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Arabia
The story of Mahmoud: Saudi soldier's journey to death in Iraq
2005-03-21
Six months ago sergeant Mahmoud al-Harithi resigned from the Saudi military, said goodbye to his wife and two children, and left home for jihad in Iraq. A family man, the 32-year-old called home regularly. But he said little and resisted pleas for him to return. "He was looking for martyrdom. No matter who he would fight and no matter where, Afghanistan or Iraq, he was looking to be a martyr," said one of his cousins, who asked not to be named.
And now Mahmoud's worm-food in a forgotten grave in Iraq.
One Friday in late February his father had just finished midday prayers when he noticed two missed calls on his mobile phone. He called back, and heard a curt message telling him that Mahmoud's wish had been granted. "Your son is dead. We regret we cannot send you his body. We request your permission to bury him in Iraq," the voice said.

Harithi followed the same journey as many hundreds of Saudi men who are believed to have slipped away to fight in Iraq, angered by the US military occupation and driven by a desire to restore Muslim honour. Together with other foreign fighters they have helped fuel a bloody insurgency by Baathists and Islamists trying to force American troops out of the country they invaded two years ago. From time to time their secret, violent tales become public. In January, Saudi newspapers reported that a young Saudi man had survived, bloodied and horribly burned, after driving a fuel truck carrying explosives into Baghdad on December 25. Nine people died when the truck exploded but the militant, Ahmad Shayia, survived and were arrested, the papers said. His family in Saudi Arabia had already had a phone call telling them he was dead.
Let the Iraqi locals at him for five minutes and he will be.
Harithi had a pious upbringing and attended meetings regularly at his local mosque after sunset prayers. His family does not know exactly what prompted him to take up arms in Iraq, although he may well have been inspired by rhetoric at the mosque, and they begged him to reconsider. His father even told the Saudi authorities where his son was. "He kept calling from Iraq. He said: 'I'm in Iraq. I'm on jihad'," said the cousin. "They asked him to come back but he said he was afraid of being punished by the government."
"Nope, can't get back in the army, nope, you'll have to join the, um, ... interior police. Yeah, that's it."
His family, who were not told where or how Mahmoud died, accepted condolences for the traditional three day period of mourning. "They were upset but they appeared proud their son had fought in Iraq," said the cousin. Saudi authorities claim to have tried to stem the flow of terrorists jihadis heading for Iraq, tightening control at the border. "There are tens of Saudis in jail because either they wanted to go to Iraq, were caught trying to get in or were collecting money for people going to Iraq," said Mansour Nogaidan, a former terrorist militant who is now a critic of Saudi Arabia's strict Wahhabi school -- blamed by some for inspiring anti-Western violence.

Terrorists Militants have found other routes, mostly through Syria. Recent claims of successes by Saudi security forces in their battle with Al Qaeda militants may have pushed more fighters towards Iraq. One senior Saudi security official recently told a private gathering there may now be 1,500 Saudis in Iraq, Nogaidan said. Fares Houzam, a researcher on Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia, said he estimated up to 2,500 Saudis have travelled to Iraq since the US invasion in March 2003, 400 of whom may have died there. "Every day somewhere in Saudi Arabia, in the north or the south, there is a family accepting condolences," he said.
And just 1500 more to go ...
Saleh al-Awfi, the suspected leader of Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia, has pledged to despatch more Saudis to Iraq. "We will send you terrorists fighters and martyrdom seekers whenever you need them and you will find us a fortified castle and a strong shield," Awfi wrote in a letter posted on the Internet.
We'll find them under rubble, dead, mostly.
Prominent Saudi Muslim holy men scholars have stoked the fires, declaring support in November for the terrorists militants and saying holy war against occupiers was a duty. The statement, signed by 26 holy men scholars, urged Muslims to "stand by their brothers in Iraq".
"We of course are too valuable to go risk our necks in Iraq, so we'll stay here and cheer for you", the statement concluded.
Saudi officials fear returning terrorists militants from Iraq could spell further trouble in the birthplace of Islam, where Al Qaeda supporters have carried out a series of attacks aimed at scaring away Westerners and undermining the pro-US royal family. Islamist lawyer Mohsen Awajy said most Saudi militants in Iraq had "one-way tickets" and would most likely die there. But if any came back they could bring with them the more violent ideology of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Al Qaeda leader in Iraq.
Hence the one-way ticket.
Link


Arabia
Soddy al-Qaeda now gunning for Western targets
2004-12-19
In other words, it's just like things were back in the pre-Riyadh days ...
Al Qaeda forces in Saudi Arabia have shifted their strategy and are now almost exclusively searching for U.S. and other Western targets in the kingdom while avoiding attacks on domestic institutions in a bid to strengthen their flagging network, according to security officials and Saudi experts on radical groups.
How's that fit in with their plan to blow up oil facilities?
While al Qaeda retains its primary goal of eventually toppling the Saudi royal family -- as Osama bin Laden made clear in an audio recording released Thursday -- an 18-month campaign of car bombings, gun battles and kidnappings has so far failed to generate many new recruits and has resulted in a backlash among many Saudis, even those who otherwise are critical of the government, the officials and experts said. More than 80 people have died in the attacks, the majority of them Saudis or non-Western immigrant workers.

Many people in the kingdom are not only angry over the bloodshed but also fearful of al Qaeda's attempt to turn Saudi Arabia, a deeply conservative tribal society, into an even more conservative Islamic theocracy, several Saudi reformers said in interviews. "People want government reforms and changes, but they are more scared of al Qaeda extremists," said Mansour Nogaidan, a former Islamic radical who has moderated his views but is still one of the most prominent critics of the Saudi government. "The common people -- those people who thought their life might improve if the government changed -- they are not ready to lose all this for what some young teenagers have in their minds as a utopia."

Despite an al Qaeda-sponsored attack on the U.S. consulate in Jiddah this month that left 9 people dead, including the four assailants, Saudi government officials expressed confidence that they are steadily gaining the upper hand in their fight with the militants. Security forces have arrested or killed 17 of the 26 most wanted militant leaders in the country. Two others on the most wanted list are believed to be dead or badly injured, while a key operational planner reportedly fled the kingdom, Saudi security officials said. Saudi officials said that they have dismantled three of four known al Qaeda cells and that the insurgents are finding it harder to obtain ammunition, weaponry and money. The size and scope of the attacks have also dwindled since last year, when car bombs in Riyadh blew up two Western residential compounds and caused more than 200 casualties. "The people who are still there are not as skillful as the ones who were there in the beginning," said Brig. Gen. Mansour Turki, a spokesman for the Saudi Interior Ministry. "We feel more confident than we did in the beginning of this fight. We thought it would take much longer to be in control. We cannot deny that there are still possibilities that the terrorists could execute more acts, but they are not as strong as they were a year ago."
Link



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