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 Saudi ArabiaThe Attacks of September 11, 2001, and Their ConsequencesSaudi Arabia's relations with the U.S. were strained after the Sept.
11, 2001, terrorist attacks—15 of the 19 suicide bombers involved
were Saudis. Despite the monarchy's close ties to the West, much of the
extremely influential religious establishment has supported
anti-Americanism and Islamic militancy. In Aug. 2003, following the
U.S.-led war on Iraq in March and April 2003, the United States withdrew
its troops stationed in Saudi Arabia. The U.S. had maintained troops in
the country for the past decade, a source of great controversy in the
strongly conservative Islamic country. One of the major reasons given for
the Sept. 11 attacks by Saudi terrorist Osama bin Laden was the presence
of U.S. troops in the home of Islam's holiest sites, Medina and Mecca. On
May 12, 2003, suicide bombers killed 34, including 8 Americans, at housing
compounds for Westerners in Riyadh. Al-Qaeda was suspected. Saudi Arabia's
commitment to antiterrorist measures was again called into question by the
U.S. and other countries. In July, the U.S. Congress bitterly criticized
Saudi Arabia's alleged financing of terrorist organizations. While the
Saudi government arrested a sizable number of suspected terrorists, little
was done to quell Islamic militancy in the kingdom. Several attacks
against Westerners took place in 2003 and 2004.
In Feb. 2005, Saudi Arabia held its first elections ever: municipal
council elections to choose half of the new council members in Riyadh. The
other half continued to be appointed, in keeping with the previous Saudi
system. Women were not eligible to vote, and less than a third of eligible
voters registered.
In Aug. 2005, King Fahd bin 'Abdulaziz died. His half-brother Abdullah,
who had been the de facto ruler of the country for the past decade,
assumed the throne.
Saudi Arabia brokered talks between the Afghan government and Taliban
leaders in September 2008. In the talks, the first attempt to end the
protracted armed conflict, the Taliban said it is severing ties to
al-Qaeda.
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