Order Code IB93113
CRS Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Saudi Arabia:
Current Issues and
U.S. Relations
Updated April 28, 2005
Alfred B. Prados
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Current Issues
September 11 Terrorist Attacks and Aftermath
Allegations
Saudi Responses
Joint Congressional Report
Joint Task Force
9/11 Commission Report
Major Terrorist Attacks
Riyadh, May 2003
Riyadh, November 2003
Riyadh, April 2004
Yanbu, May 2004
Khobar, May 2004
Assassinations and Murders, Post-May 2004
Jeddah (U.S. Consulate), December 2004
Evolution of Saudi Efforts
Bin Laden Tape
Saudi Stance on Iraq
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Post-War Iraq: Withdrawal of U.S. Troops from Saudi Arabia
Infiltrators?
Iraqi Debt
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Saudi-Palestinian Relations
Hamas
Arms Transfers to Saudi Arabia
U.S. Arms Sales
Saudi-Pakistani Contacts
Contacts with China
Trade Relationships
Oil Production
Foreign Investment
Human Rights, Democracy, and Other Issues
Background to U.S.-Saudi Relations
Political Development
Saudi Leadership
Royal Succession
U.S. Aid, Defense, and Security
Congressional Interest in Saudi Arabia
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Saudi Arabia: Current Issues and U.S. Relations
SUMMARY
Saudi Arabia, a monarchy ruled by the
ing anti-Americanism in some segments of the
Saud dynasty, enjoys special importance in
Saudi population. Since the attacks on the
much of the international community because
United States September 11, 2001, some
of its unique association with the Islamic
commentators have maintained that Saudi
religion and its oil wealth. Since the estab-
domestic and foreign policies have created a
lishment of the modern Saudi kingdom in
climate that may have contributed to terrorist
1932, it has benefitted from a stable political
acts by Islamic radicals. U.S. officials have
system based on a smooth process of succes-
generally cited Saudi support in the aftermath
sion to the throne and a prosperous economy
of the attacks, including increased intelligence
dominated by the oil sector. Some commenta-
sharing, law enforcement activities, and track-
tors have suggested that growing internal
ing of terrorist financing.
pressures and regional tensions may have
weakened the Saudi regime in recent years;
In its final report, released on July 23,
others point to an apparent consensus behind
2004, the U.S. National Commission on
Saudi institutions over much of the last cen-
Terrorist Attacks upon the United States (the
tury as evidence of long-term stability.
9/11 Commission) described Saudi Arabia as
having been “a problematic ally in combating
The United States and Saudi Arabia have
Islamic extremism,” while noting that Saudi
long-standing economic and defense ties. A
cooperation has improved, especially since
series of informal agreements, statements by
further terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia begin-
successive U.S. administrations, and military
ning in May 2003. The National Intelligence
deployments have demonstrated a strong U.S.
Reform Act (P.L. 108-458, December 17,
security commitment to Saudi Arabia. Saudi
2004) contains a requirement (Section
Arabia was a key member of the allied coali-
7120(b)) that the President submit to desig-
tion that expelled Iraqi forces from Kuwait in
nated congressional committees a strategy for
1991. Saudi Arabia subsequently hosted U.S.
collaboration with Saudi Arabia, as part of a
aircraft enforcing the no-fly zone over south-
larger report on U.S. government activities to
ern Iraq. Saudi officials expressed opposition
implement the provisions of this act.
to the U.S.-led military campaign launched
against Iraq in March 2003 (Operation Iraqi
Other principal issues of bilateral interest
Freedom), although Saudi Arabia reportedly
include security in the post-war Gulf region,
permitted certain support operations by U.S.
the Saudi position on the Arab-Israeli conflict,
and British military forces, in addition to
arms transfers to Saudi Arabia, Saudi external
making some facilities available to them. By
aid programs, bilateral trade relationships and
mutual agreement, the United States withdrew
oil production, and Saudi policies involving
virtually all its forces from Saudi Arabia at the
human rights and democracy. The Consoli-
end of August 2003.
dated Appropriations Act for FY2005 (P.L.
108-447, December 8, 2004) contains a ban
Bombing attacks against several U.S. and
on U.S. assistance to Saudi Arabia but pro-
foreign operated installations in Saudi Arabia
vides for a presidential waiver (Section 575) if
have raised some concerns about security of
the President certifies that Saudi Arabia is
U.S. personnel and what appears to be grow-
cooperating in the war against terrorism.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
The Saudi government held three rounds of municipal elections on February 10, March
3, and April 20, 2005, in a three-stage process in which male Saudi citizens cast votes for
half the members of 178 municipal councils in the country’s first nation-wide elections. In
addition, a royal decree in early April 2005 expanded the membership of Saudi Arabia’s
appointive consultative council from 120 to 150.
On April 25, Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, the country’s de facto ruler, visited
President Bush in Crawford, Texas (he had made a similar visit in April 2002). The two
leaders reportedly discussed oil supply and pricing, the war on terrorism and terrorist
financing, stability in the Middle East, support for Iraq, Arab-Israeli peacemaking,
development of democracy in Saudi Arabia and the region, and trade relations including
Saudi candidacy for membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO). In follow-up
comments, Crown Prince Abdullah’s advisor said Saudi Arabia has a limited spare capacity
of approximately 1.3 to 1.4 million barrels per day for increased oil production and expressed
the view that producers and consumers need to develop a long-range structure to deal with
fundamental issues of supply and demand.
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Current Issues
September 11 Terrorist Attacks and Aftermath
Allegations. The September 11, 2001 attacks kindled criticisms within the United
States of alleged Saudi involvement in terrorism or of Saudi laxity in acting against terrorist
groups. Commentators have pointed to the high percentage of Saudi nationals among the
hijackers (15 out of 19). Some critics go so far as to accuse Saudi government officials of
responsibility for the September 11, 2001, attacks through design or negligence and for the
continuing threat posed by the perpetrators or by like-minded terrorist groups. Others
maintain that Saudi domestic and foreign policies have created a climate that may have
contributed to terrorist acts by Islamic radicals. For example, some believe that the Saudi
regime has fostered international terrorism by funding religious schools (madrasas) that
propagate extreme forms of Islam and advocate violence. (For more information on these
schools, see CRS Report RS21654, Islamic Religious Schools, Madrasas: Background)
Critics of Saudi policies have also cited a multiplicity of reports that the Saudi government
has permitted or encouraged fund raising in Saudi Arabia by charitable Islamic groups and
foundations linked to Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda organization, which the U.S. government
has identified as clearly responsible for the hijacks. The exiled bin Laden was formerly a
Saudi national, but Saudi authorities revoked his citizenship in 1994. (For more information
on the question of Saudi fundraising, see CRS Report RL32499, Saudi Arabia: Terrorist
Financing Issues
, July 28, 2004.)
