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Realist
Bibliophile
Inside the
Mirage, Thomas W. Lippman
Inside the Mirage:
America's Fragile Partnership with Saudi Arabia.
Thomas W. Lippman. Westview Press, 2004.
Thomas W. Lippman's Inside the Mirage puts
flesh on the skeleton of the U.S.-Saudi relationship of
the last half century. Relying not only on archives,
but also on scores of interviews with those intimately
connected with the relationship for the last fifty
years--including many of the "ordinary" American
specialists and their families who lived and worked in
the desert kingdom--Lippman creates a compelling story
backed not only by facts and figures, but memorable
anecdotes.
What this book does--and does effectively--is to
illustrate how the U.S.-Saudi "bargain" functioned.
Saudi Arabia wanted access to the West's modern
technology and benefits without undergoing cultural
Westernization. The U.S. wanted access to the kingdom's
oil and strategic location. Since both realized that
large numbers of Americans were needed to bring about
these joint objectives, and that Americans could not, in
turn, be "Saudi-ized", compromises had to be created
that would allow Americans to live in the kingdom, more
or less as Americans, without "infecting" the larger
Saudi society.
Both sides, at various points in the relationship, were
prepared to compromise on fundamental values. The
kingdom had to convince its own conservative elites to
permit the bending of traditional values and mores to
accommodate Americans. The American side, in turn,
accepted that principles of gender and religious
equality (and, later on, legal transparency) would not
be insisted upon as a precondition for Americans to do
business with the Saudis.
Two trends are apparent in reading this book. The first
is that the Saudis tended to grow more confident and
assertive not simply as their oil wealth grew, but as
they began to acquire the skills needed to operate the
infrastructure they imported from the West, the need to
accommodate Westerners in the kingdom declined (Lippman
records Michael Ameen's observation [Ameen being the
head of ARAMCO's representation office in Riyadh], that
Americans were, in essence, training themselves out of
jobs in the kingdom.)
The second is that while the interests of the two states
are closely enmeshed, the personal web of ties that used
to bind the two countries are beginning to unravel. The
Joint Economic Commission that sent thousands of
American specialists to modernize and rationalize the
Saudi government has ended. The American-constructed
infrastructure is now largely peopled by Saudis. In the
aftermath of 9/11, Saudis may look elsewhere--to Europe
or Asia--for
training and education. Lippman aptly concludes, "The
marriage of convenience continues, helpful to both
partners, but they are now spending more of their time
in separate bedrooms."
Where the relationship is headed is anyone's guess. But
Lippman's narrative makes it clear that the marriage is
entering a midlife crisis.
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