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Khalid of Saudi Arabia

Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (Arabic: خالد بن عبد العزيز آل سعود, romanizedKhālid bin ʿAbd al ʿAzīz Āl Suʿūd; 13 February 1913 – 13 June 1982) was a Saudi Arabian statesman and politician who served as King and Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia from 25 March 1975 to his death in 1982. Prior to his ascension, he was Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia from 29 March 1965 to 25 March 1975. He was the fifth son of King Abdulaziz, the founder of modern Saudi Arabia.

Khalid
Official portrait, 1977
King and Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia
Reign25 March 1975 –
13 June 1982
Bay'ah25 March 1975
PredecessorFaisal
SuccessorFahd
Deputy Prime Minister
In office31 October 1962 –
25 March 1975
MonarchSaud
Faisal
RegentCrown Prince Faisal (1964)
Prime MinisterFaisal bin Abdulaziz
Born(1913-02-13)13 February 1913
Riyadh, Emirate of Riyadh
Died13 June 1982(1982-06-13) (aged 69)
Ta’if, Saudi Arabia
Burial13 June 1982
Spouses
List
Issue
List
  • Prince Bandar
  • Prince Abdullah
  • Princess Al Bandari
  • Princess Al Jawhara
  • Prince Fahd
  • Princess Nouf
  • Princess Moudi
  • Princess Hussa
  • Prince Mishaal
  • Prince Faisal
Names
Khalid bin Abdulaziz bin Abdul Rahman
DynastyHouse of Saud
FatherKing Abdulaziz
MotherAl Jawhara bint Musaed Al Jiluwi

Khalid was the son of King Abdulaziz and Al Jawhara bint Musaed Al Jiluwi. He assisted his half-brother Prince Faisal in his duties as foreign minister of Saudi Arabia. Khalid served as viceroy of the Hejaz region for a brief time in the 1930s. He visited the United States in 1943 together with Faisal, establishing relations between the two countries. He was appointed as the deputy prime minister of Saudi Arabia in 1962. After Khalid's full brother Prince Muhammad stepped aside from the royal succession, King Faisal named Khalid as crown prince in 1965.

Following the assassination of King Faisal in 1975, Khalid ascended to the throne. His reign saw both huge developments in the country due to increase in oil revenues and significant events in the Middle East. In 1979, a group of civilians seized the Grand Mosque of Mecca and sought but failed to kidnap Khalid. Saudi forces regained control over the mosque, but the seizure resulted in the introduction of stricter religious policies in Saudi Arabia. Khalid died in 1982 and was succeeded by his half-brother Fahd.

Early life and education Edit

 
King Abdulaziz, father of Khalid

Khalid was born in Qasr Al Hukm, Riyadh,[1] on 13 February 1913.[2][3] He was the fifth son of King Abdulaziz.[4] His mother, Al Jawhara bint Musaed, was from the important Al Jiluwi clan.[5] She was a second cousin of Abdulaziz, their paternal grandfathers Jiluwi bin Turki and Faisal bin Turki being brothers. This was in keeping with long-standing traditions in Arabia of marriage within the same lineage, and members of Al Jiluwi frequently intermarried with the members of Al Saud.[6]

Khalid had one full-brother, Muhammad.[7] His full sister, Al Anoud, married to the sons of King Abdulaziz's brother Sa'ad bin Abdul Rahman. She first married Saud bin Sa'ad. After Saud died, she married Fahd bin Sa'ad.[8] Khalid attended the Mufirej school founded by Sheikh Abdul Rahman Al Mufirej in 1879 based in the Sheikh Abdullah bin Abdul Latif Mosque in the Dukhna neighborhood of Riyadh.[9] There he acquired basic literacy skills and studied arithmetics.[9]

Early experience Edit

Aged 14, Khalid was sent by Abdulaziz as his representative to the desert tribes to hear their concerns and problems.[10] In 1928 he and his brother Muhammad were given the task of observing the Transjordan border during the Ikhwan revolt.[11] Prince Khalid's preparation for ruling a modern state started through his visits with his brother Prince Faisal on foreign missions. He served as advisor to Faisal.[12] Prince Khalid became an international figure due to his visits and service as a Saudi representative.[12] He was more liberal in informing the press about the rationale behind foreign policy decisions.[5]

Prince Khalid was made acting viceroy of Hejaz in early 1932 when his full brother Prince Muhammad carried out the task badly.[13] The same year he was named as viceroy of Hejaz, replacing Prince Faisal in the post, who was named minister of foreign affairs, and Prince Khalid's term lasted until 1934.[14] Prince Khalid joined the Saudi army led by his older brother Prince Faisal and fought against Yemeni forces in 1934.[10] After the war, Prince Khalid served as the chairman of the Saudi delegation at the Taif Conference with Yemen in 1934.[12][15] This was a diplomatic move that led to the Taif Treaty later that year which was signed by Prince Khalid on behalf of Saudi Arabia and Abdullah Al Wazeer on behalf of Yemen.[12][16]

Prince Khalid was named interior minister in 1934[14] and was the Saudi representative at the peace negotiations in Yemen in 1935.[17] In 1939, he participated in the St. James Conference on Palestine in London as the minister of interior as well as an assistant to Prince Faisal, head of the Saudi delegation.[12][18]

 
Prince Khalid (right) and Prince Faisal visiting the United States in 1943

In October 1943 Prince Faisal and Prince Khalid visited the United States representing their father, upon the July 1943 invitation of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[19] The visit was the earliest high-level contact between Saudi Arabia and the USA.[19][20] Vice President Henry A. Wallace organized a dinner for them at the White House.[21] They also met with President Roosevelt.[22] They stayed at the official government guest house, Blair House, and visited the West Coast by a special train that was officially provided by the U.S. government.[21] A foreign diplomat described Prince Khalid following the visit as the "nicest man in Saudi Arabia."[23]

However, after this visit and during the most of the 1950s Prince Khalid did not play a significant role in the government partly due to the fact that his half-brother Mansour bin Abdulaziz and his nephew Abdullah bin Faisal became much more dominant political figures.[11] Prince Khalid reemerged as a significant figure in 1960 when King Saud named him acting prime minister.[11] In addition, on 31 October 1962 he was appointed deputy prime minister in the new cabinet formed by Crown Prince Faisal.[19][24] This move indicated his prominence in the line of succession.[25][26] During the rivalry between Crown Prince Faisal and King Saud, Prince Khalid supported the former together with other princes who were members of the Al Jiluwi branch of Al Saud through maternal lineage or marriage.[27] The group was led by Prince Muhammad, Prince Khalid and Prince Abdullah.[27]

At the beginning of King Faisal's reign Prince Khalid was made a member of the council which had been established by the king to guide the succession issues.[28]

Crown prince Edit

Khalid's older full-brother Prince Muhammad declined a place in the succession.[29] Khalid also refused the offer of King Faisal to be named as crown prince several times until March 1965.[17] In addition, he asked King Faisal to remove him from the position various times.[17] However, the King persuaded Khalid that his presence as crown prince was necessary to keep peace within the House of Saud.[17] One of the speculations about Prince Khalid's selection as heir designate was his lack of predilection for politics. In short, by selecting him as heir designate the royal family could create intra-familial consensus.[30]

Khalid was named crown prince on 29 March 1965.[31][32] King Faisal announced Khalid's appointment on the same day through a broadcast over Mecca Radio:[33]

Since the position of Crown Prince is a fundamental factor for the continuation and firmness of the reign, now the country enjoys stability, advancement and prosperity. Thanks to its adherence to Islam. It gives me great pleasure to announce...that I have chosen my brother Prince Khalid bin Abdulaziz as Crown Prince to rule after me.

Prince Khalid was also named first deputy prime minister following his appointment as crown prince.[12][34] Although Joseph A. Kéchichian argues that Crown Prince Khalid was not active in daily issues, but acted as a representative during King Faisal's absences in meetings or ceremonies,[25] he governed all organisational and executive powers of the Council of Ministers.[17] He also dealt with the affairs of the Governorate of Mecca on behalf of King Faisal.[12] However, in 1968 Crown Prince Khalid expressed his desire not to preside over the Council of Ministers against King Faisal's request which led to the appointment of Prince Fahd as second deputy prime minister with the task of leading the Council meetings.[35]

In 1970 Crown Prince Khalid led Saudi delegations to Jordan to meet the needs of Palestinians who were seriously affected from Israel's attacks.[36] According to the declassified US diplomatic documents of 1971, he enjoyed the support of the tribal chiefs, religious authorities and of Prince Abdullah, head of the Saudi National Guard, during this period.[37]

Reign Edit

 
King Khalid and Crown Prince Fahd at a ceremony

Khalid succeeded to the throne on 25 March 1975 when King Faisal was assassinated.[38][39] He was proclaimed king after a meeting of senior members of Al Saud: his uncle Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman and his brothers Muhammad, Nasser, Saad, Fahd, and Abdullah.[40] The meeting occurred just hours after the assassination of King Faisal.[25] Khalid also became the de facto prime minister of Saudi Arabia and the chairman of two significant councils, namely the Higher Council for Administrative Reform and the Supreme Council for National Security.[13][41]

Although there are various reports stating that King Khalid was only a figurehead during his reign,[42] he was in fact not a figurehead, but the final decision-maker on all major policy issues during his reign.[43][44] King Faisal established a system in which the king was the final mediator in family problems.[45] King Khalid reduced the power of the Sudairi Seven concerning succession in 1977 when he was in London for treatment.[28] Following the unsuccessful attempt of the Sudairi Seven to overthrow King Khalid and to install one of their own, Prince Sultan, as deputy crown prince instead of Prince Abdullah, the King asked Crown Prince Fahd and Prince Abdullah to fully obey the existing succession plan without any change.[28][46] King Khalid also closely checked the activities of Crown Prince Fahd due to the latter's clear support for the pro-Western policies and hostile tendency against Iran and Shia population of Saudi Arabia.[47]

In addition, King Khalid was not an ineffective leader.[40] Although he seemed to be reluctant to rule the country initially, he later warmed to the throne and displayed an apparent interest in improving the education, health-care and infrastructure of the country during his seven-year reign.[48] During the first two years of his reign he was not active in politics due to his poor health condition, but later he became much more active as a result of his much better health.[49]

King Khalid is also considered to have been a genial caretaker during his reign.[50] However, he failed to monopolize power during his reign, leading to the empowerment of the princes who had been in powerful posts in late King Faisal's reign.[51] He had some personal characteristics that made him a respected king. He was admired as an honest man who managed to have good relations with the traditional establishment of Saudi Arabia.[40] Therefore, he was granted support by other princes and powerful forces of the country.[40] Ghadah Alghunaim, a board member of the King Abdulaziz Center for National Dialogue, argues in her doctoral dissertation that Khalid's reign was a golden era and the "era of goodness" for the country.[52]

