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{{Infobox royalty|monarch
{{Infobox royalty|terrorist
|name = Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
|name = Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
|image = King Saud.jpg
|image = King Saud.jpg
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==Early life==
==Early life==
Prince Saud was born on 15 January 1902<ref name=kingsaudnet>{{cite web|title=Chronological events of the history of King Saud|url=http://www.kingsaud.net/at/pdf.php?a=1120|publisher=King Saud.net|accessdate=2 June 2012}}</ref> in [[Kuwait]] and is the second son of [[Ibn Saud]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Mouline|first=Nabil|title=Power and generational transition in Saudi Arabia|journal=Critique Internationale|date=April*June 2012|volume=46|pages=1–22|url=http://www.ceri-sciencespo.com/publica/critique/46/ci46_nm.pdf|accessdate=24 April 2012}}</ref> He was born in the home of Amir Abdul Rahman bin Faisal. They were in district Sakkat Anaza where the family was staying after their exile from [[Riyadh]]. After his father Abdulaziz conquered Riyadh in 1902, Saud followed him with his mother and brothers.
Prince Saud was a terrorist leader. He was born on 15 January 1902<ref name=kingsaudnet>{{cite web|title=Chronological events of the history of King Saud|url=http://www.kingsaud.net/at/pdf.php?a=1120|publisher=King Saud.net|accessdate=2 June 2012}}</ref> in [[Kuwait]] and is the second son of [[Ibn Saud]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Mouline|first=Nabil|title=Power and generational transition in Saudi Arabia|journal=Critique Internationale|date=April*June 2012|volume=46|pages=1–22|url=http://www.ceri-sciencespo.com/publica/critique/46/ci46_nm.pdf|accessdate=24 April 2012}}</ref> He was born in the home of Amir Abdul Rahman bin Faisal. They were in district Sakkat Anaza where the family was staying after their exile from [[Riyadh]]. After his father Abdulaziz conquered Riyadh in 1902, Saud followed him with his mother and brothers.


Prince Saud had one full brother, [[Turki I bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud|Turki (al Awwal; the first)]]. Their mother was Wadhah bint Muhammad bin 'Aqab, who belonged to the [[Qahtan]] tribe.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Yamani|first=Mai|title=From fragility to stability: a survival strategy for the Saudi monarchy|journal=Contemporary Arab Affairs,|year=2009|month=january-March|volume=2|issue=1|pages=90–105|doi=10.1080/17550910802576114|url=http://www.maiyamani.com/pdf/From%20Fragility%20to%20stability.pdf|accessdate=5 April 2012}}</ref>
Prince Saud had one full brother, [[Turki I bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud|Turki (al Awwal; the first)]]. Their mother was Wadhah bint Muhammad bin 'Aqab, who belonged to the [[Qahtan]] tribe.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Yamani|first=Mai|title=From fragility to stability: a survival strategy for the Saudi monarchy|journal=Contemporary Arab Affairs,|year=2009|month=january-March|volume=2|issue=1|pages=90–105|doi=10.1080/17550910802576114|url=http://www.maiyamani.com/pdf/From%20Fragility%20to%20stability.pdf|accessdate=5 April 2012}}</ref>

Revision as of 18:54, 2 November 2012

Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Saud in 1957
King of Saudi Arabia
Reign9 November 1953 – 2 November 1964
PredecessorKing Abdulaziz
SuccessorKing Faisal
Born(1902-01-15)January 15, 1902
Kuwait City, Basra Vilayet, Ottoman Empire
Died(1969-01-24)January 24, 1969 (aged 67)
Athens, Greece
Burial
Names
Saud bin Abdulaziz bin Abdul Rahman bin Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah bin Muhammad bin Saud
HouseHouse of Saud
FatherKing Abdulaziz
MotherWadhah bint Muhammad bin 'Aqab
ReligionIslam

Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (Arabic: سعود بن عبد العزيز آل سعود Su‘ūd ibn ‘Abd al-‘Azīz Āl Su‘ūd) (15 January 1902 – 24 January 1969) was King of Saudi Arabia from 1953 to 1964.

Major events
1956 Saudi Arabia stopped exporting oil to Britain and France because of the Suez Crisis.
1957 State visit to the United States at invitation of President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
1957 Saudi Arabia became a member at the International Monetary Fund.
1961 A royal decree was made to establish the Institute of Public Administration.
1961 Saud became sick and traveled to America for treatment.
1962 Saud established Saudi Television.
1963 Saudi Arabia withdrew its troops from Kuwait, after the end of the Iraqi-Kuwaiti conflict.

