Saudi Money Gathers Together 350,000 Soldiers From 20 Countries In Northern Saudi

Saudi Arabia amasses 350,000 troops in massive show of military firepower

MORE than 2,500 warplanes, 20,000 tanks and 450 helicopters have assembled as Saudi Arabia flexes its military muscles at Iran, Syria and Russiay David Trayner / Published 16th February 2016.

Saudi jets, soldiers and King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
GETTY  
ACTION MAN: Saudi jets and soldiers – and King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud

Armed forces from 20 countries have gathered for the “largest and most important” military drill in the history of the Middle East – dubbed “Northern Thunder”.

Many of the nations involved cut diplomatic ties with Iran after a mob attacked the Saudi Arabian embassy in Tehran and the exercises are seen as a veiled threat to the Islamic Kingdom’s Middle Eastern rival.

The mammoth 18-day manoeuvres – which involve four times as many troops as the British Army – come as .

Saudi Arabian special forces
GETTY   SAUDI SAS: Saudi Arabia is preparing to send special forces to Turkey – ready to invade Syria

“It will serve to boost fighting capabilities”

Brigadier General Ahmed al-Assiri

Gulf nations and other allies – such as Pakistan, Jordan, Chad and Sudan – are taking part in the drill, which will involve ground, naval and air forces.

Saudi Arabia said Northern Thunder would send the message it and its allies “stand united in confronting all challenges and preserving peace and stability in the region”.

Neither the US nor any western nation was invited to take part.

Brigadier General Ahmed al-Assiri said: “It will serve to boost fighting capabilities, exchange information, benefit from experiences and expertise and enhance coordination between the participating countries.”

Saudi army artillery fire shells towards Yemen from a post close to the Saudi-Yemeni border
GETTY   BOOM: Saudi artillery fire shells across the border with Yemen

Turkey’s Man In Mosul Lobbies Washington For Second Chance To Surrender the City

“The former governor of Nineveh…and the brother of Iraqi Vice President Usama al-Nujaifi…he was sacked in May, when a majority of Iraqi MPs voted to fire him for corruption and complicity in the fall of Mosul to the Islamic State.”—The Enemy You Know and the Ally You Don’t

Ex-Mosul chief opens DC bureau to represent Iraq’s Sunnis

Shia powers hope to change Iraq’s demography following elimination of Daesh, Atheel al-Nujaifi asserts

Ex-Mosul chief opens DC bureau to represent Iraq’s Sunnis

By Idris Okuducu

ERBIL, Syria

Atheel al-Nujaifi, a leading member of Iraq’s Sunni Hashd al-Watani (“People’s Mobilization”) group, has announced that his organization had opened an office in Washington D.C. to serve as the voice of Iraq’s Sunni-Muslim community.

“We want to communicate directly with all countries of the world with a view to reversing longstanding prejudices against Sunni Muslims,” al-Nujafi, who served as governor of Iraq’s northern city of Mosul (now held by the Daesh militant group) from 2009 to 2015, told Anadolu Agency.

“Our people [Iraq’s Sunni Muslims] have recently gone through a difficult period,” he said. “We want our voices to be heard by the world.”

“We want the U.S. and EU to hear about the difficult conditions we have been facing,” he added.

“The central government in Iraq is Shia-led, so our [i.e., Iraqi Sunnis’] contacts with other countries aren’t strong,” al-Nujafi said. “This is what led us to open a representative office in the U.S. capital.”

He went on to assert that the Shia-led Baghdad government was opposed to his organization’s new Washington bureau.

“Iraqi Shias don’t want Sunnis to have close ties with other countries,” he said.

Al-Nujafi went on to point out that Hadi al-Amiri, a commander of the Badr Brigade (an affiliate of the Hashd al-Shaabi organization, an umbrella of Iraqi Shia armed groups), had recently said his forces would take part in planned operations to retake Mosul from Daesh.

However, al-Nujaifi said, “the international coalition [against Daesh], along with many Sunnis, have expressed their opposition to Shia militias taking part in any future campaign to retake Mosul”, which, he added, “should not be turned into a sectarian [i.e., Sunni vs. Shia] conflict”.

Al-Nujaifi went on to allege that certain Shia powers hoped to change Iraq’s traditional demography following the elimination of Daesh.

“That’s why these Shia powers are so eager to join the conflicts in Iraq. They want to extend their control on the ground,” he said.

Noting that he remained in close contact with “prominent people” in Daesh-held Mosul, al-Nujaifi added, “People there are suffering; they need food and medicine. And they say they will support a future operation [to retake the city].”

In mid-2014, Daesh overran Mosul before declaring a self-styled “caliphate” in parts of Iraq and Syria.

Located in Iraq’s northern Nineveh province, Mosul is the country’s second largest city.

HOT HEADS Pushing Syria Towards Regional War Seem To Be Cooling Their Rhetoric

Saudi Arabia and Turkey rolling back on rhetoric to send troops into Syria

the independent

Officials say they will wait to see if a planned ceasefire transpires and for a sign-off from the US-led coalition.

