Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
10RIYADH33
2010-01-05 17:35:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Riyadh
Cable title:  

SAUDIS ANGRY & CONFUSED OVER NEW TSA SCREENING

Tags:  EAIR PTER SCUL KPAD SA 
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DE RUEHRH #0033/01 0051735
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 051735Z JAN 10
FM AMEMBASSY RIYADH
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 2240
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE
RUEHDH/AMCONSUL DHAHRAN IMMEDIATE 0427
RUEHJI/AMCONSUL JEDDAH IMMEDIATE 0537
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 RIYADH 000033 

SIPDIS

NEA/ARP FOR JOSH HARRIS AND JEREMY BERDNT

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: EAIR PTER SCUL KPAD SA
SUBJECT: SAUDIS ANGRY & CONFUSED OVER NEW TSA SCREENING
PROCEDURES

RIYADH 00000033 001.2 OF 002


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 RIYADH 000033

SIPDIS

NEA/ARP FOR JOSH HARRIS AND JEREMY BERDNT

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: EAIR PTER SCUL KPAD SA
SUBJECT: SAUDIS ANGRY & CONFUSED OVER NEW TSA SCREENING
PROCEDURES

RIYADH 00000033 001.2 OF 002



1. AN AVALANCHE OF INQUIRIES: The Embassy has been deluged
with media inquiries since the story broke January 4. All
Saudi media outlets reported January 5 that the U.S.
Department of State had issued a new directive for intensive
air screening of U.S.-bound passengers from 14 countries,
including Saudi Arabia. Saudi official and public reaction
to the proposed TSA screening procedures has been swift,
vehement, and uniformly negative, from the top levels of
government on down. We have been vilified in the media, in
meetings and in casual conversation, accused of implementing
reactionary procedures that are not necessitated by recent
events. The following are just a few examples of the
responses we have received.


2. ROYAL DENUNCIATION: Assistant Minister of Defense Prince
Khalid bin Sultan angrily denounced the new procedures during
a January 5 meeting with Ambassador Smith, saying that
singling Saudis out for special searches would deter Saudis
from travelling to the U.S., including Saudis travelling to
attend military training.


3. SECURITY OFFICIALS INCREDULOUS: The Saudi Director
General of Civil Aviation similarly denounced the new
procedures in a call to TSA's Amman-based regional
representative, and has demanded a meeting with the
Ambassador on Saturday to discuss the measures. Separately,
during a routine meeting with D/RSO, the commander of the
diplomatic police (responsible for all residential areas
currently used by direct-hire American Embassy personnel),
supplanted pleasantries with scathing and indignant questions
regarding the new procedures, and demanding details and
explanations as to why the Kingdom as a whole was being
singled out.


4. POLITICAL BLACKMAIL: Al-Watan, a leading daily, reported
resentment and surprise over the U.S. decision to inspect
Saudi citizens. An academic researcher, Sultan Angaris, was
quoted as saying: "This process is political blackmailing
resulting from the position of the Kingdom against Israel,
and it is an insult to each Saudi citizen who will now be
treated as a terrorist." He added: "There is nothing new
since the 9/11 attacks. Personal inspections, difficulties in
obtaining visas, even after interviews that have included the

elderly and disabled in wheelchairs- the list goes on." The
paper added that some students studying in the U.S. have
expressed their strong resentment and their immediate
intention to transfer to universities in other countries,
while others say that the decision has a positive side,
"protecting our souls and innocent people."


5. ABUSE OF TRAVELERS: Pan-Arab daily, Asharq Al-Awsat
reported that just before the issuance of the latest decision
by the U.S. Department of State regarding screening of air
traveliers to the U.S., a Saudi student on a scholarship
program traveling to the U.S. to enter the University of
Chicago, via Amsterdam airport, was subjected to 2 days of
detention, interrogation, several personal inspections,
checks of his personal documents and personal belongings,
before he was sent back to the Kingdom.


6. COLLECTIVE PUNISHMENT: Arab News wrote under the op-ed
titled "Collective Punishment is No Answer" - "It has not
been a great start to 2010. The failed terrorist attempt by
a Nigerian passenger to blow up an American airliner has
brought the war against terror back to the forefront.
President Barack Obama has pointed the finger to Al-Qaeda in
Yemen and has ordered a series of measures to be taken to
tighten security at American airports and restrict granting
visas to nationals from countries who the U.S. associates,
directly or indirectly, with terrorists. Most of the
countries on the new list are Arab and Muslim ... Muslims are
once again being stigmatized and penalized because they are
being associated with terror and terrorism. If the Nigerian
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab was a blue-eyed renegade belonging
to a fringe Bible-belt sect, Western reaction would have been
different ... to punish an entire nation for the folly of one
citizen will only serve the goals of the terrorists, and
right-wing forces that are gaining ground in the West ...
Obama,s first global message was to Muslims everywhere,
which he delivered from Cairo University. He promised
openness, tolerance, he vowed to open a new page in
America,s relations with the Muslim world. Today Obama,s
acts are a breach of those promises. Yes, Al-Qaeda is still
there, a menace not only to the West but to the Muslim world
and our children. But is this the way to combat it?"


7. US FAILURE: Saudi Gazette editorialized in the lead
editorial entitled "Air Security" that "The U.S. has now

RIYADH 00000033 002.2 OF 002


placed the nationals of 15 countries on a list of passengers
that must receive extra screening when traveling to the U.S.
The new procedures are clearly discriminatory, bordering on
ethnic profiling. The vast majority of nationals (on the
list),including Saudi Arabia, harbor no ill will towards the
U.S. and have no intention of causing any harm whatsoever.
Increased security for air travel is difficult to argue
against. So why not allow all of us equal standing in the
fight against terrorism and submit all of us to the same
procedures? The U.S.,s own intelligence system failed
miserably ... for a country that prides itself on equality,
the U.S. should practice the same ethos in its relationship
to the rest of the world."


8. DEMAND FOR RECIPROCITY: A Saudi blogger, Al-Tomaar,
commented on the new security measures at American ports
against citizens of certain countries, including Saudis, and
called for treating American citizens coming into Saudi
Arabia in the same manner.
SMITH