near Riyadh to partake in traditional pastimes such as
camel racing, arts and crafts, and traditional song and dance.
Al-Ḥijr (Madāʾin Ṣāliḥ), an archaeological site inhabited until
the 1st century ce by the Nabataeans, was designated a UNESCO
World Heritage site in 2008.
Sports and recreation
Saudis value a number of traditional and modern pastimes.
Football (soccer) is extremely popular. Many Saudis also
participate in activities such as scuba diving, windsurfing, and
sailing. The time-honoured pursuit of camel racing developed a
new following in the 1970s. During the winter—the coolest part
of the year—races are held weekly at the Riyadh stadium. The
annual King’s Camel Race, begun in 1974, is one of the sport’s
most important contests and attracts animals and riders from
throughout the region. Falconry, another traditional pursuit, is
still practiced, although it has come under increasingly strict
regulation because several species on which the falcon preys
have become endangered.
The government of Saudi Arabia has encouraged sports and
athletics by constructing sports and recreation facilities in
all major urban areas. The Saudi Arabian Olympic Committee was
organized in 1964 and was recognized internationally the
following year. It has sent athletes to the Summer Games since
1972 but has not fielded a team for the Winter Games. The
country also sends athletes to the Asian Games.
Media and publishing
Several daily and weekly newspapers are published in Arabic
and in English. Although newspapers and periodicals are mostly
privately owned, editors frequently practice self-censorship.
Criticism of the government and of the royal family is frowned
upon, and on occasion journalists have been dismissed for
statements seen as antigovernment or against religion. The
government heavily subsidizes the publishing industry, including
periodical and academic presses. Radio and television
broadcasting is operated by the Ministry of Information.
Joshua Teitelbaum
History
This discussion focuses on Saudi Arabia since the 18th
century. For a treatment of earlier periods and of the country
in its regional context, see Arabia.
The coastal parts of the territory that was to become Saudi
Arabia participated in the broad trends of Arabian Peninsula
history in the Islamic period—the rise of Islam in western
Arabia in the 7th century, the creation and expansion of the
various Islamic empires to the 10th century, the establishment
of separate and usually small Muslim states in the period
leading to the 15th century, and the ordering of the Arab Middle
East conducted by the Ottoman Empire starting in the 16th
century. Central Arabia was linked commercially and
intellectually with western Arabia and the Fertile Crescent but
was often isolated from general political and military trends
because of its remoteness and relative poverty. In the middle of
the 18th century in central Arabia, an alliance of Muslim
Wahhābī religious reformers and the Saʿūdī dynasty formed a new
state and society that resulted in the creation of three
successive Saʿūdī kingdoms, including the modern country of
Saudi Arabia, officially proclaimed in 1932.
The Wahhābī movement
Origins and early expansion
As the population of the oasis towns of central Arabia such
as ʿUyaynah slowly grew from the 16th to the early 18th century,
the ʿulamāʾ (religious scholars) residing there increased in
number and sophistication. Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb, the
founder of the Wahhābī movement, was born in ʿUyaynah in 1703 to
a family of religious judges and scholars and as a young man
traveled widely in other regions of the Middle East. It was upon
his return to ʿUyaynah that he first began to preach his
revolutionary ideas of conservative religious reformation based
on a strict moral code. His teaching was influenced by that of
the 14th-century Ḥanbalī scholar Ibn Taymiyyah, who called for
the purification of Islam through the expulsion of practices
that he saw as innovations, including speculative theology,
Sufism, and such popular religious practices as saint worship.
The ruler of ʿUyaynah, ʿUthmān ibn Muʿammar, gladly welcomed
the returning prodigal and even adhered to his doctrines. But
many opposed him, and ʿAbd al-Wahhāb’s preaching was put to a
number of severe tests. The chief of the Al-Hasa region, who was
of the influential Banū Khālid tribe, threatened to withhold
gifts to ʿUthmān, or even to go to war with him, unless ʿAbd
al-Wahhāb was put to death.
ʿUthmān, unable to face this danger but unwilling to kill his
guest, decided to dismiss ʿAbd al-Wahhāb from his territory.
ʿAbd al-Wahhāb went to Al-Dirʿiyyah, some 40 miles (65 km) away,
which had been the seat of the local prince Muḥammad ibn Saʿūd
since 1726. In 1745 people flocked to the teaching of the
reformer. The alliance of theologian and prince, duly sealed by
mutual oaths of loyalty, soon began to prosper in terms of
military success and expansion.
One by one, the enemies of the new union were conquered. The
earliest wars brought ʿUyaynah and portions of Al-Hasa under
Wahhābī control, but the oasis town of Riyadh maintained a
stubborn resistance for 27 years before succumbing to the steady
pressure of the new movement. By 1765, when Muḥammad ibn Saʿūd
died, only a few parts of central and eastern Arabia had fallen
under more or less effective Wahhābī rule.
Muḥammad ibn Saʿūd’s son and successor, ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz I
(reigned 1765–1803), who had been largely responsible for this
extension of his father’s realm through his exploits as
commander in chief of the Wahhābī forces, continued to work in
complete harmony with Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb. It was the
latter who virtually controlled the civil administration of the
country, while ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz himself, later in cooperation with
his warlike son, Saʿūd I (1803–14), busied himself with the
expansion of his empire far beyond the limits inherited by him.
Meanwhile, in 1792, Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb died at the age
of 89. Wahhābī attacks on settled areas had begun to attract the
attention of officials of the Ottoman Empire, the dominant
political force in the region. In 1798 an Ottoman force invaded
Al-Hasa, though it later was compelled to withdraw. Qatar fell
to the Saʿūdīs in 1797, and they also gained control through
local allies over Bahrain and parts of Oman.