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Saudi Arabia in Brief

Population (July 2004):
25,795,938 (includes 5,576,076 foreign residents)
Growth rate: 2.44%
Area:
1,960,582 sq.km. (756,985 sq.mi.); just over one fifth the size of the
United States
Ethnic Groups:
(native Saudis only) Arab 90%; Afro-Asian 10%
Religion:
(native Saudis only) Muslim 100% (Sunni 85-95%, Shi’ite 5-15%)
Literacy (2003):
78.8% (male 84.7%, female 70.8%)
GDP (2003):
$211.6 billion; growth rate: 6.4%*
External Public Debt (2003): $39.1 billion
Inflation (2003):
1.0%
Unemployment (2003):
25%
*Unusually high figure, largely owing to surge in oil production.
Sources: IMF; U.S. Dept. of Commerce; CIA World Factbook; Economist Intelligence Unit (London)
Saudi Responses. Saudi officials maintain that they are working closely with the
United States to combat terrorism, which they say is aimed as much at the Saudi regime as
it is at the United States. In October 2001, the Saudi government announced that it would
implement U.N. Security Council Resolution 1373, which called among other things for
freezing terrorist related funds. The Saudi government later invited the G-7 Financial Action
Task Force (FATF) on Money Laundering into the kingdom to conduct a “mutual
evaluation,” established a Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) to collect intelligence on
financial activity, and passed new banking regulations.1 On February 24, 2004, Saudi Arabia
and 12 other Middle East or Asian countries attended a conference organized by the 29-
member FATF, where attendees focused on terrorist use of charitable organizations to
finance terrorist operations. In February 2005, Saudi Arabia hosted a counterterrorism
conference at which attendees adopted a resolution (the “Riyadh Declaration”) condemning
violence and terrorism.
Saudi officials say they have arrested suspected terrorists including persons believed to
be affiliated with Al Qaeda and sought to dampen religious extremism in the Kingdom. In
a speech to an Islamic conference on August 30, 2003, for example, Saudi King Fahd bin
Abd al-Aziz condemned terrorism and exhorted Muslim clerics to emphasize peace, security,
cooperation, justice, and tolerance in their sermons. Press reports indicate that Saudi security
forces had arrested 600 suspects as of November 10, 2003. On several occasions, most
recently in September 2003, the Saudi Embassy issued a comprehensive white paper
detailing initiatives undertaken by Saudi Arabia in the war against terrorism since the
September 11, 2001 attacks, with particular emphasis on apprehension of suspected
terrorists, establishment of joint task forces with the United States (see below), intelligence
cooperation, and various steps against terrorism financing.
1 Matthew Levitt, “Saudi Financial Counterterrorism Measures (Part II): Smokescreen or
Substance?” Policywatch No. 687, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Dec. 10, 2002, p. 1.
A U.S. Treasury Department official confirmed on May 6, 2004, that the FIU had been established.
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U.S. government statements have generally complimented Saudi cooperation with the
U.S. campaign against terrorism, while sometimes suggesting that the Saudi government
could do more. In its most recent annual report entitled Patterns of Global Terrorism, 2003
(published April 29, 2004), the State Department noted that the Saudi government adopted
a new law in August 2003 criminalizing money laundering and terrorist financing, and also
established new financial controls to regulate charitable contributions. In this connection,
according to the U.S. Treasury Department, the United States and Saudi Arabia have worked
together in jointly designating several entities as supporters of terrorism. For example, on
June 2, 2004, a spokesman of the Saudi Embassy in Washington, D.C. announced that a large
Saudi-based charitable organization (the al-Haramayn Islamic Foundation), which has been
linked to terrorist activity, would be dissolved and that its assets, along with the assets of
other Saudi charitable organizations, would be merged into a new organization to be called
the Saudi National Commission for Relief and Charity Work Abroad, in an effort “to ensure
that the charity of our citizens goes to those who need it.” During the same period, the
United States and Saudi Arabia reportedly asked the U.N. Sanctions Committee to add five
other overseas branches of al-Haramayn to its list of foreign terrorist organizations. In his
State of the Union address of February 2, 2005, President Bush mentioned Saudi Arabia
among 11 countries that have captured or detained Al-Qaeda terrorists.
Joint Congressional Report. On July 24, 2003, the House and Senate Intelligence
Committees released part of a 900-page report entitled Joint Inquiry into Intelligence
Community Actions before and after the Terrorist Attacks of September 11, 2001 (S.Rept.
107-351; H.Rept. 107-792). The Bush Administration refused to allow the release of an
approximately 28-page section of the report. According to press articles, persons who claim
to have read the still-classified section of the report say it covers Saudi links with individuals
involved in the September 11 attacks; specifically, the classified section reportedly states that
senior Saudi officials channeled hundreds of millions of dollars to charitable groups that may
have helped fund the attacks.2 Saudi officials, including the Saudi Ambassador to the United
States, have denounced the report, maintaining that “Al Qaeda is a cult seeking to destroy
Saudi Arabia as well as the United States. By what logic would we support a cult that is
trying to kill us?”3 On July 29, in response to an urgent request from Saudi Arabia, President
Bush met with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faysal, who called for the release of the still-
classified section of the report to enable Saudi Arabia to rebut the allegations contained
therein. President Bush refused to do so on the grounds that disclosure could reveal
intelligence sources and methods to enemies of the United States and might compromise the
on-going investigation of the September 11, 2001, attacks.4
Joint Task Force. In August 2003, the United States and Saudi Arabia reached an
agreement for the establishment in Saudi Arabia of a joint U.S.-Saudi task force to monitor
terrorist financing. The task force, composed of representatives from the U.S. Treasury
Department, the FBI, and other U.S. agencies, will screen bank accounts, computer records,
and other financial data in an effort to track the flow of money to terrorist organizations and
shut it off. U.S. officials left for the Saudi capital of Riyadh on August 26, to work out
2 “Classified Section of Sept. 11 Report Faults Saudi Rulers,” New York Times, July 26, 2003.
3 “Saudis Slam Congressional Report Accusing Kingdom of Poor Cooperation in Terror War,”
Associated Press News Wire, July 26, 2003.
4 “Bush Refuses to Declassify Saudi Section of Report,” New York Times, July 30, 2003.
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details regarding the task force. News articles have noted that this is the first time Saudi
authorities have allowed U.S. government agencies to maintain an extended presence in
Saudi Arabia or provided them with access to Saudi documents and investigations. Some
speculate that the May 2003 bombings of three residential compounds in Riyadh (see below)
in which 34 people died, including eight Americans and seven Saudis, may have impelled
Saudi authorities to expand cooperation with the United States in fighting terrorism (“U.S.-
Saudi Anti-Terror Operation Planned,” Washington Post, August 26, 2003).