Domestic affairs Edit

 
King Khalid in 1979

King Khalid's reign was of massive development in Saudi Arabia and therefore, the country became one of the richest countries in that the oil revenues became $40 billion in 1977 and $90 billion in 1980.[53]

King Khalid primarily dealt with domestic affairs with special focus on agricultural development.[41] The industrial cities of Jubail and Yanbu were created during the early days of his reign.[32][54] In 1975 the Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu was founded to run the cities, and its first secretary general was Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki.[55] Jeddah Port Authority was established in September 1976 to expand the capacity of the existing port.[56] The number of schools increased during his reign. In 1975, there were 3,028 elementary schools, 649 secondary schools and 182 high schools. In 1980, there were 5,373 elementary, 1,377 secondary and 456 high schools.[57] The other significant development in the field of education during his reign was the establishment of King Faisal University.[12] The others were the Higher Education Center for Women which was opened in 1976 as well as colleges of medicine and pharmacology established specifically for female students.[57]

Immediately following his ascension to the throne King Khalid issued a general amnesty which allowed the release of political prisoners who had been members of the left wing movements and the return of those who had been in exile to Saudi Arabia.[58] Most of them were arrested during the reign of King Faisal.[59]

In terms of administrative functions King Khalid followed the structure established by King Faisal in which both royals and non-royals occupied significant positions.[60] The political power consolidation of the ruling family was intensified during his reign.[61] However, King Khalid expanded the role of nonroyals in bureaucracy without diminishing the roles of royal family members.[60] These non-royals were mostly graduates of foreign universities, and by 1977 ten of the thirty-six members in the council of ministers were those who received a master's or doctorate degree from Western universities.[62]

The strict financial policies of King Faisal, coupled with the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis, created a financial windfall that fueled development and led to a commercial and economic boom in the country. Notable achievements in his reign included the institution of the second Five-Year Plan in 1975,[63] which aimed to build up Saudi infrastructure and health care.[14] The planned budget for the development plan was $142 billion.[64] Although not all goals were achieved, the second development plan was much more successful than the first one.[63] King Khalid also launched the Kingdom's third development plan with the budget of $250 billion in May 1980.[48]

In a reorganization of the council of ministers on 30 March 1975, King Khalid named Crown Prince Fahd deputy prime minister and Prince Abdullah second deputy prime minister.[65][66] Appointment of Prince Fahd as both crown prince and first deputy prime minister made him much powerful figure in contrast to the status of King Khaled when he was crown prince under King Faisal reign.[67] Prince Nayef was named minister of interior succeeding Prince Fahd on 30 March 1975.[68] King Khalid also appointed Prince Saud as the foreign affairs minister in March 1975.[69]

In addition to the existing ministerial bodies six new ones were established by King Khalid.[70] One of them was the ministry of municipal and rural affairs established in October 1975, and Prince Majid was appointed minister.[27][71] Additionally, Prince Mutaib was appointed minister of public works and housing that was also established by King Khalid in October 1975.[71] These two appointments were a move to reduce the power of Sudairi Seven in the cabinet.[27] Besides, the ministry of industry and electricity, the ministry of higher education, the ministry of post, telegraph, and telephone and the ministry of planning were all founded by King Khalid.[12][70] In the same government reshuffle he removed Prince Musaid, his uncle, from the post of finance minister which he had been held since 16 March 1962,[72] and Mohammed bin Ali Aba Al Khail was made new finance minister.[73] King Khalid also expanded the internal structure of some ministries, for instance, in 1976 the Public Security Administration was created to preserve the public order and tranquility, to promote of the public health, safety, and morals, and to detect and punish the crimes, and attached it to the ministry of interior.[74]

The members of the inner family council headed by King Khalid included his brothers, namely Prince Mohammad, Crown Prince Fahd, Prince Abdullah, Prince Sultan, and Prince Abdul Muhsin and two of his uncles, Prince Ahmed and Prince Musaid.[75] Prince Mohammad was one of King Khalid's key advisors.[65] In fact, they acted together on almost all political issues.[25] Another of his advisors was Maarouf al-Dawalibi, former Prime Minister of Syria and founder of the Islamic Socialist Front.[76]

Kamal Adham served as the president of Al Mukhabarat Al A'amah or the general intelligence directorate until 19 January 1979[77] which he had held since 1965.[78] Adham's successor in the post was Turki bin Faisal.[78]

In 1977 a coup attempt by Saudi Air Force personnel, backed by the Libyan Intelligence Service, was discovered and quickly defeated.[79]

Saudi Arabia acquired full control of Aramco in 1980 during his reign and the company was renamed as Saudi Aramco.[38][80] In March 1980 King Khalid established a constitutional committee with eight members under the presidency of Prince Nayef.[81] However, the committee could not manage to produce the basic law that had been promised.[82] King Khalid implemented a significant policy towards bedouins through a decree dated 15 March 1981 which required them to settle in a fixed place.[83]

In November 1979, Khalid's reign saw two major local incidents which have had significant effects on the politics of Saudi Arabia: the Grand Mosque seizure and the Qatif Uprising.

Grand Mosque seizure Edit

Some foreign observers thought traditionalism was no longer a strong force in Saudi Arabia. This idea was disproved when at least 500 dissidents invaded and seized the Grand Mosque in Mecca on 20 November 1979.[84] The same day two other raids were made by the groups related to these dissidents in Medina and Taif.[85] The dissidents in Medina were immediately defeated by the Saudi troops.[85] The goal of the dissidents in Taif was to abduct King Khalid who escaped the attack due to the changes in his plans.[85]

When the first news of the attack in Mecca reached Riyadh, the initial reaction of King Khalid was to consult the ulama, to get permission to use military force to eject the attackers. The ulama hesitated and refrained from a definite answer.[84] Only after the assault had been underway for 36 hours did some ulama allow the use of force.[84] At the time of the event, Crown Prince Fahd was in Tunisia for a meeting of the Arab Summit and the commander of the National Guard Prince Abdullah was in Morocco for an official visit.[86] Therefore, King Khalid assigned the responsibility to Prince Sultan, the minister of defense, and Prince Nayef, the minister of interior, to deal with the incident.[86]

The Grand Mosque was regained by Saudi forces on 4 December 1979[87] and 63 rebels were executed on 9 January 1980 in eight different cities.[88] The executions were decreed by King Khalid after the edict issued by ulemas.[88] Although the Saudi government under King Khalid executed the rebels, the religious establishment that inspired them were given greater powers.[89] And ulema successfully pressed King Khalid to realize their intentions.[90]

1979 Qatif Uprising Edit

In November 1979, Shiites in the Eastern Province, particularly in Qatif and in nearby villages, organized protests. Several demonstrators were arrested.[91] The major reason for the uprising was negative conditions in villages. In the spring of 1979, King Khalid announced an annual budget of 160 billion riyals, indicating that this budget would be employed to improve the living conditions of all Saudi citizens.[91] However, the budget did not make any significant contribution to the services.[91] Instead, the royal family benefitted from the budget.[91] Following the release of the demonstrators in February 1980, King Khalid and Crown Prince Fahd visited the Eastern region from town to town.[92] Due to King Khalid's policy change towards the Shiite population in the region, they positively modified their approach towards the Saudi government and abandoned their oppositional ideas and actions.[91]

International relations Edit

Although King Khalid did not have an extensive interest in foreign affairs as much as King Faisal had,[45] his reign witnessed many important international events, including the Iranian Revolution, the assassination of Anwar Sadat and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, all of which had significant effects for Saudi Arabia. In addition, the Saudi government led by King Khalid was much more active in improving the relations of Saudi Arabia with neighbouring states in contrast to the reign of Faisal.[19] His government was also much more moderate and less conservative in regard to the Arab–Israeli conflict than that of King Faisal.[93] Kamal Adham was King Khalid's key counsellor on foreign policy during his reign from 1975 to 1982.[94][95]

King Khalid initiated a move to bring in foreign labor to help with the country's development.[96]

 
King Khalid praying at a mosque with Prince Abdullah

1975–1980 Edit

In April 1975, King Khalid's first diplomatic coup was the conclusion of a demarcation agreement concerning the Al Buraymi Oasis, where the frontiers of Abu Dhabi, Oman and Saudi Arabia meet.[39] Claims and counterclaims over this frontier had exacerbated relations among them for years. Therefore, King Khalid aimed at settling this long-standing boundary disputes.[41] The conclusion of negotiations under King Khalid added to his stature as a statesman.[14] Another significant event was the visit of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran to Riyadh on 28 April 1975.[97][98] In June 1975, Saudi Arabia appointed an ambassador to the United Arab Emirates, which also assigned an ambassador to Saudi Arabia the same date.[19]

 
King Khalid meeting President Sadat of Egypt on his arrival to Cairo, July 1975

His first official visit as the King of Saudi Arabia was to Cairo, Egypt in mid-July 1975.[99] The visit was an indication of Saudi Arabia's support of the initiatives of Anwar Sadat concerning peace settlement between the Arabs and Israel.[99] King Khalid visited Damascus in December 1975 and met with Syrian President Hafez Assad to discuss the ways to support Muslims in Lebanon, where a civil war began in April 1975.[15][45] He declared the Saudi Arabia's support to Syria's role in the war.[100]

Diplomatic relations with the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen were reestablished in March 1976.[19] A month later, in April 1976, King Khalid made state visits to all of the Gulf states in the hope of promoting closer relations with his peninsular neighbors.[14][19] On 24 May 1976 King Khalid visited Tehran to meet with Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.[101] He also called numerous summits and inaugurated the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in 1981 that is seen an outcome of his early visits.[14][38] Then GCC was established along with Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.[38]

One of the significant international moves occurred in the reign of King Khalid was the establishment of the Safari Club, of which the treaty was signed on 1 September 1976.[102] It was a secret organization with the participation of Egypt, France, Iran, Morocco and Saudi Arabia to eliminate the potential influence of communism in the region.[102] The treaty was signed by Kamal Adham on behalf of Saudi Arabia.[102] King Khalid organized a conference in Riyadh in October 1976 to resolve the ongoing Lebanese civil war, and the conference contributed to end the war.[10] The same month he also visited Pakistan, and the visit was mostly concerned with Saudi Arabia's financial support for the joint developmental projects in Pakistan.[103] In addition, he visited Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore and Karachi, and initiated the construction of King Faisal Mosque in Islamabad.[104]

