U.S. defence chief welcomes Saudi offer on troops in Syria

US defence chief says increased activity by other countries would make it easier for the US to accelerate its fight against Daesh

Image Credit: AFP
US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter
Published: 10:08 February 5, 2016

Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada: U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter welcomed on Thursday a Saudi offer to participate in any ground operations in Syria launched by the U.S.-led coalition.

Carter said increased activity by other countries would make it easier for the United States to accelerate its fight against Islamic State militants.

“That kind of news is very welcome,” he told reporters while on a visit to Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada.

Carter said he looked forward to discussing the offer of ground troops with the Saudi defense minister in Brussels next week.

He said the Saudi government had indicated a willingness to do more in the fight against Daesh, which controls vast swaths of Syria and Iraq.

For instance, Saudi officials had said they would help marshal some Muslim countries to join in the fight, and to ensure that Iraqi and Syrian populations were able to prevent a reemergence of the military group later, Carter said.

Carter said he planned to use next week’s meetings in Brussels to help encourage more broad-based support for accelerating the fight against Daesh.

The Pentagon chief said the United States was also watching events in Libya very carefully but had made no decision on expanding its role there.

“The concern there is that Libya not get on a glide slope to the kind of situation that we find elsewhere, where (Daesh), in a politically disrupted environment, seizes a foothold, gathers a piece of territory from which it is able to tyrannise people, and plot operations elsewhere,” Carter said.

Daesh forces have attacked Libya’s oil infrastructure and established a foothold in the city of Sirte, exploiting a power vacuum in the country where two rival governments have been battling for supremacy.

Carter said the focus was now on political change in Libya, where the warring administrations are expected to form a unity government.

“The most important objective right now is to help Libyans come together and help put their government back together,” he said.

Once that was accomplished, the U.S. government had said it was willing to join other countries, including Italy, in helping secure the country, he said.

Saudi official says kingdom ready to send troops to Syria

Cairo: A Saudi military spokesman said Thursday the kingdom is ready to send ground troops to Syria to fight Islamic State group provided coalition leaders agree during an upcoming meeting in Brussels.
Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asiri told The Associated Press that Saudi Arabia has taken part in coalition airstrikes against Daesh since the U.S.-led campaign began in September 2014, but could now provide ground troops.
The United States is scheduled to convene a meeting of defense ministers from countries fighting Daesh in Brussels this month.
“We are determined to fight and defeat Daesh,” Asiri said, using the Arabic acronym for the so-called Islamic State for Iraq and the Levant. He didn’t elaborate on how many troops the kingdom would send.
Saudi Arabia is deeply involved in Yemen’s civil war, where it is fighting Iranian-backed rebels. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries have long viewed Iran as a regional menace, and Riyadh and Tehran back opposite sides in the wars in Syria and Yemen.
A spokesman said the U.S. State Department had no immediate comment on the issue of Saudi Arabia’s involvement, but added that “in general we want members of the coalition against Daesh to look for ways to do more and to contribute more.”
Asiri’s announcement came shortly after Russia said it suspects Turkey of planning a military invasion of Syria.
Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said Thursday in a statement that the Russian military has registered “a growing number of signs of hidden preparation of the Turkish armed forces for active actions on the territory of Syria.”
He said images of a checkpoint on the Turkish-Syrian border taken in late October and late January show a buildup of transportation infrastructure that could be used for moving in troops, ammunition and weapons.
The announcement came a day after U.N.-led peace talks in Geneva were suspended for three weeks.
The United States blames both Syria’s government and Russia for stalling the peace negotiations. Syrian government troops, backed by Russian airstrikes, have increased the pace of attacks on opposition forces in recent days as the talks faltered.
“We believe that the airstrikes alone are not the perfect solution,” Asiri said in another interview with the Dubai-based Al-Arabiya TV.
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1 reply

  1. MUNAFIQ – HYPOCRITES … all of them. First creating chaos and then pretending to want to solve it.

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