Here you have it - the view of the US's Great Ally. Their real enemy is Syria and Russia, not their own creation, ISIS.
Remember this next time you get more nonsense about the war against the "Great Satan".
US should stop Syria not ISIS: Saudi prince
CNBC,
21
January, 2015
U.S.
policymakers should concentrate on eliminating the threat posed by
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad instead of Islamic State militants
in Iraq and Syria, according to an influential member of the Saudi
Arabian royal family.
Prince
Turki bin Faisal Al Saud told CNBC at the World
Economic Forum in Davos that
the reason why Islamic State exists is because of what's happening in
Syria and has called on U.S. authorities including the government,
the Central Intelligence Agency and the military to act.
"They
are all aware of what needs to be done," he said. "It needs
the political will."
The
prince, who is a former intelligence chief in Saudi Arabia and
ambassador to the U.S., said that the United States is currently
"leaving Assad to continue his murderous campaign."
President
Bashar al-Assad's regime was accused of using chemical weapons
against civilians in 2013 but the U.K. rejected the use of military
action in Syria. The U.S. has also been reluctant to intervene in
Syria despite U.S. President Barack Obama initially threatening
missile strikes.
Instead,
the U.S. turned its attention to the Islamic State which has taken
control of parts of both Iraq and Syria. Last week, the U.S. - along
with its allies - continued
airstrikes against the terrorist organization,
with the Combined Joint Task Force saying that 29 airstrikes had been
conducted in a 24-hour period, according to Reuters.
Prince
Turki likened the Islamic State to the Mafia, saying that it was
"more criminal than they are religious." His own anecdotal
evidence suggested to him that the group's members were more
concerned with "robbing" and "looting," with many
only joining the organization for the money.
He
agreed that the region needed to create more opportunities for young
people and suggested a multi-pronged attack of better education,
better economies and a better family unit would help diminish the
threat of these groups.
In
a wide-ranging interview, Prince Turki also stated his belief that
giving Crimea back to the Tatars would solve the current issues in
the region. The Tatars are a Turkic ethnic group who make up around
12 percent of the Crimean population, according to a 2001 census.
Russia
decided to annex Crimea in March 2014 after a change of government in
Ukraine gave Kiev a pro-European Union leader. In the eastern part of
Ukraine, conflicts between government forces and pro-Moscow rebels
are still ongoing and Crimea
is still in the hands of Russian leadership.
"Nobody
talks about them," he said. "Bring the Tatars back...you'll
solve it," he added.
He
went on to suggest that the same could be said of the situation
between Israel and Palestine, adding that an Arab Peace Initiative
could look at the possibility of giving Palestinians land that is
rightfully theirs.
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