JNN 20 June 2012 RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah has appointed his defence minister, Prince Salman, as heir apparent, opting for stability and a continuation of cautious reforms at a time of challenges for the world’s biggest oil exporter.
Crown Prince Salman, 76, has built a reputation for pragmatism and is likely swiftly to assume substantial day-to-day responsibilities from a king 13 years his senior.
Since the death of King Abdulaziz Ibn Saud, the country’s founding father, the succession has moved along a line of his sons.
Salman becomes Abdullah’s third heir after the deaths of two older brothers: Crown Prince Sultan last October and Crown Prince Nayef, the interior minister, on Saturday.
The swift decision came as no surprise; analysts had already said they expected Salman to continue the gradual social and economic reforms adopted by King Abdullah as well as Saudi Arabia’s moderate oil pricing policy.
At stake is the future direction of a country that sits on more than one fifth of the world’s proven global oil reserves.
As crown prince and later as king, Salman will have to tackle challenges ranging from an al Qaeda security threat to systemic joblessness at a time of unparalleled Middle Eastern turmoil, Sectarian bias against the Shia Population of Saudi Arabia, all set against a regional rivalry with Shia Iran.
Like other Wahabi – led Gulf monarchies, Saudi Arabia is nervous of the rise of Islamist movements such as Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood in the turmoil created by successive “Arab Spring” revolutions, as well as growing discontent among the region’s Shia population groups.
“I would predict we will see more Saudi activity abroad, particularly considering what is going on throughout the Arab world today,” said Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent former Saudi newspaper editor.
As crown prince, Salman will keep the defence portfolio and serve as deputy prime minister to King Abdullah, Monday’s royal decree said.
KEY POST
From 1962 until last year, Prince Salman served as governor of Riyadh, a position that gave him more contact with foreign governments than many other senior royals.
That role saw him arbitrating disputes between members of the ruling family, putting him at the centre of the kingdom’s most important power structure.
He also had to maintain good relations with senior clerics and tribal leaders, meaning he has experience working with all the main groups that count in Saudi policy-making.
The decree made no mention of the Allegiance Council, a family body that Abdullah set up to ensure smooth successions, which does not legally have to come into play until he dies.
Salman’s younger brother Prince Ahmed was made Nayef’s successor as interior minister after spending decades as his deputy.
Prince Ahmed is seen as unlikely to alter security policies at a time when Saudi Arabia faces a threat from al Qaeda in neighbouring Yemen and unrest among its Shia Muslim minority.
“He was always close to Prince Nayef, but he was more involved in administrative matters, not security. He has vast experience here,” Khashoggi said.
Nayef built a formidable security apparatus that crushed al Qaeda inside the kingdom , and he used the same apparatus to crush the Shia protest against the Political Arrest & Discrimination in Jobs , Education and all the Civil Rights they should enjoy .
His services arrested thousands of suspected militants and successfully infiltrated Islamist cells, but came down hard on political dissent.
Although the US sponsored al Qaeda campaign last decade was suppressed, its survivors took shelter in neighbouring Yemen , and working for the CIA’s Covert actions , where they have built the movement’s most dangerous wing, dedicated to toppling the Saudi ruling family.