Saudi soccer: A game of geopolitics and religion, not just sports
By James M. Dorsey
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Saudi
Arabia's soccer player buying spree is about more than sports and the
diversification of the kingdom's economy.
It’s also about
geopolitics and religion for Saudi Arabia and, at least, some of the world’s top players moving to the
kingdom.
Recent high-profile
transfers include Real Madrid’s Karim Benzema, Chelsea’s N’Golo Kante and Kalidou
Koulibaly, Lens’ Seko Fofana, Lyon’s Moussa Dembele, and Manchester City’s Riyad
Mahrez.
To be sure,
mouthwatering transfer fees and salaries are a major driver.
But for
Muslims, so is a religious affinity with Saudi Arabia, the custodian of Islam’s
two holiest cities, Mecca and Medina.
As are
European culture wars that fuel anti-migrant, anti-Muslim, and
anti-black sentiment for Muslim and non-Muslim players of colour.
In addition,
European clubs have a mixed record of accommodating Muslim players' religious
needs, such as fasting during Ramadan and daily prayer times.
The exodus
of pious Muslim and non-Muslim players amounts to a backlash against a Western push for LGBTQ rights, privately rejected by some as
contradicting their faith.
Mr. Benzama
said he had decided to move to Saudi Arabia’s Al Ittihad “because I am Muslim and it’s a Muslim country. I’ve always wanted to live there… Most
importantly, it's a Muslim country, it's beloved, and it's beautiful.”
On the
website of Saudi Arabia’s
Al Arabiya television network, Bahraini analyst Omar Al-Ubaydli
asserted that “any practicing Muslim or non-White person living in Europe will
immediately understand that it’s probably not just about money.”
Mr.
Al-Ubaydli said: "To be clear, the millions of dollars on offer are
certainly a major factor. However, a mixture of arrogance and ignorance is
making the secular white Westerners who dominate European football – including
its media – underestimate Saudi Arabia’s attractiveness.”
Mr.
Al-Ubaydli concedes, "That's not to say Saudi Arabia is free from racism.
However, a quick look at the national team – and a quick stroll through the
grand mosque in Mecca – suggests that black people are unlikely to be subjected
to the sort of vitriolic hatred that is becoming increasingly frequent in
Europe.”
Mr.
Al-Ubaydli may have a point despite critics wondering why players did not seek
more harmonious, culturally more accommodating pastures earlier, even if
employment packages were less attractive in the past.
The answer
is likely severalfold.
Saudi Arabia
is a different place since Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman introduced
far-reaching social reforms that have significantly enhanced women's
professional and social opportunities, rolled back gender segregation, and
introduced a Western-style entertainment industry.
Moreover,
Mr. Bin Salman’s sports ambitions, part of the crown prince’s economic
diversification plans designed to reduce the kingdom’s dependency on oil
exports, make Saudi Arabia an exciting place to play soccer.
If Mr. Bin
Salman succeeds in turning the Saudi Professional League
into one of the world’s top five leagues, soccer will strengthen the crown prince's positioning of
the kingdom as a major power in a new multipolar world order in which middle
powers have greater strategic autonomy.
With
big-name Muslim players populating successful Saudi clubs, it would also boost
the kingdom’s positioning in a competition for religious soft power
in the Muslim world. Moreover, it would strengthen
Saudi Arabia’s bid to define what Islam stands for in the 21st
century.
Mr. Bin
Salman’s sports push suggests that the crown is confident that the dark side of
his reforms, brutal repression of human and political rights, ensures that
soccer will not emerge as a vehicle for dissent and protest.
Soccer has
taken the Middle East and North Africa by storm since Britain and France
introduced it in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The
region's most popular sport has since played a key role in anti-colonial
struggles and post-colonial anti-government protests.
Saudi Arabia
initially sought to reduce soccer’s profile in response to the 2011 popular
Arab revolts. Militant soccer fans played a vital
role in the revolts that toppled Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and Yemen’s leaders.
Spanish
consultants, hired before Mr. Bin Salman’s rise to power, were instructed to
develop Saudi Arabia's first-ever national sports strategy, emphasizing individual rather than
team sports.
De-emphasising
team sports was intended to limit soccer’s potential as a venue for anti-government
protests.
A Facebook
page entitled Nasrawi Revolution demanded in 2013 the resignation as head of Al
Nassr FC of Faisal bin Turki, a burly nephew of the late King Abdullah. A
YouTube video captured Mr. Bin Turki running off the soccer pitch after rudely
shoving a security official aside.
The campaign
against Mr. Bin Turki followed the unprecedented resignation in 2012 of Nawaf
bin Feisal, another member of the kingdom’s ruling Al-Saud family, as head of
the Saudi Football Federation (SFF), the first royal to be forced by public
pressure to step down.
Mr. Bin
Feisal’s resignation led to the election of a commoner, storied former player
Ahmed Eid Alharbi, in a country that has no elections. Alharbi was widely
viewed as a reformer and proponent of women’s soccer.
Mr. Bin
Salman's social reforms, enhanced confidence, and unbridled ambition improved
his chances of sports success compared
to a 1978 Saudi attempt to buy some of the
world’s top players
from Brazil.
Roberto
Rivelino, like Cristiano Ronaldo, the first soccer superstars to move to Saudi
Arabia this year,, was accorded a hero’s welcome when landed in the kingdom on
a Concorde to play for Al-Hilal 45 years ago.
Mr. Rivelino
was greeted at the airport by thousands of fans waving flags. He was whisked
away in a Rolls Royce to one of the most luxurious royal residences and honored
with a lavish multi-course banquet attended by Saudi ruling family members.
Saudi
Arabia’s rulers, then, like now, hoped soccer would strengthen Saudis’ national
identity.
Geopolitical
rivalry lurked in the background then too. Even though the Shah still ruled
Iran, Saudi rulers could not accept that its rival was the only Middle Eastern
state to qualify for the 1978 World Cup.
The Saudis
have since come a long way, qualifying for several World Cups, and beating
Argentina last December during the Qatar tournament.
Contrary to
1978, Saudi Arabia today is not pursuing soccer ambitions in isolation. Its acquisition
spree is part of a broad country overhaul. That enhances the kingdom’s chances
of soccer success but makes it dependent on Mr. Bin Salman's ability to
implement his broader economic reforms successfully. The jury is still out on
that.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an
award-winning journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and
the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M.
Dorsey.
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