Struggle with the Ottomans
In 1801 the Wahhābīs captured and sacked the Shīʿite holy
city of Karbalāʾ in Ottoman Iraq, plundering and damaging
important religious buildings. In the following year, Saʿūd led
his father’s army to the capture of Mecca itself in the Hejaz,
which was also under Ottoman control. It was soon after Saʿūd’s
return from this expedition that his father was assassinated by
a Shīʿite in the mosque of Al-Dirʿiyyah in revenge for the
desecration of Karbalāʾ.
Conflict between the Ottomans and the Wahhābīs of Arabia now
broke out in earnest. In 1804 Saʿūd captured Medina, and the
Wahhābī empire embraced the whole of Arabia down to Yemen and
Oman. Year after year, Saʿūd visited Mecca to preside over the
hajj pilgrimage as the imam of the Muslim congregation. But the
tide was soon to turn to his disadvantage. The sultan of the
Ottoman Empire, preoccupied in other directions, consigned to
Muḥammad ʿAlī, the virtually independent viceroy of Egypt, the
task of crushing those the Ottomans viewed as heretics. An
Egyptian force landed on the Hejaz coast under the command of
Muḥammad ʿAlī’s son Ṭūsūn. Saʿūd inflicted a severe defeat on
the invaders, but reinforcements enabled Ṭūsūn to occupy Mecca
and Medina in 1812. The following year, Muḥammad ʿAlī assumed
command of the expeditionary force in person. In the east,
Britain severely curbed the maritime activities of the Qawāsim
dynasty, who were allies of the Wahhābīs, in 1809.
Saʿūd died at Al-Dirʿiyyah in 1814. His successor, his son
ʿAbd Allāh ibn Saʿūd, was scarcely of his father’s calibre, and
the capture of Al-Raʿs in Al-Qaṣīm region by the Egyptians in
1815 forced him to sue for peace. This was duly arranged, but
the truce was short-lived, and in 1816 the struggle was renewed,
with Ibrāhīm Pasha, another of Muḥammad ʿAlī’s sons, in command
of the Egyptian forces. Gaining the support of the volatile
tribes by skillful diplomacy and lavish gifts, he advanced into
central Arabia. Joined by most of the principal tribes, he
appeared before Al-Dirʿiyyah in April 1818. Fighting ended in
September with the surrender of ʿAbd Allāh, who was sent to the
Ottoman capital of Constantinople (Istanbul) and beheaded. Local
Wahhābī leaders also were executed, Al-Dirʿiyyah was razed, and
Egyptian garrisons were posted to the principal towns. The Saʿūd
family had suffered heavy losses during the fighting. A few had
managed to escape before the surrender; the rest were sent to
Egypt for detention along with descendants of Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd
al-Wahhāb. The Wahhābī empire ceased to exist, but the faith
lived on in the desert and in the towns of central Arabia in
defiance of the new rulers of the land.
Second Saʿūdī state
The dynasty was restored and the second Saʿūdī state
begun in 1824 when Turkī (1823–34), a grandson of Muḥammad ibn
Saʿūd, succeeded in capturing Riyadh and expelling the Egyptian
garrison. Thereafter, Riyadh remained the capital of the state.
Turkī tried to maintain friendly ties with the Ottoman governors
of Iraq, as he accepted nominal Ottoman sovereignty, and with
the British. Al-Hasa and Ḥāʾil fell again to the Saʿūdīs by 1830
as the town militias of central Arabia, which formed the bases
of the Saʿūdī army, overcame the nomadic tribes. Literature,
commerce, and agriculture flourished despite the crushing losses
to society occasioned by the return of cholera.
In 1834 Turkī was murdered by an ambitious cousin, who then
was deposed and executed by Turkī’s son Fayṣal (1834–38;
1843–65). Fayṣal had been carried away into captivity in Egypt
in 1818 but had escaped in 1828 to rejoin his father and play a
prominent part in reestablishing Wahhābī rule. He refused to pay
the Egyptian tribute, and in 1837 an Egyptian expeditionary
force entered Riyadh. Fayṣal was captured the following year and
returned to Cairo. Khālid, son of Saʿūd and brother of ʿAbd
Allāh, was installed as ruler of Najd by the Egyptians on the
condition that he recognize Egyptian hegemony.
The subservience of Khālid to his Egyptian and Ottoman
masters was increasingly resented by his Wahhābī subjects, and
in 1841 his cousin, ʿAbd Allāh ibn Thunayān, raised the standard
of revolt. Riyadh was captured by a bold coup; its garrison was
expelled; and Khālid, who was in Al-Hasa at the time, fled by
ship to Jiddah. ʿAbd Allāh resisted when Fayṣal reappeared in
1843, only to be overpowered and slain. So Fayṣal resumed his
reign after an interruption of five years and ruled basically
unchallenged, despite occasional tribal uprisings and friction
with the townspeople of Al-Qaṣīm, until his death in 1865. The
Hejaz remained in Ottoman hands, while northern Arabia (the
province of Jabal Shammar) was locally autonomous but
acknowledged the supremacy of Riyadh. Fayṣal reestablished
Saʿūdī authority for a short time in Bahrain and for a longer
time in Al-Buraymī and the Oman hinterland. He extended his
influence as far as Hadhramaut and the frontiers of Yemen. Only
British intervention stopped the extension of direct Saʿūdī
power over the western shore of the gulf.
Administration under Fayṣal was simple and involved few
people, mostly members of the royal family and descendants of
Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb. Justice in the provinces was
enforced by officials appointed by Riyadh; even the tribes paid
taxes; and the writing of poetry and history flourished.