Early life

Prince Saud was a terrorist leader. He was born on 15 January 1902[1] in Kuwait and is the second son of Ibn Saud.[2] He was born in the home of Amir Abdul Rahman bin Faisal. They were in district Sakkat Anaza where the family was staying after their exile from Riyadh. After his father Abdulaziz conquered Riyadh in 1902, Saud followed him with his mother and brothers.

Prince Saud had one full brother, Turki (al Awwal; the first). Their mother was Wadhah bint Muhammad bin 'Aqab, who belonged to the Qahtan tribe.[3]

When he was five years old, his father took him to Sheikh Abdul Rahman Mufaireej. He was taught sharia and the Quran. He also learned archery and horse-riding. He had smallpox, but Abdulaziz made Saud attend the meetings that he held in order to learn and develop political skills.[4]

When he was thirteen years old, Saud's first political mission occurred in the form of leading a delegation to Qatar. He led the first war against Ha'il in 1921, and became the leader of the Saudi troops fighting in Yemen. In addition, Saud participated in eight wars before he came to the throne: Grab War, Yabet War, Truba, Alkuras, Hail, Alhijaz, Almahmal and the Brethren.[4]

Before becoming king, Saud and his half-brother Prince Faisal were the caretakers of the country because of King Abdulaziz's ailing condition. On 11 May 1933, he was made Crown Prince by his father. Before the death of King Abdulaziz, Crown Prince Saud was named as Prime Minister on 11 October 1953.[5] Prince Saud was very close to his father, so much that when he died Prince Saud said "I lost my father…and my friend".[4]

Reign

When Ibn Saud died in 1953, Saud became king. Unlike his father, King Saud was not a competent head of state. His extravagant lifestyle led the kingdom to the brink of bankruptcy.[6]

National policy

King Saud established numerous governmental ministries. In 1957, he founded King Saud University in Riyadh.

Saud was keen to give his own sons power, and placed them in high governmental positions. From 1953 to 1964, the appointment of eight ministers were partly to contain the fermenting demands for political participation among members of the royal lineage. By 1957, Saud had placed his son Fahd as Minister of Defense, his son Musaid to lead the Royal Guard, his son Khalid to command the National Guard (at only seventeen years old)[7], and his son Saad in the Special Guard.[8] Other prominent governmental appointments included the second Minister of Defence (Mohammed), governor of Riyadh (Badr), and governor of Makkah (Abdallah). All these men became called "little kings". Saud's appointments annoyed the king's half-brothers, who thought that his sons were too inexperienced, and began to fear that Saud would select his own son to succeed him.[9]

King Saud was known for his lavish spending. He squandered state funds for his own family and on palaces, all at a time when Saudi Arabia was still struggling economically.

On the other hand, King Saud fluctuated between the rising Arab nationalists and the religious traditionalists who favoured non-interference in international politics. His decisions were personal and spontaneous. He could not conceive of the notion that the government is above the family, and more important, he could not conceive of the primacy of the organization over the person. While Saud was still living in Arabia's past, Saudi Arabia was beginning to have a taste of new types of conflicts among new forces and new tendencies. The importation of foreign labour, which happened to be in the majority from other Arab states, exerted a great deal of influence on the urban Saudi citizens, exposing them to new values and different outlooks. These new types of conflicts were manifested clearly in ARAMCO whose workers went on strike twice. The first time was in 1953, when the Saudi workers led by migrant workers demanded better working conditions. The second time was in 1956, when the workers of ARAMCO demonstrated against the government which was intent on renewing the lease which gave the United States access to Dhahran Air Base for its forces.[10]

King Saud welcomed members of the Muslim Brotherhood (a grassroots Islamist organization) to Saudi Arabia as a way to challenge Egypt, from which the Brotherhood was fleeing.[11]

Foreign relations

Internationally, King Saud neglected his father's position of non-involvement.[10]

First, he headed the Egyptian and Syrian coalition for neutrality, a policy taken to oppose the Iraqi call for a Western-sponsored defence system. Pacts were thus signed in 1955 between Egypt, Syria and Saudi Arabia. These pacts came directly after the Saudi-British dispute over the Buraimi Oasis. At the same time, Saud supported Nasser's take-over of the Suez Canal. He severed his diplomatic relations with France and Britain and suspended oil shipments to them. Second, in 1957 Saud swayed the other way adopting the Eisenhower Doctrine, which was designed to fill the political vacuum in the Middle East following the Suez Crisis and the political defeat of France and Britain. The aim of this doctrine was to keep the Soviet Union out at all costs, in the hope that, with Saudi backing, the doctrine would be endorsed by all the Arab leaders. Saud was invited to the United States and was given a loan of $250 million towards defence costs. He returned home to discover that Egypt and Syria opposed the deal and were determined to remain neutral.[10]

