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Addiction and intrigue: Inside the Saudi palace coup


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Addiction and intrigue: Inside the Saudi palace coup

 

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FILE PHOTO: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Nayef, the interior minister, arrives to a military parade in preparation for the annual Haj pilgrimage in the holy city of Mecca September 5, 2016. REUTERS/Ahmed Jadallah/File Photo

 

(Reuters) - On Tuesday June 20 Mohammed bin Nayef, a powerful figure in Saudi Arabia's security apparatus for the past two decades and the next in line to the throne, was summoned to meet King Salman bin Abdulaziz on the fourth floor of the royal palace in Mecca.

 

There, according to a source close to MbN, as he is known, the king ordered him to step aside in favour of the king's favourite son, Mohammed bin Salman. The reason: an addiction to painkilling drugs was clouding MbN's judgment.

 

"The king came to meet MbN and they were alone in the room. He told him: 'I want you to step down, you didn't listen to the advice to get treatment for your addiction which dangerously affects your decisions'," said the source close to MbN.

 

The new details about the extraordinary meeting between the king and MbN that touched off the de facto palace coup help to explain the events that are reshaping the leadership of the world's biggest oil exporting nation.

 

Reuters could not independently confirm MbN's addiction issues.

 

A senior Saudi official said the account was totally "unfounded and untrue in addition to being nonsense".

 

"The story depicted here is a complete fantasy worthy of Hollywood," the official said in a statement to Reuters, which did not refer to MbN's alleged use of drugs.

 

The official said MbN had been removed in the national interest and had not experienced any "pressure or disrespect". Reasons for his dismissal were "confidential".

 

Sources with knowledge of the situation said however that the king was determined to elevate his son to be heir to the throne and used MbN's drug problem as a pretext to push him aside.

 

Three royal insiders, four Arab officials with links to the ruling house of Saud, and diplomats in the region, told Reuters that MbN was surprised to be ordered to step aside.

 

"It was a big shock to MbN," said a Saudi political source close to MbN. "It was a coup. He wasn't prepared."

 

The sources said MbN did not expect to be usurped by the often impulsive Mohammed bin Salman, who MbN considered to have made a number of policy blunders, such as his handling of the Yemen conflict and cutting financial benefits to civil servants.

 

The high-stakes power grab has placed sweeping powers in the hands of the 32-year-old Mohammed bin Salman, also known as MbS, and appears designed to speed his accession to the throne.

 

Should he get the job, the young prince will preside over a kingdom facing tough times from depressed oil prices, the conflict in Yemen, rivalry with an emboldened Iran and a major diplomatic crisis in the Gulf.   

 

The source close to MbN acknowledged that he had health issues, which were aggravated after an al Qaeda attacker tried to blow himself up in front of him in his palace in 2009. The health issues were corroborated by three other sources in Saudi Arabia and Arab official sources with links to the royal family.

 

An Arab source with close Saudi links also provided a similar account of the meeting at which King Salman asked MbN to step down because of his alleged drug addiction.

 

These sources said MbN had shrapnel in his body that could not be removed and he depended on drugs such as morphine to alleviate the pain. One source said MbN had been treated in clinics in Switzerland on three occasions in recent years. Reuters was unable to confirm this independently. 

 

A PALACE COUP

 

The King moved ahead of a meeting of the Political and Security Council. The meeting was due to start at 11 pm, but a few hours before that, MbN received what he viewed as a routine phone call from Mohammed bin Salman. According to the source close to MbN, Mohammed bin Salman told MbN that the king wanted to see him.

 

In the hours that followed the meeting in which MbN was dismissed, the House of Saud's Allegiance Council, comprising the ruling family's senior members, were informed of a letter written in the name of the king.

 

Drafted by palace advisers to MbS, it said MbN had a medical condition - drug addiction - and "we have been trying for over two years to persuade him to seek treatment but to no avail".

 

"Because of this dangerous situation we see that he should be relieved of his position and that Mohammed bin Salman be appointed in his place," the Saudi source close to MbN quoted excerpts of the letter as saying.

 

The letter was read over the phone to members of the Allegiance Council, while MbN was kept isolated in a room all night, his mobile phone removed, and cut off from contact with his aides. His bodyguards from elite paramilitary interior ministry units were also replaced.

 

Envoys were sent to council members to get their signatures. All but three of 34 signed. The coup had worked.

 

Calls by council members who backed MbN's removal were recorded and played to him by a palace adviser to demonstrate the strength of the forces against him and to discourage any urge the 57-year-old crown prince might have to resist.

 

According to two Saudi sources with links to the royal house, only three members of the council opposed his overthrow: Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, a former interior minister, Abdulaziz bin Abdallah, a representative of the family of late king Abdallah, and Prince Mohammad bin Saad, a former deputy governor of Riyadh. The three could not immediately be reached for comment.

 

At dawn MbN gave up. He told a palace adviser that he was ready to see the king. The meeting was short. MbN agreed to step down and signed a document to that effect.

 

When MbN left the king's quarters, he was surprised to see MbS waiting for him, the adviser said. MbN was embraced and kissed by MbS while television cameras rolled.

 

Soon afterward a pre-written statement was released announcing the king's decision to make his son the next crown prince. This was the clip that would play on all Saudi and Gulf media over the coming hours and days.

 

HOUSE ARREST

 

MbN remains under house arrest to keep him out of circulation following his overthrow, with no visitors allowed except close family members. He is not taking calls, the source close to MbN said. In the past week he was only granted permission to visit his elderly mother with the new guards assigned to him.

 

The senior Saudi official said, however, that MbN had received guests, including the king and the new crown prince.