Death of Fayṣal
In 1865, when his power was an acknowledged factor in
Arabian politics, Fayṣal died. His sons disputed the succession.
His eldest son, ʿAbd Allāh, succeeded first, maintaining himself
against the rebellion of his brother Saʿūd II for six years
until the Battle of Jūdah (1871), in which Saʿūd triumphed. ʿAbd
Allāh fled, and Saʿūd took power. But during the next five years
the throne changed hands no fewer than seven times in favour of
different members of the Saʿūd family. Drought in 1870–74
exacerbated the civil war’s effects as the unity of the Wahhābī
community disintegrated. Meanwhile, ʿAbd Allāh had appealed to
the Ottoman governor in Baghdad, who came to his assistance but
took advantage of the situation to occupy the province of
Al-Hasa for the empire in 1871—an occupation that lasted 42
years.
The Rashīdīs
Saʿūd II died in 1875, and, after a brief interval of
chaos, ʿAbd Allāh (as ʿAbd Allāh II) returned to the throne the
following year only to find himself powerless against the
Rashīdī emirs of Jabal Shammar, with their capital at Ḥāʾil. The
Rashīdīs had ruled there since 1836, first as agents for the
Saʿūd family, but subsequently they became independent, with
strong links to the Ottomans and growing wealth from the caravan
trade. Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Rashīd (reigned 1869–97) was
undoubtedly the dominant figure in Arabian politics when ʿAbd
Allāh (now as ʿAbd Allāh II ibn Saʿūd) returned to Riyadh for
his third spell of authority. At first the Rashīdīs refrained
from any forward action, but they soon intervened in the chaotic
affairs of the Wahhābī state. And it was not long before ʿAbd
Allāh was persuaded to join Ibn Rashīd at Ḥāʾil (ostensibly as a
guest but in truth as a hostage), while a representative of the
Rashīdīs was appointed governor of Riyadh in 1887. ʿAbd Allāh
eventually was allowed to return to Riyadh and even was named
governor of the city in 1889. ʿAbd Allāh did not live to enjoy
his restoration for long, however; he died in the same year,
leaving to his youngest brother, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān, the almost
hopeless task of reviving the dynasty.
ʿAbd al-Raḥmān was soon embroiled in hostilities with the
Rashīdīs. The Battle of Al-Mulaydah (in Al-Qaṣīm) settled the
issue between them decisively in 1891, and, for the second time
in a space of 70 years, the Wahhābī state seemed to be
completely destroyed. ʿAbd al-Raḥmān fled with his family to
take refuge in Kuwait as the guest of its rulers. Unlike the
first Saʿūdī regime, which was ended by external conquest, the
second Saʿūdī state fell chiefly because of internal disputes
between members of the royal family.
Ibn Saʿūd and the third Saʿūdī state
ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz (known commonly as Ibn Saʿūd), the son of
the exiled ʿAbd al-Raḥmān, took advantage of his new location to
acquire useful knowledge of world affairs, while the new Rashīdī
prince, ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn ʿAbd Mitʿab, alienated the population
of Najd. In 1901 the young Ibn Saʿūd (he was about 22 to 26
years old) sallied out of Kuwait with a force of 40 followers on
what must have seemed a forlorn adventure. On Jan. 15, 1902,
with a select body of only 15 warriors, he scaled the walls of
Riyadh, surprised and defeated the Rashīdī governor and his
escort before the gate of the fort of Mismāk (Musmāk), and was
hailed by the populace as their ruler.
The following years witnessed the development of the struggle
by the third Saʿūdī state to expand its control once again over
most of the Arabian Peninsula and thereby reestablish the
glories of the first Saʿūdī state in the 18th century. The first
challenge was from the Rashīdīs, whose power was by no means
spent and who received substantial help from the Ottomans in men
and material. In 1904 Ibn Saʿūd defeated a combined Rashīdī and
Ottoman force but afterward allowed the Ottomans to place
garrisons in central Arabia for one year. Ibn Rashīd continued
the struggle, but he was killed in battle in 1906, and
thenceforth Ibn Saʿūd, who secured the withdrawal of Ottoman
troops from Al-Qaṣīm in 1906, became the undisputed master of
central Arabia. Ibn Saʿūd bent himself to the task of regaining
the whole realm of his ancestors. He was cautious enough to
continue acknowledging Ottoman overlordship (even if only in
name), and, by cultivating contacts with Britain, he hoped to
balance each power against the other.
Meanwhile, he busied himself with the reorganization of the
country’s administration, including the inception of a plan
designed to ensure the stability and permanence of his military
force. In 1912 he established the first Ikhwān (“Brethren”)
colony on the desert wells of Al-Arṭāwiyyah, peopled entirely by
Bedouin. The colony formed a militant cantonment dedicated to
the service of God and prince. During the next decade, nearly
100 similar colonies organized around tribal group identity were
founded throughout the country, providing Ibn Saʿūd with a
formidable military force. At the same time, however, the Saʿūdī
military also included soldiers recruited from the towns and
settled areas.
Ibn Saʿūd’s first major conquest in Najd was the taking of
Al-Hasa province from the Ottomans in 1913, although he was
again compelled to reaffirm Ottoman sovereignty over all of his
territory in 1914. During World War I (1914–18), he was aided by
British subsidies, but he managed by adroit diplomacy to be
relatively quiescent, though surrounded by enemies. In 1919,
however, he struck his first blow, against Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī of
the Hejaz, whose army was annihilated by the Ikhwān. In 1920 Ibn
Saʿūd’s son Fayṣal captured the province of Asir between the
Hejaz and Yemen. In 1921 Ibn Saʿūd defeated the forces of
Muḥammad ibn Ṭalāl, the last Rashīdī emir, and annexed the whole
of northern Arabia, occupying Al-Jawf and Wadi Al-Sirḥān in the
following year. Kuwait experienced border raids and a Saʿūdī
blockade over payment of customs duties. Meanwhile, Fayṣal I and
ʿAbdullāh I, the sons of Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī, had been placed on the
thrones of Iraq and Transjordan, respectively, by the British
government. These territories and the Hejaz served as a
formidable British-protected cordon around the northern and
western borders of the Wahhābī state, though incidents along the
border were frequent.
