PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Geography
Area: 1,960,582 million sq. km. (784,233 sq.
mi.), slightly more than one-fifth the size of
the continental United States.
Cities (2003 est.): Capital--Riyadh (pop.
3.7 million). Other cities--Jeddah (2.7
million), Makkah, (1.6 million), Dammam/Khobar/Dhahran,
(1.6 million).
Terrain: Primarily desert with rugged mountains
in the southwest.
Climate: Arid, with great extremes of
temperature in the interior; humidity and
temperature are both high along the coast.
People
Nationality: Noun--Saudi(s). Adjective--Saudi
Arabian or Saudi.
Population (2004 est.): 26.7 million (19.7
million Saudis, 7 million foreign nationals).
Annual growth rate: 3.1%.
Ethnic groups: Arab (90% of native pop.),
Afro-Asian (10% of native pop.).
Religion: Islam.
Language: Arabic (official).
Education: Literacy--male 84.7%, female
77.8%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--48/1,000.
Life expectancy--male 67 years, female 71
years.
Work force: 7.0 million (about 35% foreign
workers); industry--25%; services
(including government)--63%; agriculture--12%.
Government
Type: Monarchy with Council of Ministers and
Consultative Council. Unification: September 23,
1932.
Constitution: The Holy Qur'an (Governed
according to Islamic Law), Shari’a, and the
Basic Law.
Branches: Executive--King (chief of state
and head of government). Legislative--a
Consultative Council with advisory powers was
formed September 1993. Judicial--Supreme
Council of Justice, Islamic Courts of First
Instance and Appeals.
Administrative divisions: 13 provinces.
Political parties: None.
Economy
GDP (2002 est.): $242 billion.
Annual growth rate (2002 est.): 0.6%.
Per capita GDP (2002 est.): $10,560.
Natural resources: Hydrocarbons, gold, uranium,
bauxite, coal, iron, phosphate, tungsten, zinc,
silver, copper.
Agriculture: Products--dates, grains,
livestock, vegetables. Arable land--1.72%.
Industry: Types--petroleum,
petrochemicals, cement, fertilizer, light
industry.
Trade (2001 est.): Exports--$66.9
billion: petroleum and petroleum products.
Imports--$29.7 billion: manufactured goods,
transportation equipment, clothing and textiles,
processed food products. Major trading
partners--U.S., Japan, South Korea, western
Europe.
PEOPLE
Saudi Arabia's 2004 population was estimated to
be about 26.7 million, including about 7 million
resident foreigners. Until the 1960s, most of
the population was nomadic or seminomadic; due
to rapid economic and urban growth, more than
95% of the population now is settled. Some
cities and oases have densities of more than
1,000 people per square kilometer (2,600 per sq.
mi).
Saudi Arabia is known as the birthplace of
Islam, which in the century following Muhammad's
death in 632 A.D. spread west to Spain and east
to India. Islam obliges all Muslims to make the
Hajj, or pilgrimage to Makkah, at least once
during their lifetime if they are able to do so.
The cultural environment in Saudi Arabia is
highly conservative; the country adheres to a
strict interpretation of Islamic religious law (Shari'a).
Cultural presentations must conform to narrowly
defined standards of ethics. Men and women are
not permitted to attend public events together
and are segregated in the work place.
Most Saudis are ethnically Arab. Some are of
mixed ethnic origin and are descended from
Turks, Iranians, Indonesians, Indians, Africans,
and others, most of whom immigrated as pilgrims
and reside in the Hijaz region along the Red Sea
coast. Many Arabs from nearby countries are
employed in the kingdom. There also are
significant numbers of Asian expatriates mostly
from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, and
the Philippines. There are less than 100,000
Westerners in Saudi Arabia.
HISTORY
Except for a few major cities and oases, the
harsh climate historically prevented much
settlement of the Arabian Peninsula. People of
various cultures have lived in the peninsula
over a span of more than 5,000 years. The Dilmun
culture, along the Gulf coast, was
contemporaneous with the Sumerians and ancient
Egyptians, and most of the empires of the
ancient world traded with the states of the
peninsula.
