Robert Fisk: A year on from Jamal Khashoggi’s murder, and Saudi Arabia is lurching towards hysterical chaos // Patrick Coburn: Iraq on brink of mass popular uprising as internet shut down and indefinite curfew imposed by officials
The Saudis are taking
a pasting. Video pictures from the Houthis of Saudi soldiers and their allies
killed or surrendering inside the Saudi border town of Najran represent a
devastating blow to a kingdom which is constantly threatening war against
Iran. If it can’t protect
its own armed forces inside Saudi territory, what is the point of wasting time
menacing Iran with military action over the massive destruction of the oil
facilities at Abqaiq and Khurais almost two weeks ago? This is the same Saudi
Arabia which kidnapped Lebanon’s prime minister Saad Hariri, bombed thousands
of civilians in Yemen and tried to wipe out Qatar’s independence. Not to
mention the little matter of chopping up Jamal Khashoggi almost one year ago in
the country’s Istanbul consulate and then secretly burying bits of his body,
for which Mohamed bin Salman – perhaps the worst crown prince in Saudi history
– now takes national (but not personal) responsibility - More posts on Khashoggi
Patrick Cockburn: Iraq on brink of mass popular uprising - internet shut down; indefinite curfew
The news that King
Salman’s personal bodyguard has now been murdered in Jeddah – by a “friend”, we
are told – only adds a hysterical note to the chaos within the country. Are the Americans now
going to be asked to act as mercenaries for this bizarre kingdom? Clearly Saudi Arabia’s
own armed forces, clotted with jet fighters, missiles, American – and British –
assistants, are as hopeless as they always were. Remember how they couldn’t
defend themselves from Saddam after his invasion of Kuwait in 1990, which
brought a pageant of international armies to “protect” them?
The Iranians may have
concluded that Donald Trump – in the immortal words of American columnist
Nicholas Kristof – is “the mother of all bunny rabbits”, but it seems pretty
clear that Trump’s decision to tear up US commitments under the Iranian nuclear
deal is a colossal disaster. He’s now supposed to
defend a vicious monarchy that threatens war against Iran for its (Houthi?)
attacks on Saudi’s major oil installations – but with what? Does he bomb Iran
and then ask it not to shoot back? At American ships? At US troops in Saudi
Arabia? In fact, this whole
wretched saga is beginning to look less like “War in the Middle East” and more
like “Carry On Up the Gulf”. We are supposed to take Iran seriously. But can
this be done when it’s principal opponent – a kingdom which spoke of “cutting
off the head of the snake” (Iran) – behaves like a buffoon? ...
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/saudi-arabia-iran-jamal-khashoggi-donald-trump-middle-east-a9126601.htmlPatrick Cockburn: Iraq on brink of mass popular uprising - internet shut down; indefinite curfew
Iraq is on the edge of
a mass popular uprising which the government is seeking to stifle through a
strictly imposed open-ended curfew and an enforced internet blackout. Protests, met with a
fierce response from the authorities, have gripped Baghdad and spread
since Tuesday to southern Iraqi provinces. So far, 19 people have been reported
killed, including one policeman, according to authorities. The real total could
be higher.
The closing down of
the internet has not stopped the protests but has led to them becoming more
disorganised and focused in districts of Baghdad away from the centre. Protesters in the Shia
working-class stronghold of Sadr City in east Baghdad attacked municipal
offices and set fire to the Dawa party headquarters....
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iraq-protests-baghdad-internet-blackout-curfew-a9141686.html