In 1923 the British government invited all the rulers
concerned in these sporadic hostilities to attend a conference
in Kuwait and if possible to settle their differences. The
British also made it clear that the subsidies theretofore paid
to Ibn Saʿūd and Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī would be terminated.
The conference ended in complete disagreement, and in
September 1924 the Wahhābīs attacked the Hejaz. They captured
Al-Ṭāʾif after a brief struggle, but this was followed by a
massacre of the city’s male civilians. The Saʿūdīs occupied
Mecca without opposition. Ibn Saʿūd then laid siege to Jiddah
and Medina, while Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī abdicated his throne in favour
of his son ʿAlī. By the end of 1925, both Medina and Jiddah had
surrendered to the Saʿūdīs. The Al-ʿAqabah–Maʿān district
adjacent to the northern Hejaz was occupied by Transjordan to
prevent its falling into Wahhābī hands. On Jan. 8, 1926, Ibn
Saʿūd, who had adopted the title sultan of Najd in 1921, was
proclaimed king of the Hejaz in the Great Mosque of Mecca. In
1927 he also changed his title of sultan to king of Najd and its
dependencies, the two parts of his dual kingdom being
administered for the time being as separate units. In the same
year, the Treaty of Jiddah, negotiated between Ibn Saʿūd and a
British special envoy, Sir Gilbert Clayton, placed Saʿūdī
relations with Great Britain on a permanent footing as the
British fully acknowledged Saʿūdī independence. A series of
Muslim conferences sponsored by the Saʿūdīs in the Hejaz
legitimized their presence as rulers.
Associating with Christian powers put Ibn Saʿūd in an awkward
position with the more religious elements in Najd. Moreover, his
alleged complaisance over British involvement in and protection
of Iraq and Transjordan, both of which the Ikhwān thought ripe
for conquest, created tension with his military supporters.
Incidents on their frontiers created a state of virtual though
undeclared war, in which British aircraft played a part in
discouraging Wahhābī incursions. Ibn Saʿūd also on several
occasions violently suppressed political and military opposition
by the Ikhwān.
In 1928 and 1929, Fayṣal al-Dawīsh, Sulṭān ibn Bijād, and
other leaders of the Ikhwān, accusing Ibn Saʿūd of betraying the
cause for which they had fought and opposing the taxes levied
upon their followers, resumed their defiance of the king’s
authority. The rebels sought to stop the centralization of power
in the hands of the king and keep the purity of Wahhābī
practices against what they saw as innovations advocated by Ibn
Saʿūd. The majority of the population rallied to the king’s
side, and this, with the support of the Najdi ʿulamāʾ, enabled
him to defeat the rebels. The civil war, however, dragged on
into 1930, when the rebels were rounded up by the British in
Kuwaiti territory and their leaders handed over to the king.
With their defeat, power passed definitively into the hands of
townspeople rather than the tribes.
Ibn Saʿūd was at last free to give his undivided attention to
the development of his country and to the problems of foreign
policy that beset him on all sides. Above all, he was concerned
to assert and maintain the complete independence of his country
and in it the exclusive supremacy of Islam. As long as these
fundamental objectives remained in place, he was not only ready
to cooperate with all nations but prepared to regard with
sympathy some of the practices that had taken root in the Hejaz
and other areas as the result of foreign contacts. The ban on
music, for example, was progressively circumvented by the radio,
which was also used as a tool to unite the kingdom and increase
military efficiency. And so the latitudinarian spirit, slowly at
first but with ever-increasing momentum, lessened a few of the
inhibitions of the puritan regime.
On the other hand, Ibn Saʿūd rigorously opposed the
intervention of any foreign government whatever in the internal
politics of the regime. Yet, aside from members of the royal
family, and Najdi and Hejazi merchants, many of the king’s chief
advisers were foreign Muslims. Some of the foreign advisers were
political refugees from their homelands and served Ibn Saʿūd for
many years.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
The history of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia begins
properly on Sept. 23, 1932, when by royal decree the dual
kingdom of the Hejaz and Najd with its dependencies,
administered since 1927 as two separate units, was unified under
the name of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The chief immediate
effect was to increase the unity of the kingdom and to decrease
the possibility of Hejazi separatism, while the name underscored
the central role of the royal family in the kingdom’s creation.
No attempt was made to change the supreme authority of the king
as the absolute monarch of the new regime; indeed, his power was
emphasized in 1933 by his choice of his son Saʿūd as heir
apparent.
Foreign relations, 1932–53
From the date of its establishment in September 1932,
Saudi Arabia enjoyed full international recognition as an
independent state, although it did not join the League of
Nations.
In 1934 Ibn Saʿūd was involved in war with Yemen over a
boundary dispute. An additional cause of the war was Yemen’s
support of an uprising by an Asiri prince against Ibn Saʿūd. In
a seven-week campaign, the Saudis were generally victorious.
Hostilities were terminated by the Treaty of Al-Ṭāʾif, by which
the Saudis gained the disputed district. Diplomatic relations
with Egypt, severed in 1926 because of an incident on the Meccan
pilgrimage, were not renewed until after the death of King Fuʾād
of Egypt in 1936.
