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ID106712
Title ProperBrezhnev in the Hejaz
LanguageENG
AuthorRiedel, Bruce
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)THE SAUDI royal family is afraid. Very, very afraid. A crisis of leadership is brewing. The king is ailing and his successor, Crown Prince Sultan, is in even worse health. Their hard-line brother, Prince Nayef bin Abdel Aziz, is set to take the throne. One of the last absolute monarchies, the Saudi family seems to represent all that the Arab Spring is fighting against: closed societies with unequal wealth distribution; repressed minorities living within manufactured boundaries; strong Islamist sympathies across its lands; a latent Sunni-Shia power struggle embedded in the country's fabric-not to mention a string of surrounding states struggling to stave off revolutions that could easily have a contagion effect.
`In' analytical NoteNational Interest vol. 2011, No. 115; Sep-Oct 2011: p.27-32
Journal SourceNational Interest vol. 2011, No. 115; Sep-Oct 2011: p.27-32
Key WordsNayef bin Abdel Aziz ;  Sunni - Shia Power Struggle ;  Saudi Arab ;  Riyadh ;  Monarchies ;  Egypt ;  Iraq ;  Libya