Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Saudi Perspective, August 12, 2008
I am a Saudi so my review might give a different perspective about Mark's book. I was astonished by the tremendous effort he puts in the data collection and research to write his book. He travelled to different cities and met many people. It also amazed me how much knowledge that Mark has about the history of Saudi Arabia.
In short, unlike other authors how wrote their books about Saudi Arabia from their offices in Washington, Mark did travel to Saudi Arabia and met and interviewed Saudi people from different backgrounds and levels in order to write his book.
|
|
|
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Everything You Wanted To Know About Saudi Arabia But Were Afraid To Ask, July 30, 2008
The price of gas is sky-high and I admit, I was surprised to realize that Saudi Arabia has a quarter of the world's oil while the United States has just 2 percent. I knew I had a lot to learn about the Saudi kingdom and am so glad to have Prophets and Princes as my guide. Mark Weston does a phenomenal job of separating myth (and mistrust) from fact and of explaining in a thoughtful and compelling way everything westerners should know from the birth of Islam to the recent and dramatic changes in Saudi Arabia today. A balanced and comprehensive book complete with remarkable photographs, this is an impressive tour de force that is also remarkably clear and readable.
|
|
|
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Most Comprehensive and Balanced History of Saudi Arabia..., June 19, 2009
... that has been written by a Westerner. Prior to President Obama's recent speech to the Islamic world, given in Cairo, he stopped in Saudi Arabia, the "country where Islam began." His visit was an implicit acknowledgment of the importance of the Saudi-American relationship, now in its 8th decade. Mark Weston, in his introduction, wisely gives a small sampling of the appalling ignorance and bigotry concerning the Kingdom which is extant within certain sections of the American leadership, from an article in "Parade" magazine which puts King Abdullah in 4th place as one of the "world's 10 worst dictators," to the assorted slanders of Lt. Gen. William Boykin, Franklin Graham, Jerry Vine, and, of course, Bill O'Reilly.
Previously the two best histories were Lacey's "The Kingdom," and Holden and Johns' "The House of Saud." Each is now three decades out of date, thus missing the period of the Kingdom's dynamic growth. Neither discusses the importance and continued influence of the early Islamic period on Saudi Arabia today. Weston rectifies these deficiencies. He deftly covers the period of Mohammed's life, the first four caliphs, who were known as "the rightly guided ones," (Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman and Ali), the beginnings of monarchy, with Muawiya and Yazid, the fifth and sixth caliphs, and on to the Sunni - Shiite division which began on the plains of Karbala. As Weston points out, all Saudis know this history; they are the equivalent of Westerner's Bible stories, or for the more secular Americans, Bunker Hill and Valley Forge. Decisions made today have antecedents in the 7th Century, much as other religions adhere to events that occurred thousands of years ago. Weston "telescopes" a thousand years of history onto one page, and then commences with the first and second Saudi states, and the alliance of the House of Saud with an itinerant fundamentalist preacher, Abdul Wahab, known today in the West, generally pejoratively, as the founder of "Wahhabism."
About a fifth of the way into the book, Weston commences the story of Abdul Aziz taking back his family's ancestral home in Riyadh, in 1902. In roughly 150 pages Weston parallels the work of Lacey and Holden & Johns, covering the 20 years in which Abdul Aziz, in his alliance with the Ikhwan (the Brotherhood) warriors, consolidated most of the Arabian Peninsula into one country, which was named after his family. Eventually Abdul Aziz had to turn his guns, or more precisely, some British guns, on his messianic warrior allies, whose rigid theological outlook was incompatible with the exigencies of political rule. This action would be mirrored over 70 years later, when the House of Saud had to turn much more sophisticated weaponry against similar ideological extremists, Al-Qaeda. Much of the significance of the book is that over half is devoted to the post-Lacey, Holden & Johns era, from the early 80's through 2007.
The author astutely handles the political forces and the conflicts, along with the basic overall harmony among the principal individuals in the Saudi leadership, including the delicate questions of succession. Naturally the oil industry, and the impact of fluctuating prices, is likewise covered, along with the remarkable development of the country's infrastructure and the attendant transformation of the Saudis' "small town" and nomadic societies. A key event was the first Gulf War (1990-91), and the consequent backlash against the Saudi leadership's need to have American troops defend the country. This was a significant contributing factor to the rise of forces that supported Osama bin Laden, now that he was "cause-less" after the eviction of Soviet forces in Afghanistan. The book is current and fresh, and has a reasonable analysis of the rule of King Abdullah, since he formally assumed the throne upon the death of King Fahd in 2005, as well as the growing concern about the power, including possibly nuclear, of Iran. Overall, Weston is judicious in his comparisons and analogies, and I particularly thought his comparison of Wahabbism with Calvinism useful. Finally, unlike most other authors on the Kingdom, he actually lived in the country as a scholar at the King Faisal Center, interviewed some of the top leadership, and was able to provide a few personal anecdotes on life in the Kingdom.
