Revealed - Saudis Plan To Give Up Palestine - For War On Iran
The tyrants of Saudi Arabia developed a plan that sells away Palestine. They see this as necessary to get U.S. support for their fanatic campaign against their perceived enemy Iran.
18
August, 2017
An
internal Saudi memorandum, leaked to the Lebanese paper Al-Akhbar,
reveals its major elements. (Note: The genuineness of the memo has
not been confirmed. In theory it could be a "plant" by some
other party. But Al-Akhbar has
so far an excellent record of publishing genuine leaks and I trust
its editors' judgement.)
According
to the memo the Saudis are ready to give up on the Palestinian right
of return. They forfeit Palestinian sovereignty over Jerusalem and no
longer insist of the status of a full state for the Palestinians. In
return they ask for a U.S.-Saudi-Israeli (military) alliance against
their perceived enemy on the eastern side of the Persian Gulf.
Negotiations
on the issue were held between the Saudis and the Zionist under the
aegis of the United States. Netanyahu and Trump’s "shared
personal assistant, wunderkind Jared Kushner", is the point men
in these negotiations. He made at least three
trips to
Saudi Arabia this year, the last one very recently.
The
Saudi operations over the last month, against the internal opposition
to the Salman clan as well as against Hizbullah in Lebanon, have to
be seen in
the context and as preparation of
the larger plan. To recap:
- Last week the current front-man of the Palestinians, Mahmoud Abbas, was ordered to Riyadh. There he was told to accept whatever will be presented as U.S. peace plan or to resign. He was urged to cut all Palestinian ties with Iran and Hizbullah:
Since the warnings, which could threaten the new Palestinian unity agreement signed by Fatah and the Iranian-backed Hamas in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian media displayed a rare degree of unity in recent days by coming out against Iran.
Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump - 3:03 PM - 6 Nov 2017
I have great confidence in King Salman and the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, they know exactly what they are doing....
- The Saudi tyrant abducted the Prime Minister of Lebanon, Saad Hariri, and declared waron the country. The purpose of this move is to remove or isolate Hizbullah, the Shia resistance of Lebanon which is allied with Iran and opposes the Saudi plans for Palestine.
- On November 11 the New York Times reported on the U.S. drafting of a "peace plan" but provided little detail. The chance for such a plan to succeed was described as low.
The
left-wing Lebanese paper Al-Akhbar has
obtained a copy
of the plan (Arabic)
in form of a memorandum by the Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir
to the Saudi clown prince Mohammed Bin Salman (English
machine translation):
The document, which is being unveiled for the first time, proves all that has been leaked since President Trump's visit to Saudi Arabia last May on the launch of US efforts to sign a peace treaty between Saudi Arabia and Israel. This was followed by information on the exchange of visits between Riyadh and Tel Aviv, the most important being the visit of the Saudi Crown Prince to the Zionist entity.
The document reveals the size of concessions that Riyadh intends to present in the context of the liquidation of the Palestinian issue, and its concern to get in return the elements of power against Iran and the resistance, led by Hezbollah.
The
Saudi foreign ministry memo starts by laying out its strategic
perspective:
To face Iran by increasing sanctions on ballistic missiles and reconsidering the nuclear deal, the Kingdom has pledged in the strategic partnership agreement with US President Donald Trump that any US-Saudi effort is the key to success.
...
Saudi Arabia's rapprochement with Israel involves a risk to the Muslim peoples of the Kingdom, because the Palestinian cause represents a spiritual and historical and religious heritage. The Kingdom will not take this risk unless it feels the United States' sincere approach to Iran, which is destabilizing the region by sponsoring terrorism, its sectarian policies and interfering in the affairs of others.
The
Saudi paper describes the issues and process steps towards a deal in
five points:
First:
The Saudis demand a "parity
of the relationship"
between Israel and Saudi Arabia. On the military level they
demand that either Israel gives up on its nuclear weapons or Saudi
Arabia is itself allowed to acquire such.