Fixing the boundaries of the country remained a problem
throughout the 1930s. In tribal society, sovereignty was
traditionally expressed in the form of suzerainty over certain
tribes rather than in fixed territorial boundaries. Hence, Ibn
Saʿūd regarded the demarcation of land frontiers with suspicion.
Nevertheless, the majority of the frontiers with Iraq, Kuwait,
and Jordan had been demarcated by 1930. In the south, no
agreement was reached on the exact site of the frontiers with
the Trucial States and with the interior of Yemen and Muscat and
Oman.
After Saudi Arabia declared its neutrality during World War
II (1939–45), Britain and the United States subsidized Saudi
Arabia, which declared war on Germany in 1945, and this thus
enabled the kingdom to enter the United Nations as a founding
member. Ibn Saʿūd also joined the Arab League, but he did not
play a leading part in it, since the religious and conservative
element in Saudi Arabia opposed cooperation with other Arab
states, even when Saudis shared common views, as in opposition
to Zionism. In the Arab-Israeli War of 1948, Saudi Arabia
contributed only one battalion.
Internal affairs, 1932–53
Although oil had been discovered in Al-Hasa near the
shores of the Persian Gulf before World War II, it was not
exploited until after 1941. State revenues before the war were
derived primarily from the pilgrimage, customs duties, and
taxes—which decreased as a result of the world economic
depression of the 1930s. After 1944 large numbers of foreign oil
workers arrived in the country, and Aramco (the Arabian American
Oil Company) was established as a joint venture between a number
of American oil companies and the Saudi government. The country
was itself unable to supply the oil company with sufficient
skilled workers, and oil production was largely managed and
undertaken by foreigners. When in 1949 Aramco paid more taxes to
the U.S. government than the yield to Saudi Arabia in royalties,
the Saudi leadership obtained a new agreement in 1950 that
required Aramco to pay an income tax of 50 percent of the net
operating income to the Saudis.
The sudden wealth from increased production was a mixed
blessing. Cultural life flourished, primarily in the Hejaz,
which was the centre for newspapers and radio, but the large
influx of outsiders apparently increased xenophobia in a
population already noted for its distrust of foreigners. The
disturbance of traditional patterns caused by the cultural
changes, new wealth from increased production of oil, inflation,
and the movement of the population to the major cities was
reflected in the government, which had become increasingly
wasteful and lavish. Despite the new wealth, extravagant
spending led to governmental deficits and foreign borrowing in
the 1950s.
Ibn Saʿūd, who had been brought up in the strict puritanical
faith of the Wahhābīs, viewed this flood of wealth and the
consequent changing mores with distaste and bewilderment. He
died on Nov. 9, 1953.
Reigns of Saʿūd ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz and Fayṣal
(1953–75)
Domestic affairs
Ibn Saʿūd was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,
Saʿūd, with his second son, Fayṣal (the two had different
mothers), declared heir apparent. The two half-brothers were
remarkably different. Saʿūd had been heir apparent since 1933;
he had many ties among the desert tribes. Fayṣal, who had lived
chiefly in the cities of the Hejaz, had often been abroad in his
post as Saudi foreign minister. Saʿūd thus represented what soon
would become the ancien régime, while those advocating
modernization supported Fayṣal.
Meanwhile, money continued to pour into the country. There
was an enormous increase in the population of the towns, notably
of Riyadh and Jiddah. The character of these urban societies was
changed beyond all recognition by a large influx of bourgeoisie
from neighbouring countries. The freer lifestyle of immigrant
wives was tolerated to a certain degree, but such liberalization
was not extended to Saudi women. Roads, schools, hospitals,
palaces, apartment buildings, and airports replaced the old
alleyways and mud-brick houses. Weaving and other crafts
continued, but they were modified by the use of new patterns and
materials.
At the royal court, there was constant rivalry between Saʿūd
and Fayṣal. In March 1958, as a result of pressure from the
royal family, Saʿūd issued a decree transferring all executive
power to Fayṣal. In December 1960, however, Fayṣal was obliged
to resign as prime minister, and the king himself assumed the
office. In 1962–63 Fayṣal was once more given executive powers.
Finally, on Nov. 2, 1964, the family collectively deposed Saʿūd
and proclaimed Fayṣal king. The National Guard, the royal
princes, and the ʿulamāʾ had supported Fayṣal in the struggle
for power against Saʿūd. Fayṣal was simply more competent than
Saʿūd: it was he who developed the ministries of government and
established for the first time an efficient bureaucracy.
Foreign affairs
Since the frontier between Saudi Arabia and Oman had
never been demarcated and there was the possibility of
discovering oil in the area, in 1952 Saudi Arabian forces
occupied the oasis of Al-Buraymī, which Britain felt belonged to
Oman and the emirate of Abu Dhabi (Abū Ẓabī)—both of which
enjoyed British protection. In July 1954 the British and Saudi
governments agreed to submit the dispute to an arbitration
tribunal. It convened in Geneva in September 1955, but the
negotiations broke down, and British-officered forces from Oman
and Abu Dhabi reoccupied the oasis. During the Suez Crisis in
1956, Saudi Arabia broke off relations with Britain, and they
were not reestablished until 1963. In September 1961, following
the Iraqi claim to sovereignty over Kuwait, Saudi Arabia sent
troops to Kuwait in response to a request from its ruler.
Since World War II, the United States had become the most
influential foreign power in Saudi Arabia. American interest was
directed toward the oil industry, which was owned by U.S.
companies. In 1960 Saudi Arabia helped found the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The Saudis favoured
the United States in the Cold War with the Soviet Union, but
they opposed American support of Israel.