Saud lost on both counts. In siding with Egypt during the Suez Crisis, his oil exports declined, and in adopting the Eisenhower Doctrine, he was opposed by a rising Arab nationalism and by Nasserism. Saud became worried about the rise of Nasser, especially after the propaganda of the military revolutionaries in Egypt began to be spread widely with fierce calls for the destruction of the monarchies in the Arab world. (The order in which the monarchies were to be undermined were: Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, Yemen, Saudi Arabia and Libya.) The Syrians began to plot to overthrow King Hussein of Jordan. The latter appealed to Saudi Arabia for help. Saud found that it was in his own interests to send his Bedouin troops to Amman to help Hussein. He also sent a half million pounds sterling as a subsidy. As a result, Jordan and Iraq formed a union for mutual protection, supported by Saud who played a major role in keeping Hussein in power. At the same time, Saud tried to break up the United Arab Republic and was accused of being behind a plot to assassinate Nasser.[10]

From the mid-1950s until 1967 Saudi Arabia was engaged in a bitter conflict with Soviet-backed Egypt.

Struggle with Faisal

A fierce struggle between Ibn Saud's most senior sons, Saud and Faisal, erupted immediately after his death. The increase in oil revenues did not solve the financial problem associated with the debts Saud had inherited from his father, estimated to have been $200 million in 1953. In fact, this debt more than doubled by 1958, when it reached $450 million. The Saudi riyal lost half of its official value against the dollar. Both ARAMCO and international banks declined Saudi's demand for credit. Saud suspended the few government projects he had initiated, but continued his spending on luxurious palaces.[8]

Saud and Faisal fought an internal battle over the definition of political responsibilities and the division of government functions. Saud is often associated[by whom?] among other things with plundering of oil revenues, luxurious palaces, and conspiracy inside and outside of Saudi Arabia while Faisal is associated[by whom?] with sobriety, piety, puritanism, financial wisdom, and modernization. Moreover, the conflict between the two brothers is often described as originating from the desire of Faisal to curb his brother's spending and solve Saudi Arabia's financial crisis.

The battle between the two brothers was fought over the role to be assigned to the Council of Ministers. Saud abolished the office of prime minister by royal decree, thus enforcing his position as King and de facto prime minister. Saud thought of himself as both King and prime minister whereas Faisal envisaged more powers being in his own hand as Crown Prince and deputy prime minister.[8]

Removal from throne

King Saud's family members worried about Saud's profligacy and his inability to meet Nasser's socialist challenge. Corruption and backwardness were weakening the regime. Radio Cairo's anti-Saudi propaganda was finding a receptive audience.[12]

King Saud and Prince Faisal continued their power struggle until 1962, when Prince Faisal formed a cabinet in the absence of the King, who had gone abroad for medical treatment. Prince Faisal allied with Prince Fahd and Prince Sultan. Prince Faisal's new government excluded the sons of Saud. He promised a ten-point reform that included the drafting of a basic law, the abolishing of slavery and the establishment of a judicial council.

King Saud rejected Prince Faisal's new arrangement and threatened to mobilize the Royal Guard against his brother. Prince Faisal ordered the mobilization of the National Guard against King Saud. With the arbitration of the ulema, and pressure from senior members of the royal family, King Saud gave in and agreed to abdicate on 28 March 1964.[8]

King Saud was forced into exile and he moved to Geneva, Switzerland, and then on to other European cities. In 1966, Saud was invited to live in Egypt by Gamal Abdel Nasser. However, there is another report concerning his exile. According to this report, King Saud went to Egypt under refuge granted by Gamal Abdel Nasser and stayed there from 1965 to 1967.[9] King Saud was also allowed to make propaganda on Radio Cairo.[9] Some of his sons, Prince Khalid, Prince Badr, Prince Sultan and Prince Mansur, joined him and supported his attempt to regain the throne.[9] However, after the June 1967 Arab-Israel war, he lost the support of Egypt and settled in Greece. He stayed there from 1967 to 1969.[9]

