A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
Back to 500BC.
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written by eric margolis-saturday april 23, 2016


Poor
President Barack Obama flew to Saudi Arabia this past week but its
ruler, King Salman, was too busy to greet him at Riyadh’s airport.
This
snub was seen across the Arab world as a huge insult and violation of
traditional desert hospitality. Obama should have refused to deplane and
flown home.
Alas, he did not. Obama went to kow-tow
to the new Saudi monarch and his hot-headed son, Crown Prince Muhammed
bin Nayef. They are furious that Obama has refused to attack Iran,
Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Syria’s Assad regime.
They
are also angry as hornets that the US may allow relatives of 9/11
victims to sue the Saudi royal family, which is widely suspected of
being involved in the attack.
Interestingly,
survivors of the 34 American sailors killed aboard the USS Liberty when
it was attacked by Israeli warplanes in 1967, have been denied any
legal recourse.
The
Saudis, who are also petrified of Iran, threw a fit, threatening to
pull $750 billion of investments from the US. Other leaders of the Gulf
sheikdoms sided with the Saudis but rather more discreetly.
Ignoring
the stinging snub he had just suffered, Obama assured the Saudis and
Gulf monarchs that the US would defend them against all military threats
– in effect, reasserting their role as western protectorates. So much
for promoting democracy.
Saudi
Arabia and the Gulf states have been de facto US-British-French
protectorates since the end of World War II. They sell the western
powers oil at rock bottom prices and buy fabulous amounts of arms from
these powers in exchange for the west protecting the ruling families.
As
Libya’s late Muammar Kadaffi once told me, “the Saudis and Gulf
emirates are very rich families paying the west for protection and
living behind high walls.”
Kadaffi’s
overthrow and murder was aided by the western powers, notably France,
and the oil sheiks. Kadaffi constantly denounced the Saudis and their
Gulf neighbors as robbers, traitors to the Arab cause, and puppets of
the west.
Many
Arabs and Iranians agreed with Kadaffi. While Islam commands all
Muslims to share their wealth with the needy and aid fellow Muslims in
distress, the Saudis spent untold billions in casinos, palaces and
European hookers while millions of Muslims starved. The Saudis spent
even more billions for western high-tech arms they cannot use.
During
the dreadful war in Bosnia, 1992-1995, the Saudis, who arrogate to
themselves the title of "Defenders of Islam” and its holy places,
averted their eyes as hundreds of thousands of Bosnians were massacred,
raped, driven from their homes by Serbs, and mosques blown up.
The
Saudi dynasty has clung to power through lavish social spending and
cutting off the heads of dissidents, who are routinely framed with
charges of drug dealing. The Saudis have one of the world’s worst human
rights records.
Saudi’s
royals are afraid of their own military, so keep it feeble and inept
aside from the air force. They rely on the National Guard, a Bedouin
tribal forces also known as the White Army. In the past, Pakistan was
paid to keep 40,000 troops in Saudi to protect the royal family. These
soldiers are long gone, but the Saudis are pressing impoverished
Pakistan to return its military contingent.
The
US-backed and supplied Saudi war against dirt-poor Yemen has shown its
military to be incompetent and heedless of civilian casualties. The
Saudis run the risk of becoming stuck in a protracted guerilla war in
Yemen’s wild mountains.
The
US, Britain and France maintain discreet military bases in the kingdom
and Gulf coast. The US Fifth Fleet is based in Bahrain, where a
pro-democracy uprising was recently crushed by rented Pakistani police
and troops. Reports say 30,000 Pakistani troops may be stationed in
Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.
Earlier
this month, the Saudis and Egypt’s military junta announced they would
build a bridge across the narrow Strait of Tiran (leading to the Red
Sea) to Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula. The clear purpose of a large bridge in
this remote, desolate region is to facilitate the passage of Egyptian
troops and armor into Saudi Arabia to protect the Saudis. Egypt now
relies on Saudi cash to stay afloat.
But
Saudi Arabia’s seemingly endless supply of money is now threatened by
the precipitous drop in world oil prices. Riyadh just announced it will
seek $10 billion in loans from abroad to offset a budget shortfall. This
is unprecedented and leads many to wonder if the days of free-spending
Saudis are over. Add rumors of a bitter power-struggle in the
6,000-member royal family and growing internal dissent and
uber-reactionary Saudi Arabia may become the Mideast’s newest hotspot.
Reprinted with permission from EricMargolis.com.