I tend to rate books on Saudi Arabia "on the curve" because there are numerous ones that are sheer fantasy and/or ill-informed political "hatchet jobs." I've given two books, "The Bin Ladens," and "Inside the Mirage" a 5-star rating even though each contained at least one egregious error. Despite his seeming good intentions, I had several problems with Weston's book, and particularly since he actually lived there (and therefore should have known better!) I've only given it a 4-star.
Weston called the 1973 Israeli-Arab war the "Yom Kippur" war, which would grate in the Arab world just as much as if an American was touring the battlefield at Gettysburg, and heard the park ranger refer to the conflict as the "War of Northern Aggression," which I'm sure is a term used by a very few "un-reconstructed" Southerners still. The author could easily have explained that the Israelis and some of their supporters use "Yom Kippur", the Arabs, and their supporters use "the Ramadan War," and those seeking to be neutral would use "the October, 1973 Arab-Israeli" war. Likewise, chapter 17 is entitled "the Persian Gulf War" when the Saudis prefer the term "Arabian Gulf," and simply "The Gulf" is preferred (in context). Far worse that the nomenclature of wars is his use of the word "terrorist." It is used as an all-encompassing objective fact, and always means "them," not "us." On page 557, in his Conclusion, he uses the familiar concatenation of Islam and terror: "The United States cannot win the war against Islamic terror alone." Recently an American walked into the Holocaust museum in Washington DC and killed a security guard; another American walked into a church in Kansas and killed a doctor who happened to perform abortions. Both crimes were politically motivated; neither was labeled a "terrorist" act. Many other examples abound. On page 390 Weston discusses the killing of Sheikh Ahmad Yasin, but does not mention the number of civilians killed by the missile shot from an airplane. Indeed, are the deaths of any civilians killed as a result of aerial action every labeled a "terrorist act"? Wisely, President Obama, realizing that "terrorist" is a very loaded word, eschewed its usage in his recent speech in Cairo. Weston also quotes Gerald Posner (!), of all people, concerning dirty bombs - at least Weston says that his claims were met with skepticism by many journalists, and those in the intelligence community. But why quote him at all? The author's most stunning mistake was accepting, apparently unexamined, a portion of the bigotry of expat "Saudi tales" when he said: "On the outskirts of cities, the livestock pens behind the car dealerships disappeared because the Bedouin no longer swapped camels for their first pickup truck." (p 251).
I am also bothered by formulations such as: "...what the Saudis saw as Israel's noncompliance with UN resolutions demanding its withdrawal from the West Bank." (p 392). Isn't it an objective fact that Israel has not complied with UN resolution 242 (and others), and don't most Europeans, Americans, and numerous Israelis concur?
I also had a problem with his use of statistics, given invariably without specifying their derivation, and with no caveats. Implied was an exactitude that simply is impossible. As is known, such a figure as the US unemployment rate is given to different interpretations, and is subject to political manipulation. How much more so the numbers that he cited. In particular I had a problem when he cites polling data. I once looked at the methodology of one of the polling companies. Their poll takers call from a foreign country, and "try" to match genders. Anyone who actually knows a Saudi would consider it hilarious that a Saudi woman, for example, might tell a strange Arab man who calls from a foreign country what her true sentiments were, about, say, Bin Laden or the Royal Family. Indeed, how many Americans would? There IS a reason why all too many Saudis answer the phone not with "marhaba" (hello), but "Min" (who) (as in, who is this?).
The book could benefit from much tighter editing, for example, there are numerous duplications, sometimes in the same chapter, such as being told South Koreans earn $20,000 a year on page 480, and repeating it again on 490. Weston adds to the numerous Western mis-translations of "Tash ma Tash" with "Does it Splash?" Finally, although the author actually lived in the Kingdom, I doubt that he ever spent a night around a desert campfire. His primary adjective for the desert is "harsh." And even, "Compared to the almost lifeless Arabian Desert, the American Southwest is a garden." Well, yes, I do like our trees which elevation gives us, just like they do in the Kingdom, in the Asir, but Weston must never have seen the wildflowers around Hail in March.
Overall though, Mark Weston has written a very important, needed book - a comprehensive, fairly balanced history of Saudi Arabia. He humbly points out that deficiencies exist, and the ideal author would have a much better background. It is unlikely that the person he describes exists, so I hope he will come out with a revised edition that merits the full 5-stars.
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|