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Erdogan conspired with Saudis to help militants in Syrian Idlib onslaught: Report

May 29, 2015 By administrator

15647c06-378a-49ae-907a-e651e488f908A recent report has revealed that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan conspired with Saudi Arabian authorities and facilitated the ground for foreign-sponsored militants to capture the northwestern Syrian city of Idlib last March following days of clashes with Syrian troops.

The report, published by Lebanon-based Arabic-language al-Manar satellite television network and citing unnamed sources, said that Riyadh funneled weapons and money to the militants, including the al-Qaeda-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra group, while Ankara provided logistical support as well as massive fire cover for the extremists.

The al-Manar report also said that a command center was set up in Turkey in order to organize the offensive against Idlib, located roughly 295 kilometers (183 miles) north of the Syrian capital, Damascus.

Saudi officials, in return, paid for satellite images that the command center needed for the purpose.

Moreover, Turkey supplied the militants during the battles with Wi-Fi Internet connectivity via an unmanned aerial vehicle that flew overhead and linked the computers and smart phones used by the militants together.
On March 28, foreign-backed militants seized Idlib in northwestern Syria after more than five days of fierce fighting with units of government forces.

Syria has been plagued by a deadly crisis fueled by Takfiri groups since March 2011. More than 222,000 people have so far been killed in the conflict, according to the so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Over 3.8 million Syrians have also fled the violence to neighboring countries, namely Jordan and Lebanon, and more than 7.2 million others have also become internally uprooted, according to the United Nations.

MP/HJL/HRB

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: conspired, Erdogan, idlib, saudi, Syria

Saudi Arabia’s fear of revolutionary blow-back from Yemen

May 17, 2015 By administrator

By Yuram Abdullah Weiler, Press TV

Yamen-saudi“The Saudis committed a big mistake in Yemen and the impacts of the crimes they have committed will certainly backfire on them.”

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei

On March 26, 2015, Saudi Arabia launched a sanguinary military aggression against its neighbor Yemen in an effort to restore the defunct government of Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi. Vice president for 17 years under former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, Hadi came to power in 2011 under a deal brokered by Saudi royals under US auspices, but resigned in January 2015 after failing to fulfill a power-sharing agreement signed with the Houthis in September 2014. As a result, Hadi was forced to look to his US-backed benefactors to regain his office, but history suggests Saudi efforts not only will fail but will also backfire.

On the surface, the conflict in Yemen appears to be a classic case of reestablishing the reign of a US-backed dictator by the use of a proxy force, in this case, Saudi Arabia. However, a closer look reveals that the Saudi royals have undertaken this mission out of fear that unrest expanding outside its borders has the potential to infiltrate and destabilize the Wahhabi monarchy.

If the Saudi campaign fails to achieve the goal of restoring Hadi to his presidential position, not only would it be a great embarrassment to the new monarch Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud and a major foreign policy defeat, but it also could embolden opposition forces within the kingdom.

And one need look no further than Bahrain and the brutal suppression of the popular protests carried out by Saudi military forces to comprehend the intensity of this collective fear among the Saudi rulers of revolutionary blowback. As a result of these fears of an uprising within Saudi Arabia, Riyadh’s royals have ruthlessly crushed uprisings with ferocity in Bahrain and Yemen as well as within the borders of the kingdom itself. This widespread suppression of dissent has included the imprisonment of ulema such as Sheikh Nimr an-Nimr, who has been sentenced to death for his alleged role in demonstrations against the Riyadh regime.

For the US, Saudi Arabia is a close regional ally and therefore it is backing Riyadh’s aggressive foray against Yemen. One possible rationalization for Washington’s support is quelling fears over the alleged involvement of Iran with the Houthis; more likely is ensuring the security of the Bab al-Mandeb strait at the mouth of the Red Sea, one of six main transit chokepoints for worldwide crude oil shipping. Since any disruption in the crude oil supply chain would have global economic repercussions, the US can be expected to back the Saudis, regardless of the atrocities they may commit. Similarly, with the 5th US Naval fleet based in Manama, Bahrain, the US has been predictably silent on the brutal Saudi suppression of demonstrations there. Hence, US interests seem to be in lockstep with Saudi interests, at least for the near term.