On 19 May 1977, King Khalid met Hafez Assad and Anwar Sadat in Riyadh to initiate a coordinated policy on the Arab–Israeli conflict.[105] He also met Prime Minister of Pakistan Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in Riyadh on 18 June 1977.[105] Lebanese Foreign Minister Fuad Butrus was received by King Khalid in Riyadh on 5 July 1977 to discuss the current situation in Lebanon.[105] On 10 July 1977, Yen Chia-kan, President of Taiwan, visited Saudi Arabia and was received by the King in Riyadh.[105] Two days later, on 12 July 1977, King Khalid and Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre met in Jeddah.[105] Sudanese President Jaafar Nimeiry and King Khalid met in Ta'if on 2 August 1977.[105] King Khalid's next visitors were Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti and Foreign Minister Arnaldo Forlani who visited Saudi Arabia on 5–6 August.[106]

 
King Khalid with U.S. President Jimmy Carter, 27 October 1978

In early January 1978 the US President Jimmy Carter paid an official visit to Riyadh and met King Khalid to discuss the Middle East peace efforts.[107] Immediately after this meeting Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi visited King Khalid on 11 January 1978 to discuss some topics related to the security of the region.[98] Following King Khalid's heart surgery at the Cleveland Clinic on 3 October 1978 Jimmy Carter invited him to the White House for lunch, and they met on 27 October.[108] The Camp David accord which was signed by Egypt and Israel in September 1978 severely affected the Saudi–Egyptian alliance, and Saudi Arabia's diplomatic relations with Egypt were terminated following the Baghdad Conference in November 1978.[19] The same year King Khalid visited France to finalize the procurement of $24 billion military equipment, namely tanks, helicopters, and a complete radar network which was capable of covering the entire Red Sea.[15] Much of this equipment was sent to North Yemen, Sudan, and Somalia to assist their resistance against communism.[15]

Following the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, King Khalid sent Khomeini a congratulatory message, stating that Islamic solidarity could be the basis for closer relations of two countries.[109] He also argued that with the foundation of the Islamic Republic in Iran there were no obstacles that inhibited the cooperation between two countries.[110] In addition, King Khalid requested the secretary-general of the Organization of the Islamic Conference to congratulate the new Iranian government.[111] However, his initiatives were unsuccessful in that Saudi Arabia unofficially supported Iraq against Iran in the Iran–Iraq War in 1980.[109]

On 24 December 1979 Pakistan President Zia ul Haq visited Riyadh and met King Khalid in relation to the Grand Mosque crisis which had been solved at the beginning of the month.[103]

1980–1982 Edit

In April 1980 King Khalid cancelled the state visit to Britain as a protest over the broadcasting of Death of a Princess on 9 April 1980 in the United Kingdom that narrated the execution of Misha'al bin Fahd, the granddaughter of Prince Mohammad bin Abdulaziz.[112] King Khalid had been invited by Queen Elizabeth II in June 1979,[112] following the Queen's visit to Saudi Arabia in February 1979, during which King Khalid gave her a diamond necklace.[113] In addition, the British ambassador was expelled from Saudi Arabia for five months due to the broadcasting of the documentary on ITV.[114][115] Egyptian actress Suzan Abu Talib or Sawsan Badr and other actors who had roles in the documentary were banned from entering Saudi Arabia.[115]

King Khalid in the capacity of the chairman of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation assisted Pakistani authorities to end the hijacking of the Pakistan International Airlines Flight 326 on 2 March 1981 first to Kabul and to Damascus on the request of President Zia ul Haq.[103] Upon meeting then-British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in Saudi Arabia in April 1981,[116] King Khalid is reputed to have said he would be happy to discuss falcons with her, but for all matters of administration she should talk to Crown Prince Fahd.[4][42] King Khalid's visit to the United Kingdom that had been cancelled in 1980 was realized on 9 June 1981 for four days.[117] Next he visited Spain on 15 June 1981.[118]

King Khalid asked the US President Jimmy Carter to sell advanced fighter planes to Saudi Arabia to assist in countering communist aggression in the area.[96] The delivery of the first of sixty F-15s under the agreement approved by Carter arrived in the Kingdom in 1982. He purchased a Boeing 747 with an operating room should he be stricken while on his travels.[96] Jimmy Carter in his memoirs stated that both King Khalid and then Crown Prince Fahd assured him of "their unequivocal support for Sadat", but they would realize no concrete move in this direction, at least not publicly.[119]

Views Edit

Look after the weak, for the strong can look after themselves.

— King Khalid[120]

In June 1974 when he was Crown Prince Khalid argued that France taught the Syrians to be stubborn, and the British instilled the idea for the Arabs to differ with each other.[121]

At the very beginning of his reign King Khalid stated "Islamic law is and will remain our standard, our source of inspiration, and our goal."[53] and "We are against communism and we will protect ourselves against it by all means. If the United States pressed Israel into making a just peace settlement, Russia would not acquire a single foothold in the Middle East."[15]

He questioned the support of the US administration to Greece instead of Turkey in late May 1976 citing Turkey's contributions in the Korean War during the 1950s.[122] In an interview on BBC Summary of World Broadcasts he expressed the following views on Zionism, Communism and colonialism on 3 July 1979: "We regard Zionism, communism and colonialism as a trinity allied against Arab and Islamic rights and aspirations. Our policy is based on that understanding, and it is natural for us to be always subjected to biased and poisonous campaigns at the hand of that very trinity."[123] Following the defeat of invaders of Grand Mosque King Khalid expressed the following: "if [Juhayman] al Otaibi and his cohorts had targeted palaces rather than the Grand Mosque [in their 1979 uprising] the results of the uprising might have been very different."[124]

At the third summit of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Taif in January 1981 he declared non-alignment of Saudi Arabia concerning the tensions between the USA and Soviet Union: "Our loyalty must be neither to an eastern bloc nor to a western bloc. The security of the Islamic nation will not be assured by joining a military alliance, nor by taking refuge under the umbrella of a superpower."[125]

Personal life Edit

 
King Khalid with his grandchildren in the late 1970s

King Khalid married four times and was the father of ten children. While the sequence in seniority of his wives is not known clearly, his wives were:

  • Latifa bint Ahmed Al Sudairi. Latifa was a daughter of King Abdulaziz's maternal uncle and Khalid was fifteen when he married her.[9] They had no children.[72]
  • Tarfa bint Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman Al Saud. She was a daughter of his uncle, Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman.[9] They had no children.[72]
  • Noura bint Turki bin Abdulaziz bin Abdullah bin Turki Al Saud.[72] She was the mother of Khalid's elder sons, Prince Bandar and Prince Abdullah[9] and his elder daughter, Al Bandari. Noura bint Turki died at age 95 on 12 September 2011.[126]
  • Seeta bint Fahd Al Damir[127] had seven children with King Khalid: Al Jawhara, Fahd (died young), Nouf, Moudi, Hussa, Mishaal, and Faisal. She was from the Ujman tribe in Al Badiyah and was a niece of Wasmiyah Al Damir, wife of Abdullah bin Jiluwi.[128] She died on 25 December 2012 at the age of 90.[129]

Khalid had four sons and six daughters.[130] Prince Bandar, the eldest son of King Khalid, was born in 1935.[25][131] He was one of the members of Al Saud Family Council established by Crown Prince Abdullah in June 2000 to discuss private issues such as business activities of princes and marriages of princess to individuals who were not member of House of Saud.[132] Prince Bandar died in Mecca in March 2018.[133] His youngest child, Prince Faisal, is the former governor of Asir Province and a member of the Allegiance Council.

Khalid's eldest daughter, Princess Al Bandari, married her cousin Prince Badr, son of Prince Abdul Muhsin.[57] Another of his daughters, Princess Hussa, married Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki, grandson of Turki I bin Abdulaziz.[134] She died at the age of 59 in November 2010.[135] Two of his daughters married the sons of Abdullah bin Faisal: Princess Al Jawhara married Khalid bin Abdullah Al Saud and has a son, Mohammed, and Princess Nouf married Mohammed bin Abdullah and has four children, including Noura.[136]

Another daughter of Khalid, Moudi, married Prince Abdul Rahman bin Faisal and is the general secretary of the King Khalid Foundation and the Al Nahda Foundation, and a former member of the Consultative Assembly.[137][138] One of Khalid's daughters, Mishael bint Khalid died in Riyadh in April 2014.[139]

Personality, pastimes and property Edit

 
Falconry was an enjoyed pastime of King Khalid.

Khalid was described as warm, cheerful, attentive and devout and was adored by his sisters and brothers.[50] An American journalist from Christian Science Monitor, John K. Cooley, following his observation of King Khalid at majlis stated that he carefully listened to his subjects showing his sense of humor and amused smile.[43] During the first year of his rule King Khalid was said by his close observers to be an open and good man without any pretense representing the best example of Arab gentlemanly culture.[43] His favourite topics to discuss at majlis with visitors were the problems related to education and youth.[43]

Khalid had the capacity to settle conflicts which was first recognized by his father.[17] It was the reason for sending him to Yemen in 1935 to handle the problems with local people.[17] During his kingship Khalid acted as a mediator between the Sudairi brothers and Prince Abdullah although he was much closer to the latter.[66]

Falconry and horse-riding were Khalid's favorite pastimes.[3][140] He was described as a man of the desert.[40] He had one of the best falcon collections.[141] In the late 1970s King Khalid was given a rare Alberta-trained gyrfalcon by the Canadian government as a gift.[142] Hunting was also one of his favorites, and he went to African countries to participate in hunting safaris when he was young.[141] Khalid bought the first Toyota Landcruiser in 1955 for falconry.[143] In December 1975 he bought the then longest Cadillac at 25 feet and 2 inches long again for falconry,[144] and Time magazine called it "Khalidillac".[56] In June 1974 while he was Crown Prince in a meeting with US Foreign Minister Henry Kissinger Khalid stated that he had been interested in hunting with hawks for forty years.[121]

In the same meeting Kissinger asked him where he lived.[121] In response he stated that he lived in Riyadh, but in the summer he stayed in Taif.[121] King Khalid owned a desert farm outside Riyadh at Um Hamam.[145] He bought Beechwood House in the north London suburb of Highgate for £1.9 million in March 1977[146] to use following two operations on his hip in the Wellington Hospital in London.[147]

Health Edit

When Khalid bin Abdulaziz was crown prince, he had a massive heart attack in 1970 and had a heart surgery in 1972 at the Cleveland Clinic in the United States.[148] Since King Khalid suffered from heart ailment for a long period of time, Crown Prince Fahd was in charge of ruling the country.[149] On 3 October 1978, he underwent a second heart surgery again in Cleveland.[148][150] He also had a hip operation at Wellington Hospital in London in 1976.[151][152][153] In February 1980, King Khalid had a minor heart attack.[50]

Death and funeral Edit

King Khalid died on 13 June 1982 due to a heart attack[145][149] in his summer palace in Taif.[154] On the same day his body was brought from Taif to Mecca. After funeral prayers at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, King Khalid was buried in Al Oud cemetery in Riyadh.[149][155] Leaders of Qatar, Kuwait, Djibouti, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain,[149] as well as President of Egypt Hosni Mubarak, participated in the funeral.[156]