The Saudi state began in central Arabia in
about 1750. A local ruler, Muhammad bin Saud,
joined forces with an Islamic reformer, Muhammad
Abd Al-Wahhab, to create a new political entity.
Over the next 150 years, the fortunes of the
Saud family rose and fell several times as Saudi
rulers contended with Egypt, the Ottoman Empire,
and other Arabian families for control on the
peninsula. The modern Saudi state was founded by
the late King Abdul Aziz Al-Saud (known
internationally as Ibn Saud). In 1902, Abdul
Aziz recaptured Riyadh, the Al-Saud dynasty's
ancestral capital, from the rival Al-Rashid
family. Continuing his conquests, Abdul Aziz
subdued Al-Hasa, the rest of Nejd, and the Hijaz
between 1913 and 1926. In 1932, these regions
were unified as the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Boundaries with Jordan, Iraq, and Kuwait were
established by a series of treaties negotiated
in the 1920s, with two "neutral zones"--one with
Iraq and the other with Kuwait--created. The
Saudi-Kuwaiti neutral zone was administratively
partitioned in 1971, with each state continuing
to share the petroleum resources of the former
zone equally. Tentative agreement on the
partition of the Saudi-Iraqi neutral zone was
reached in 1981, and partition was finalized by
1983. The country's southern boundary with Yemen
was partially defined by the 1934 Treaty of Taif,
which ended a brief border war between the two
states. A June 2000 treaty further delineated
portions of the boundary with Yemen. The
location and status of Saudi Arabia's boundary
with the United Arab Emirates is not final; a de
facto boundary reflects a 1974 agreement. The
border between Saudi Arabia and Qatar was
resolved in March 2001. The border with Oman
also is not demarcated.
King Abdul Aziz died in 1953 and was
succeeded by his eldest son, Saud, who reigned
for 11 years. In 1964, Saud abdicated in favor
of his half-brother, Faisal, who had served as
Foreign Minister. Because of fiscal
difficulties, King Saud had been persuaded in
1958 to delegate direct conduct of Saudi
Government affairs to Faisal as Prime Minister;
Saud briefly regained control of the government
in 1960-62. In October 1962, Faisal outlined a
broad reform program, stressing economic
development. Proclaimed King in 1964 by senior
royal family members and religious leaders,
Faisal also continued to serve as Prime
Minister. This practice has been followed by
subsequent kings.
The mid-1960s saw external pressures
generated by Saudi-Egyptian differences over
Yemen. When civil war broke out in 1962 between
Yemeni royalists and republicans, Egyptian
forces entered Yemen to support the new
republican government, while Saudi Arabia backed
the royalists. Tensions subsided only after
1967, when Egypt withdrew its troops from Yemen.
Saudi forces did not participate in the
Six-Day (Arab-Israeli) War of June 1967, but the
government later provided annual subsidies to
Egypt, Jordan, and Syria to support their
economies. During the 1973 Arab-Israeli war,
Saudi Arabia participated in the Arab oil
boycott of the United States and Netherlands. A
member of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), Saudi Arabia had
joined other member countries in moderate oil
price increases beginning in 1971. After the
1973 war, the price of oil rose substantially,
dramatically increasing Saudi Arabia's wealth
and political influence.
In 1975, King Faisal was assassinated by a
nephew, who was executed after an extensive
investigation concluded that he acted alone.
Faisal was succeeded by his half-brother Khalid
as King and Prime Minister; their half-brother
Prince Fahd was named Crown Prince and First
Deputy Prime Minister. King Khalid empowered
Crown Prince Fahd to oversee many aspects of the
government's international and domestic affairs.
Economic development continued rapidly under
King Khalid, and the kingdom assumed a more
influential role in regional politics and
international economic and financial matters.
