Abdullah Al-Arian Profile picture
Nov 24, 2017 42 tweets 16 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
In honor of Thomas Friedman’s latest love letter to Saudi here is 70 years of the NY Times describing #Saudi royals in the language of #reform.
This piece from 1953 describes King Saud as “more progressive and international-minded than his autocratic father”
This piece from 1957 doesn’t refer to Saudi Arabia specifically but it’s an epic headline nevertheless.
1960: “King Saud has increasingly assumed the role of liberal champion of constitutional reform.” (The Saudi constitution was adopted by royal decree in 1992).
1962: “The Oil Genie and the Sheikh” offers a tour of Gulf palaces that marvels at their “gilded furniture of impressive ugliness.”
During the so-called “Arab Cold War” Saudi royals were supported as a bulwark against Nasserism. This 1963 piece celebrates Crown Prince Faisal’s “burst of social reform and economic development.”
“With his older brother no longer looking over his shoulder...”
1964: “He is a man who has gained nearly absolute power without really wanting it.”
Here Faisal is described as “ascetic, with only one wife, who lives on grilled meat and boiled vegetables and makes a fetish of moderation.”
This 1975 obituary: “Faisal, Rich and Powerful, Led Saudis Into 20th Century“
Faisal’s successor, King Khalid, was a “moderating force”
A couple of more headlines from 1975, including one on “planting the seeds of a parliamentary system in the kingdom.”
An epic lede here from 1979: “His black Trans-Am sports car creeps along the Corniche Road on the edge of the Red Sea. To the left, skyscrapers jab into the humid air, a sight made more impressive by the desolation surrounding the ancient city of Jidda.” 😳
1982: “King Fahd has been depicted as the leading figure in a progressive, modernizing faction within the tradition-minded monarchy.”
1991-92: “major political changes,” “modernizers,” “governmental reform,” “and other political reforms”
1992: “In making the changes, King Fahd is following previous generations of Saudi rulers who had also moved toward modernization since King Abdelaziz united a vast territory populated by feuding tribal leaders into the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 60 years ago.”
1996: Friedman makes his first appearance, describing King Fahd as a “bulldozer” in tackling political problems on behalf of his US ally.
2000: “Saudi Heir Urges Reform, and Turn From US”
2002: Friedman opines about the “2 futures” for Saudi Arabia, concluding “Which school would I bet on? Ask me in five years.”
Luckily, we wouldn’t have to wait that long. On eve of Iraq invasion Friedman makes the case that war “could drive reform in the Arab/Muslim world”
2005: “For Abdullah, who has fashioned himself as a reformer in a land where conforming to tradition is a virtue, the challenge now is to make good on longstanding promises for change.”
😕
2007: “The (Not So) Eagerly Modern Saudi”
“Saudi King Tries to Grow Modern Ideas in Desert” 🤔
2009: A cabinet reshuffle can sometimes be reform.
This editorial welcomes the reshuffle.
“More generally, the reform agenda has drawn momentum from King Abdullah’s personal popularity...”
“You have a reform-oriented king trying to push in the direction of reform, but you have a non-reform-oriented structure that is close to impossible to change.”
“Yet by the Saudi’s premodern standards, the 85 year-old King Abdullah, with a harem of wives, is a social revolutionary.”
2011: at the height of the Arab uprisings, royal funds buy peace, for now
Going on a Black Friday hike (leaves are 70% off!). I’ll finish these later.
Apologies for the interruption, but I assure you it was worth it.
Saudi society is divided, but the monarch’s sympathies lie with the reformers.
From 2012: “King Faisal, in a rush to modernize his realm, created Saudi state television in the 1960s, and that bold step is widely believed to have led to his assassination”
Twitter gets a shout!
Reporting from the front lines of the Arab uprisings in Dubai, Friedman calls Saudi King Abdullah “a real progressive”
King Abdullah’s 2015 obituary describes him as “...a cautious reformer amid great changes in the Middle East.”
Friedman on what messes him up in reporting on Saudi 😐
Saudi Arabia’s economic revolution offers “tantalizing hints at even broader reforms.” 🤗
In 2017, Saudi reforms include smart robots 🤖
From earlier this month, this Friedman piece includes such gems as “he is much more McKinsey than Wahhabi — much more a numbers cruncher than a Quran thumper.”
And finally, the one that inspired it all, a hagiographic ode to royal reform that represents seven decades of strategic policy objectives barely concealed beneath recycled cultural tropes.

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