Moreover, the ruling elite in the US seem inclined to the Saudi royals’ misguided view that containment of Iran is vital to the security of the Persian Gulf region. However, the rise of ISIL has changed the calculus and now some in the US administration apparently have realized that Iran could be an essential partner in the war against the Takfiri militants. Nevertheless, a recent US Senate Armed Services Committee hearing chaired by ultra-right winger John McCain heard testimony from “experts” who insisted that Iran still poses a greater threat than ISIL, at least as far as Iraq is concerned.

A quick look at the history of Yemen should help clarify the futility of the current Saudi aggression. The Houthi movement consists of so-called Zaydi (or “Fiver”) Shi’a Muslims who split from the majority “Twelver” Shi’a Muslims that recognized Muhammad ibn Ali ibn al-Husayn (AS) as the fifth Imam. Instead, they followed Zayd ibn Ali who in 740 led an unsuccessful rebellion against the Umayyad caliphate. Despite the defeat, adherents managed to establish an enduring Zaydi imamate in Yemen that lasted until September 1962 when a coup instigated by modernist army officers affiliated with Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser forced the last Zaydi imam, Muhammad al-Badr al-Mansur, into exile and precipitated a civil war lasting from 1962 to 1970.

The ensuing civil war in Yemen drew in massive armed forces from Egypt and mercenaries from Saudi Arabia who found themselves on opposite sides of the conflict, the Egyptian troops backing the modernists of the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen) and the Saudis backing the Zaydis, who refused to accept the legitimacy of the Nasser-aligned, republican government. Nasser finally pulled his troops out of Yemen in June of 1967, leading to the creation of the Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen), which later fell under Marxist control in 1969. North Yemen managed to establish a coalition government in 1974, but it was not until after the civil war of 1986 that Yemen was finally united in 1990 under former president Ali Abdullah Saleh. Even then, another civil war in 1994 was instigated by Sunni southern factions attempting to reestablish an independent South Yemen.

Today, Egyptian military historians refer to Nasser’s armed escapade in Yemen as Egypt’s Vietnam, reflecting the failure of the Egyptian forces totaling 55,000 to subdue the Zaydi rebels. Why Saudi king Salman bin Abdulaziz would think Saudi forces using tactics similar to those used by the Egyptians against the Zaydis would be successful in subduing the Houthis now is difficult to understand, since history teaches that such a war plan is doomed to failure.

What led the Saudis to initiate this latest aggression appears to have been the imminent agreement by the Houthis and the other dozen Yemeni parties involved in the negotiations on power-sharing, which would have retained a role for Hadi. According to Jamal Benomar, the former United Nations mediator in Yemen, “When this [Saudi]campaign started, one thing that was significant but went unnoticed is that the Yemenis were close to a deal that would institute a power-sharing with the Houthis.”

Publicly, the Saudis gave three reasons for their campaign that has slain over 1,500 people: first, restoring Hadi as president; second, crushing the Houthi movement; and third, curbing Iran’s influence in Yemen. In regards to Saudi allegations of Iranian interference, even the US State Department through spokesperson Marie Harf denied this. “We know there’s a relationship with the Houthis, certainly, although, not to our knowledge, an operational sort of control relationship,” she said in a recent press briefing.

Crushing the determined and well-armed Houthi movement did not happen in 2005 and seems even less likely to happen now. Furthermore, the Houthis had been willing to accept a 20-percent role in the government, so even if they were completely eliminated, there is the other 80 percent of Yemeni opposition forces remaining. Finally, by pursuing their fruitless military interference on the Yemeni people’s right of self-determination, the Saudis risk escalating internal opposition to their already fragile monarchy.

The Saudi bombing war in Yemen also has consequently strengthened al-Qaeda of the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), which has gained ground in Yemen since the assault began. By targeting the Houthi fighters exclusively, the Saudis have allowed their AQAP adversary, which is financed by private Saudi funding, to increase in strength. Even right-leaning Brookings Institute scholar Kenneth Pollack has warned that “greater Saudi intervention in Yemen is unlikely to improve the situation and could easily undermine the Kingdom’s own security and stability over the medium to longer term.” In short, Saudi Arabia’s “Operation Decisive Storm” is not only proving to be indecisive, but also is backfiring on its perpetrator.