In June 1982, King Khalid died, and Fahd
became King and Prime Minister in a smooth
transition. Another half-brother, Prince
Abdullah, Commander of the Saudi National Guard,
was named Crown Prince and First Deputy Prime
Minister. King Fahd's brother, Prince Sultan,
the Minister of Defense and Aviation, became
Second Deputy Prime Minister. Under King Fahd,
the Saudi economy adjusted to sharply lower oil
revenues resulting from declining global oil
prices. Saudi Arabia supported neutral shipping
in the Gulf during periods of the Iran-Iraq war
and aided Iraq's war-strained economy. King Fahd
played a major part in bringing about the August
1988 cease-fire between Iraq and Iran and in
organizing and strengthening the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC), a group of six
Arabian Gulf states dedicated to fostering
regional economic cooperation and peaceful
development.
In 1990-91, King Fahd played a key role
before and during the Gulf war. King Fahd's
action also consolidated the coalition of forces
against Iraq and helped define the tone of the
operation as a multilateral effort to
reestablish the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of Kuwait. Acting as a rallying point
and personal spokesman for the coalition, King
Fahd helped bring together his nation's GCC
allies, Western allies, and Arab allies, as well
as nonaligned nations from Africa and the
emerging democracies of eastern Europe. He used
his influence as Custodian of the Two Holy
Mosques to persuade other Arab and Islamic
nations to join the coalition.
King Fahd suffered a stroke in November 1995.
From 1997, Crown Prince Abdullah took on much of
the day-to-day responsibilities of running the
government. Upon King Fahd’s death on August 1,
2005, Abdullah assumed the throne as King.
Prince Sultan, Minister of Defense and Aviation,
became Crown Prince and First Deputy Prime
Minister.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The central institution of Saudi Arabian
Government is the monarchy. The Basic Law
adopted in 1992 declared that Saudi Arabia is a
monarchy ruled by the sons and grandsons of King
Abd Al Aziz Al Saud, and that the Holy Qur'an is
the constitution of the country, which is
governed on the basis of Islamic law (Shari'a).
There are no political parties or national
elections; however, the country held its first
municipal elections in 2005. The king's powers
are limited because he must observe the Shari'a
and other Saudi traditions. He also must retain
a consensus of the Saudi royal family, religious
leaders (ulema), and other important elements in
Saudi society. The leading members of the royal
family choose the king from among themselves
with the subsequent approval of the ulema.
Saudi kings gradually have developed a
central government. Since 1953, the Council of
Ministers, appointed by and responsible to the
king, has advised on the formulation of general
policy and directed the activities of the
growing bureaucracy. This council consists of a
prime minister, the first and second deputy
prime ministers, 20 ministers (of whom the
minister of defense also is the second deputy
prime minister), two ministers of state, and a
small number of advisers and heads of major
autonomous organizations.
Legislation is by resolution of the Council
of Ministers and the Shura Council, ratified by
royal decree, and must be compatible with the
Shari'a. Justice is administered according to
the Shari'a by a system of religious courts
whose judges are appointed by the king on the
recommendation of the Supreme Judicial Council,
composed of 12 senior jurists. The independence
of the judiciary is protected by law. The king
acts as the highest court of appeal and has the
power to pardon. Access to high officials
(usually at a majlis, or public audience) and
the right to petition them directly are
well-established traditions.
The kingdom is divided into 13 provinces
governed by princes or close relatives of the
royal family. All governors are appointed by the
King.
In March 1992, King Fahd issued several
decrees outlining the basic statutes of
government and codifying for the first time
procedures concerning the royal succession. The
King's political reform program also provided
for the establishment of a national Consultative
Council, with appointed members having advisory
powers to review and give advice on issues of
public interest. It also outlined a framework
for councils at the provincial or emirate level.
