Saudi Arabia’s Dictator Demands Regime-Change in Syria — Otherwise WW III
BY ERIC ZUESSE
25
February,2016
As
has been recently
reported, many
experts on international relations are saying that the danger of a
nuclear war between NATO and Russia is greater now than it was during
the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 — in other words: greater than
ever before in history. But it has just ratcheted a bit higher still:
The
owner of Saudi Arabia, King Salman al-Saud, speaking through his
spokesperson and chosen Foreign Minister, in an
interview that was published on February 19th in Germany’s magazine
Spiegel, says
that he demands the resignation or else the overthrow of Syria’s
President Bashar al-Assad, who is allied with both Iran and
Russia. Polls
of the Syrian public, by Western polling firms,
consistently show Assad to be overwhelmingly approved by the Syrian
people to be the leader of Syria, and show that Syrians blame the
United States for causing ISIS, which is disapproved by 76% of
Syrians. The other named jihadist groups, such as al-Nusra which is
Al Qaeda in Syria, received similarly low approval-ratings from the
Syrian public. In stark contrast, a
poll of Saudi Arabians shows that 92% of them approve of ISIS.
But the United States is allied with the fundamentalist-Islamic
dictatorship Saudi Arabia, against the separation-of-church-and-state
democracy of Russia. So too is America’s fellow-NATO-member Turkey
allied with the fundamentalist Muslims, and they’re publicly
threatening to invade Syria (another nation that has strict
separation of church-and-state)
with ground troops. They’re backed by planes that were supplied to
the Sauds by the United States.
Robert
Parry reported on February 18th, “A
source close to Russian President Vladimir Putin told me that
the Russians have warned Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan that Moscow is prepared to use tactical nuclear weapons
if necessary to save their troops in the face of a
Turkish-Saudi onslaught. Since Turkey is a member of NATO, any
such conflict could quickly escalate into a full-scale nuclear
confrontation.”
The
Saudi Foreign Minister also says that his country is waiting for U.S.
President Barack Obama to take the lead in forcing Assad to resign,
because, he says, otherwise Assad will necessarily be overthrown in a
war, and there is a possibility that World War III could result,
though he also says, “I don’t think World War III is going to
happen in Syria.” He even says that to talk about “the danger of
World War III … is an over-dramatization,” because he expects
America to lead in the overthrow of Assad. He’s waiting for Obama’s
decision.
Spiegel’s
interviewer asked some challenging follow-up questions, such as, “Is
Saudi Arabia not financing extremist groups? Zarif speaks of
attacks by al-Qaida.”
To that one, he answered, “Yes, but that’s not us. We don’t tolerate terrorism.”
To that one, he answered, “Yes, but that’s not us. We don’t tolerate terrorism.”
In
the UAE, the TV network of Dubai telecast on 22 January 2016 an
interview with the former Imam of the Grand Mosque in Mecca Saudi
Arabia, a high authority on the Sauds’ faith, which is likewise the
faith of the six royal families of UAE, and this interview was
telecast in Arabic, so the expectation was naturally to be speaking
to the locals instead of to foreigners. However, a YouTube on January
27th included subscripts in English, and is headlined “Former
Imam of the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Adel Kalbani: Daesh ISIS have the
same beliefs as we do.” He
states there that the only difference between ISIS and their faith is
that (1:55-) “We follow the same thought but apply it in a refined
way,” because Saudis believe that (1:12-) “if we execute them
[people] in a way that does not show us in a bad way, then that’s
fine,” whereas ISIS’s way is so (1:09-) “brutal that it ruins
our image in front of the world.” But that’s just the Saudi faith
as it’s represented by the ‘holy men.’ What about the royals
themselves?
See: Al Qaeda’s Bookkeeper Spills the Beans
Here
is the evidence on this matter, which
Spiegel’s interviewer failed even to bring up: The individual who
had been the bookkeeper, accountant, and bagman for Al Qaeda, and who
personally collected (in cash) each one of the million-dollar-plus
donations to Al Qaeda, from which donations the “salaries” (as he
referred to them) of each one of the terrorists and
terrorists-in-training were being paid, testified under oath in an
American court case, saying that almost all of that money came from
Saudi Arabia’s royal family, from their Princes, including from the
one — Prince Bandar bin Sultan al-Saud — who was, at the very
time of 9/11, serving in the United States, as the Saudi Ambassador.