9/11 Commission Report. In its final report, released on July 23, 2004, the U.S.
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States (the 9/11 Commission)
described Saudi Arabia as having been “a problematic ally in combating Islamic extremism.”
The report takes note of long-standing cooperative relations between the U.S. and Saudi
governments, growing misunderstandings at the popular level in recent years, and U.S.
criticisms in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks that Saudi officials could do more to fight
terrorism. The report acknowledges increased efforts in that regard since mid-2003 when
terrorists began hitting targets in Saudi Arabia itself with more frequency; today, according
to the report, “The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is now locked in mortal combat with al Qaeda.”
One of the key recommendations in the 9/11 report addresses the U.S.-Saudi relationship:
The problems in the U.S.-Saudi relationship must be confronted, openly. The United
States and Saudi Arabia must determine if they can build a relationship that political
leaders on both sides are prepared to publicly defend — a relationship about more than
oil. It should include a shared commitment to political and economic reform, as Saudis
make common cause with the outside world. It should include a shared interest in greater
tolerance and cultural respect, translating into a commitment to fight the violent
extremists who foment hatred.
Major Terrorist Attacks
The mid-1990s saw two forerunners of more recent attacks by terrorists against U.S. and
other targets starting in 2003. The first attack, which occurred on November 13, 1995, at the
headquarters of a U.S. training program for the Saudi National Guard in the capital of
Riyadh, killed seven persons (including five U.S. citizens). Several months later, Saudi
authorities executed four Saudis, who reportedly confessed to having been influenced by
Islamic fundamentalist exiles. The second and more lethal explosion occurred in June 1996
at Khobar Towers, a housing facility for U.S. Air Force personnel near Dhahran Air Base,
killing 19 U.S. Air Force personnel and wounding many others. Saudi Interior Minister
Prince Nayif told reporters on May 22, 1998, that the bombings “were carried out by Saudis
with the support of others.” On June 21, 2001, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft
announced that a federal grand jury had indicted 14 individuals in connection with the
explosion, which killed 19 U.S. servicemen and wounded 372 others. According to the U.S.
Justice Department, the suspects belonged to the Saudi and Lebanese branches of the militant
Shi’ite Muslim organization Hizballah, which is supported by Iran. The 1996 Khobar
bombing remains unresolved, but seven years passed before another incident of this nature
took place.
Riyadh, May 2003. Three near-simultaneous suicide bombings at about 11:20 p.m.
on May 12, 2003, destroyed three housing compounds in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, inhabited
by U.S. military personnel and other foreign residents in Riyadh. According to reports, as
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many as 34 people were killed, including eight Americans, seven Saudis, two Jordanians,
two Filipinos, one Lebanese, one Swiss and nine unidentified persons (possibly including the
perpetrators), while many more were wounded. A fourth explosion occurred the following
morning at the headquarters of a U.S.-Saudi joint venture, but there were no reported
injuries. U.S. and Saudi officials said the attacks had many of the earmarks of previous Al
Qaeda operations in their coordinated timing and in their techniques, in that the assailants
attacked guards at the compound gates and then drove their trucks into the compounds.
President Bush condemned the attack, which he linked to Al Qaeda.5 Top Saudi leaders,
including Crown Prince Abdullah and Defense Minister Prince Sultan, also condemned the
attacks, and some commentators expressed the view that the attacks were targeted against
the Saudi government as well. On May 13, a U.S. interagency team including six FBI
representatives left for Saudi Arabia to assist in investigating the attack. A joint U.S.-Saudi
task force was established several months later, as discussed above.
Riyadh, November 2003. On November 9, a car bomb exploded in the Saudi capital
of Riyadh at a residential compound inhabited mainly by foreign residents from other Arab
countries, killing at least 17 and wounding over 120, including four Americans. According
to a statement by the Saudi Cabinet, King Fahd promised to “strike with an iron fist” at
anyone seeking to threaten security and stability in the country; Interior Minister Prince Nayif
said there would be no dialog with the perpetrators “other than with the rifle and the sword”;
and the Minister of Islamic Affairs described the attack as “flagrant aggression” against
Islam. U.S. and Saudi officials blamed Al Qaeda for the attack; visiting U.S. Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage said “this attack bears their hallmark.” Noting that
virtually all U.S. military personnel have departed the kingdom, some commentators
suggested that the perpetrators were primarily seeking to destabilize the Saudi government.
Riyadh, April 2004. On April 21, 2004, a suicide bomber detonated a Chevrolet
Blazer packed with explosives in front of the Saudi General Security building in the capital
of Riyadh, killing at least four persons (two Saudi police officers, one civilian, and one
Syrian girl) and wounding 148. Al-Haramayn Brigades, a group allegedly connected to Al
Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the attack, which was the first suicide bombing of a major
Saudi government building. Saudi officials said the perpetrators “are not what they claim
to be: people of Islam” but “criminals.”
Yanbu, May 2004. During a shooting spree on May 2, 2004, four gunmen killed two
U.S., one Australian, and two British citizens employed by the Swiss-Swedish based
engineering company ABB Lummus, which was engaged in upgrading operations at a
petrochemical plant in the Saudi Red Sea port city of Yanbu. The plant is jointly owned by
U.S. Exxon Mobil and a Saudi industrial firm. The gunmen dragged the body of one U.S.
victim from the back of a car and fired at a nearby McDonald’s and a Holiday Inn before
being shot by members of the Saudi Arabian National Guard. Two Saudi security officers
were killed while trying to apprehend the gunmen. No group has claimed responsibility, but
Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayif blamed Al Qaeda for being behind the shooting, and a
statement of undetermined authenticity by Abdul Aziz al-Muqrin, the leader of an apparent
Al-Qaeda affiliate known as “Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula,” on May 5 praised “the
four heros” who carried out the attack. Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faysal
5 “Bush Vows ‘American Justice’ For Bombers in Saudi Arabia,” Washington Post, May 14, 2003.
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accused a London-based dissident group, the Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia. In
addition, Crown Prince Abdullah and Prince Saud suggested that “Zionists” had manipulated
some of the terrorists but gave no evidence to support this claim.
Khobar, May 2004. On May 29, 2004, at least four gunmen attacked a residential
compound housing oil company employees and dependents in Khobar, Saudi Arabia, seizing
approximately 50 hostages. Twenty-two of the hostages, including one U.S. citizen, were
killed and approximately 25 wounded before the hostage-takers fled during a rescue
operation mounted by Saudi commandos on May 30. Three gunmen either escaped or were
allowed to leave by Saudi authorities in return for releasing the hostages; a fourth, described
as a ringleader, was wounded and captured. In a taped statement, Al Qaeda operative Abd
al-Aziz al-Muqrin (see above) claimed responsibility for the attack and promised that the
year 2004 would be “bloody and miserable for infidels.”