In September 1993, King Fahd issued
additional reform decrees, appointing the
members of the national Consultative Council and
spelling out procedures for the new council's
operations. He announced reforms regarding the
Council of Ministers, including term limitations
of 4 years and regulations to prohibit conflict
of interest for ministers and other high-level
officials. The members of 13 provincial councils
and the councils' operating regulations also
were announced in September 1993. In February,
March, and April 2005, Saudis voted in the
country’s first municipal elections in more than
50 years. Women, and male members of the
military, were not permitted to vote.
In July 1997, the membership of the
Consultative Council was expanded from 60 to 90
members, and again in May 2001 from 90 to 120
members. In 2005, membership was expanded to 150
members. Membership has changed significantly
during expansions of the council as many members
have not been reappointed. The role of the
council is gradually expanding as it gains
experience.
Principal Government Officials
King, Prime Minister, Custodian of the
Two Holy Mosques--King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz
Al Saud
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Prince Saud Al
Faysal bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud
Ambassador to the U.S.--vacant
The
embassy of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is
located at 601 New Hampshire Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20037; tel. 202-342-3800.
ECONOMY
Oil was discovered in Saudi Arabia by U.S.
geologists in the 1930s, although largescale
production did not begin until after World War
II. Oil wealth has made possible rapid economic
development, which began in earnest in the 1960s
and accelerated spectacularly in the 1970s,
transforming the kingdom.
Saudi oil reserves are the largest in the
world, and Saudi Arabia is the world's leading
oil producer and exporter. Oil accounts for more
than 90% of the country's exports and nearly 75%
of government revenues. Proven reserves are
estimated to be 260 billion barrels, about
one-quarter of world oil reserves.
More than 95% of all Saudi oil is produced on
behalf of the Saudi Government by the parastatal
giant Saudi ARAMCO. In June 1993, Saudi ARAMCO
absorbed the state marketing and refining
company (SAMAREC), becoming the world's largest
fully integrated oil company. Most Saudi oil
exports move by tanker from Gulf terminals at
Ras Tanura and Ju'aymah. The remaining oil
exports are transported via the east-west
pipeline across the kingdom to the Red Sea port
of Yanbu. A major new gas initiative promises to
bring significant investment by U.S. and
European oil companies to develop nonassociated
gas fields in three separate parts of Saudi
Arabia. Following final technical agreements
with concession awardees in December 2001,
development was expected to begin in 2002.
Due to a sharp rise in petroleum revenues in
1974 following the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, Saudi
Arabia became one of the fastest-growing
economies in the world. It enjoyed a substantial
surplus in its overall trade with other
countries; imports increased rapidly; and ample
government revenues were available for
development, defense, and aid to other Arab and
Islamic countries.
But higher oil prices led to development of
more oil fields around the world and reduced
global consumption. The result, beginning in the
mid-1980s, was a worldwide oil glut, which
introduced an element of planning uncertainty
for the first time in a decade. Saudi oil
production, which had increased to almost 10
million barrels per day (b/d) during 1980-81,
dropped to about 2 million b/d in 1985.
Budgetary deficits developed, and the government
drew down its foreign assets. Responding to
financial pressures, Saudi Arabia gave up its
role as the "swing producer" within OPEC in the
summer of 1985 and accepted a production quota.
Since then, Saudi oil policy has been guided by
a desire to maintain market and quota shares.
However, beginning in late 1997, Saudi Arabia
again faced the challenge of low oil prices. Due
to a combination of factors--the East Asian
economic crises, a warm winter in the West
caused by El Nino, and an increase in non-OPEC
oil production--demand for oil slowed and pulled
oil prices down by more than one-third.
Saudi Arabia was a key player in coordinating
the successful 1999 campaign of OPEC and other
oil-producing countries to raise the price of
oil to its highest level since the Gulf War by
managing production and supply of petroleum.
That same year, Saudi Arabia established the
Supreme Economic Council to formulate and better
coordinate economic development policies in
order to accelerate institutional and industrial
reform.