So despite the public facade, the one and only reason for the Saudi aggression against the Houthis in Yemen is to prevent a popular uprising from spilling over into the kingdom and gathering momentum. However, by continuing their relentless assault on Yemen, the Saudis are assuring that their campaign will indeed backfire by inspiring opposition forces within the kingdom to close ranks and exercise their right of self-determination.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Arabia’s, blow-back, saudi, yemen

Rouhani Iran will weather oil price slide, Saudi Arabia will suffer –

May 6, 2015 By administrator

RuhaniIranian President Hassan Rouhani said Tuesday that Iran can cope with the economic turmoil of falling oil prices, adding that Saudi Arabia and Kuwait will be harder hit.

Rouhani said that while oil now only accounts for one-third of Tehran’s budget, some of the Gulf states are up to 95 percent reliant on it. Report RT

“If Iran suffers from the drop in oil prices, know that other oil-producing countries such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait will suffer more than Iran,” he said.

He added that “Kuwait’s budget is 95 percent reliant on oil,” and 90 percent of Saudi Arabia’s “annual exports are related to oil.”

READ MORE: Oil plummet: Crude dives below $45 for first time since 2009

Rouhani was addressing a crowd in the southern city of Bushehr – home to a nuclear power plant built with the help of the Russians, which became operational in 2011.

He also said that falling prices for crude oil are the result of “a plot that will be overcome with unity and resistance.”

“Those [countries] who have planned the oil price reduction against some countries should know that they will regret it,” he said, without elaborating on what countries he meant.

Rouhani was elected in 2013 on promises to turn around Iran’s sanctions-hit economy. He has successfully lifted the country out of recession and recently began to stress the importance of non-oil exports.

Iran was somewhat caught off guard by the slide in oil prices, as its current budget was based on sales at US$100 a barrel.

Tehran cut that estimate to $72 in March but oil has now hit a six-year low, with Brent crude trading at just $46.

With Rouhani at the helm, inflation rates have halved to less than 20 percent. With progress in talks regarding Iran’s controversial nuclear program, some sanctions by the West have been lifted.

But as oil prices continue to tumble, there is now the prospect of a deficit in Tehran, particularly as businesses are cut off from loans in the international banking system, as most of the sanctions still remain in place.

By seeking to hammer out a deal with the six world powers, Rouhani had hoped to breathe life into the Iranian economy by opening Iran up to foreign companies and partnership deals.

Due to Western sanctions, Iran’s oil exports have dropped from 2.5 million barrels a day in 2011 to about one million barrels today, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iran, oil, rouhani, saudi

Thousands of Yemeni protest in Sana’a condemn Saudi deadly military aggression

April 10, 2015 By administrator

yemen-protistThousands of Yemeni protesters have poured into the streets of the capital, Sana’a, to condemn the Saudi deadly military aggression against their country as a violation of international law.

In a mass rally on Friday, the Yemeni demonstrators waved national flags and carried large banners while calling on the international community to probe crimes committed in their country by the Saudi regime and prosecute the perpetrators of the atrocities.

The protesters reiterated that the Yemeni people are capable of resolving their own problems peacefully.

They also hailed efforts by Iran, Russia, China and several other countries to stand behind the people of Yemen.

 

Meanwhile, sporadic protests were also held in other parts of the Arab country, including the southeastern city of Taiz.

The demonstrations were held as Saudi jet fighters targeted several parts of Sana’a during rallies in al-Matar street.

Saudi Arabia started its air campaign against Yemen on March 26 without a UN mandate in a bid to restore power to the country’s fugitive former president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, a staunch ally of Riyadh.

A spokesperson for the Yemeni army, fighting alongside Ansarullah fighters, said on Friday that at least 1,000 people, including 200 children, have been killed in Saudi airstrikes.

The military official added that 15,000 others have been also injured since the start of Saudi military campaign.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said on April 7 that more than 540 people had been killed in Yemen since the military conflict began in the Arab country in mid-March.

Christian Lindmeier, a WHO spokesman, noted that the death toll was related to the period between March 19 and April 6.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: aggression, deadly, military, saudi, yemen

BEIRUT: Yemeni students in Lebanon protest Saudi-led airstrikes

April 1, 2015 By administrator

The Daily Star
404372_img650x420_img650x420_cropBEIRUT: Dozens of mostly-Yemeni expat students from Lebanese University protested outside a U.N. office in Downtown Beirut Wednesday against the Saudi-led airstrikes launched last week.