Legacy Edit

King Khalid International Airport, King Khalid University, King Khalid Eye Specialist Hospital in Riyadh, King Khalid Military City and King Khalid Medical City in the Eastern province were all named after him.[96][157] In Riyadh there is also a mosque named after him, King Khalid Mosque, serving the Muslims since 1988.[158] In Jeddah a bridge is named after King Khalid.[159] There is a research center on wildlife in Saudi Arabia named after him, Khalid Wildlife Research Centre.[160]

In addition, his family established King Khalid Foundation, which is being headed by his son, Abdullah bin Khalid.[161] The foundation awards individuals who have achievements in the fields of corporate social responsibility, nonprofit management and social innovation.[162]

Awards Edit

In January 1981 King Khalid was awarded by the United Nations (UN) a gold medal which is the UN's highest decoration for the statesmen who significantly contributed to peace and cooperation worldwide.[163] King Khalid also received the King Faisal International Prize for Service to Islam due to his efforts in support of Islamic solidarity in 1981.[164]

Honours Edit

Styles of
King Khalid
 
Reference styleHis Majesty
Spoken styleYour Majesty

Foreign honours Edit

Ancestry Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

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  157. ^ Saeed Al Asmari (7 June 2013). "King Khalid Medical City Project earns Mideast design award". Arab News. Dammam. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  158. ^ "Our story". King Khalid Foundation. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  159. ^ "Maintenance of King Khalid bridge". Construction Week. 2016. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  160. ^ "Head Veterinarian, King Khalid Wildlife Research Centre, Saudi Arabia". Zoological Society of London. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  161. ^ . King Khalid Foundation. Archived from the original on 18 June 2013. Retrieved 9 August 2013.
  162. ^ "King Khalid Awards". King Khalid Foundation. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  163. ^ Muhammed Azhar Ali Khan (28 January 1981). "King Khalid stars at summit". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
  164. ^ (in Arabic). King Khalid Award. Archived from the original on 24 January 2012. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  165. ^ (PDF). Istiadat. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 July 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
  166. ^ "Decree A04035-04035" (PDF). Spanish Official Journal. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  167. ^ "Decree A23482-23482" (PDF). Spanish Official Journal. Retrieved 1 September 2020.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to King Khalid bin Abdulaziz at Wikimedia Commons
Khalid of Saudi Arabia
Born: 1913 Died: 1982
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Saudi Arabia
1975–1982
Succeeded by
Saudi Arabian royalty
Preceded by Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia
1965–1975
Succeeded by
Fahd
Political offices
Preceded by
Faisal
Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia
1975–1982
Succeeded by
Fahd