Assassinations and Murders, Post-May 2004. Since 2004, terrorist groups in
Saudi Arabia have targeted several western expatriates, including three U.S. contractors
working on military-related projects. This shift by terrorists from bombs to targeted
assassinations has been described by some observers as an attempt by the perpetrators to
deflect mounting criticism of Saudi militants for previous indiscriminate bombings that cause
injury and death to increasing numbers of Saudis and other Muslims.6 On June 8 and 12,
respectively, two U.S. contractors were shot and killed near their residences. On June 12,
another U.S. contractor, Lockheed Martin employee Paul M. Johnson, was kidnaped by
Muqrin’s group, which subsequently gave Saudi authorities a three-day deadline to release
detained members of a militant Islamist cell. On June 18, Muqrin’s “Al-Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula” posted photos in which they claimed to have beheaded Johnson after
Saudi authorities did not meet the three-day deadline. Meanwhile, an estimated 15,000
members of Saudi security forces mounted a massive hunt to find Johnson and his captors,
and on June 19, Saudi officials announced that they had killed Muqrin and three of his
confederates in a shootout in the capital of Riyadh. In a CNN interview on June 21, a senior
Saudi foreign policy advisor described the elimination of Muqrin as a major blow to his
group but added that others might seek to reconstitute the group’s capability. Subsequently,
conflicting press reports indicated that Muqrin’s replacement, Saleh Al-Oufi, was killed by
Saudi security forces and replaced by Saud Al-Otaibi, but a Saudi Ministry of Interior
officials denied this report.
Jeddah (U.S. Consulate), December 2004. On December 6, 2004, militants
using small arms and grenades stormed the heavily fortified U.S. Consulate in the Red Sea
port city of Jeddah, killing five foreign employees of the consulate before Saudi security
personnel killed four of the militants and captured the other one. The Saudi cabinet
condemned the attack, which Saudi officials blamed on “deviants,” a term used by Saudi
officials to describe operatives or supporters of Al Qaeda. This is the first major terrorist
assault inside Saudi Arabia since the attack on the oil company residential compounds at
Khobar on May 29. Some commentators speculate that Al Qaeda may have shifted its
6 See Craig Whitlock and Renae Merle, “Saudi Victims Had Military Link,” Washington Post, June
14, 2004.
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strategy again to target U.S. and western interests while refraining from attacks on domestic
targets, in an effort to recoup Saudi domestic support for their operations.7
Evolution of Saudi Efforts. In the past, U.S. officials have criticized Saudi
counterparts for insufficient sharing of information that Saudi officials have gained from
their investigations of terrorist acts that have killed or injured U.S. citizens. Press reports
indicate that U.S.-Saudi cooperation in the investigation of terrorist incidents has improved
since mid-2003. Both U.S. and Saudi officials said the impetus for closer cooperation came
from the May attacks, which one knowledgeable observer described as “the inevitable wake
up call” for Saudi leaders increasingly concerned over apparent attempts by terrorists to
target the Saudi regime. The November bombing, which occurred after virtually all U.S.
forces had left the country, may have reinforced Saudi concerns over their vulnerability to
such attacks by Al Qaeda and like-minded groups,8 and Saudi willingness to share
information with U.S. officials. According to the 9/11 Commission’s report, “[a]s in
Pakistan, Yemen, and other countries, [Saudi] attitudes changed when the terrorism came
home.” In another vein, on June 23, 2004, Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah offered a limited
amnesty to members of a “misguided group” who turn themselves in to Saudi authorities
within one month. According to press reports, only six responded to the offer, one of whom
was on the kingdom’s 26-member most-wanted list. Meanwhile, in early June, Saudi
Ambassador to the United States Prince Bandar bin Sultan promised to conduct war against
the insurgents, whom he described as “deviants” and “traitors to their faith” and added: “War
means war. It is not Boy Scout camp.”9
Bin Laden Tape. On December 16, 2004, an audiotape circulated on the internet and
purportedly from Osama bin Laden called for an uprising against the Saudi monarchy. The
tape charged the Saudi royal family with misrule, condemned other “tyrannical ruling
families” in the region, praised the December 6 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Jeddah,
exhorted listeners to attack Gulf oil supplies, and added that “Targeting America in Iraq in
terms of economy and loss of life is a golden and unique opportunity.” On the same date,
the London-based Saudi dissident group, “Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia,” called
for protesters to mount anti-regime demonstrations in Saudi cities, but these demonstrations
failed to materialize.
Saudi Stance on Iraq
Operation Iraqi Freedom. Between the Gulf War of 1991 and Operation Iraqi
Freedom in 2003, Saudi Arabia hosted U.S. Air Force units that conducted overflights to
enforce a no-fly zone over southern Iraq (Operation Southern Watch). Although they did not
usually object to small scale U.S. responses to Iraqi aircraft or air defense units challenging
allied aircraft conducting these overflights, Saudi authorities were opposed to large-scale
allied military action against Iraqi targets. Saudi Arabia opposed the U.S.-led Operation Iraqi
Freedom, and on March 19, 2003 (the day President Bush initiated the campaign), a
7 “Ql Qaeda Shifts Its Strategy In Saudi Arabia,” The Washington Post, Dec. 19, 2004.
8 “U.S.-Saudi Anti-Terror Operation Planned,” Washington Post, Aug. 26, 2003; “A Campaign to
Rattle a Long-Ruling Dynasty,” New York Times, Nov. 10, 2003.
9 “Turning Back the Tide,” Middle East Economic Digest, July 23-29, 2004, p. 23.
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communique by King Fahd stated that Saudi Arabia “will not participate in any way” in the
war. A number of news reports, however, indicated that Saudi Arabia informally agreed to
provide logistical support to U.S.-led forces: permission to conduct refueling,
reconnaissance, surveillance, and transport missions from bases in Saudi Arabia; landing and
overflight clearances; and use of a U.S.-built facility in Saudi Arabia known as the Combat
Air Operations Center (CAOC) to coordinate military operations in the region.10 Also, on
March 8, 2003, Saudi Defense Minister Prince Sultan bin Abd al-Aziz said his government
was allowing U.S. troops to use two airports in northern Saudi Arabia for “help in a technical
matter.” A later report in the Philadelphia Inquirer on April 26, 2004, quoting unnamed
U.S. and Saudi officials, alleged that Saudi Arabia had a wider role in the war than had been
publicized at the time. In addition to support noted above, the officials said the Saudi royal
family permitted the staging of special forces operations from inside Saudi Arabia, allowed
some 250-300 mainly transport and surveillance planes to fly missions from Saudi Arabia,
and provided tens of millions of dollars in discounted oil, gas, and fuel for U.S. forces.