The students, joined by a number of their comrades from Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon and Bahrain, raised banners and shouted slogans outside the U.N.’s ESCWA building to denounce the Saudi-led coalition airstrikes targeting Houthis in Yemen.

One Yemeni student raised a poster that read “stop the massacre,” while another held up a sign that said “stop the siege.”

Students also raised pictures of the Yemeni flag and shouted slogans expressing rejection of the Saud-led intervention in the country.

The protest comes as at least 37 workers were killed and 80 wounded overnight at a dairy plant in an attack at a port in Yemen, although authorities could not say if the Saudi-led force or Houthi rebels were behind the attack.

Since Friday at least 93 civilians have been killed and 364 wounded in the fighting, the U.N. human rights office said Tuesday.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: air strike, BEIRUT, Protest, saudi, student, yemen

Yemenis take to streets to condemn Saudi aggression against their country

April 1, 2015 By administrator

March of unity

March of unity

Yemeni people have taken to streets to in Bab al-Yemen district of the capital, Sana’a, to condemn Saudi aggression against their country and voice their support for resistance.

Yemeni protesters chanted slogans against Saudi regime, in favor of Houthi movement’s Ansarullah revolutionaries.

Similar demonstrations were also held in Yemen’s cities of Ta’izz and Amran with protesters calling for the boycott of goods made by countries engaged in Saudi-led aggression of Yemen.

Protesters also chanted slogans against the US, Israel, and Saudi regime describing Saudi regime as an ally of Israel, which is implementing US-Israeli agenda.

The demonstrators called on all people around the world to condemn the barbaric Saudi aggression, urging all global organizations and entities to do their responsibility against the Saudi aggression.

One demonstrator grabbed the microphone and cried, “Where are the free people of the world? Where are the free people of Saudi Arabia to come out to protest against their government atrocities?”

The demonstrators said they will stand together to defend the unity of Yemen and the sovereignty of their nation.

“From Sana’a to Qatif, the revolution will not stop,” they chanted, referring to the city of Qatif in eastern Saudi Arabia.

“This million-man turnout come in order to declare to the world that we are not afraid of any incursion, we resort to God, the God will give us victory, God rewards he whom he wants,” a protester said.

Calling for popular mobilization against Saudi aggression against Yemen, the protesters also condemned international silence over Saudi crimes in their country.

They also asked for international probe into unauthorized Saudi aggression of Yemen.

Senior members of the Ansarullah movement, which currently controls most parts of Yemen, read statements to the demonstrators, ensuring them that Saudi Arabia will certainly pay for its attacks on Yemen.

They said the Saudi war on Yemen is against all ethical and Islamic principles.

“It is shedding the bloods of Yemenis without taking into consideration any ethics, any humanitarian principle,” a Houthi official told the gathering, adding that instead of targeting people and civilian infrastructure, the Saudi-led attacks should have been focused on the Palestinian cause and targeted the Israeli regime.

Another Houthi member said that the Yemenis are not frightened by the ongoing attacks, saying that they will stand against the Saudis with steadfastness.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: aggression, saudi, yemen

Iraqi protesters slam Saudi aggression against Yemen

March 31, 2015 By administrator

Iraqis hold a portrait of the leader of Yemen’s Ansarullah movement, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi,

Iraqis hold a portrait of the leader of Yemen’s Ansarullah movement, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi,

Thousands of people have held separate demonstrations across Iraq in protest against the ongoing Saudi military aggression against Yemen.

On Tuesday, Iraqi protesters carried portraits of the leader of Yemen’s Ansarullah movement, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, as they converged on the landmark Firdous square of the capital, Baghdad, to voice their resentment at Riyadh’s onslaught against its impoverished southern neighbor.

A similar rally was also staged in Iraq’s southern city of Basra, where people held banners and flags to show their anger at the Saudi airstrikes across Yemen.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Zeid al-Hussein has warned that Yemen is on the brink of complete collapse amid Saudi-led aerial assaults against the country.

“The country seems to be on the verge of total collapse,” the UN official said in a statement released on Tuesday.

He also expressed worries about the fatalities caused by the air raids, saying the situation in Yemen “is extremely alarming, with dozens of civilians killed over the past four days.”

According to figures published by Zeid’s office, over 90 civilians have been killed and nearly 370 injured since March 26, when the Al Saud regime unleashed deadly air raids against Yemen in an attempt to restore power to fugitive Yemeni president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, a close ally of Riyadh.