khalid, saudi, arabia, king, khalid, redirects, here, airport, king, khalid, international, airport, khalid, abdulaziz, saud, arabic, خالد, بن, عبد, العزيز, آل, سعود, romanized, khālid, ʿabd, ʿazīz, suʿūd, february, 1913, june, 1982, saudi, arabian, statesman,. King Khalid redirects here For the airport see King Khalid International Airport Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud Arabic خالد بن عبد العزيز آل سعود romanized Khalid bin ʿAbd al ʿAziz Al Suʿud 13 February 1913 13 June 1982 was a Saudi Arabian statesman and politician who served as King and Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia from 25 March 1975 to his death in 1982 Prior to his ascension he was Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia from 29 March 1965 to 25 March 1975 He was the fifth son of King Abdulaziz the founder of modern Saudi Arabia KhalidOfficial portrait 1977King and Prime Minister of Saudi ArabiaReign25 March 1975 13 June 1982Bay ah25 March 1975PredecessorFaisalSuccessorFahdDeputy Prime MinisterIn office31 October 1962 25 March 1975MonarchSaudFaisalRegentCrown Prince Faisal 1964 Prime MinisterFaisal bin AbdulazizBorn 1913 02 13 13 February 1913Riyadh Emirate of RiyadhDied13 June 1982 1982 06 13 aged 69 Ta if Saudi ArabiaBurial13 June 1982Al Oud cemetery RiyadhSpousesList Latifa bint Ahmed Al SudairiTarfa bint Abdullah Al SaudNoura bint Turki Al SaudSeeta bint Fahd Al DamirIssueList Prince BandarPrince AbdullahPrincess Al BandariPrincess Al JawharaPrince FahdPrincess NoufPrincess MoudiPrincess HussaPrince MishaalPrince FaisalNamesKhalid bin Abdulaziz bin Abdul RahmanDynastyHouse of SaudFatherKing AbdulazizMotherAl Jawhara bint Musaed Al JiluwiKhalid was the son of King Abdulaziz and Al Jawhara bint Musaed Al Jiluwi He assisted his half brother Prince Faisal in his duties as foreign minister of Saudi Arabia Khalid served as viceroy of the Hejaz region for a brief time in the 1930s He visited the United States in 1943 together with Faisal establishing relations between the two countries He was appointed as the deputy prime minister of Saudi Arabia in 1962 After Khalid s full brother Prince Muhammad stepped aside from the royal succession King Faisal named Khalid as crown prince in 1965 Following the assassination of King Faisal in 1975 Khalid ascended to the throne His reign saw both huge developments in the country due to increase in oil revenues and significant events in the Middle East In 1979 a group of civilians seized the Grand Mosque of Mecca and sought but failed to kidnap Khalid Saudi forces regained control over the mosque but the seizure resulted in the introduction of stricter religious policies in Saudi Arabia Khalid died in 1982 and was succeeded by his half brother Fahd Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early experience 3 Crown prince 4 Reign 4 1 Domestic affairs 4 1 1 Grand Mosque seizure 4 1 2 1979 Qatif Uprising 4 2 International relations 4 2 1 1975 1980 4 2 2 1980 1982 5 Views 6 Personal life 6 1 Personality pastimes and property 6 2 Health 7 Death and funeral 8 Legacy 8 1 Awards 9 Honours 9 1 Foreign honours 10 Ancestry 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksEarly life and education Edit nbsp King Abdulaziz father of KhalidKhalid was born in Qasr Al Hukm Riyadh 1 on 13 February 1913 2 3 He was the fifth son of King Abdulaziz 4 His mother Al Jawhara bint Musaed was from the important Al Jiluwi clan 5 She was a second cousin of Abdulaziz their paternal grandfathers Jiluwi bin Turki and Faisal bin Turki being brothers This was in keeping with long standing traditions in Arabia of marriage within the same lineage and members of Al Jiluwi frequently intermarried with the members of Al Saud 6 Khalid had one full brother Muhammad 7 His full sister Al Anoud married to the sons of King Abdulaziz s brother Sa ad bin Abdul Rahman She first married Saud bin Sa ad After Saud died she married Fahd bin Sa ad 8 Khalid attended the Mufirej school founded by Sheikh Abdul Rahman Al Mufirej in 1879 based in the Sheikh Abdullah bin Abdul Latif Mosque in the Dukhna neighborhood of Riyadh 9 There he acquired basic literacy skills and studied arithmetics 9 Early experience EditAged 14 Khalid was sent by Abdulaziz as his representative to the desert tribes to hear their concerns and problems 10 In 1928 he and his brother Muhammad were given the task of observing the Transjordan border during the Ikhwan revolt 11 Prince Khalid s preparation for ruling a modern state started through his visits with his brother Prince Faisal on foreign missions He served as advisor to Faisal 12 Prince Khalid became an international figure due to his visits and service as a Saudi representative 12 He was more liberal in informing the press about the rationale behind foreign policy decisions 5 Prince Khalid was made acting viceroy of Hejaz in early 1932 when his full brother Prince Muhammad carried out the task badly 13 The same year he was named as viceroy of Hejaz replacing Prince Faisal in the post who was named minister of foreign affairs and Prince Khalid s term lasted until 1934 14 Prince Khalid joined the Saudi army led by his older brother Prince Faisal and fought against Yemeni forces in 1934 10 After the war Prince Khalid served as the chairman of the Saudi delegation at the Taif Conference with Yemen in 1934 12 15 This was a diplomatic move that led to the Taif Treaty later that year which was signed by Prince Khalid on behalf of Saudi Arabia and Abdullah Al Wazeer on behalf of Yemen 12 16 Prince Khalid was named interior minister in 1934 14 and was the Saudi representative at the peace negotiations in Yemen in 1935 17 In 1939 he participated in the St James Conference on Palestine in London as the minister of interior as well as an assistant to Prince Faisal head of the Saudi delegation 12 18 nbsp Prince Khalid right and Prince Faisal visiting the United States in 1943In October 1943 Prince Faisal and Prince Khalid visited the United States representing their father upon the July 1943 invitation of U S President Franklin D Roosevelt 19 The visit was the earliest high level contact between Saudi Arabia and the USA 19 20 Vice President Henry A Wallace organized a dinner for them at the White House 21 They also met with President Roosevelt 22 They stayed at the official government guest house Blair House and visited the West Coast by a special train that was officially provided by the U S government 21 A foreign diplomat described Prince Khalid following the visit as the nicest man in Saudi Arabia 23 However after this visit and during the most of the 1950s Prince Khalid did not play a significant role in the government partly due to the fact that his half brother Mansour bin Abdulaziz and his nephew Abdullah bin Faisal became much more dominant political figures 11 Prince Khalid reemerged as a significant figure in 1960 when King Saud named him acting prime minister 11 In addition on 31 October 1962 he was appointed deputy prime minister in the new cabinet formed by Crown Prince Faisal 19 24 This move indicated his prominence in the line of succession 25 26 During the rivalry between Crown Prince Faisal and King Saud Prince Khalid supported the former together with other princes who were members of the Al Jiluwi branch of Al Saud through maternal lineage or marriage 27 The group was led by Prince Muhammad Prince Khalid and Prince Abdullah 27 At the beginning of King Faisal s reign Prince Khalid was made a member of the council which had been established by the king to guide the succession issues 28 Crown prince EditKhalid s older full brother Prince Muhammad declined a place in the succession 29 Khalid also refused the offer of King Faisal to be named as crown prince several times until March 1965 17 In addition he asked King Faisal to remove him from the position various times 17 However the King persuaded Khalid that his presence as crown prince was necessary to keep peace within the House of Saud 17 One of the speculations about Prince Khalid s selection as heir designate was his lack of predilection for politics In short by selecting him as heir designate the royal family could create intra familial consensus 30 Khalid was named crown prince on 29 March 1965 31 32 King Faisal announced Khalid s appointment on the same day through a broadcast over Mecca Radio 33 Since the position of Crown Prince is a fundamental factor for the continuation and firmness of the reign now the country enjoys stability advancement and prosperity Thanks to its adherence to Islam It gives me great pleasure to announce that I have chosen my brother Prince Khalid bin Abdulaziz as Crown Prince to rule after me Prince Khalid was also named first deputy prime minister following his appointment as crown prince 12 34 Although Joseph A Kechichian argues that Crown Prince Khalid was not active in daily issues but acted as a representative during King Faisal s absences in meetings or ceremonies 25 he governed all organisational and executive powers of the Council of Ministers 17 He also dealt with the affairs of the Governorate of Mecca on behalf of King Faisal 12 However in 1968 Crown Prince Khalid expressed his desire not to preside over the Council of Ministers against King Faisal s request which led to the appointment of Prince Fahd as second deputy prime minister with the task of leading the Council meetings 35 In 1970 Crown Prince Khalid led Saudi delegations to Jordan to meet the needs of Palestinians who were seriously affected from Israel s attacks 36 According to the declassified US diplomatic documents of 1971 he enjoyed the support of the tribal chiefs religious authorities and of Prince Abdullah head of the Saudi National Guard during this period 37 Reign Edit nbsp King Khalid and Crown Prince Fahd at a ceremonyKhalid succeeded to the throne on 25 March 1975 when King Faisal was assassinated 38 39 He was proclaimed king after a meeting of senior members of Al Saud his uncle Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman and his brothers Muhammad Nasser Saad Fahd and Abdullah 40 The meeting occurred just hours after the assassination of King Faisal 25 Khalid also became the de facto prime minister of Saudi Arabia and the chairman of two significant councils namely the Higher Council for Administrative Reform and the Supreme Council for National Security 13 41 Although there are various reports stating that King Khalid was only a figurehead during his reign 42 he was in fact not a figurehead but the final decision maker on all major policy issues during his reign 43 44 King Faisal established a system in which the king was the final mediator in family problems 45 King Khalid reduced the power of the Sudairi Seven concerning succession in 1977 when he was in London for treatment 28 Following the unsuccessful attempt of the Sudairi Seven to overthrow King Khalid and to install one of their own Prince Sultan as deputy crown prince instead of Prince Abdullah the King asked Crown Prince Fahd and Prince Abdullah to fully obey the existing succession plan without any change 28 46 King Khalid also closely checked the activities of Crown Prince Fahd due to the latter s clear support for the pro Western policies and hostile tendency against Iran and Shia population of Saudi Arabia 47 In addition King Khalid was not an ineffective leader 40 Although he seemed to be reluctant to rule the country initially he later warmed to the throne and displayed an apparent interest in improving the education health care and infrastructure of the country during his seven year reign 48 During the first two years of his reign he was not active in politics due to his poor health condition but later he became much more active as a result of his much better health 49 King Khalid is also considered to have been a genial caretaker during his reign 50 However he failed to monopolize power during his reign leading to the empowerment of the princes who had been in powerful posts in late King Faisal s reign 51 He had some personal characteristics that made him a respected king He was admired as an honest man who managed to have good relations with the traditional establishment of Saudi Arabia 40 Therefore he was granted support by other princes and powerful forces of the country 40 Ghadah Alghunaim a board member of the King Abdulaziz Center for National Dialogue argues in her doctoral dissertation that Khalid s reign was a golden era and the era of goodness for the country 52 Domestic affairs Edit nbsp King Khalid in 1979King Khalid s reign was of massive development in Saudi Arabia and therefore the country became one of the richest countries in that the oil revenues became 40 billion in 1977 and 90 billion in 1980 53 King Khalid primarily dealt with domestic affairs with special focus on agricultural development 41 The industrial cities of Jubail and Yanbu were created during the early days of his reign 32 54 In 1975 the Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu was founded to run the cities and its first secretary general was Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki 55 Jeddah Port Authority was established in September 1976 to expand the capacity of the existing port 56 The number of schools increased during his reign In 1975 there were 3 028 elementary schools 649 secondary schools and 182 high schools In 1980 there were 5 373 elementary 1 377 secondary and 456 high schools 57 The other significant development in the field of education during his reign was the establishment of King Faisal University 12 The others were the Higher Education Center for Women which was opened in 1976 as well as colleges of medicine and pharmacology established specifically for female students 57 Immediately following his ascension to the throne King Khalid