Like several Sunni Muslim-led regimes in the Gulf region, Saudi leaders are reportedly
worried in the aftermath of the war about the possible spread of Shi’ite Muslim influence in
the region, especially Iraq, whose Shi’ite majority may be vulnerable to Iranian overtures.
(“As Saudi Visits, Bush Seeks Help on Lowering Oil Prices,” New York Times, April 25,
2005.) A joint statement by President Bush and Crown Prince Abdullah on April 25, 2005
called on the international community to support Iraq and urged neighboring states to avoid
interfering in Iraq’s internal political affairs.
Post-War Iraq: Withdrawal of U.S. Troops from Saudi Arabia. Following the
collapse of the Saddam Hussein regime, the New York Times reported on April 30, 2003, that
the United States planned to withdraw almost all of its 5,000 troops in Saudi Arabia and
move its Combat Air Operations Center to neighboring Qatar. The U.S. Air Force unit to
which most U.S. military personnel in Saudi Arabia had been assigned was formally de-
activated on August 27, 2003. On September 22, 2003, the New York Times reported that
the last American combat troops had left Saudi Arabia earlier in the month. Approximately
220 U.S. military and contract advisors, most of them working with the Saudi National
Guard, remain in country. Both U.S. and Saudi officials hoped the departure of U.S. troops
would remove some of the pressure on the Saudi government from militant anti-U.S. groups;
but some terrorist attacks against residential compounds have continued, as noted above.
Infiltrators? In late August 2003, a senior State Department official commented that
pro-Saddam Arab volunteer fighters have been infiltrating into Iraq through Iran, Syria, and
Saudi Arabia to mount attacks against U.S.-led coalition forces in Iraq. In remarks published
on August 26, a senior Saudi foreign policy advisor responded that “we have no evidence of
Saudis crossing into Iraq and we have received no evidence from the U.S. government.”11
A press article on November 19, 2003, quoted local U.S. military commanders as saying that
their soldiers had encountered relatively few foreign fighters crossing into Iraq from
10 See for example “U.S. And Saudis Agree On Cooperation,” Washington Post, Feb. 26, 2003.
11 “Saudis Challenge U.S. Over Iraq Fighters,” Washington Post, Aug. 26, 2003.
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neighboring countries, including Saudi Arabia.12 According to a New York Times report of
April 23, 2004, quoting Saudi officials, the Saudi government has installed heat sensors to
detect movement on the Saudi-Iraqi border in an effort to seal it. In late December 2004,
unidentified western diplomats in Saudi Arabia reportedly said that several hundred Saudi
nationals are fighting in Iraq from a total of 1,000-1,500 foreign insurgents, but went on to
say that most Saudi infiltrators had come via Syria or other countries rather than directly
from Saudi Arabia, which has tighter border controls. (London Financial Times, December
20, 2004). A more recent press report (“Islamic Activities Sweep Saudi Council Elections,”
Washington Post, April 24, 2005) also mentions “hundreds” of Saudis fighting U.S. forces
in Iraq.
Iraqi Debt. As of January 2004, Iraq reportedly owed the Saudi government $9 billion
in debts incurred during the Saddam Hussein regime, while private Saudi firms and banks
hold about $19 billion in Iraqi debt.13
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Saudi Arabia supports Palestinian national aspirations, strongly endorses Muslim claims
in the old city of Jerusalem, and has been increasingly critical of Israel since the outbreak of
the Palestinian uprising in the occupied West Bank and Gaza in September 2000. At the
same time, Saudi Arabia has supported U.S. policy by endorsing Israeli-Palestinian peace
agreements, joined with neighboring Gulf states in 1994 in terminating enforcement of the
so-called secondary and tertiary (indirect) boycotts of Israel while retaining the primary
(direct) boycott, and adopted a more pro-active approach to peacemaking. In March 2002,
Crown Prince Abdullah proposed a peace initiative calling for full Israeli withdrawal from
occupied territories in return for full normalization of relations between Arab states and
Israel. The plan was endorsed by the Arab League at a summit conference on March 27-28,
2004 and used as a basis of discussion between Crown Prince Abdullah and President Bush
at a bilateral meeting in April 2002. Over a year later, on June 3, 2003, President Bush,
Crown Prince Abdullah, and four other Arab leaders met at Sharm al-Shaykh, Egypt, where
the attendees endorsed the Road Map — a plan for Palestinian-Israeli peace promulgated by
the United States, the United Nations, Russia, and the European Union (the “Quartet”).
Saudi-Palestinian Relations. Saudi Arabia, like other Arab states, recognizes the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian
people. Saudi officials say that their support to Palestinians (estimated at $80 million to
$100 million per year) is provided exclusively to the Palestinian Authority (PA), which was
established under the Israeli-Palestinian agreement of September 13, 1993, known as the first
Oslo Accord.14 Saudi Arabia has provided aid (variously estimated at $33 million and $59
million) to families of Palestinians killed or injured in the three-year-old Palestinian
uprising; in addition, Saudis raised additional funds (over $100 million according to one
12 “U.S. Officers in Iraq Find Few Signs of Infiltration by Foreign Fighters,” New York Times, Nov.
19, 2003.
13 Tom Everett-Heath, “Opposing Views of the Kingdom to Come,” Middle East Economic Digest,
Jan. 23-29, 2004, p. 1.
14 “Flow of Saudi Cash to Hamas Is Under Scrutiny by U.S.,” New York Times, Sept. 17, 2003.
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report) for this purpose at a telethon sponsored by King Fahd on April 11, 2002. Saudi
officials told U.S. counterparts in late April 2002 that proceeds of the telethon are funneled
through non-governmental organizations to provide some humanitarian support to needy
Palestinian families; the Saudis drew a distinction between their fund raising activities and
those of Iraq under Saddam Hussein, which paid families who would sacrifice their children
as suicide bombers. (For more information on Saudi payments to families of Palestinians
killed in the Palestinian uprising or imprisoned by Israeli authorities, see CRS Report
RL32499, Saudi Arabia: Terrorist Financing Issues.) During Crown Prince Abdullah’s visit
with President Bush in Crawford, Texas on April 25, 2005, Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice told reporters she had discussed with the Crown Prince “the need for everyone to
support, including financially, the Palestinians as they move forward.”