Saudi Arabia has announced its intention to
accelerate its accession to the World Trade
Organization. Negotiations have focused on the
degree to which Saudi Arabia is willing to
increase market access to foreign goods and
services and the timeframe for becoming fully
compliant with WTO obligations. In April 2000,
the government established the Saudi Arabian
General Investment Authority to encourage
foreign direct investment in the country. Saudi
Arabia signed a Trade Investment Framework
Agreement with the U.S. in July 2003.
Through 5-year development plans, the
government has sought to allocate its petroleum
income to transform its relatively undeveloped,
oil-based economy into that of a modern
industrial state while maintaining the kingdom's
traditional Islamic values and customs. Although
economic planners have not achieved all their
goals, the economy has progressed rapidly. Oil
wealth has increased the standard of living of
most Saudis. However, significant population
growth has strained the government's ability to
finance further improvements in the country's
standard of living. Heavy dependence on
petroleum revenue continues, but industry and
agriculture now account for a larger share of
economic activity. The mismatch between the job
skills of Saudi graduates and the needs of the
private job market at all levels remains the
principal obstacle to economic diversification
and development; about 4.6 million non-Saudis
are employed in the economy.
Saudi Arabia's first two development plans,
covering the 1970s, emphasized infrastructure.
The results were impressive--the total length of
paved highways tripled, power generation
increased by a multiple of 28, and the capacity
of the seaports grew tenfold. For the third plan
(1980-85), the emphasis changed. Spending on
infrastructure declined, but it rose markedly on
education, health, and social services. The
share for diversifying and expanding productive
sectors of the economy (primarily industry) did
not rise as planned, but the two industrial
cities of Jubail and Yanbu--built around the use
of the country's oil and gas to produce steel,
petrochemicals, fertilizer, and refined oil
products--were largely completed.
In the fourth plan (1985-90), the country's
basic infrastructure was viewed as largely
complete, but education and training remained
areas of concern. Private enterprise was
encouraged, and foreign investment in the form
of joint ventures with Saudi public and private
companies was welcomed. The private sector
became more important, rising to 70% of non-oil
GDP by 1987. While still concentrated in trade
and commerce, private investment increased in
industry, agriculture, banking, and construction
companies. These private investments were
supported by generous government financing and
incentive programs. The objective was for the
private sector to have 70% to 80% ownership in
most joint venture enterprises.
The fifth plan (1990-95) emphasized
consolidation of the country's defenses;
improved and more efficient government social
services; regional development; and, most
importantly, creating greater private-sector
employment opportunities for Saudis by reducing
the number of foreign workers.
The sixth plan (1996-2000) focused on
lowering the cost of government services without
cutting them and sought to expand educational
training programs. The plan called for reducing
the kingdom's dependence on the petroleum sector
by diversifying economic activity, particularly
in the private sector, with special emphasis on
industry and agriculture. It also continued the
effort to "Saudiize" the labor force.
The seventh plan (2000-2004) focuses more on
economic diversification and a greater role of
the private sector in the Saudi economy. For the
period 2000-04, the Saudi Government has aimed
at an average GDP growth rate of 3.16% each
year, with projected growths of 5.04% for the
private sector and 4.01% for the non-oil sector.
The government also has set a target of creating
817,300 new jobs for Saudi nationals.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Saudi foreign policy objectives are to maintain
its security and its paramount position on the
Arabian Peninsula, defend general Arab and
Islamic interests, promote solidarity among
Islamic governments, and maintain cooperative
relations with other oil-producing and major
oil-consuming countries.
Saudi Arabia signed the UN Charter in 1945.
The country plays a prominent and constructive
role in the International Monetary Fund, the
World Bank, and Arab and Islamic financial and
development assistance institutions. One of the
largest aid donors in the world, it still gives
some aid to a number of Arab, African, and Asian
countries. Jeddah is the headquarters of the
Secretariat of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference and its subsidiary organization, the
Islamic Development Bank, founded in 1969.
