ARAB LEAGUE TO HOLD URGENT MEETING ON IRAN AS SAUDIS REPORTEDLY MOBILIZE FIGHTER JETS
12 November, 2017
The
Arab League is set to hold an emergency meeting on Iran at Saudi
Arabia’s request, this according
to Reuters and
various regional sources, at
a moment when Saudi fighter jets may be mobilizing for war in an
attempted show of force.
Egypt-based Ahram
Online also
reports further that the meeting will discuss “Iranian
interference” in the region at League headquarters in Cairo, and
other early unconfirmed reports indicate the meeting could come as
early as next Sunday.
News
of the Arab League extraordinary session comes as tensions are at
breaking point as regional powers – especially Saudi Arabia and
Israel – talk war against perceived Iranian expansion and
domination in the Middle East.
Meanwhile, The
Daily Star,
citing the Baghdad
Post,
claims that Saudi Arabia has scrambled its air force for strikes in
Lebanon: “Reports now state the Royal Saudi Air Force has placed
its warplanes on alert to launch strikes as the region sits on a
knife edge.” The report accompanies undated footage of Saudi F-15’s
in aerial maneuvers over what is presumably a Saudi airfield
The
Daily Star adds the following accompanying
the video:
The kingdom has mobilized its F-15 fighter jet fleet to launch a military operation against the Iranian-backed terrorist militia of Hezbollah in Lebanon, regional news website The Baghdad Post reports.
Saudi Arabia previously accused both Lebanon and Iran of committing an act of wars against it after rebels fired a missile at the King Khalid International Airport in the kingdom’s capital of Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia has reportedly placed its air force on alert
However
unlikely it is that the Saudis would take direct military action
against Lebanon,
the report reveals the legitimate fears of Lebanese citizens who are
increasingly aware that their
country has fallen in the cross hairs of an unusual alliance between
Saudi Arabia, Israel, and anti-Iranian interests which
see Hezbollah and pro-Iranian proxies as the number one threat and
scapegoat for all of the region’s problems.
Iran
is currently being scapegoated for just about all tensions which have
exploded in the gulf over the past week, including the following:
-
the civil war in Yemen,
-
the Qatar economic blockade and isolation over accusations that it is “Iran friendly”,
-
the latest civil unrest in Bahrain and the alleged bombing of a major oil pipeline there,
-
ratcheting up tensions with Israel in support of Hezbollah,
-
destabilizing Lebanon itself leading to PM Saad Hariri’s “resignation” – all of this precipitating the Saudi “night of the long knives”.
As
many astute pundits have pointed out, it’s
now “blame Iran time” according
to the official Saudi (and allies) narrative of events in order to
set the stage for public support for potential military action
against Iran.
Saudi
Arabia 'scrambles fighter jets' amid fears of WAR in Middle East
SAUDI
Arabia has scrambled its air force for strikes in Lebanon amid fears
of a new war in the Middle East, according to reports.
11
November, 2017
The
kingdom has mobilised its F-15 fighter jet fleet ito launch a
military operation against the Iranian-backed terrorist militia of
Hezbollah in Lebanon, regional news website The Baghdad Post reports.
Saudi
Arabia previously accused both Lebanon and Iran of commiting an act
of wars against it after rebels fired a missile at the King Khalid
International Airport in the kingdom's capital of Riyadh.
Yesterday,
Saudi Arabia ordered its citizens to leave Lebanon escalating fears
of war to new heights – which the US have dubbed grounds for a
“proxy war”.
Hezbollah
are the most powerful military and political force in Lebanon and
receives major support from Iran.
Reports
now state the Royal Saudi Air Force has placed its warplanes on alert
to launch strikes as the region sits on a knife edge.
Hezbollah
said on Friday that Saudi Arabia had declared war on Lebanon after
the nation was accused of holding their Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri
against his will.
The
PM resigned while on a visit to Riyadh last Saturday, which was
dubbed as an "insult" to Lebanon.
Hariri’s
resignation has plunged Lebanon into crisis, thrusting into the
centre of the rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
The
region sits on a knife-edge as the power struggle between Iran and
Saudi Arabia looks set to draw their neighbours into a major war.
Thamer
al-Sabhan, the Saudi minister for Gulf affairs, said the Lebanese
government would now “be dealt with as a government declaring war
on Saudi Arabia” over “acts of agressionn” by Hezbollah.
Ex-prime
minister Hariri has blamed Iran for the growing conflict – claiming
Hezbollah are “Iran’s arm” in Lebanon.
US
secretary of state Rex Tillerson warned the region not to star a war
in the Middle East – and urged Iran to back down for its support of
Hezbollah.
He
said: “The United States supports the stability of Lebanon and is
opposed to any actions that could threaten that stability.
“The
United States cautions against any party, within or outside Lebanon,
using Lebanon as a venue for proxy conflicts or in any manner
contributing to instability in that country.”
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