Hamas. There have been unsubstantiated reports of Saudi assistance to the PLO’s
principal rival organization, the fundamentalist Hamas organization, which the U.S.
government has designated as a foreign terrorist organization. In its annual report on
terrorism for the year 2001 (Patterns of Global Terrorism, 2001, published May 21, 2002),
the State Department noted that Hamas receives funding from “private benefactors in Saudi
Arabia and other moderate Arab states.” In its most recent issue (Patterns of Global
Terrorism, 2003
, published April 29, 2004), the State Department does not specifically
mention Saudi Arabia; rather, it states that Hamas “[r]eceives some funding from Iran but
primarily relies on donations from Palestinian expatriates around the world and private
benefactors, particularly in Western Europe, North America, and the Persian Gulf region.”
The State Department reports do not estimate amounts involved. According to one press
report, people in Saudi Arabia contribute approximately $5 million to Hamas per year, or
approximately half of its annual operating budget.15 Some reports indicate that Saudi
authorities tolerate fund raising for Hamas. For example, in May 2002, Israeli officials,
citing captured Palestinian documents, said the Saudi government had given money to 13
charities, seven of which provide support to Hamas. Saudi spokesman Adel al-Jubeir, an
advisor to Crown Prince Abdullah, maintains that “no Saudi government money goes to
Hamas, directly or indirectly.”16 (See also CRS Report RL32499, cited above.)
Arms Transfers to Saudi Arabia
U.S. Arms Sales. The United States has long been Saudi Arabia’s leading arms
supplier. During the eight-year period from 1996 through 2003, U.S. arms ordered by Saudi
Arabia amounted to $7.3 billion while U.S. arms delivered to Saudi Arabia amounted to
$22.9 billion, reflecting earlier orders. An upsurge in Saudi arms purchases from the United
States in the early 1990s was due in large measure to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and its
aftermath. The largest recent sale was a $9 billion contract for 72 F-15S advanced fighter
aircraft, signed in May 1993. Saudi arms purchase figures include not only lethal equipment
but also significant amounts of support services and construction. A downward trend has
15 Don Van Natta, Jr., with Timothy L. O’Brien, “Flow of Saudis’ Cash to Hamas Is Scrutinized,”
The New York Times, Sept. 17, 2003. The report cites American law enforcement officials,
American diplomats in the Middle East, and Israeli officials.
16 Don Van Natta, Jr. with Timothy L. O’Brien, “Flow of Saudis’ Cash to Hamas Is Scrutinized,” The
New York Times
, Sept. 17, 2003.
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marked Saudi arms procurement since the mid-1990s as Saudi Arabia completed many of
its post-Gulf War purchases and the country faced straitened finances.
Saudi-Pakistani Contacts. According to press reports in 1999, U.S. officials were
concerned over a visit by the Saudi Defense Minister to nuclear and missile facilities in
Pakistan, but had received assurances from Saudi officials that Saudi Arabia was not seeking
nuclear weapons or other weapons of mass destruction. Four years later, a Washington Times
article of October 22, 2003, citing “a ranking Pakistani insider,” reported that Saudi Arabia
and Pakistan have concluded a secret agreement on nuclear cooperation, under which
Pakistan would provide Saudi Arabia with nuclear technology in return for oil at reduced
prices. On the same day, a U.S. State Department spokesman said the U.S. Administration
had seen these reports but added that “[w]e have not seen, however, any information to
substantiate what would seem to us to be rather bald assertions.” The spokesman went on
to note that Pakistan understands U.S. concerns over nuclear proliferation and that Saudi
Arabia is a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The Saudi Ambassador to the
United States denied that Saudi Arabia and Pakistan had concluded a nuclear agreement and
repeated previous Saudi calls for a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East.
Contacts with China. In 1988, shortly before the end of the cold war, Saudi Arabia
concluded a controversial purchase of approximately 30 intermediate range CSS-2 missiles
from China, in its first and only major arms purchase from a communist (or formerly
communist) state. A Reuters news wire report of February 15, 2004, quoted unnamed U.S.
officials as voicing concern over continued alleged cooperation between China and Saudi
Arabia on missiles; the report did not provide details. On the following day, the Saudi Press
Agency said a responsible source at the Saudi Defense Ministry denied the report, which a
defense spokesman described as “fabricated and baseless.”

Trade Relationships
Saudi Arabia was the largest U.S. trading partner in the Middle East in 2004. For that
year, Saudi exports to the United States were estimated at $20.4 billion (up from $17.7
billion in 2003) and imports from the United States at $4.7 billion (up from $4.3 billion).
Comparable figures for Israel, the second largest U.S. trading partner in the Middle East in
2004, were $14.5 billion in exports and $6.0 billion in imports . To a considerable extent,
this high volume of trade is a result of U.S. imports of hydrocarbons from Saudi Arabia and
U.S. arms exports of arms, machinery, and vehicles to that country. Saudi Arabia has applied
to join the 128-member World Trade Organization (WTO), and U.S. officials including
President Bush have expressed support for its application. During Crown Prince Abdullah’s
April 2005 visit, his chief advisor said the United States and Saudi Arabia are very close to
reaching a bilateral trade agreement, which would open the door to Saudi membership in the
WTO.
Oil Production. With the world’s largest proven oil reserves (estimated at 261.7
billion barrels in January 2001), Saudi Arabia produced approximately 9.5 million barrels
per day (bpd) of crude oil as of April 2005. Approximately 12.1% of U.S. oil imports and
7.6% of total U.S. oil consumption came from Saudi Arabia during 2004. Formerly the
largest foreign supplier of oil to the United States, Saudi Arabia has been exceeded in this
role by Canada, Mexico, and/or Venezuela during recent years (see Table 2).
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In recent years, Saudi Arabia has alternately supported cuts and increases in production
as oil prices on the international market have fluctuated. Under a “gentlemen’s agreement”
reached in June 2000, members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) established a mechanism to adjust the supply of oil by 500,000 bpd if the 20-day
average price of oil moved outside a $22 to $28 price band. This band eroded in subsequent
years as oil prices continued to rise to more than $50 per barrel, and in follow-up comments
after the April 25, 2005, meeting between President Bush and Crown Prince Abdullah, the
Crown Prince’s foreign policy advisor said the $22-$28 price band has become unrealistic.
He went on to say that Saudi Arabia has a limited spare capacity of approximately 1.3 to 1.4
million bpd for increased production. During the April 2005 visit, Saudi officials proposed
a long-range plan to deal with fundamental issues of supply and demand, indicating that they
would aim for production levels of 12.5 million bpd by the end of the current decade and
15.0 million bpd over time.