Second:
In exchange Saudi Arabia will use its diplomatic and economic power
to push through a 'peace plan' between Israel, the Palestinians and
Arab countries along the lines that the U.S. will lay out. Within
such a peace plan the Saudis, according to the memo, are willing to
make extraordinary concessions:
- The city of Jerusalem would not become capital of a Palestinian state but be subjected to a special international regime administered by the United Nations.
- The right of return for Palestinian refugees, who were violently expelled by the Zionists, would be given up on. The refugees would be integrated as citizens of those countries where they currently reside.
- (No demand for full sovereignty of a Palestinian state is mentioned.)
Third:
After reaching an agreement of the "main principles of the final
solution" for Palestine between Saudi Arabia and the U.S.
(Israel), a meeting of all foreign ministers of the region would be
convened to back these up. Final negotiations would follow.
Fourth:
In coordination and cooperation with Israel Saudi Arabia would use
its economic power to convince the Arab public of the plan. The point
correctly notes "At the beginning of normalizing relations with
Israel, normalization
will not be acceptable to public opinion in the Arab world."
The plan is thus to essentially bribe the Arab public into accepting
it.
Fifth:
The Palestinian conflict distracts from the real issue the Saudi
rulers have in the region which is Iran: "Therefore, the Saudi
and Israeli sides agree on the following:
- Contribute to counter any activities that serve Iran's aggressive policies in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia's affinity with Israel must be matched by a sincere American approach against Iran.
- Increase US and international sanctions related to Iranian ballistic missiles.
- Increase sanctions on Iran's sponsorship of terrorism around the world.
- Re-examination of the group (five + 1) in the nuclear agreement with Iran to ensure the implementation of its terms literally and strictly.
- Limiting Iran's access to its frozen assets and exploiting Iran's deteriorating economic situation and marketing it to increase pressure on the Iranian regime from within.
- Intensive intelligence cooperation in the fight against organized crime and drug trafficking supported by Iran and Hezbollah."
The
memo is signed by Adel al-Jubeir. (But who were the 'advisors'
who dictated it to him?)
The
U.S. plan for peace in Palestine is to press the Palestinians and
Arabs into anything Israel demands. The Saudis will agree to that,
with minor conditions, if only the U.S. and Israel help them to get
rid of their nemesis Iran. But that is impossible. Neither Israel nor
the U.S. will agree to a "parity of relationship" for Saudi
Arabia. Saudi Arabia lacks all elements to become a supreme state in
the Arab Middle East. Iran can not be defeated.
Iran
is the at the core of the Shia constituency and at the core of
resistance to "western" imperialism. Shia and Sunni aligned
populations in the Middle East (ex Egypt) are of roughly equal size.
Iran has about four times the number of citizens the Saudis have. It
is much older and cultured than Saudi Arabia. It has an educated
population and well developed industrial capabilities. Iran is a
nation, not a conglomerate of desert tribes like the desert peninsula
under al-Saud. Its geographic position and resources make it
unconquerable.
To
defeat Iran the Saudis started proxy-wars in Iraq, Syria, Yemen and
now Lebanon. They needed foot soldiers to win these wars. The Saudis
hired and sent the only significant infantry they ever had at their
disposal. Their hordes of al-Qaeda and ISIS fanatics were defeated.
Tens of thousands of them have been killed on the battle fields in
Iraq, Syria and Yemen. Despite a global mobilization campaign nearly
all the potentially available forces have been defeated by the local
resistances on the ground. Neither the colonial settler state nor the
U.S. are willing to send their soldiers into battle for Saudi
supremacy.
The
grant plan of the Trump administration to achieve peace in the Middle
East is high on hopes but lacks all the necessary details. The
Saudi's promise to support the U.S. plan if the Trump administration
is willing to fight their nemesis Iran. Both leaderships are hapless
and impulsive and both of their plans have little chance of final
success. They will be pursued anyway and will continue to create an
enormous amount of collateral damage. The Zionist entity feels no
real pressure to make peace. It is already dragging
its feet on
these plans and will try to use them to its sole advantage.
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