issued a general amnesty which allowed the release of political prisoners who had been members of the left wing movements and the return of those who had been in exile to Saudi Arabia 58 Most of them were arrested during the reign of King Faisal 59 In terms of administrative functions King Khalid followed the structure established by King Faisal in which both royals and non royals occupied significant positions 60 The political power consolidation of the ruling family was intensified during his reign 61 However King Khalid expanded the role of nonroyals in bureaucracy without diminishing the roles of royal family members 60 These non royals were mostly graduates of foreign universities and by 1977 ten of the thirty six members in the council of ministers were those who received a master s or doctorate degree from Western universities 62 The strict financial policies of King Faisal coupled with the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis created a financial windfall that fueled development and led to a commercial and economic boom in the country Notable achievements in his reign included the institution of the second Five Year Plan in 1975 63 which aimed to build up Saudi infrastructure and health care 14 The planned budget for the development plan was 142 billion 64 Although not all goals were achieved the second development plan was much more successful than the first one 63 King Khalid also launched the Kingdom s third development plan with the budget of 250 billion in May 1980 48 In a reorganization of the council of ministers on 30 March 1975 King Khalid named Crown Prince Fahd deputy prime minister and Prince Abdullah second deputy prime minister 65 66 Appointment of Prince Fahd as both crown prince and first deputy prime minister made him much powerful figure in contrast to the status of King Khaled when he was crown prince under King Faisal reign 67 Prince Nayef was named minister of interior succeeding Prince Fahd on 30 March 1975 68 King Khalid also appointed Prince Saud as the foreign affairs minister in March 1975 69 In addition to the existing ministerial bodies six new ones were established by King Khalid 70 One of them was the ministry of municipal and rural affairs established in October 1975 and Prince Majid was appointed minister 27 71 Additionally Prince Mutaib was appointed minister of public works and housing that was also established by King Khalid in October 1975 71 These two appointments were a move to reduce the power of Sudairi Seven in the cabinet 27 Besides the ministry of industry and electricity the ministry of higher education the ministry of post telegraph and telephone and the ministry of planning were all founded by King Khalid 12 70 In the same government reshuffle he removed Prince Musaid his uncle from the post of finance minister which he had been held since 16 March 1962 72 and Mohammed bin Ali Aba Al Khail was made new finance minister 73 King Khalid also expanded the internal structure of some ministries for instance in 1976 the Public Security Administration was created to preserve the public order and tranquility to promote of the public health safety and morals and to detect and punish the crimes and attached it to the ministry of interior 74 The members of the inner family council headed by King Khalid included his brothers namely Prince Mohammad Crown Prince Fahd Prince Abdullah Prince Sultan and Prince Abdul Muhsin and two of his uncles Prince Ahmed and Prince Musaid 75 Prince Mohammad was one of King Khalid s key advisors 65 In fact they acted together on almost all political issues 25 Another of his advisors was Maarouf al Dawalibi former Prime Minister of Syria and founder of the Islamic Socialist Front 76 Kamal Adham served as the president of Al Mukhabarat Al A amah or the general intelligence directorate until 19 January 1979 77 which he had held since 1965 78 Adham s successor in the post was Turki bin Faisal 78 In 1977 a coup attempt by Saudi Air Force personnel backed by the Libyan Intelligence Service was discovered and quickly defeated 79 Saudi Arabia acquired full control of Aramco in 1980 during his reign and the company was renamed as Saudi Aramco 38 80 In March 1980 King Khalid established a constitutional committee with eight members under the presidency of Prince Nayef 81 However the committee could not manage to produce the basic law that had been promised 82 King Khalid implemented a significant policy towards bedouins through a decree dated 15 March 1981 which required them to settle in a fixed place 83 In November 1979 Khalid s reign saw two major local incidents which have had significant effects on the politics of Saudi Arabia the Grand Mosque seizure and the Qatif Uprising Grand Mosque seizure Edit Some foreign observers thought traditionalism was no longer a strong force in Saudi Arabia This idea was disproved when at least 500 dissidents invaded and seized the Grand Mosque in Mecca on 20 November 1979 84 The same day two other raids were made by the groups related to these dissidents in Medina and Taif 85 The dissidents in Medina were immediately defeated by the Saudi troops 85 The goal of the dissidents in Taif was to abduct King Khalid who escaped the attack due to the changes in his plans 85 When the first news of the attack in Mecca reached Riyadh the initial reaction of King Khalid was to consult the ulama to get permission to use military force to eject the attackers The ulama hesitated and refrained from a definite answer 84 Only after the assault had been underway for 36 hours did some ulama allow the use of force 84 At the time of the event Crown Prince Fahd was in Tunisia for a meeting of the Arab Summit and the commander of the National Guard Prince Abdullah was in Morocco for an official visit 86 Therefore King Khalid assigned the responsibility to Prince Sultan the minister of defense and Prince Nayef the minister of interior to deal with the incident 86 The Grand Mosque was regained by Saudi forces on 4 December 1979 87 and 63 rebels were executed on 9 January 1980 in eight different cities 88 The executions were decreed by King Khalid after the edict issued by ulemas 88 Although the Saudi government under King Khalid executed the rebels the religious establishment that inspired them were given greater powers 89 And ulema successfully pressed King Khalid to realize their intentions 90 1979 Qatif Uprising Edit In November 1979 Shiites in the Eastern Province particularly in Qatif and in nearby villages organized protests Several demonstrators were arrested 91 The major reason for the uprising was negative conditions in villages In the spring of 1979 King Khalid announced an annual budget of 160 billion riyals indicating that this budget would be employed to improve the living conditions of all Saudi citizens 91 However the budget did not make any significant contribution to the services 91 Instead the royal family benefitted from the budget 91 Following the release of the demonstrators in February 1980 King Khalid and Crown Prince Fahd visited the Eastern region from town to town 92 Due to King Khalid s policy change towards the Shiite population in the region they positively modified their approach towards the Saudi government and abandoned their oppositional ideas and actions 91 International relations Edit Although King Khalid did not have an extensive interest in foreign affairs as much as King Faisal had 45 his reign witnessed many important international events including the Iranian Revolution the assassination of Anwar Sadat and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan all of which had significant effects for Saudi Arabia In addition the Saudi government led by King Khalid was much more active in improving the relations of Saudi Arabia with neighbouring states in contrast to the reign of Faisal 19 His government was also much more moderate and less conservative in regard to the Arab Israeli conflict than that of King Faisal 93 Kamal Adham was King Khalid s key counsellor on foreign policy during his reign from 1975 to 1982 94 95 King Khalid initiated a move to bring in foreign labor to help with the country s development 96 nbsp King Khalid praying at a mosque with Prince Abdullah1975 1980 Edit In April 1975 King Khalid s first diplomatic coup was the conclusion of a demarcation agreement concerning the Al Buraymi Oasis where the frontiers of Abu Dhabi Oman and Saudi Arabia meet 39 Claims and counterclaims over this frontier had exacerbated relations among them for years Therefore King Khalid aimed at settling this long standing boundary disputes 41 The conclusion of negotiations under King Khalid added to his stature as a statesman 14 Another significant event was the visit of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran to Riyadh on 28 April 1975 97 98 In June 1975 Saudi Arabia appointed an ambassador to the United Arab Emirates which also assigned an ambassador to Saudi Arabia the same date 19 nbsp King Khalid meeting President Sadat of Egypt on his arrival to Cairo July 1975His first official visit as the King of Saudi Arabia was to Cairo Egypt in mid July 1975 99 The visit was an indication of Saudi Arabia s support of the initiatives of Anwar Sadat concerning peace settlement between the Arabs and Israel 99 King Khalid visited Damascus in December 1975 and met with Syrian President Hafez Assad to discuss the ways to support Muslims in Lebanon where a civil war began in April 1975 15 45 He declared the Saudi Arabia s support to Syria s role in the war 100 Diplomatic relations with the People s Democratic Republic of Yemen were reestablished in March 1976 19 A month later in April 1976 King Khalid made state visits to all of the Gulf states in the hope of promoting closer relations with his peninsular neighbors 14 19 On 24 May 1976 King Khalid visited Tehran to meet with Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi 101 He also called numerous summits and inaugurated the Gulf Cooperation Council GCC in 1981 that is seen an outcome of his early visits 14 38 Then GCC was established along with Bahrain Kuwait Oman Qatar and the United Arab Emirates 38 One of the significant international moves occurred in the reign of King Khalid was the establishment of the Safari Club of which the treaty was signed on 1 September 1976 102 It was a secret organization with the participation of Egypt France Iran Morocco and Saudi Arabia to eliminate the potential influence of communism in the region 102 The treaty was signed by Kamal Adham on behalf of Saudi Arabia 102 King Khalid organized a conference in Riyadh in October 1976 to resolve the ongoing Lebanese civil war and the conference contributed to end the war 10 The same month he also visited Pakistan and the visit was mostly concerned with Saudi Arabia s financial support for the joint developmental projects in Pakistan 103 In addition he visited Islamabad Rawalpindi Lahore and Karachi and initiated the construction of King Faisal Mosque in Islamabad 104 On 19 May 1977 King Khalid met Hafez Assad and Anwar Sadat in Riyadh to initiate a coordinated policy on the Arab Israeli conflict 105 He also met Prime Minister of Pakistan Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in Riyadh on 18 June 1977 105 Lebanese Foreign Minister Fuad Butrus was received by King Khalid in Riyadh on 5 July 1977 to discuss the current situation in Lebanon 105 On 10 July 1977 Yen Chia kan President of Taiwan visited Saudi Arabia and was received by the King in Riyadh 105 Two days later on 12 July 1977 King Khalid and Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre met in Jeddah 105 Sudanese President Jaafar Nimeiry and King Khalid met in Ta if on 2 August 1977 105 King Khalid s next visitors were Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti and Foreign Minister Arnaldo Forlani who visited Saudi Arabia on 5 6 August 106 nbsp King Khalid with U S President Jimmy Carter 27 October 1978In early January 1978 the US President Jimmy Carter paid an official visit to Riyadh and met King Khalid to discuss the Middle East peace efforts 107 Immediately after this meeting Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi visited King Khalid on 11 January 1978 to discuss some topics related to the security of the region 98 Following King Khalid s heart surgery at the Cleveland Clinic on 3 October 1978 Jimmy Carter invited him to the White House for lunch and they met on 27 October 108 The Camp David accord which was signed by Egypt and Israel in September 1978 severely affected the Saudi Egyptian alliance and Saudi Arabia s diplomatic relations with Egypt were terminated following the Baghdad Conference in November 1978 19 The same year King Khalid visited France to finalize the procurement of 24 billion military equipment namely tanks helicopters and a complete radar network which was capable of covering the entire Red Sea 15 Much of this equipment was sent to North Yemen Sudan and Somalia to assist their resistance against communism 15 Following the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran King Khalid sent Khomeini a congratulatory message stating that Islamic solidarity could be the basis for closer relations of two countries 109 He also argued that with the foundation of the Islamic Republic in Iran there were no obstacles that inhibited the cooperation between two countries 110 In addition King Khalid requested the secretary general of the Organization of the Islamic Conference to congratulate the new Iranian government 111 However his initiatives were unsuccessful in that Saudi Arabia unofficially supported Iraq against Iran in the Iran Iraq War in 1980 109 On 24 December 1979 Pakistan President Zia ul Haq visited Riyadh and met King Khalid in relation to the Grand