Membership in the 11-member OPEC and in the
technically and economically oriented Arab
producer group--the Organization of Arab
Petroleum Exporting Countries--facilitates
coordination of Saudi oil policies with other
oil-exporting governments. As the world's
leading exporter of petroleum, Saudi Arabia has
a special interest in preserving a stable and
long-term market for its vast oil resources by
allying itself with healthy Western economies
which can protect the value of Saudi financial
assets. It generally has acted to stabilize the
world oil market and tried to moderate sharp
price movements.
The Saudi Government frequently helps mediate
regional crises and support the
Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. A
charter member of the Arab League, Saudi Arabia
supports the position that Israel must withdraw
from the territories which it occupied in June
1967, as according to United Nations Resolution
242. Saudi Arabia supports a peaceful resolution
of the Arab-Israeli conflict but rejected the
Camp David accords, claiming that they would be
unable to achieve a comprehensive political
solution that would ensure Palestinian rights
and adequately address the status of Jerusalem.
Although Saudi Arabia broke diplomatic relations
with and suspended aid to Egypt in the wake of
Camp David, the two countries renewed formal
ties in 1987. In March 2002, Crown Prince
Abdallah offered a Middle East peace plan at the
annual summit of the Arab League in which Arab
governments would offer “normal relations and
the security of Israel in exchange for a full
Israeli withdrawal from all occupied Arab lands,
recognition of an independent Palestinian state
with Jerusalem as its capital, and the return of
Palestinian refugees.”
In 1990-91, Saudi Arabia played an important
role in the Gulf War, developing new allies and
improving existing relationships between Saudi
Arabia and some other countries. However, there
also were diplomatic and financial costs.
Relations between Saudi Arabia and Tunisia,
Algeria, and Libya deteriorated. Each country
had remained silent following Iraq's invasion of
Kuwait but called for an end to violence once
the deployment of coalition troops began.
Relations between these countries and Saudi
Arabia have returned to their pre-war status.
Saudi Arabia's relations with those countries
which expressed support for Saddam Hussein's
invasion of Kuwait--Yemen, Jordan, and
Sudan--were severely strained during and
immediately after the war. For example, several
hundred thousand Yemenis were expelled from
Saudi Arabia after the Government of Yemen
announced its position, thus exacerbating an
existing border dispute. Saudi-Yemeni relations,
especially in the wake of the 1994 Yemen civil
war, remain fragile and of significant concern
to the Saudi Government. The Palestine
Liberation Organization's support for Iraq cost
it financial aid as well as good relations with
Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. Recently,
though, Saudi Arabia's relations with Jordan and
the Palestinian Authority have improved, with
the Saudi Government providing assistance for
the Palestinian Authority.
During and after the Gulf War, the Government
of Saudi Arabia provided water, food, shelter,
and fuel for coalition forces in the region.
There also were monetary payments to some
coalition partners. Saudi Arabia's combined
costs in payments, foregone revenues, and
donated supplies were $55 billion. More than $15
billion went toward reimbursing the United
States alone.
U.S.-SAUDI ARABIAN RELATIONS
Saudi Arabia's unique role in the Arab and
Islamic worlds, its possession of the world's
largest reserves of oil, and its strategic
location make its friendship important to the
United States. Diplomatic relations were
established in 1933; the U.S. embassy opened in
Jeddah in 1944 and moved to Riyadh in 1984. The
Jeddah embassy became a U.S. consulate.
Meanwhile, a U.S. consulate opened in Dhahran in
1944.
The United States and Saudi Arabia share a
common concern about regional security, oil
exports and imports, and sustainable
development. Close consultations between the
U.S. and Saudi Arabia have developed on
international, economic, and development issues
such as the Middle East peace process and shared
interests in the Gulf. The continued
availability of reliable sources of oil,
particularly from Saudi Arabia, remains
important to the prosperity of the United States
as well as to Europe and Japan. Saudi Arabia is
often the leading source of imported oil for the
United States, providing about 20% of total U.S.
crude imports and 10% of U.S. consumption. The
U.S. is Saudi Arabia's largest trading partner,
and Saudi Arabia is the largest U.S. export
market in the Middle East.
