When a raiding
party from Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant attacked a Saudi border
post last week, it was no mere hit on a desert outpost.
The jihadists were launching an assault on the new, highest-profile
effort by Saudi Arabia to insulate itself from the chaos engulfing its
neighbours.
The Saudis are
building a 600-mile-long “Great Wall” — a combined fence and ditch — to
separate the country from Iraq to the north.
Much of the area on the Iraqi side is now controlled by Isil, which
regards the ultimate capture of Saudi Arabia, home to the “Two Holy
Mosques” of Mecca and Medina, as a key goal.
The proposal had been discussed since 2006, at the height of the
Iraqi civil war, but work began in September last year after Isil’s
charge through much of the west and north of the country gave it a
substantial land border with the Kingdom to the south.
The border zone now includes five layers of fencing with watch towers, night-vision cameras, and radar cameras.
Riyadh also sent an extra 30,000 troops to the area.
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