A 2010 photo of Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal al-Saud, one of Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the billionaire investor, who is one of at least 11 prominent figures arrested and being detained in luxury hotels across Riyadh.

A 2010 photo of Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal al-Saud, one of Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the billionaire investor, who is one of at least 11 prominent figures arrested and being detained in luxury hotels across Riyadh. AP / Hassan Ammar, File

Saudi Arabia's Very Public, Very Risky Palace Intrigue

The arrest of 11 senior figures, including one of the world’s richest men, is a sign of the crown prince’s consolidation of power.

Details are still emerging about why, exactly, 11 of Saudi Arabia's richest and most influential businessmen and politicians are being held at the Ritz Carlton and other five-star hotels across Riyadh.

But one thing is clear: Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s purge Saturday of high-ranking leaders in the kingdom is yet another sign of the crown prince’s consolidation of power since he ascended to the position this summer.*

Among those detained by the crown prince’s anti-corruption committee over the weekend were Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the billionaire investor, and at least 10 other prominent figures. Separately, King Salman replaced the minister of the Saudi national guard, who controlled the branches of the military that weren’t yet under the crown prince’s control. Saturday’s move was announced on Al Arabiya, the Saudi-owned Arabic-language broadcaster, as part of an anti-corruption investigation. But the move comes just months after Crown Prince Mohammed is believed to have orchestrated the ouster of Prince Mohammed bin Nayef as interior minister. Mohammed bin Nayef had served as crown prince until Prince Mohammed’s elevation in June.

Although palace intrigue is often a feature of entrenched systems in which patronage plays an important role in determining who is in favor and who isn’t, what makes the present events in Saudi Arabia particularly surprising is that the monarchy rarely if ever airs its laundry in public. Princelings are privately sidelined and officials quietly demoted. The figurative defenestration of public figures such as Prince Alwaleed bin Talal could be a sign that the crown prince is sending a message to potential rivals to the throne. It also suggests that, if such rivals exist, the young crown prince is consolidating his power to fend them off.

“Nothing like this has ever happened before in the history of Saudi Arabia, giving the sense the kingdom is entering into unchartered waters with unknown consequences,” David Ottaway, Middle East Fellow at The Wilson Center, said in a statement. He added the actions “could well threaten the House of Saud’s stability for years to come.”

More than half of Saudi Arabia’s population is under the age of 25—and the kingdom’s youth is where the crown prince draws much of his support. But Saudi Arabia’s old guard, whose hold on the reins of power is slipping quickly, is much more skeptical of the pace of change under Prince Mohammed bin Salman. While much of the recent attention has focused on Saudi women gaining the right to drive, the crown prince’s other initiatives are the ones that have caused worry within the kingdom: The conflict in Yemen is not only seen as a proxy war against Iran, Saudi Arabia’s main regional rival, it is also seen largely as one that cannot be won; add to this the Saudi-led blockade of Qatar, the crown prince’s Vision 2030 program, which aims to reduce the kingdom’s economic dependence on oil, as well as his plan to sell 5 percent of Saudi Aramco, the state-run oil company. The crown prince says he believes the sale will yield $100 billion.

President Trump spoke to King Salman and a readout of the call provided by the White House did not discuss the Saudi arrests. It said the two leaders discussed the situation in Yemen, where Saudi-led forces are involved in a proxy war against Iran-backed rebels. Trump reportedly also thanked the king for spending $15 billion to buy the THAAD anti-ballistic missile defense system. Earlier, the U.S. president tweeted he hoped Aramco would be listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

But if economic reform is a cornerstone of the crown prince’s plan, then the arrest of Prince Alwaleed, one of the richest men in the world, is a funny way of showing it. The billionaire investor has large stakes in tech giants Apple, Twitter, and Lyft, as well as traditional investment targets like Citigroup and News Corp. He is estimated to be worth $17 billion, according to Forbes, and is a frequent interlocutor of Western leaders and companies. News of his detention prompted a nearly 10 percent slide in Kingdom Holding, his investment firm. Ottaway, the Middle East expert, pointed out that the arrest of Prince Alwaleed “could well dampen international interest in investing in the crown prince’s much-heralded Vision 2030 to make the non-oil private sector the new motor of the economy.”

That may well be true, but the crown prince is perhaps betting on the long game. With the Trump administration firmly in the corner of the ruling royal family and the last vestiges of opposition swept away, if all goes according to his plan, Prince Mohammed bin Salman will remake his country in his image. But as he awaits his ascension to the throne, amid the turmoil he has created, he might also find that uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.