As a result of the rise to power of Egypt’s Pan-Arab
nationalist president Gamal Abdel Nasser, Saudi relations with
Egypt were often strained. Egyptian propaganda made frequent
attacks on the Saudi system of royal government. When Egyptian
troops were sent to North Yemen in 1962, tension between Saudi
Arabia and Egypt became more acute. The Saudis helped the Yemeni
royalists against the Egyptian-backed Yemen republic. King
Fayṣal ultimately agreed to assist Egypt with financial aid,
provided Nasser withdrew his troops from Yemen.
Fayṣal, leader of the largest conservative Arab state,
continued to warn against the danger of communist influence in
Arab and Muslim countries. Saudi Arabia also acted against the
United States, however, as a result of U.S. assistance to Israel
during the Arab-Israeli War of 1973. The Saudis and other Arab
oil producers organized a short-lived oil boycott, and the price
of oil worldwide quadrupled.
The Saudi government gained direct ownership of one-fourth of
Aramco’s crude oil operations in 1973. Ultimately, the Saudis
achieved complete control of the company and, therefore, over
their chief economic resource. By 1984 the president of Aramco
was a Saudi citizen.
Harry St. John Bridger Philby
William L. Ochsenwald
Joshua Teitelbaum
Reign of Khālid (1975–82)
On March 25, 1975, King Fayṣal was assassinated; he was
succeeded by his half-brother, Crown Prince Khālid, and Prince
Fahd was made crown prince. During the new king’s reign,
economic and social development continued at an extremely rapid
rate, revolutionizing the infrastructure and educational system
of the country.
After the signing of the Egyptian-Israeli peace agreement on
March 26, 1979, Saudi Arabia joined most of the other Arab
nations in severing diplomatic relations with Egypt. (See Camp
David Accords.) The establishment of the Islamic Republic of
Iran in 1979 and the subsequent Iran-Iraq War (1980–88) also
caused the Saudi monarchy serious concern—owing in no small part
to the large Shīʿite minority in eastern Saudi Arabia (the same
sect that predominates in Iran) that rioted in 1979 and 1980 in
support of Iran’s revolution. The kingdom thereafter supported
Iraq in its war with Iran.
The only dramatic domestic challenge to the monarchy since
World War II took place in November 1979 when the Ḥaram mosque
(Great Mosque) in Mecca, the holiest site in the world for
Muslims, was seized by followers of a Saudi religious extremist,
Juhaymān al-ʿUtaybī, who had been educated by the Saudi
religious establishment and was a former member of the National
Guard. Juhaymān protested what he saw as the un-Islamic
behaviour of the Saudi royal family. The rebels occupied the
mosque for two weeks before they were defeated by National Guard
troops.
Saudi Arabia under Fahd and Crown Prince ʿAbd
Allāh (1982–2005)
On June 13, 1982, King Khālid died, and Crown Prince
Fahd, who had long been influential in the administration of
affairs, succeeded to the throne. Fahd maintained Saudi Arabia’s
foreign policy of close cooperation with the United States and
increased purchases of sophisticated military equipment from the
United States and Britain. In the 1970s and ’80s, the country
had become the single largest oil producer in the world, and the
government played a major role in determining OPEC policy on oil
production and pricing. Oil revenues were crucial to Saudi
society as its economy was changed by the extraordinary wealth
channeled through the government and derived from oil
operations, notwithstanding a downturn in oil prices and
production in the mid-1980s. Urbanization, mass public
education, the presence of numerous foreign workers, and access
to new media all affected Saudi values and mores. While society
changed profoundly, however, political processes did not. The
political elite came to include more bureaucrats and
technocrats, but real power continued in the hands of the
dynasty.
The Persian Gulf War and its aftermath
Saudi political leadership was challenged when Iraq, after
having rejected attempted Saudi mediation, reasserted its
earlier claims and invaded neighbouring Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990,
precipitating the Persian Gulf War (1990–91). The Kuwaiti
government fled to Saudi Arabia, and King Fahd denounced the
Iraqi invaders. Fearing that President Ṣaddām Ḥussein of Iraq
might invade Saudi Arabia next (despite Saudi assistance to Iraq
during the Iran-Iraq War), the Saudis, breaking with tradition,
invited the United States and other countries to send troops to
protect the kingdom. This was done after Fahd had received the
approbation of the kingdom’s highest-ranking religious official,
Sheikh ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn Bāz, who agreed that non-Muslims could
defend Islam’s holiest places. By mid-November the United States
had sent 230,000 troops, which were the most important part of
the coalition force that ultimately included soldiers from many
other countries. The Saudis adroitly coordinated Arab and Muslim
contingents and also established diplomatic ties with China, the
Soviet Union, and, later, Iran. King Fahd expanded his goal
beyond the protection of Saudi Arabia to include the liberation
of Kuwait and, if possible, the overthrow of Ṣaddām Ḥussein.
With approval from Saudi Arabia secured in advance, the
coalition, with some 800,000 troops (more than 540,000 from the
United States), attacked Iraq by air on Jan. 16–17, 1991. Saudi
pilots flew more than 7,000 sorties and were prominent in the
battles around the Saudi town of Raʾs al-Khafjī. In the four-day
ground war that began on February 24, Saudi troops, including
the National Guard, helped defeat the Iraqis and drive them out
of Kuwait. Despite the clear military victory, the full
implications of the war for Saudi Arabia were not immediately
known.
William L. Ochsenwald
Joshua Teitelbaum
Yet as time wore on, that cardinal event, in which a fellow
Arab state threatened to rend years of the royal family’s
accomplishments asunder, seemed to be a turning point for many
aspects of Saudi political, social, and economic life. A certain
malaise set in, with various groups questioning the wisdom of
the royal family and demanding accountability. Many citizens
questioned how a regime that had spent such vast sums on defense
would, in the end, be required to call on the help of non-Muslim
outsiders when it felt threatened. In the internal political
sphere, two opposition movements emerged, one Islamist and the
other liberal and modernist, and forced Fahd to undertake
several initiatives.