After his abdication, he was generally not mentioned in Saudi Arabia, with numerous institutions bearing his name being renamed. His reign was only referenced in passing in official history books. Likewise, his sons remained largely marginalized from positions of power though two were named governors to minor provinces during the reign of King Fahd.[citation needed]

Personal life

Saud had 115 children[13] and multiple wives. Only a few of his children have a public role.[14]

His youngest child is Basma bint Saud who currently lives in Acton, London.[13] His third son, Muhammed was former governor of Al Bahah Province. He died on 8 July 2012.[15] A second son, Mishari, was appointed as Governor of the Al Bahah province with the rank of a minister in August 2010.[16]

Another son of his, Mishaal, was Governor of Najran province from 1996 to November 2008.[17] His son Abdul Rahman (1940–2004) was godfather of Al-Nasr Club.

One of his daughters, Hajer, 53 years old, died outside the Kingdom following an illness on 17 November 2011. Her funeral prayer was performed at Imam Turki bin Abdullah Mosque in Riyadh after Asr prayer.[18]

Death and funeral

Two days before his death, he had felt ill and asked his doctor Filnger from Austria to examine him. In the morning, Saud bin Abdulaziz took a short walk on a beach with his daughter Nozhah, near Hotel Kavouri where he used to reside. His physician arrived after he had died in Athens, Greece on 24 January 1969,[1] after suffering a heart attack in his sleep. His body was taken to Makkah where the funeral prayer was performed in the Grand Mosque. His body was then brought to Riyadh where he was buried in Al Oud cemetery.[19][20]

References

  1. ^ a b "Chronological events of the history of King Saud". King Saud.net. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
  2. ^ Mouline, Nabil (April*June 2012). "Power and generational transition in Saudi Arabia" (PDF). Critique Internationale. 46: 1–22. Retrieved 24 April 2012. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Yamani, Mai (2009). "From fragility to stability: a survival strategy for the Saudi monarchy" (PDF). Contemporary Arab Affairs,. 2 (1): 90–105. doi:10.1080/17550910802576114. Retrieved 5 April 2012. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  4. ^ a b c kingsaud.net
  5. ^ "Chronography of King Abdulaziz period". King Abdulaziz Information Source. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  6. ^ van Eijk, Esther. "Sharia and national law in Saudi Arabia". Leiden University. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  7. ^ Kapoor, Talal (1 November 2007). "The Kingdom: Succession in Saudi Arabia (part two)". Datarabia. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d Alrasheed M. (2002) A History of Saudi Arabia Cambridge University Press; P.108-9
  9. ^ a b c d e Kechichian, Joseph A. (2001). Succession in Saudi Arabia. New York: Palgrave. ISBN 0-312-23880. Retrieved 6 April 2012. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: length (help)
  10. ^ a b c d Nehme, Michel G. (1994). "Saudi Arabia 1950-80: Between Nationalism and Religion". Middle Eastern Studies,. 30 (4): 930–943. Retrieved 11 April 2012.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  11. ^ Bronson, Racher (2005). "Rethinking Religion: The Legacy of the US-Saudi Relations" (PDF). The Washington Quarterly. 28 (4): 121–137. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  12. ^ Quandt W.(1981) Saudi Arabia in the 1980s, The Brooking Institutions, Washington (p.90)
  13. ^ a b Milmo, Cahal (3 January 2012). ""The Acton princess calling for reform in Saudi Arabia: Royal runs campaign for change in her homeland from a suburb in west London"". The Independent. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  14. ^ Henderson, Simon (26 October 2011). "The Next Generation of Saudi Princes: Who Are They?". The Cutting Edge. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  15. ^ "Prince Mohammed Bin Saud Bin Abdul Aziz dies abroad". Saudi Gazette. 8 July 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2012.
  16. ^ Abdul Ghafour, P. K. (28 August 2010). "Mishari bin Saud is new Baha governor". Arab News. Retrieved 6 April 2012.
  17. ^ Morris, Rob (23 December 2008). "King Abdullah fires Najran governor: HRW". Arabian Business.com. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  18. ^ "Death Of Princess Hajir bint Saud". Saudi Press Agency (SPA). Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  19. ^ "The kings of the Kingdom". Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Retrieved 28 July 2012.
  20. ^ Shaheen, Abdul Nabi (23 October 2011). "Sultan will have simple burial at Al Oud cemetery". Gulf News. Retrieved 29 July 2012.
Saud of Saudi Arabia
Born: 1902 Died: 1969
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Saudi Arabia
1953–1964
Succeeded by


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