Ali Al-Ahmed

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Ali Al-Ahmed

Born 1966
Flag of Saudi Arabia Al-Khobar, Saudi Arabia
Occupation Political activist, public speaker, scholar, writer

Ali Al-Ahmed (علي آل أحمد) is a Saudi scholar and expert on Saudi political affairs including: terrorism, Islamic movements, Wahhabi Islam, Saudi political history, Saudi-American relations, and the Al-Saud family history. He is the founder and director of the Institute for Gulf Affairs (formerly the Saudi Institute), an independent think tank in Washington, D.C. focused on providing analyses and disseminating information on political issues in the Gulf region and particularly Saudi Arabia, and U.S.-Gulf relations. IGA also convenes conferences, conducts independent research and investigations, and works with the media and policymakers to fosters a deeper understanding of the Gulf countries by providing them with up-to-date and exclusive information and connecting them with reliable analysts.

He has been invited to speak by Princeton University, Amnesty International, the Hudson Institute, American Enterprise Institute and Meridian International Center.

He is currently the director of the Institute for Gulf Affairs (formerly the Saudi Institute) in Washington, DC.

As a journalist he exposed major news stories such as The Pentagon's botched translation of the 9-11 Bin Laden tape in December of 2001. He also discovered the video of Daniel Pearl's murder.

He has testified before Congress on several occasions on the issue of civil rights and religious freedom in the Middle East[1][2].

He has authored reports on Saudi Arabia regarding religious freedom, torture, press freedom, and religious curriculum.[3]

Contents


[edit] Family and Early Years

The middle of nine children, Al-Ahmed was born in 1966 in Al-Khobar, Saudi Arabia, to a politically active Shi’a family that belongs to the Shammar, the largest tribe in the Arabian Peninsula. His maternal grandfather Salman Abdul Hadi Al-Habib was the sheikh of Safwa in the early to mid twentieth century until his death. His oldest uncle Ali Salman was arrested for his nationalist opposition activities in 1969-1975, and his youngest uncle Adil Salman was imprisoned for 18 months in 1991 for membership in the Socialist Workers Party.

Al-Ahmed’s political career began at the age of 14 when he became the youngest political prisoner in Saudi Arabia after he was arrested in Doha, Qatar and deported to Saudi Arabia while traveling with his parents and six siblings in 1981. He grew up in Sawfa city in the Eastern province of Saudi Arabia. In 1991 he moved to the United States to earn a B.A. in Journalism and Science at Winona State University in Minnesota and a M.A. in International Finance at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, MN

[edit] Media and Speaking Appearances

Al-Ahmed is a frequent consultant to major international broadcast media on issues of Saudi political affairs, terrorism, Sunni-Shi’a relations, Wahhabi Islam, political and religious oppression and lack of human and women’s rights in Saudi Arabia, and the Saudi-U.S. relationship. He is a regular guest on CBS News, CNN, PBS, Fox News, and Al-Jazeera. His quotes and writings have appeared in the Washington Post, Associated Press, The Times, Reuters, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, the Boston Globe and other newspapers in several languages.

Al-Ahmed has been invited to speak at Princeton University, Amnesty International, the Hudson Institute, American Enterprise Institute and Meridian International Center. He has testified before Congress on several occasions on the issue of civil rights and religious freedom in the Middle East and Saudi Arabia.[3][4].

[edit] Notable Achievements

Bin Laden 9/11 Tape Discovery

After conducting an analysis of the Osama bin Laden videotape claiming responsibility for the destruction of Twin Towers on September 11, 2001, Al-Ahmed discovered that the original translation made by Pentagon missed the fact that bin Laden identified nine hijackers by name, including brothers Nawaf al Hazmi and Salam al Hazmi, four others who were from the Al-Ghamdi tribe and two others named Al-Shehri. Amid other details identified by Al-Ahmed and missed by the Pentagon translation were the names of three Saudi clerics who publicly backed the attacks, according to the man speaking with bin Laden on the tape. The government’s version of the tape also didn’t mention bin Laden telling the followers, "When you hear a breaking news announcement on the radio, kneel immediately, and that means they have hit the World Trade Center."[4]

Daniel Pearl Murder Discovery

In May 2002, after Wall Street reporter Daniel Pearl was kidnapped in murdered in Karachi, Pakistan, Al-Ahmed found a video of his beheading on the Arabic-language Web site used to recruit jihadists to fight the United States. The footage of Pearl’s murder was interspersed with news clips, Arabic subtitles and calls to holy war directed at young people in Saudi Arabia, at least some of whom found the video appealing. "The first place where they had it on most of the people who commented on the tape, they said, 'I wish I was there. I wish I had done it,'" said al-Ahmed. CBS’s decision to air parts of the videotape was criticized by Pearl’s family and the State and Justice Department, both of whom asked the network not to air the video. Anchor Dan Rather defended CBS’s decision by saying the tape was aired after great deliberation and was carefully edited to omit the most brutal moments. "We believe," said Rather, "it is important for Americans to see it and understand the full impact and danger of the propaganda war being waged against the United States and its allies, and also its effect on the young people of the Arab world."[5]

Saudi Curriculum of Intolerance Exposed

In May 2006 the Institute for Gulf Affairs and the Freedom House’s Center for Religious Freedom released “Saudi Arabia’s Curriculum of Intolerance”, a report analyzing a set of 12 Saudi textbooks currently used in Islamic studies courses for elementary and secondary students. The analysis showed that the textbooks espoused hatred toward non-Muslims and non-Wahhabi Muslims. IGA collected textbooks, used in Saudi Arabia and Saudi-run schools outside the Kingdom, from teachers, administrators and families with children in Saudi schools.

The report debunked claims repeated earlier by Saudi government spokesmen, including Saudi embassy spokesmen Adel Al-Jubeir and new Saudi Ambassador to the U.S. Turki al-Faisal, that all educational materials have undergone significant revision. In stark contradiction to these claims, the IGA/FH analysis showed that the textbooks commanded Muslims to hate non-Muslims, denigrated the majority of Sunni Muslims as “deviants and descendants of polytheists”, taught conspiracy theories like Protocols of the Elders of Zion as if they were proven facts, and called upon students not to "greet," "befriend," "imitate," "show loyalty to," "be courteous to," or "respect" non-believers. Saudi Arabia runs academies in 19 world capitals, including the Islamic Saudi Academy in Fairfax County near Washington, D.C., that use the same textbooks. The IGA/Freedom House study was cited as evidence in the report released by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom in October 2007 that urged the State Department to shut down ISA unless it can prove it is not teaching religious intolerance. The panel expressed "significant concerns" that the school is promoting a brand of religious intolerance that could prove a danger to the United States.

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[edit] Notes