The economic impact of the Persian Gulf War was considerable,
as Saudi Arabia housed and assisted not only foreign troops but
also Kuwaiti civilians while at the same time expelling Yemenis
and Jordanians, whose countries had supported Iraq
diplomatically. Saudi Arabia purchased new weapons from abroad,
increased the size of its own armed forces, and gave financial
subsidies to a number of foreign governments. Higher Saudi oil
production and substantially higher prices in the world oil
market provided some compensation for the Saudi economy.
However, gross domestic product per capita grew only marginally
through the 1990s and in real terms actually fell in some years.
A languid economy—in a country perceived as otherwise being
extremely wealthy—combined with a growth in unemployment to
contribute to the kingdom’s sense of malaise. This disquiet
added to a subsequent rise in civil unrest.
One of the first results of the altered situation in Saudi
Arabia was King Fahd’s March 1, 1992, issuance of three
important decrees: the Basic Law of Government; the Consultative
Council Statute; and the Regions Statute. Whereas Fahd was
responding to demands for greater governmental accountability,
the first and second decrees contained a number of
quasi-constitutional clauses. But since the government had often
stated that the Qurʾān and the sunnah (practices) of the Prophet
were the country’s constitution, he was at pains to state that
there had not been a “constitutional vacuum” in Saudi Arabia and
that the new laws confirmed existing practice.
The Saudi dilemma was to respond to dissent while making as
few actual changes in the status quo as possible. The Basic Law
of Government changed the process used to select the heir to the
throne by extending candidates to the grandchildren of Ibn
Saʿūd, enshrined the king’s right to choose his heir,
established a right to privacy, and prohibited infringements of
human rights without just cause. The Consultative Council
Statute set up an advisory body of 60 (later expanded to 120)
members plus a chairman. While convoking a council gave the
appearance of a step toward a more representative government,
the council actually was appointed by the king and could be
dissolved by him at will.
Fahd made it clear that he did not have democracy in mind: “A
system based on elections is not consistent with our Islamic
creed, which [approves of] government by consultation [shūrā].”
The Islamist opposition
After the Persian Gulf War, Saudi Arabia’s Islamist
opposition grew more influential. It was not made up of
extremists like Juhaymān; instead, highly educated academics and
Islamic preachers from the lower ranks of the establishment
ʿulamāʾ formed its core. It was a loose agglomeration of various
trends, but the main spokesmen were two charismatic preachers,
Salmān al-ʿAwdah and Safār al-Ḥawālī. Their main grievance was
that the regime failed to act according to what the opposition
defined as proper Islamic norms in foreign and domestic affairs.
Criticism of the government was not allowed in Saudi Arabia, but
in September 1992 a group associated with the two clerics
published a daring, lengthy, and detailed document called the
“Memorandum of Exhortation,” in which they took the regime to
task for having an overfinanced military that did not live up to
expectations, for glorifying decadent and Westernized
lifestyles, and for not allowing dissenting Islamist opinions to
be expressed in print and on the airwaves.
The regime tried to rely on clerics with whom it had close
ties to reign in the dissidents, but to no avail. The kingdom’s
first organized Sunni Islamist opposition group, the Committee
for the Defense of Legitimate Rights (CDLR), was established in
1993. The committee was not a Western-style human rights
organization—as its English-language sobriquet might suggest—but
an Islamist opposition group that demanded that the regime act
according to the strict Islamic norms on which the country had
been founded. Its original members were clerics and university
faculty, and it was quick to disseminate its message via
telephone facsimile and, later, the Internet.
The Islamist challenge that faced the regime was an
especially troubling one inasmuch as the regime itself had risen
to power and maintained its status by appealing to those same
Islamic symbols. This attack threatened to undermine the Saʿūd
family’s very legitimacy, and the family reacted by outlawing
the committee and arresting its members. The group thereafter
operated abroad, in London, until it split in 1996.
Meanwhile, in 1994 the first mass Islamist demonstration was
held in the central Arabian city of Burayda, following the
arrest of al-Ḥawālī. It was led by al-ʿAwdah, who was arrested
during the demonstration. While one could not conclude that
Islamist opposition was rampant, the fact that such a large
demonstration was held at all was an indication that all was not
right in the capital. The demonstration was followed by a
further crackdown on dissent.
The dissidents condemned the regime’s supposed un-Islamic
practices. Of particular concern to them was the presence of
U.S. troops and those of other non-Muslim countries on Saudi
soil, a presence that—given the proximity of the two holy
cities—they deemed not only an affront to their religion but a
situation designed only to protect the regime. In November 1995
an explosion rocked the central Riyadh headquarters of a U.S.
government group that trained members of the Saudi National
Guard. The explosion killed five Americans and two Indians.
Three hitherto-unknown organizations took responsibility for the
operation, and all of them demanded the withdrawal of U.S.
forces from the kingdom. While there was no proven connection
between the bombers and the known leaders of the Saudi Islamist
movement, in May 1996 Saudi authorities arrested and executed
four youths who claimed—in televised confessions—to have been
influenced by the CDLR and by the views of an Afghanistan-based
Saudi Islamist financier, Osama bin Laden.
In June 1996 a massive explosion ripped through an apartment
complex housing U.S. Air Force personnel. Nineteen U.S.
servicemembers were killed, and hundreds were injured. This
bombing remained unsolved, but U.S. and Saudi authorities
suggested that Iranian-backed Saudi Shīʿites were involved.