Mosque crisis which had been solved at the beginning of the month 103 1980 1982 Edit In April 1980 King Khalid cancelled the state visit to Britain as a protest over the broadcasting of Death of a Princess on 9 April 1980 in the United Kingdom that narrated the execution of Misha al bin Fahd the granddaughter of Prince Mohammad bin Abdulaziz 112 King Khalid had been invited by Queen Elizabeth II in June 1979 112 following the Queen s visit to Saudi Arabia in February 1979 during which King Khalid gave her a diamond necklace 113 In addition the British ambassador was expelled from Saudi Arabia for five months due to the broadcasting of the documentary on ITV 114 115 Egyptian actress Suzan Abu Talib or Sawsan Badr and other actors who had roles in the documentary were banned from entering Saudi Arabia 115 King Khalid in the capacity of the chairman of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation assisted Pakistani authorities to end the hijacking of the Pakistan International Airlines Flight 326 on 2 March 1981 first to Kabul and to Damascus on the request of President Zia ul Haq 103 Upon meeting then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in Saudi Arabia in April 1981 116 King Khalid is reputed to have said he would be happy to discuss falcons with her but for all matters of administration she should talk to Crown Prince Fahd 4 42 King Khalid s visit to the United Kingdom that had been cancelled in 1980 was realized on 9 June 1981 for four days 117 Next he visited Spain on 15 June 1981 118 King Khalid asked the US President Jimmy Carter to sell advanced fighter planes to Saudi Arabia to assist in countering communist aggression in the area 96 The delivery of the first of sixty F 15s under the agreement approved by Carter arrived in the Kingdom in 1982 He purchased a Boeing 747 with an operating room should he be stricken while on his travels 96 Jimmy Carter in his memoirs stated that both King Khalid and then Crown Prince Fahd assured him of their unequivocal support for Sadat but they would realize no concrete move in this direction at least not publicly 119 Views EditLook after the weak for the strong can look after themselves King Khalid 120 In June 1974 when he was Crown Prince Khalid argued that France taught the Syrians to be stubborn and the British instilled the idea for the Arabs to differ with each other 121 At the very beginning of his reign King Khalid stated Islamic law is and will remain our standard our source of inspiration and our goal 53 and We are against communism and we will protect ourselves against it by all means If the United States pressed Israel into making a just peace settlement Russia would not acquire a single foothold in the Middle East 15 He questioned the support of the US administration to Greece instead of Turkey in late May 1976 citing Turkey s contributions in the Korean War during the 1950s 122 In an interview on BBC Summary of World Broadcasts he expressed the following views on Zionism Communism and colonialism on 3 July 1979 We regard Zionism communism and colonialism as a trinity allied against Arab and Islamic rights and aspirations Our policy is based on that understanding and it is natural for us to be always subjected to biased and poisonous campaigns at the hand of that very trinity 123 Following the defeat of invaders of Grand Mosque King Khalid expressed the following if Juhayman al Otaibi and his cohorts had targeted palaces rather than the Grand Mosque in their 1979 uprising the results of the uprising might have been very different 124 At the third summit of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Taif in January 1981 he declared non alignment of Saudi Arabia concerning the tensions between the USA and Soviet Union Our loyalty must be neither to an eastern bloc nor to a western bloc The security of the Islamic nation will not be assured by joining a military alliance nor by taking refuge under the umbrella of a superpower 125 Personal life Edit nbsp King Khalid with his grandchildren in the late 1970sKing Khalid married four times and was the father of ten children While the sequence in seniority of his wives is not known clearly his wives were Latifa bint Ahmed Al Sudairi Latifa was a daughter of King Abdulaziz s maternal uncle and Khalid was fifteen when he married her 9 They had no children 72 Tarfa bint Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman Al Saud She was a daughter of his uncle Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman 9 They had no children 72 Noura bint Turki bin Abdulaziz bin Abdullah bin Turki Al Saud 72 She was the mother of Khalid s elder sons Prince Bandar and Prince Abdullah 9 and his elder daughter Al Bandari Noura bint Turki died at age 95 on 12 September 2011 126 Seeta bint Fahd Al Damir 127 had seven children with King Khalid Al Jawhara Fahd died young Nouf Moudi Hussa Mishaal and Faisal She was from the Ujman tribe in Al Badiyah and was a niece of Wasmiyah Al Damir wife of Abdullah bin Jiluwi 128 She died on 25 December 2012 at the age of 90 129 Khalid had four sons and six daughters 130 Prince Bandar the eldest son of King Khalid was born in 1935 25 131 He was one of the members of Al Saud Family Council established by Crown Prince Abdullah in June 2000 to discuss private issues such as business activities of princes and marriages of princess to individuals who were not member of House of Saud 132 Prince Bandar died in Mecca in March 2018 133 His youngest child Prince Faisal is the former governor of Asir Province and a member of the Allegiance Council Khalid s eldest daughter Princess Al Bandari married her cousin Prince Badr son of Prince Abdul Muhsin 57 Another of his daughters Princess Hussa married Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki grandson of Turki I bin Abdulaziz 134 She died at the age of 59 in November 2010 135 Two of his daughters married the sons of Abdullah bin Faisal Princess Al Jawhara married Khalid bin Abdullah Al Saud and has a son Mohammed and Princess Nouf married Mohammed bin Abdullah and has four children including Noura 136 Another daughter of Khalid Moudi married Prince Abdul Rahman bin Faisal and is the general secretary of the King Khalid Foundation and the Al Nahda Foundation and a former member of the Consultative Assembly 137 138 One of Khalid s daughters Mishael bint Khalid died in Riyadh in April 2014 139 Personality pastimes and property Edit nbsp Falconry was an enjoyed pastime of King Khalid Khalid was described as warm cheerful attentive and devout and was adored by his sisters and brothers 50 An American journalist from Christian Science Monitor John K Cooley following his observation of King Khalid at majlis stated that he carefully listened to his subjects showing his sense of humor and amused smile 43 During the first year of his rule King Khalid was said by his close observers to be an open and good man without any pretense representing the best example of Arab gentlemanly culture 43 His favourite topics to discuss at majlis with visitors were the problems related to education and youth 43 Khalid had the capacity to settle conflicts which was first recognized by his father 17 It was the reason for sending him to Yemen in 1935 to handle the problems with local people 17 During his kingship Khalid acted as a mediator between the Sudairi brothers and Prince Abdullah although he was much closer to the latter 66 Falconry and horse riding were Khalid s favorite pastimes 3 140 He was described as a man of the desert 40 He had one of the best falcon collections 141 In the late 1970s King Khalid was given a rare Alberta trained gyrfalcon by the Canadian government as a gift 142 Hunting was also one of his favorites and he went to African countries to participate in hunting safaris when he was young 141 Khalid bought the first Toyota Landcruiser in 1955 for falconry 143 In December 1975 he bought the then longest Cadillac at 25 feet and 2 inches long again for falconry 144 and Time magazine called it Khalidillac 56 In June 1974 while he was Crown Prince in a meeting with US Foreign Minister Henry Kissinger Khalid stated that he had been interested in hunting with hawks for forty years 121 In the same meeting Kissinger asked him where he lived 121 In response he stated that he lived in Riyadh but in the summer he stayed in Taif 121 King Khalid owned a desert farm outside Riyadh at Um Hamam 145 He bought Beechwood House in the north London suburb of Highgate for 1 9 million in March 1977 146 to use following two operations on his hip in the Wellington Hospital in London 147 Health Edit When Khalid bin Abdulaziz was crown prince he had a massive heart attack in 1970 and had a heart surgery in 1972 at the Cleveland Clinic in the United States 148 Since King Khalid suffered from heart ailment for a long period of time Crown Prince Fahd was in charge of ruling the country 149 On 3 October 1978 he underwent a second heart surgery again in Cleveland 148 150 He also had a hip operation at Wellington Hospital in London in 1976 151 152 153 In February 1980 King Khalid had a minor heart attack 50 Death and funeral EditKing Khalid died on 13 June 1982 due to a heart attack 145 149 in his summer palace in Taif 154 On the same day his body was brought from Taif to Mecca After funeral prayers at the Grand Mosque in Mecca King Khalid was buried in Al Oud cemetery in Riyadh 149 155 Leaders of Qatar Kuwait Djibouti the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain 149 as well as President of Egypt Hosni Mubarak participated in the funeral 156 Legacy EditKing Khalid International Airport King Khalid University King Khalid Eye Specialist Hospital in Riyadh King Khalid Military City and King Khalid Medical City in the Eastern province were all named after him 96 157 In Riyadh there is also a mosque named after him King Khalid Mosque serving the Muslims since 1988 158 In Jeddah a bridge is named after King Khalid 159 There is a research center on wildlife in Saudi Arabia named after him Khalid Wildlife Research Centre 160 In addition his family established King Khalid Foundation which is being headed by his son Abdullah bin Khalid 161 The foundation awards individuals who have achievements in the fields of corporate social responsibility nonprofit management and social innovation 162 Awards Edit In January 1981 King Khalid was awarded by the United Nations UN a gold medal which is the UN s highest decoration for the statesmen who significantly contributed to peace and cooperation worldwide 163 King Khalid also received the King Faisal International Prize for Service to Islam due to his efforts in support of Islamic solidarity in 1981 164 Honours EditStyles of King Khalid nbsp Reference styleHis MajestySpoken styleYour MajestyForeign honours Edit nbsp Honorary Recipient of the Order of the Crown of the Realm Malaysia January 1982 165 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Civil Merit Spain 15 February 1974 166 nbsp Collar of the Order of Charles III Spain 15 June 1981 167 nbsp Knight of the Royal Order of the Seraphim Sweden 20 January 1981 Ancestry EditAncestors of Khalid of Saudi Arabia16 Turki bin Abdullah bin Muhammad8 Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah Al Saud17 Hia bint Hamad bin Ali Al Faqih Angari Tamimi4 Abdul Rahman bin Faisal18 Mishari bin Abdulrahman bin Hassan Al Saud9 Sara bint Mishari bin Abdulrahman bin Hassan Al Saud2 Abdulaziz ibn Saud20 Mohammed bin Turki bin Suleiman Al Sudairi10 Ahmed Al Kabir bin Mohammed bin Turki Al Sudairi5 Sara bint Ahmed Al Sudairi11 Hessa bint Muhanna bin Saleh Al Nuwairan1 Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud24 Abdullah bin Muhammad bin Saud12 Turki bin Abdullah Al Jiluwi6 Musaed bin Turki Al Jiluwi26 Ahmed Al Kabir bin Mohammed bin Turki Al Sudairi13 Noura bint Ahmed Al Kabir bin Mohammed Al Sudairi27 Hessa bint Muhanna bin Saleh Al Nuwairan3 Al Jawhara bint Musaed Al Jiluwi14 Abdullah bin Turki Al Turki7 Hussa bint Abdullah bin Turki Al TurkiSee also EditList of things named after Saudi Kings KhalidReferences Edit قصر الحكم يحتفظ بأجمل 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9484 0 Mohamed Zayyan Aljazairi 1968 Diplomatic history of Saudi Arabia 1903 1960s MA thesis University of Arizona p 53 hdl 10150 318068 Simon Henderson 1994 After King Fahd PDF Washington Institute Archived from the original Policy Paper on 17 May 2013 Retrieved 2 February 2013 Saudi Arabia PDF Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training p 77 Archived from the original Country Readers Series on 9 January 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Joseph Mann 2014 Saudi Palestinian Relations During the Run Up to and the Aftermath of Black September Terrorism and Political Violence 26 4 716 doi 10 1080 09546553 2013 773899 S2CID 145710333 Memorandum Prepared in the Central Intelligence Agency PDF Washington DC US State Department 15 July 1971 Retrieved 11 August 2013 a b c d Timeline Saudi Embassy Retrieved 25 June 2012 a b Jennifer Reed 2009 The Saudi Royal Family New York Infobase Publishing p 60 ISBN 978 1 4381 0476 8 a b c d e William B Quandt 1981 Saudi Arabia in the 1980s Foreign Policy 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159997594 Brian Lees March 2006 The Al Saud family and the future of Saudi Arabia Asian Affairs XXXVII 1 36 49 doi 10 1080 03068370500457411 S2CID 162227738 Peter T Kilborn 23 February 1987 Saudi Arabia pins its hopes on new city built on oil money The Globe and Mail Toronto ProQuest 386291585 Retrieved 5 September 2020 a b Paul Reed Baltimore 2014 From the camel to the cadillac automobility consumption and the U S Saudi special relationship PhD thesis University of California Santa Barbara p 249 286 ProQuest 1638271483 a b c Walaa