 

The source close to MbN said he would like to take his family to Switzerland or London but the king and MbS had decided that he must stay. "He wasn't given any choice."

 

The White House and CIA declined to comment. A senior administration official said Washington knew that MbS was the favourite of the king but "beyond that it's very opaque".

 

The elevation of MbS had been predicted by some Saudi and Western officials, but it came much sooner than expected with a rushed exit for MbN.

 

Since King Salman's accession, there had been clear indications that MbS was favoured over MbN, setting the stage for the younger prince to eclipse the formal heir to the throne. 

 

MbS was given unprecedented power by his ailing 81-year-old father, which he used to reorder the top jobs in the political, oil, security, security and intelligence sectors, often without the knowledge of MbN, according to diplomats and Saudi political and security sources.

 

Since Salman took the helm just over two years ago, MbS has placed his men in key positions. MbS has been interfering in MbN's interior ministry, appointing, promoting and firing officers without informing him.

 

The succession quarrel, the sources said, began in 2015 when MbN's personal court was disbanded and merged with the court of the king, preventing MbN from bestowing independent patronage and cultivating support. This was followed by the sacking of Saad al-Jabri, MbN's security adviser.

 

When Donald Trump entered the White House, MbS cultivated contacts in Washington to offset the strong support that MbN had in the U.S. security and intelligence establishment because of his successes against al Qaeda.

 

The source close to MbN told Reuters the putsch went ahead after MbS struck up a strong relationship with Trump's son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner. A spokesman for Kushner did not respond to a request for comment.

 

With MbS's sudden ascent, there is now speculation among diplomats and Saudi and Arab officials that King Salman is poised to abdicate in favour of his son.

 

Quoting a witness at the palace, one Saudi source said King Salman this month pre-recorded a statement in which he announces the transfer of the throne to his son. The announcement could be broadcast at any time, perhaps as soon as September.

 

(Reporting by Reuters)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-07-20
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Has shrapnel in his body that cannot be removed. Reminds of Fawlty Towers,when Basil was trying to prevent a female guest from going upstairs as he thought her husband was getting it on with what actually turned out to be his step daughter,in desperation Basil clutched his leg and grimaced in pain, "bit of shrapnel,korean war,plays up now and again" he gasped, "well can't they get it out " the lady asked, "no,no too deep' Fawlty replied,bit like the Saudi chap i suppose.

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if the House of Saud collapses we may see a repetition of what happened when the USA sold all kind of sophisticated weapons to Afghan "freedom fighters" in order to fight the USSR...those "freedom fighters became the Taliban" / those who could seize power in Riyadh - and this could be Al-Qaeda -  will have destructive  weapons which will make the Taliban weaponry look as toys.

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13 minutes ago, fvw53 said:

"freedom fighters" in order to fight the USSR...those "freedom fighters became the Taliban"

Nothing quite like rewriting history to support one's own opinions.

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On 7/19/2017 at 9:34 PM, blazes said:

Lovely to read about the slow crumbling of the House of Saud.  

I share your dislike for them, but one has to ask:  What will replace them?  The only organized power waiting in the wings that I am aware of is the Wahhabi clergy, and they would be much worse.

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There are plenty of stories flying about in the region just now. The conflict between Qatar and Saudi Arabia and her allies is the cause for much of the speculation. What is true and what is not? Who knows.

The USA and France are both showing concern. Not so much in UK, increased arms sales have people rubbing their grubby hands.

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On 7/20/2017 at 6:31 AM, webfact said:

the putsch went ahead after MbS struck up a strong relationship with Trump's son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner.

The Trump-archy can't get a coup in the US, so go for next best.

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On 7/20/2017 at 8:34 AM, blazes said:

Lovely to read about the slow crumbling of the House of Saud.  

Like Saddam, Qaddafi, Mubarak and Assad - may end up missing them once the alternatives raise their heads.

 

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3 hours ago, Morch said:

Like Saddam, Qaddafi, Mubarak and Assad - may end up missing them once the alternatives raise their heads.

 

True , "be careful what you wish for" applies throughout the region but these Sauds are just so utterly repugnant, redefining human garbage and presuming to call themselves royal. One can only hope for a sticky end for the lot of them while being mindful that the successors might be even worse.

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1 hour ago, Prbkk said:

True , "be careful what you wish for" applies throughout the region but these Sauds are just so utterly repugnant, redefining human garbage and presuming to call themselves royal. One can only hope for a sticky end for the lot of them while being mindful that the successors might be even worse.

I really, really, really hate defending a repugnant status quo, but as bad as the Sauds are, one must ask what will replace them? 

 

Qaddafi was appalling, and he really deserved his ignoble death, but he should have been toppled with some kind of plan B.  Is there a plan B for Saudi Arabia?

Edited by heybruce
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11 hours ago, heybruce said:

I really, really, really hate defending a repugnant status quo, but as bad as the Sauds are, one must ask what will replace them? 

 

Qaddafi was appalling, and he really deserved his ignoble death, but he should have been toppled with some kind of plan B.  Is there a plan B for Saudi Arabia?

 

Upsetting status quo's is overrated, considering alternatives. And if speaking on alternatives and plan B's - not that geopolitical prediction is an exact science, but when applied to the ME it gets even dodgier. So not just a question of having a plan, but of such a plan being applicable in fluid situations.

 

Many comments consider House of Saud future crumbling in terms of human rights, corruption, oil reserves, spread of Wahhabi teachings. All good points. Then there are these (ignoring keeping in bay of worse elements) - wide financial support in certain areas, which, regardless of the indoctrinating/terrorism angle does involve some positive elements, and more importantly, control of Mecca. Going to be quite a mess if various forces try to hold the holiest place for Muslims.

Edited by Morch
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