Although they still actively campaigned from
abroad—particularly on the Internet—Islamists maintained a low
profile within the kingdom throughout the 1990s. Indications
were that Crown Prince ʿAbd Allāh (Abdullah)—who had effectively
run day-to-day affairs after Fahd suffered a stroke in 1995—had
either reached some kind of agreement with Islamist leaders or
had been granted some form of grace period by them. In 1999 the
government ordered the release of the opposition clerics
al-Ḥawālī and al-ʿAwdah, and, although there were no indications
of the conditions of their release, the two thereafter refrained
from publicly criticizing the royal family.
Far more ominous was the development outside the kingdom of a
network, which was associated with bin Laden, known as al-Qaeda.
Although there were no direct attacks against the regime either
at home or abroad, al-Qaeda staged a number of violent attacks
against U.S. targets throughout the world. These attacks
culminated in the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001, a
majority of whose participants were citizens of Saudi Arabia.
Foreign policy since the end of the Persian
Gulf War
Saudi Arabia owed a tremendous debt to the countries
whose forces had defeated Iraq, particularly to the United
States. The kingdom repaid this debt in part by purchasing large
quantities of weapons from American firms and by supporting the
U.S.-led peace process between Israel and the Palestinians. In
the aftermath of the war, however, the kingdom also sought to
cultivate closer relations with other regional powers,
particularly with Iran.
Saudi Arabia played a behind-the-scenes role in
Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations by persuading Syria to
attend the October 1991 Madrid Conference, which opened the
postwar peace dialogue in the region; Saudi Arabia held observer
status at the conference and was active in an effort to soften
Syria’s position against Israel, though with little avail.
Following the signing of the Oslo Accords between Israel and the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in 1993, the government
overcame its anger at PLO chairman Yāsir ʿArafāt for having
supported Iraq during the Persian Gulf War and pledged large
sums of money to support the development of the Palestinian
Authority. In 1994 the Saudis, encouraged by the United States,
led the Gulf Cooperation Council in withdrawing from a
long-standing Arab League boycott of companies either directly
or indirectly doing business with Israel.
With Iraq seemingly chastened by the Persian Gulf War, Saudi
worries over regional security turned to Iran, which, since the
Islamic revolution, had purportedly sought to export the
revolution to other countries in the region with significant
Shīʿite populations, such as Iraq, Lebanon, Bahrain, and Saudi
Arabia. In strongly opposing Iran, the Saudi government also
followed the U.S. policy of “dual containment” (i.e., isolating
both Iran and Iraq), in which the United States sought to depict
Iran as a “rogue” state that supported terrorism.
By 1996, however, Saudi Arabia’s sense of obligation to the
United States for its support during the war had begun to wane.
Saudi leaders, particularly the newly powerful ʿAbd Allāh, began
to develop closer relations with Iran. ʿAbd Allāh, keen to put a
distance between his policies and the unpopular pro-Western
policies of Fahd, apparently assessed that the United States
would continue to support the Saʿūd family, despite U.S.
antipathy toward Iran, and so turned his attention to improving
regional relations. Soon dignitaries from Iran and Saudi Arabia
were exchanging visits, and the two countries’ leaders were
cooperating in several matters. The kingdom also resolved
several long-standing border disputes; these actions included
significantly reshaping its border with Yemen.
In the end, however, the greatest hurdle to U.S.-Saudi
relations came from within the kingdom—from the Saudi citizens
who participated in the September 11 attacks and other acts of
terrorism against the United States. The perception of many
Americans was that the royal family, through its long and close
relations with the Wahhābī sect, had laid the groundwork for the
growth of militant groups like al-Qaeda and that after the
attacks had done little to help track the militants or ward off
future atrocities. That viewpoint was reinforced when in 2003
the Saudi government refused to support or to participate in the
Iraq War between U.S.-led forces and Iraq, an action seen by
some as an attempt by the royal family to placate the kingdom’s
Islamist radicals. That same year Saudi and U.S. government
officials agreed to withdraw all U.S. military forces from Saudi
soil. In December 2005 Saudi Arabia formally joined the World
Trade Organization.
Joshua Teitelbaum
Reign of King ʿAbd Allāh from 2005
The country underwent a peaceful power transition in
2005, when, following Fahd’s death on August 1, ʿAbd Allāh
ascended the throne. The new king subsequently introduced a
program of moderate reform to address a number of challenges
facing Saudi Arabia. The country’s continued reliance on oil
revenue was of particular concern, and among the economic
reforms he introduced were limited deregulation, foreign
investment, and privatization. He originally sought to placate
extreme Islamist voices—many of which sought to end the Saʿūdī
dynasty’s rule—yet the spectre of anti-Saudi and anti-Western
violence within the country’s borders led him for the first time
to order the use of force by the security services against some
extremists. At the same time, in 2005 ʿAbd Allāh responded to
demands for greater political inclusiveness by holding the
country’s first municipal elections, based on adult male
suffrage.
Uncertainty surrounding succession in the kingdom was a
further source of domestic concern, and late the following year
ʿAbd Allāh issued a new law refining the country’s succession
policies. Among the changes was the establishment of an
Allegiance Commission, a council of Saudi princes meant to
participate in the selection of a crown prince—previously the
task of the king alone—and to oversee a smooth transition of
power. In February 2009 ʿAbd Allāh enacted a series of broad
governmental changes, which affected areas such as the
judiciary, armed forces, and various ministries. Notable among
his decisions were the replacement of senior individuals within
the judiciary and the religious police with more moderate
candidates and the appointment of the country’s first female
deputy minister, who was charged with overseeing girls’
education.
Ed