Saudi Arabia–United States relations (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Saudi Arabia–United States relations" in English language version.

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  • Metz, Helen Chapin, ed. (1993). Area Handbook Series: Saudi Arabia. A Country Study. Federal Research Division. doi:10.21236/ada273008. ISBN 0-8444-0791-7 – via Internet Archive.
  • Hart, Parker T. (1998). Saudi Arabia and the United States: Birth of a Security Partnership. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-33460-8 – via Internet Archive.
  • Bradley, John R. (2005). Saudi Arabia Exposed: Inside a Kingdom in Crisis. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 6. ISBN 1-4039-6433-5 – via Internet Archive.
  • Lacey, Robert (2009). Inside the Kingdom: Kings, Clerics, Modernists, Terrorists, and the Struggle for Saudi Arabia. Viking Press. pp. 288–289. ISBN 978-0-670-02118-5 – via Internet Archive. In July that year [2002] Laurent Murawiec, a French analyst with the RAND Corporation, had given a 24-slide presentation to the prestigious Defense Policy Board, an arm of the Pentagon, suggesting that the United States should consider 'taking [the] Saudi out of Arabia' by forcibly seizing control of the oil fields, giving the Hijaz back to the Hashemites, and delegating control of the holy cities to a multinational committee of moderate, non-Wahhabi Muslims: the House of Saud should be sent home to Riyadh. 'Saudi Arabia supports our enemies and attacks our allies,' argued Murawiec, a protégé of Richard Perle's, the neocon advocate of war with Iraq who chaired the Policy Board. 'The Saudis are active at every level of the terror chain, from planners to financiers, from cadre to foot soldier, from ideologist to cheerleaders.' They were 'the kernel of evil, the prime mover, the most dangerous opponent' in the Middle East.
  • Bradley 2005, p. 169. "In the climate of intense anti-American sentiment in Saudi Arabia after September 11, it is certainly true that any association with U.S.-inspired 'reform' ... is fast becoming a hindrance rather than a help."
  • Bradley 2005, p. 211. "Anti-U.S. sentiment inside Saudi Arabia is now at an all-time high, following the outrages at the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad and Washington's continued support for Israel's often brutal suppression of the Palestinians."
  • Bradley 2005, p. 85. "In a region obsessed with conspiracy theories, many Saudis, both Sunni and Shiite, think that Washington has plans to split off the Eastern Province into a separate entity and seize control of its oil reserves after Iraq has stabilized."

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  • David E. Spiro, Hidden Hand of American Hegemony Petrodollar Recycling (Cornell UP, 2019) online

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  • "Fueling Terror". Institute for the Analysis of Global Security. Retrieved July 8, 2020.

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  • Dillon, Michael R. (September 2009). "Wahhabism: Is it a Factor in the Spread of Global Terrorism?" (PDF). Calhoun. Naval Postgraduate School. Retrieved July 8, 2020. The events that transpired on 11 September 2001, shook the foundation of the U.S.–Saudi relationship by raising serious concerns and questions regarding the role of the Saudi government and their Wahhabi ideology played in terrorism associated with Al-Qaeda. The attacks shined a light on Saudi Arabia since 15 out of 19 hijackers as well as Osama bin Laden and many of the global 'jihadists' that participated in the conflicts fought in Bosnia, Chechnya, Afghanistan, and Iraq were Saudi nationals. This naturally led the U.S. government and its people to ask serious questions as to what is wrong with Saudi Arabia and to draw conclusions about its religious ideology and institutions.

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  • Rodenbeck, Max (October 21, 2004). "Unloved in Arabia". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved July 8, 2020. Judging by the tenor of much that has been said about Saudi Arabia since September 11, quite a few people seem to think something similar should be done with the present-day Saudis. In Congress, on American television, and in print, their country has been portrayed as a sort of oily heart of darkness, the wellspring of a bleak, hostile value system that is the very antithesis of our own. America's seventy-year alliance with the kingdom has been reappraised as a ghastly mistake, a selling of the soul, a gas-addicted dalliance with death.

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