Hawari 13 May 2010 Remembering King Khaled Arab News Retrieved 2 August 2012 Toby Matthiesen Summer 2020 The Cold War and the Communist Party of Saudi Arabia 1975 1991 Journal of Cold War Studies 22 3 32 62 doi 10 1162 jcws a 00950 S2CID 221118100 Rosie Bsheer February 2018 A Counter Revolutionary State Popular Movements and the Making of Saudi Arabia Past amp Present 238 1 276 doi 10 1093 pastj gtx057 a b T R McHale 1980 A Prospect of Saudi Arabia 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March 1975 Saudi King Names His New Cabinet The New York Times ProQuest 120606813 New Saudi Arabia King Picks Deputy Premiers Sarasota Herald Tribune United Press International 30 March 1975 Retrieved 3 August 2012 a b Steffen Hertog 2010 Princes Brokers and Bureaucrats Oil and the State in Saudi Arabia Ithaca Ny Cornell University Press pp 41 60 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctt7zbkq 11 a b Saudi Government Shuffled to Balance Power of Princes The New York Times Beirut Associated Press 4 October 1975 ProQuest 120416860 a b c d Joseph A Kechichian 2014 Iffat Al Thunayan An Arabian Queen Brighton Sussex Academic Press pp 80 81 ISBN 9781845196851 Previous Ministers Ministry of Finance Archived from the original on 20 September 2020 Retrieved 24 September 2020 Chapter 2 The Ministry of Interior Part 1 PDF Americans for Democracy and Human Rights in Bahrain Retrieved 6 May 2021 Gulshan Dhahani 1980 Political Institutions in Saudi Arabia International Studies 19 1 59 69 doi 10 1177 002088178001900104 S2CID 153974203 Antero Leitzinger March 2002 The Roots of Islamic Terrorism The Eurasian Politician 5 Hearings Reports and Prints of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs 1789 1975 U S Government Printing Office p 68 a b Joseph A Kechichian 12 February 2010 The man behind the scenes Gulf News Retrieved 6 August 2020 Stephanie Cronin 2013 Tribes Coups and Princes Building a Modern Army in Saudi Arabia Middle Eastern Studies 49 1 2 28 doi 10 1080 00263206 2012 743892 S2CID 143713882 Succession in Saudi Arabia Chronology PDF Springer p 164 Retrieved 9 March 2021 Rashed Aba Namay 1998 The New Saudi Representative Assembly Islamic Law and Society 5 2 238 239 JSTOR 3399342 R Hrair Dekmejian 1994 The rise of political Islamism in Saudi Arabia Middle East Journal 48 4 628 JSTOR 4328744 Nadav Samin November 2013 The Dark Matter of Tribal Belonging Genealogical Representation and Practice in Saudi Arabia PhD thesis Princeton University doi 10 23943 princeton 9780691164441 001 0001 ISBN 9780691164441 a b c Alexander Bligh 1985 The Saudi Religious Elite Ulama as Participant in the Political System of the Kingdom International Journal of Middle East Studies 17 1 37 50 doi 10 1017 s0020743800028750 JSTOR 163308 S2CID 154565116 a b c Lincoln P Bloomfield Jr 1981 Saudi Arabia Faces the 1980s Saudi Security Problems and American Interests Fletcher Forum 5 2 243 277 JSTOR 45331045 a b Mecca 1979 The mosque siege that changed the course of Saudi history BBC 27 December 2019 Retrieved 13 June 2020 Muhammad Hussein Remembering the 1979 Siege of Makkah Middle East Monitor Retrieved 13 June 2020 a b Saudis behead zealots The Victoria Advocate Associated Press 10 January 1980 Retrieved 7 August 2012 Cyrus Dioun February 2005 Democracy within Boundaries Managing Risks While Promoting Liberalization in Saudi Arabia PDF Middle East Program Nathan Hale Foreign Policy Society Archived from the original PDF on 28 November 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2012 Peter W Wilson Douglas Graham 1994 Saudi Arabia The coming storm New York M E Sharpe ISBN 978 1 56324 394 3 a b c d e Toby Craig Jones May 2006 Rebellion on the Saudi Periphery Modernity Marginalization and the Shiʿa Uprising of 1979 International Journal of Middle East Studies 38 2 219 228 doi 10 1017 S0020743806412320 JSTOR 3879971 S2CID 143066112 Saudi dynasty regains hold on monarchy after Moslem troubles The Sydney Morning Herald 27 December 1980 Retrieved 2 August 2012 George T Fitzgerald 1983 Government administration in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia Master of Public Administration thesis California State University San Bernardino p 68 Nick Thimmesch 7 April 1977 The Egyptian Saudi peace axis The News Dispatch Washington Retrieved 26 February 2013 Obituaries in the News Associated Press News Riyadh 30 October 1999 Retrieved 26 February 2013 a b c d King Khalid Air Base CoBases Retrieved 7 August 2012 Shah Arrives in Saudi Arabia For 2 Day Visit With King The New York Times Riyadh Reuters 29 April 1975 ProQuest 120614711 a b Turki bin Khalid bin Saad bin Abdulaziz Al Saud 2015 Saudi Arabia Iran relations 1929 2013 PhD thesis King s College London pp 56 57 OCLC 1085141810 a b Henry Tanner 17 July 1975 Saudi King Flies to Cairo in Show of Support for Sadat Policies The New York Times ProQuest 120232242 Andrew Downer Crain 2009 The Ford Presidency A History Jefferson NC McFarland p 142 ISBN 978 0 7864 5299 6 Chronology April 16 1976 August 15 1976 Middle East Journal 30 4 525 Autumn 1976 JSTOR 4325541 a b c Adam Fitzgerald 5 January 2020 The Axis of Evil The Safari Club CIA amp B C C I Bank Medium Retrieved 6 August 2020 a b c Naveed Ahmad 1982 Pakistan Saudi Relations Pakistan Horizon 35 4 51 67 JSTOR 41394170 Mujtaba Razvi 1981 PAK Saudi Arabian Relations An Example of Entente Cordiale Pakistan Horizon 34 1 81 92 JSTOR 41393647 a b c d e f Chronology May 16 1977 August 15 1977 PDF The Middle East Journal 31 4 469 482 1977 JSTOR 4325678 Matteo Pizzigallo 2013 History of an 80 Year Long Friendship Italy Saudi Arabia 1932 2012 PDF In Silvia Colombo ed Italy and Saudi Arabia Confronting the Challenges of the XXI Century Roma Edizioni Nuova Cultura p 26 ISBN 9788868121518 Eric Pace 4 January 1978 Carter and Saudis Meet on Mideast and Oil Problem The New York Times Riyadh Retrieved 24 September 2020 Jimmy Carter 1978 Washington DC Office of the Federal Register National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration 1979 p 1876 a b Abdulrahman A Hussein 2012 So History doesn t Forget Alliances Behavior in Foreign Policy of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 1979 1990 Bloomington IN AuthorHouse ISBN 9781467883559 Gil Feiler 2003 Economic Relations Between Egypt and the Gulf Oil States 1967 2000 Petro Wealth and Patterns of Influence Brighton Portland OR Sussex Academic Press p 151 ISBN 978 1 903900 40 6 Giorgio Cafiero 8 February 2019 Iran and the Gulf states 40 years after the 1979 revolution Middle East Institute Retrieved 26 September 2020 a b William Russell 25 April 1980 Saudi King cancels visit to Britain The Glasgow Herald Retrieved 5 August 2012 The King Khalid Diamond Necklace From Her Majesty s Jewel Vault blog 21 January 2013 Mat Nashed 15 May 2019 The Mysterious Murder of a Saudi Princess and Her Lover OZY Retrieved 13 August 2020 a b Jafar Al Bakl 16 December 2014 الفحولة وآل سعود والشرف المراق على جوانبه الدم Al Akhbar in Arabic Retrieved 12 September 2020 British Premier visits Saudi Arabia The New York Times 20 April 1981 Retrieved 5 August 2012 Saudi King arrives in Britain Montreal Gazette UPIhl en 10 June 1981 Retrieved 5 August 2012 Saudi king in Spain United Press International 15 June 1981 Retrieved 19 May 2021 Gregg Johnson Greg Lehman Matthias Matthijs Spring 2002 Power and Preservation in the House of Saud PDF The Bologna Center Journal of International Affairs Archived from the original PDF on 15 June 2013 Joanne Bladd 4 December 2018 Interview Princess Banderi Alliance Magazine Vol 23 no 4 Archived from the original on 28 January 2021 Retrieved 23 May 2021 a b c d Memorandum PDF Ford Library Museum 15 June 1974 pp 4 6 Retrieved 2 August 2021 The King And I American Heritage 56 5 October 2005 Fred Halliday December 1981 The Arc of Crisis and the New Cold War Middle East Research and Information Project Retrieved 24 September 2020 Baron Reinhold June 2001 Omnibalancing and the House of Saud MA thesis Naval Postgraduate School California Archived from the original on 9 April 2022 Dilip Hiro 2014 War without End The Rise of Islamist Terrorism and Global Response London New York Routledge p 146 ISBN 978 1 136 48556 5 وفاة الأميرة نورة بنت تركي بن عبد العزيز بن تركي آل سعود The death of Princess Noura bint Turki bin Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Saud Asharq Alawsat in Arabic Jeddah 13 September 2011 Archived from the original on 13 September 2011 Retrieved 10 August 2012 Jennifer S Uglow ed 1999 The Northeastern Dictionary of Women s Biography Boston MA Northeastern University Press ISBN 9781555534219 Wasmiyah Al Damir Biography Datarabia Retrieved 11 August 2012 Death of Princess Sita bint Fahd Saudi Press Agency 25 December 2012 Archived from the original on 30 December 2013 Retrieved 26 December 2012 Biography King Khalid Exhibition Archived from the original on 14 March 2014 Retrieved 5 August 2012 Appendix 7 Leading Grandsons of Abdul Aziz PDF Springer Retrieved 13 August 2020 Simon Henderson August 2009 After King Abdullah Succession in Saudi Arabia PDF Policy Focus 96 Archived from the original PDF on 15 February 2017 Retrieved 16 August 2020 Saudi Prince Bandar bin Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud passes away Khaleej Times 13 March 2018 Retrieved 20 June 2020 Betty Beale 15 October 1978 Washington Letter The Spokesman Review Retrieved 7 August 2012 الديوان الملكي ينعى الأميرة حصة بنت خالد Death of Princess Hussa bint Khalid Al Riyadh in Arabic 18 November 2010 Retrieved 10 August 2012 Nouf bint Khalid Marefa in Arabic Retrieved 8 October 2020 Breakthrough in Saudi Arabia women allowed in parliament Al Arabiya 11 January 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2013 Princess Moudi bint Khalid Who s Who Arab Women Archived from the original on 18 October 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2013 الأمراء يؤدون صلاة الميت على الأميرة مشاعل بنت خالد Gololy in Arabic 30 April 2014 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Bahgat Korany Moataz A Fattah 2010 Irreconcilable Role Partners Saudi Foreign Policy between the Ulama and the US In Bahgat Korany Ali E Hillal Dessouki eds The Foreign Policies of Arab States The Challenge of Globalization Cairo New York American University in Cairo Press p 371 ISBN 978 977 416 360 9 a b Lawrence van Gelden 26 March 1975 Brothers who Share Saudi Power Khalid ibn Abdel Aziz Al Saud Fahd ibn Abdel Aziz Al Saud The New York Times ProQuest 120438017 Marci McDonald 15 January 1996 A royal power play Maclean s 109 3 Booming Libya finds common interests with Gulf grandees Zawya 15 October 2007 Retrieved 7 August 2012 People in the News The Pittsburgh Press 23 December 1975 Retrieved 3 August 2012 a b Jim Hoagl 14 June 1982 King Khalid Dies The Washington Post Retrieved 1 October 2020 Work on king s mansion starts without consent The Times No 60045 2 July 1977 p 13 Retrieved 11 March 2016 via The Times Digital Archive Background National Archives of the UAE p 134 Retrieved 20 April 2021 a b King Khalid faces another operation The Deseret News 29 September 1978 Retrieved 2 August 2012 a b c d Crown Prince Fahd takes control of largest oil exporting nation Herald Journal 14 June 1982 Retrieved 28 July 2012 Khalid accepts lunch invitation at White House Eugene Register 21 October 1978 Retrieved 4 August 2012 The Desert Superstate A rich but vulnerable feudal monarchy hurtles into the jet age Time No 21 22 May 1978 Retrieved 29 June 2020 King Khalid is in good health New Straits Times Reuters 20 October 1981 Retrieved 2 August 2012 Ailing Khalid have visitors Reading Eagle United Press International 21 February 1980 Retrieved 4 August 2012 Michael Dumper 2007 Cities of the Middle East and North Africa A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 344 ISBN 978 1 57607 919 5 Abdul Nabi Shaheen 23 October 2011 Sultan will have simple burial at Al Oud cemetery Gulf News Retrieved 29 July 2012 Death of King Khaled Sarasota Herald Tribune 15 June 1982 Retrieved 4 August 2012 Saeed Al Asmari 7 June 2013 King Khalid Medical City Project earns Mideast design award Arab News Dammam Retrieved 18 July 2013 Our story King Khalid Foundation Retrieved 2 July 2020 Maintenance of King Khalid bridge Construction Week 2016 Retrieved 14 August 2020 Head Veterinarian King Khalid Wildlife Research Centre Saudi Arabia Zoological Society of London Retrieved 14 August 2020 Leadership King Khalid Foundation Archived from the original on 18 June 2013 Retrieved 9 August 2013 King Khalid Awards King Khalid Foundation Retrieved 14 August 2020 Muhammed Azhar Ali Khan 28 January 1981 King Khalid stars at summit Ottawa Citizen Retrieved 3 August 2012 الملك خالــد في سطور King Khalid in Arabic King Khalid Award Archived from the original on 24 January 2012 Retrieved 8 August 2012 Senarai Penuh Penerima Darjah Kebesaran Bintang dan Pingat Persekutuan Tahun 1982 PDF Istiadat Archived from the original PDF on 31 July 2020 Retrieved 6 June 2016 Decree A04035 04035 PDF Spanish Official Journal Retrieved 1 September 2020 Decree A23482 23482 PDF Spanish Official Journal Retrieved 1 September 2020 External links Edit nbsp Media related to King Khalid bin Abdulaziz at Wikimedia CommonsKhalid of Saudi ArabiaHouse of SaudBorn 1913 Died 1982Regnal titlesPreceded byFaisal King of Saudi Arabia1975 1982 Succeeded byFahdSaudi Arabian royaltyPreceded byMuhammad Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia1965 1975 Succeeded byFahdPolitical officesPreceded byFaisal Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia1975 1982 Succeeded byFahd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khalid of Saudi Arabia amp oldid 1179804589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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