Bandar subsequently became the chief of Saudi intelligence. The Saudi
King appointed a man like that — a big donor to Al Qaeda — to be
his Kingdom’s chief of intelligence. The current King of Saudi
Arabia, King Fahd al-Saud, was mentioned by that bagman as having
been among the people to whom Osama bin Laden had him deliver letters
to at the time when the Saud family were planning whom to select to
become the next King; Al Qaeda’s bagman said that he had delivered
Osama’s letters to “Abdullah, Fahd,
okay, Salman, Waleed
bin Talal,
Bandar, Turki of
course, and Shaykh — Shaykh Bin Baz, Shaykh Uthaimeen, Shaykh
Shehri, and Shaykh Hammoud al-Uqlaa, but Shaykh Osama told me
that the — the letter for the — for — for the ulema [the
religious leaders] I could give it — give it to Turki.” (I.e.:
Turki was the contact-man with the religious scholars.)
Here
was a follow-up question from the transcript, and the bagman’s
answer to it:
Q:
Do you have any understanding why in that context Osama bin
Laden would have been sending letters to both members of the
royal family and the senior ulema [the scholars]?
A:
My understanding from talking with people like Abu Basir
al-Wahishi who become the — the head of al-Qaeda in the
Arabian peninsula, who I used to be close to, okay, or Halad
or Shaykh
Abu Hasan [but
is that the same person?], Shayk Mujahideen, Shaykh Aman, and
Shaykh Abul Sef — my understanding that they — they
want to know who they should support.
The
counsel or advice from Osama bin Laden was respected by the members
of the Saudi royal family, in order to help them to determine which
one of them should become the next King. Presumably, Osama’s advice
was necessary in order for them to learn which ones of themselves
could become appointed to lead as King without sparking attacks by Al
Qaeda and by the clergy (whose faith they spread) against the Saud
family, and which ones would be unacceptable to Al Qaeda and to the
clergy. Al Qaeda were, in a sense, the clergy’s enforcers, and they
could do this at home in Saudi Arabia. This was the implicit threat:
that they had to appoint someone who was in-synch with the jihadist
goals, spreading the faith, the goal of the Wahhabist (which is the
Saudi branch of Salafism) clerics. (Salafism/Wahhabism
is jihadist by its very founding, and is above all dedicated to
exterminating Shiites in
order to unify global Islam behind the jihadist cause, religious
conquest for purified Sunni faith, the Caliphate.)
Furthermore: when Hillary Clinton was the U.S. Secretary of State, one of the first things she did was to send, to her Ambassadors in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, and Kuwait, instructions for them to tell their royals to make sure that they would no longer allow those donations to continue; and she even said: “Donors in Saudi Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide.” She didn’t name names, but they already knew the names. That was eight years after 9/11, in 2009, and there’s no reason to think that the situation has changed since, just as there indeed had been no change after the 9/11 attacks and the donations instead continued into at least 2009.
A
truthful answer from the Saudi Foreign Minister, to the question, “Is
Saudi Arabia not financing extremist groups? Zarif speaks of
attacks by al-Qaida,” would
have been:
“We don’t support jihad that threatens our own regime, like ISIS
does by saying that we Sauds aren’t descended from the Prophet
[Mohammed] and that their leader al-Baghdadi is
and so he should rule the world and we shouldn’t, and that we
therefore aren’t qualified even to run Saudi Arabia, and to serve
as custodians over Mecca and Medina, on that basis.” But, he didn’t
give that honest answer.
The
Saudi Foreign Minister went on to tell Spiegel, “We believe that
introducing surface-to-air missiles in Syria [which the United States
supplies to the Sauds] is going to change the balance of power on
the ground.” He believes this because it will enable the
overthrow-Assad forces on the ground to shoot down Russian jets. He
supports jihadist groups, but only the ones that acknowledge the
Sauds’ authority.
On
February 20th, Almasdar News headlined “Turkey
says Obama shares Syria concerns with Erdogan, affirms support,” and
reported that, “Turkey’s presidency said U.S. President Barack
Obama had shared his concerns over the Syrian conflict and
promised his support on Friday, hours after a tense exchange between
the two NATO allies over the role of Kurdish militants. In a phone
conversation that lasted one hour and 20 minutes, Ankara said
Obama had told his counterpart President Tayyip Erdogan that
Turkey had a right to self-defense.” These “tensions” resulted
from Obama’s urging Turkey to “show reciprocal restraint.”