Table 2. Oil Consumption and Imports
(in millions of barrels per day)
Category
2001
2002
2003
2004
Total U.S. Consumption
19.649
19.761
20.034
20.517
Total U.S. Imports
11.871
11.530
12.264
12.899
Imports from Saudi Arabia
1.662
1.552
1.774
1.556
Imports from Canada
1.828
1.971
2.072
2.118
Imports from Mexico
1.440
1.547
1.623
1.642
Imports from Venezuela
1.553
1.398
1.378
1.621
Source: DOE.
Foreign Investment. Saudi leaders, notably Crown Prince Abdullah, have shown
increasing interest in attracting foreign investment, especially in their country’s energy
sector. Oil exploration and production remain generally off limits to foreign investment;
however, with the world’s fourth largest natural gas reserves (219.4 trillion cubic feet), Saudi
Arabia is emphasizing foreign participation in the country’s gas sector. In 2001, Saudi
Arabia signed three preliminary agreements worth approximately $25 billion with eight
international oil companies (including six U.S.-based companies) to develop three natural
gas fields. Conclusion of final agreements met continuing delays as Saudi and company
negotiators tried to resolve several issues, including taxes, rate of return on investments, and
size of gas reserves being offered. Eventually, in mid-2003, negotiations collapsed, and
Saudi officials began pursuing a different approach involving smaller, less ambitious
projects of more limited scope. Meanwhile, at a July 22-24 conference in London attended
by over 40 companies including some U.S. companies, Saudi officials offered three other
contract areas for exploitation and issued tenders on September 15. International oil
companies were given until January 26, 2004, to submit bids.
Only six of the 40 companies that had expressed interest, including one U.S. company
(Chevron-Texaco), submitted bids. The three winners, announced on January 26-28, 2004,
were China’s SINOPEC, Russia’s Lukoil Holdings, and a consortium consisting of Italy’s
ENI SpA (E) and Spain’s Repsol YPF S.A. (REP.MC). The state-owned Saudi Arabian Oil
Company (Saudi ARAMCO) will hold a 20% share in each operating company. The U.S.
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Chevron-Texaco, which had bid on all three of the contract areas, was unsuccessful in
obtaining any of the contracts. Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi and other officials said the
bids were assessed strictly in accordance with the terms offered by the various companies,
although some unnamed observers suggested that the bidding process was structured in a way
that favored non-U.S. competitors. Still other observers suggested that the awards reflect
Saudi desire to cement economic ties with Russia, China, and other third countries, and one
energy expert noted that “[t]he Saudis are clearly shifting around and looking to different
parts of the world.17
Human Rights, Democracy, and Other Issues
Of particular concern to Westerners are pervasive restrictions on women’s activities and
an injunction against the practice of other religions throughout the Kingdom. This injunction
has been applied not only against non-Islamic faiths but also at times against the Shi’ite
Muslim community in Saudi Arabia, estimated at 500,000 or more persons mainly in the
Eastern Province. Since 1990, the Saudi government has moved quietly to ease some
restrictions on Shi’ites. A petition presented by Saudi Shi’ite representatives was followed
by an audience with Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah on April 30, 2003, indicating that both
the government and the Shi’ite petitioners may be seeking to pursue a more cooperative
approach. Also, according to the State Department, high-level Saudi officials have said that
Saudi policy allows for private non-Muslim worship, for example, in private homes or
secluded compounds; however, in its annual report on human rights practices, published on
February 25, 2004, the State Department notes that Saudi officials do not always follow these
guidelines in practice. In the State Department’s most recent annual Report on International
Religious Freedom (September 15, 2004), Saudi Arabia is designated for the first time as a
“Country of Particular Concern.” In his 2005 State of the Union address, President Bush
commented that “[t]he Government of Saudi Arabia can demonstrate its leadership in the
region by expanding the role of its people in determining their future.”
Political reforms promulgated by King Fahd in the early 1990s and continued under
Crown Prince Abdullah have set in motion a limited move toward democracy and protection
of individual freedoms. The “main law” announced by the King on March 1, 1992, bans
arbitrary arrest, harassment, or entry of individual homes without legal authority and
specifies privacy in telephone calls and mail. On August 20, 1993, the King appointed a 60-
member consultative (“Shura”) council (increased to 90 in 1997 and to 120 in 2001), with
limited powers to question cabinet members and propose laws. On January 25, 2005, the
Saudi Minister of Defense and Aviation and Second Deputy Prime Minister Prince Sultan
told Saudi newspapers that the council will be expanded to 150 members and given
additional unspecified authority in the next three months; a royal decree in early April 2005
approved the expanded membership of the council.
In further steps, the Saudi government held three rounds of municipal elections on
February 10, March 3, and April 20, 2005, in a three-stage process in which male Saudi
citizens cast votes for half the members of 178 municipal councils in the country’s first
17 Karen Matusic, “Saudis Extend Geopolitical Base with Gas Deals,” The Oil Daily, Feb. 2, 2004;
Simeon Kerr, “Saudi Arabia Strikes Hard Bargain On Gas Rights,” Dow Jones, Emerging Markets
Report
, Jan. 29, 2004.
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nation-wide elections. Although political parties and coalitions were banned, post-election
reports indicated that in most cases candidates endorsed by popular Sunni Islamic religious
fared best. (Shi’ite Muslim candidates also did well in the Shi’ite centers of northeastern
Saudi Arabia.) Commentators differ as to whether winners represented a moderate religious
trend or a more militant strain. In their joint press conference on April 25, 2005, President
Bush and Crown Prince Abdullah noted that “[t]he United States applauds the recently held
elections in the Kingdom [of Saudi Arabia] ... and looks for even wider participation in
accordance with the Kingdom’s reform program.” Earlier, in a press interview, the Saudi
Foreign Minister predicted that women will vote in the next election.18 The State
Department report notes the establishment for the first time in Saudi Arabia of a government-
approved human rights organization, the National Society for Human Rights, which began
to address some human rights violations during the past year, such as prison conditions. On
the other hand, a trial is under way for three reformists, who were arrested in March 2004
after calling for a constitutional monarchy in Saudi Arabia.
Background to U.S.-Saudi Relations
Political Development
Saudi Leadership. As the birthplace of the Islamic religion in 622 A.D. and as the
home of Islam’s two holiest shrines (the cities of Mecca and Medina), the Arabian Peninsula
has always occupied a position of special prestige within the Middle East. With the
establishment of Arab empires based in Damascus and Baghdad, the peninsula gradually lost
its political importance and sank into disunity. In the 16th century, much of the Arabian
Peninsula came under the nominal rule of the Ottoman Empire; however, tribal leaders
effectively controlled most of the region. During this period, an alliance developed between
an influential eastern tribe, the House of Saud, and the leaders of a puritanical and reformist
Islamic group known as the Wahhabi movement. During the first quarter of the 20th century,
a chieftain of the Saud family, Abd al-Aziz ibn Abd al-Rahman (later known as Ibn Saud)
overcame numerous rivals with the support of his Wahhabi allies and succeeded in unifying
most of the Arabian Peninsula under his rule. Four sons have succeeded him.