 

Saudi Arabia and Turkey appeared Monday to be rolling back rhetoric on sending troops to Syria, as officials said they’d wait to see if a planned cease-fire transpires and for a sign-off from the US-led coalition.

A Saudi diplomat said Sunday that Saudi Arabia was “very serious” about sending ground troops into Syria, but will first wait to see whether plans for a pause in hostilities agreed by the United States and Russia transpires.

However, speaking in Riyadh, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir also said late Sunday that the decision whether to have a ground component on the ground is up to the US-led coalition.

“The timing is not up to us,” he said.

Turkey is also considering sending in ground troops, the Saudi diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic.

The Saudi force would be made up of special forces soldiers but details are still being planned, he said.

An already tangled conflict has become more complex even as world powers push for a pause in hostilities due to be implemented later this week. Russia has been bombing from the air as Syrian government forces, including Iranian and Iraqi fighters, close in on Aleppo.

An array of rebel groups backed by the United States, Turkey and Saudi Arabia have been losing ground.

The “disarray” has spurred Saudi to action, the diplomat said, adding that Riyadh wanting to both counter Islamic State militants and Iranian influence in the country.

“Time is running out,” he said. “We are waiting for the peace process to end. We believe it will fail and when it does the situation will be completely different.”

He said Saudi Arabia and Turkey are largely “on the same page” but that Ankara is also focused on countering Kurdish forces inside Syria.

“The Turkish government has made some progress in their thinking, they realized Daesh is a threat,” the diplomat said, using an Arabic acronym for Isis. “But they are also using this as a time to eliminate the Kurdish groups.”

Turkey has been shelling Kurdish forces this weekend after they seized an airbase in northern Syria, leading to appeals from US officials for a de-escalation.

Turkish Defence Minister Ismet Yilmaz Monday denied that Turkish forces had entered Syria following a complaint by the Syrian government to the UN Security Council. It claimed that Turkish forces were among 100 gunmen that entered the country on Saturday.

“It’s not true,” Yilmaz said according to the state-run Anadolu Agency. “There is no thought of Turkish soldiers entering Syria.”

That statement jarred with the Saudi diplomat’s comments. He said Saudi officials discussed the possibility of sending troops with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, during a recent three-day visit to Saudi Arabia.

“Turkey isn’t against the ground troops, but they want to say ‘we gave the peace process a chance’,” he said.

He said a force would only consist of special forces, and the size of it is still being planned.

Yilmaz confirmed that a decision had been reached for Saudi Arabia to send four F-16 fighter jets to Turkey’s Incirlik air base.

“The Kingdom’s deployment of aircraft to the Incirlik air base in Turkey is part of this campaign,” foreign minister Jubeir told a news conference in Riyadh Sunday, Reuters reported. “The kingdom’s readiness to provide special forces to any ground operations in Syria is linked to a decision to have a ground component to this coalition against Daesh in Syria – this US-led coalition .”

Washington Post

Russia and Saudi Strike Compromise On Oil Production, Despite Threatened Confrontation In Syria

[When this news broke this morning, the price of oil began to fall precipitously, a.k.a., to crash (SEE CHART).  One thing that we can read into this news is that Russia and Saudi Arabia would not be working together in an attempt to stabilize world oil markets if they were seriously contemplating war against each other in Syria.  Very little in our manufactured reality is actually real, especially anything coming from Western media sources.  But this says nothing about Turkish intentions in Syria, which are probably indifferent to oil price fluctuations and extremely hostile towards Russia.]

chart

Oil edges ahead on news of output freeze

dunya news DUNYA NEWS

Brent North Sea crude for delivery in April advanced 50 cents to $33.89 per barrel

LONDON (AFP) – Oil crept higher Tuesday on news that Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Qatar and non-OPEC member Russia have agreed to freeze their crude production at January levels.

In late morning London deals, Brent North Sea crude for delivery in April advanced 50 cents to $33.89 per barrel.

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for March delivery added 35 cents to $29.79 a barrel from Monday s closing level.

Energy giants Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed Tuesday to freeze oil output at January levels during a meeting in Doha, the Qatari oil minister said.

The Saudi and Russian oil ministers, along with their Venezuelan and Qatari counterparts, “agreed to freeze the production at (the) January level provided that other major producers follow suit,” said Qatar s Energy Minister Mohammed bin Saleh al-Sada, who is acting president of the OPEC oil cartel.

However, analysts said the market response was muted because some traders had hoped for a reduction in oil output to curb the vast supply glut.

“It is a conditional agreement to freeze crude production at January levels,” City Index analys Fawad Razaqzada told AFP.

“The news has actually disappointed the market slightly because some people had hoped to see a cut rather than a production freeze.

“So, in the short term, oil prices may come under some pressure. Nevertheless, it is a step in the right direction and if other major producers follow suit then at the very least it should help to prevent oil prices from suffering further big falls.”