From the Independent which is not an active member of the war party like the Guardian
Saudi Arabia sends troops and fighter jets to military base in Turkey ahead of intervention against Isis in Syria
Saudi Arabia sends troops and fighter jets to military base in Turkey ahead of intervention against Isis in Syria
Saudi
officials have stated that they want to fight Isis and see President
Bashar al-Assad removed
13
February, 2016
Saudi
Arabia is sending troops and fighter jets to Turkey's
Incirlik military base ahead of a possible
ground invasion of Syria.
The
Turkish foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, confirmed the
deployment in a statement to the Yeni
Şafak
newspaper on Saturday, days before a temporary ceasefire is due to
come into force.
“Saudi
Arabia declared its determination against Daesh (the Arabic term for
Isis) by saying
that they were ready to send both jets and troops,” he said.
Syria
agreement: Cessation of hostilities within week
“At
every coalition meeting we have always emphasised the need for an
extensive result-oriented strategy in the fight against the Daesh
terrorist group.
“If
we have such a strategy, then Turkey and Saudi Arabia may launch an
operation from the land.”
He
confirmed that
planes and military personnel were being sent to Incirlik, in
Adana near the Syrian border, but said numbers had not been
confirmed.
Adel
al-Jubeir, the Saudi foreign minister, said Russia's intervention
would not help Assad stay in power in an interview published today.
“There
will be no Bashar al-Assad in the future,” he told a German
newspaper.
There
were reports of Royal Saudi Air Force F-15 jets arriving at Incirlik
Air Base in Turkey on Saturday morning
Co-operation
with Turkey could
prove problematic if Saudi Arabia follows its definition of
“terrorists” to include Kurdish fighters, who have been one of
the most effective forces against Isis on the ground.
Mr
Cavusoglu’s statement also raised the possibility of conflict
between Turkey and Russia, which he accused of hitting the so-called
Islamic State with only 12 per cent of its air strikes.
“Russia's
target is supporting Assad, we all know that,” he added. “But the
question is this: Who will stop Russia doing that?”
Ash
Carter, the American defence secretary, said on Friday that he
expected the Saudis and the United Arab Emirates to send commandos to
help recapture Isis’ Syrian stronghold and de-facto capital of
Raqqa.
Saudi
Arabia and Turkey are among Assad’s foreign opponents who have been
supplying selected rebel groups with weapons via a Turkey-based
operations centre.
Some
of the vetted groups, mainly part of the Free Syrian Army, have
received military training overseen by the US Central Intelligence
Agency.
In
the wake of Saudi Arabia’s proposal to send in ground troops on
Thursday, the Russian
Prime Minister claimed the move could spark a new world war.
“A
ground operation draws everyone taking part in it into a war,“ he
told the Handelsblatt newspaper.
“The
Americans and our Arab partners must consider whether or not they
want a permanent war.”
Russia
started its intervention in September at the request of Assad,
Vladimir Putin’s long-term ally, to support the Syrian regime.
The
Kremlin has repeatedly claimed it is bombing “terrorists” but has
been condemned by the UN and the international community for evidence
it is
predominantly targeting civilian areas held by anti-government
rebels.
Russia’s
intervention is supported by Iran, which admits sending troops to
train Syrian forces but has
been accused of sending its them into combat with rebels.
Updates here https://www.superstation95.com/index.php/world/886
ReplyDeleteThis indeed looks very serious.
And who owns the Independent?
ReplyDeleteOh yes, - Alexander Lebedev.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Independent
And who is Alexander Lebedev?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Lebedev#Legal
There's a reason why oligarch Russians own UK newspapers and football clubs!
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alisher_Usmanov
Can you think why?