Royal Succession. King Fahd, the current ruler and a dynamic leader for many
years, is approximately 80 years old and suffers from medical problems including diabetes
and arthritis. In early 1996, King Fahd temporarily turned over affairs of state to his half-
brother, Crown Prince Abdullah, for a six-week period while the King recuperated from a
stroke. Amid conflicting reports about the King’s condition, Crown Prince Abdullah has
increasingly carried out many governmental functions since 1996, together with other senior
princes of the royal family. Another key figure is Defense Minister Prince Sultan, a full
brother of King Fahd, who is generally considered next in line of succession after Prince
Abdullah. (King Fahd, Prince Abdullah, and Prince Sultan also hold the positions of Prime
Minister, First Deputy Prime Minister, and Second Deputy Prime Minister, respectively.)
18 Al”Changes in the Kingdom — on ‘Our Timetable’” (interview by Lally Weymouth with Prince
Saud al-Faysal), The Washington Post, Feb. 27, 2005.
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Most commentators believe the royal family would back Crown Prince Abdullah in a
smooth transfer of power if King Fahd should pass from the scene. Various sources describe
Prince Abdullah as more traditional and less western in outlook than King Fahd and more
oriented toward the Arab world. On balance, the Crown Prince seems likely to maintain
Saudi Arabia’s long-standing strategic and economic ties with the United States. U.S.
officials commented that President Bush and Crown Prince Abdullah established a very good
personal rapport during the latter’s visit in April 2002. Some speculate, however, that
succession could become more intricate after Abdullah (who is only two years younger than
Fahd but believed to be in better health) and fear that future intra-family rivalries could
weaken the Saud dynasty over the long term. Possible future candidates include some 25
brothers and half-brothers of King Fahd and a number of sons and nephews.
U.S. Aid, Defense, and Security
As Saudi oil income expanded, U.S. economic aid ended in 1959. Small amounts of
aid continued through 1975, limited to a small international military education and training
(IMET) program after 1968. Total U.S. aid to Saudi Arabia from 1946 through its
termination in 1975 amounted to $328.4 million, of which $295.8 million was military and
$32.6 million was economic assistance. Approximately 20% of total aid was in the form of
grants and 80% in loans, all of which have been repaid. A small IMET program of $22,000
per year to help defray some expenses of sending Saudi officers to U.S. military service
schools was resumed in FY2002 and increased slightly to $25,000 in 2003 and 2004;
$25,000 was requested by the Administration for Saudi Arabia in FY2005. This amount
permits Saudi Arabia to purchase additional U.S. training at a lower cost than that which is
charged to countries not eligible for IMET. Saudi officials also cite their country’s role as
a donor of aid to less affluent countries; according to the Saudi Embassy in Washington,
Saudi Arabia gave $1.7 billion in development assistance and $14.7 million in relief
assistance to developing countries in 2002.
Congressional Interest in Saudi Arabia
108th Congress. U.S.-Saudi bilateral issues of interest to Congress in recent years
include arms sales to Saudi Arabia, Arab-Israeli issues including the now somewhat
attenuated Arab boycott of Israel, oil pricing, Saudi trade practices including disputes
between U.S. companies and Saudi clients (largely resolved), and terrorism. During the
debate on H.R. 4818, the Foreign Operations Appropriations bill for FY2005, the House
adopted Amendment 708 introduced by Representative Anthony D. Weiner, which stated
that “None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available pursuant to this act shall
be obligated or expended to finance any assistance to Saudi Arabia.” Though not included
in the Senate version of the bill, this amendment was included as Section 575 in the
conference report on H.R. 4818 (H.Rept. 108-792); it provided waiver authority if the
President certifies to the congressional appropriations committees that Saudi Arabia is
cooperating in the war against terrorism and that U.S. assistance will facilitate that effort.
The President signed the bill as P.L. 108-447 on December 8, 2004.
Relevant sections of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (P.L. 108-
458, December 17, 2004) capture many of the concerns reflected in the 9/11 Commission
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report regarding Saudi Arabia. Section 7105(a) contains findings that review problems in
the bilateral relationship but note improvements in counter-terrorism cooperation between
the two countries since mid-2003. Section 7105(b) expresses the sense of Congress that
“there should be a more robust dialogue between the people and Government of the United
States and the people and Government of Saudi Arabia.” Section 7120(b) requires the
President to submit to Congress within 180 days a strategy for collaboration with Saudi
Arabia, as part of a larger report on U.S. government activities to implement the provisions
of this act. The strategy paper is to include steps to institutionalize U.S.-Saudi relationships,
intelligence and security cooperation, ways to increase Saudi contributions to peace and
stability in the Middle East, political and economic reform, ways to promote tolerance and
diversity in Saudi Arabia, and ways to diminish support from Saudi sources to extremist
groups.
109th Congress. The 109th Congress has continued to show concern over the role of
Saudi Arabia in the war against terrorism, with particular emphasis on encouraging Saudi
leaders to heighten their efforts against terrorist financing. S. 12, the Targeting Terrorists
More Effectively Act of 2005, introduced on January 24, 2005, contains sections on Saudi
Arabia including:
! A statement of U.S. policy to work with the Saudi government to curtail
terrorist financing through a variety of methods;
! Findings that Saudi Arabia has an uneven record in fighting terrorism,
especially with regard to terrorist financing, support for radical madrasas
(schools), and lack of political outlets for its citizens; and that the Saudi
government must undertake political and economic reforms; and
! A requirement for the President to submit a report to designated
congressional committees containing a long-term strategy for U.S.-Saudi
engagement and for effective prevention of terrorist financing.19
H.R. 505, the Prohibit Aid to Saudi Arabia Act of 2005, would impose a ban on U.S.
aid to Saudi Arabia and contains no waiver authority; H.R. 604 would halt issuance of visas
to Saudi citizens until the President certifies that the Saudi government does not discriminate
in its visa policies on the basis of religious affiliation or cultural heritage.
Section 810 of S. 600, the State Department authorization bill for FY2006-2007,
expresses the sense of Congress that the municipal elections held in early 2005 constituted
a “positive initial step” and adds that it is in the interest of Saudi Arabia to permit women
to vote and run for office in future elections.
19 Present legislation — Section 7120 of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (P.L.
108-458, December 17, 2004) — requires the President to submit a strategy as part of a larger
reporting requirement within 180 rather than 90 days, as explained above.
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