In addition to economic ties, a longstanding
security relationship continues to be important
in U.S.-Saudi relations. A U.S. military
training mission established at Dhahran in 1953
provides training and support in the use of
weapons and other security-related services to
the Saudi armed forces. The United States has
sold Saudi Arabia military aircraft (F-15s,
AWACS, and UH-60 Blackhawks), air defense
weaponry (Patriot and Hawk missiles), armored
vehicles (M1A2 Abrams tanks and M-2 Bradley
infantry fighting vehicles), and other
equipment. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has
had a long-term role in military and civilian
construction activities in the Kingdom.
The Gulf War and Operation Iraqi Freedom
demonstrated U.S.-Saudi cooperation in the areas
of cultural accommodation, as well as in
military operations. For example, the U.S.
military issued general orders prohibiting the
consumption of alcohol and setting guidelines
for off-duty behavior and attire. Saudi Arabia
accommodated U.S. culture and its military
procedures by allowing U.S. servicewomen to
serve in their varied roles throughout the
kingdom--a major step for a highly patriarchal
society. In August 2003, following the U.S.-led
war in Iraq in March and April 2003, the United
States withdrew its troops stationed in Saudi
Arabia.
Saudi Arabia’s relations with the United
States were strained after the September 11,
2001, terrorist attacks in which 15 of the
suicide bombers were Saudi citizens. On May 12,
2003 suicide bombers killed 35 people, including
nine Americans, in attacks at three housing
compounds for Westerners in Riyadh. On November
8, 2003 terrorists attacked another compound
housing foreign workers from mainly Arab
countries. At least 18 people, including 5
children died in this attack, and more than 100
were injured.
On May 1, 2004 terrorists killed two
Americans in the Yanbu oil facility in the
western part of the country. On May 29, 2004
terrorists killed one American and wounded
several others in attacks on an official
building and housing compound in al-Khobar in
the Eastern Province. On June 6, terrorists shot
and killed a BBC journalist. On June 9 and June
12, 2004 terrorists killed Americans Robert
Jacobs and Kenneth Scroggs. On June 18, 2004
terrorists kidnapped and beheaded American Paul
Johnson. On December 6, 2004 terrorists attacked
the U.S. Consulate in Jeddah, killing five
consulate employees. Terrorists also targeted
and killed other foreign nationalities during
this time.
Currently, Saudi Arabia is an important
partner in the campaign against terrorism,
providing assistance in the military,
diplomatic, and financial arenas.
Counterterrorism cooperation between Saudi
Arabia and the United States increased
significantly after the May 12, 2003 bombings in
Riyadh and continues today. In February 2005,
the Saudi government sponsored the first ever
Counter-Terrorism International Conference in
Riyadh.
Human Rights
Despite close cooperation on security issues,
the United States remains concerned about human
rights conditions in Saudi Arabia. Principal
human rights problems include abuse of prisoners
and incommunicado detention; prohibitions or
severe restrictions on the freedoms of speech,
press, peaceful assembly and association, and
religion; denial of the right of citizens to
change their government; systematic
discrimination against women and ethnic and
religious minorities; and suppression of
workers' rights.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--James
Oberwetter
Deputy Chief of Mission--Gary Grappo
Counselor for Consular Affairs--Dennis Hankins
Counselor for Economic Affairs--David Rundell
Counselor for Political Affairs--Michael
Gfoeller
Counselor for Political-Military Affairs--Robert
Murphy
Counselor for Public Affairs--Carol Kalin
Consul General, Dhahran--John Kincannon
Consul General, Jeddah--Tatiana Gfoeller
(scheduled to arrive August 2005)