In
other words: Turkey is a member of NATO and it will therefore be
backed by fellow-NATO-member U.S. in any war against Russia, but
Turkey should use “restraint.” The issue there was the use by
U.S.-backed Kurds in Syria, of U.S. weapons which those Kurds were
firing against the jihadists who are trying to take over Syria. The
pro-jihadist Erdogan wants to send his ground-forces into Syria to
kill those Kurds, but those Kurds are allied now with both the United
States and Russia, and so Erdogan has been holding off. The
possibility exists that if the Syrian conflict can be ended without
having sparked a nuclear war, then Syria will become a federal
republic, and the Kurdish region in its easternmost corner will
become a largely autonomous state within the Syrian federal union.
That outcome is unacceptable to Erdogan, but U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry has tentatively agreed with Russia that it needs to be and
remain open.
The
Saudi Foreign Minister told Spiegel, “It is important that Bashar
leaves in the beginning, not at the end of the process.” In other
words, King Saud agrees with Hillary Clinton that Assad must be
forced out of power while, and not after, the battles to defeat ISIS
are going on. They demand their own victory, before any political
process can begin in Syria. (As the Sauds see Assad, he’s not only
a secularist, but he’s a Shiite, and therefore should die and be
replaced by a fundamentalist Sunni like themselves.)
Whether
or not to continue America’s war against Russia, which has
continued even after the Warsaw Pact ended in 1991 with a ceaseless
expansion of NATO right up to Russia’s borders, is the biggest
issue in the U.S. Presidential campaign, with Hillary Clinton and the
Establishment Republicans demanding its continuation, and with Bernie
Sanders and Donald Trump saying that there’s no sound reason for
continuing it.
On
February 18th, Stephen Kinzer had an op-ed in the Boston Globe
titled, “The
media are misleading the public on Syria,” and
he wrote:
Washington-based
reporters tell us that one potent force in Syria, al-Nusra, is made
up of “rebels” or “moderates,” not that it is the local
al-Qaeda franchise. Saudi Arabia is portrayed as aiding freedom
fighters when in fact it is a prime sponsor of ISIS. Turkey has for
years been running a “rat line” for foreign fighters wanting
to join terror groups in Syria, but … we hear little about it.
The
first reader-comment to it was:
Ozark02/18/16
02:08 PM
When
did you join the payroll of the Kremlin and Teheran, Mr. Kinzer?
The
first reply to that was:
tsynchronous02/18/16
02:13 PM
Sadly
he is on the payroll of a foundation funded by IBM — even though he
thinks capitalism and the USA is vil.
A
subsequent response to it was:
Miker602/19/16
05:19 AM
And notice that Stephen Kinzer completely leaves out Barack Obama’s famous “RED LINE” proclamation for Bashir Assad, and why did he completely back out of it?
That
alone is enough to Stephen Kinzer to be the one who is misleading the
public on Syria.
Actually,
the comment by Miker602 was further evidence that Kinzer’s op-ed is
true. In fact, that
sarin gas attack was carried out by al-Nusra, which had been supplied
the sarin from the Benghazi Libya U.S. Consulate, which was actually
a CIA operation and worked with the Sauds who own Saudi Arabia, plus
the Thanis who own Qatar, plus Erdogan who aims to re-establish the
Ottoman Empire, and it was definitely not done by the forces of
Bashar al-Assad. In other words: Obama was behind it, but Assad was
not, and Obama (and ‘our’ ‘allies’) were doing it in order to
blame it on Assad so as to have an excuse for invading. But
how much is this fact being reported in the U.S., or in the ‘news’
media of its allies? This is “samizdat,” and even Kinzer doesn’t
touch upon it.
Or,
how much is the fact being reported that, other than the United
States leadership, many if not most of the other Western countries
are saying that in the event of an invasion of Syria by Turkey, it
won’t have their backing: According to Russia’s
Sputnik News on February 20th,
Luxembourg and Germany have already said no to participating in any
such invasion. It seems that U.S. President Obama is trying to get
other allies to support and participate in invading Syria, but hasn’t
yet had any takers, except for the terrorist-supporting nations, only
one of which (Turkey) is even in NATO. (Perhaps if he can get other
NATO members to join, then he’ll call a halt to John Kerry’s
negotiations with Russia. World War III could commence shortly after
that.)
The
big problem — which virtually no one in the West’s ’news’
media talks about — is that NATO
didn’t end when the Warsaw Pact did, but
instead became a
U.S.-run military club against the post-Soviet, non-communist,
democratic nation of Russia.
Ending
the corruption that’s behind all this will take forever. But
something else is behind it that can and should be done more
immediately.
End
NATO now. It has become urgent.
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