HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031877.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
Article 1.
The Washington Post
From a Saudi prince, tough talk on
America’s favoritism toward Israel
Richard Cohen
June 13 -- As best I can recall, I first met Saudi Arabia’s Prince Turki
al-Faisal at a private home in Washington years ago. I found him
stern and humorless, sometimes even bitter. I have seen him since at
international conferences and the like — never in the mood for small
talk and exhibiting, sometimes in his glorious robes, not an ounce of
Bedouin charm. Still, | was unprepared for the opinion column he
published in Sunday’s Post. It read like a declaration of war.
Prince Turki is not now in the government. Yet he is a member of the
Saudi royal family and was once the kingdom’s intelligence chief and
its former ambassador to both London and Washington. The man is
solidly credentialed.
He is also angry as hell, and he lets America have it. He starts by
citing what he calls President Obama’s “controversial speech last
month, admonishing Arab governments to embrace democracy and
provide freedom to their populations.” Saudi Arabia, he wrote, heard
what Obama said and took it “seriously,” and he noted, of course,
that Obama had not demanded the same rights for Palestinians under
Israeli occupation. Point taken.
But the same kingdom that has taken Obama “seriously” is an
absolute monarchy that, among other things, bans women from
driving cars. It is also a country that offers no freedom of religion but
offers, for the occasional criminal, a public beheading. Given that
Turki has spent a good deal of time in the West, it’s not possible that
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031877