Hadi stepped down in January and refused to reconsider the decision despite calls by Ansarullah revolutionaries. The Yemeni parliament did not approve his resignation.

Gradually, as the Yemeni government failed to provide security and properly run the affairs of the country, the Ansarullah fighters started to take control of state matters to contain corruption and terror.

The fugitive president fled Aden to the Saudi capital city of Riyadh after Ansarullah revolutionaries advanced toward Aden, where he had sought to set up a rival power base, and withdrew his resignation.

The Houthis, however, say Hadi lost his legitimacy as president of the country after he escaped the capital in February.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: against, aggression, saudi, yemen

Iran warns of bloodshed as Saudi-led forces bomb Yemen

March 26, 2015 By administrator

Houthi rebels say least 18 people killed in air strikes in Sanaa,

Houthi rebels say least 18 people killed in air strikes in Sanaa,

Houthi rebels say least 18 people killed in air strikes in Sanaa, as Iran warns violence could spread across the region.
Saudi air strikes on Shia rebels in Yemen have triggered a furious reaction from regional rival Iran, with top officials warning that military action could spill into other countries.

Saudi Arabia said that a coalition consisting of 10 countries, including members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), had begun air strikes at 2am local time on Thursday, targeting Houthi positions in the capital, Sanaa.

According to Al Jazeera sources, the strikes carried out by 100 jets from Saudi and its coalition, have destroyed Iranian-made missile launchers in the capital Sanaa. The operation has been dubbed, “Decisive Storm.”

Houthi military barracks and air bases controlled by the rebels were also reportedly destroyed, Fayez al-Duweiri, a retired Jordanian general and defence analyst, told Al Jazeera.

The Houthi-run health ministry in Sanaa said that at least 18 civilians were killed and 24 others were wounded in the Saudi-led attacks on the capital.

The bombing of the Houthis, who are said to be backed by Iran – a charge Tehran denies – came after several weeks of warnings that Yemen was descending into civil war.

Saudi Arabia said it had launched the bombing raids to reinstate what it called the legitimate government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who has been holed up in the main southern city of Aden since fleeing rebel-controlled Sanaa.

The Houthis and their allies within the armed forces had been closing in on Hadi’s last bastion, Aden.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said the air strikes would lead only to greater loss of life.

“Military action from outside of Yemen against its territorial integrity and its people will have no other result than more bloodshed and more deaths,” he told the Iranian-owned Al-Alam television channel.

He also called for an “urgent dialogue” among the Yemeni factions “without external interference”.

Speaking to Al Jazeera from Sanaa, Houthi spokesman Mohammed al-Bukhaiti called the military action a declaration of war on Yemen, adding that reports alleging a Houthi leader, Mohamed Ali al-Houthi, had been injured were false.

Meanwhile, thousands of pro-Houthi protesters gathered in Sanaa on Thursday to condemn the Saudi-led air strikes. In the city of Taiz, supporters of President Hadi organised a rival protest.

Sanaa targeted

Huge explosions were heard in Sanaa as strikes hit an air base at the capital’s airport and other locations in the city, an AFP correspondent reported.
Strikes were also reported on targets in the Malaheez and Hafr Sufyan regions of Saada province, a main Houthi stronghold on the border with Saudi Arabia.

The United Arab Emirates is participating with 30 jets, Bahrain with 12, Qatar with 10, Morocco and Jordan both with six, while Sudan offered three planes, officials said.

An Egyptian official told the AFP news agency that Egypt would also take part. Saudi Arabia said that another four Muslim countries including Pakistan wanted to participate in the military coalition.

Kuwait’s defence ministry announced it was sending three squadrons of its F-18 Super Hornet aircraft to Saudi’s King Abdulaziz airbase in Dhahran to take part in the offensive.

Four Egyptian war ships also entered the Suez Canal on Thursday en route to the Gulf of Aden after Cairo pledged military support for the campaign, canal officials said.

The officials said the ships will take part in operations “to secure” the strategic waters that control southern access to the Suez Canal.

Pakistan, which has longstanding ties to Saudi Arabia, was examining a request from Riyadh to join the coalition, Islamabad said.

In a statement following the strikes, the White House said that the US was coordinating military and intelligence support with the Saudis but not taking part directly in the strikes.

The European Union, however, opposed the strikes with the EU High Representative and Vice President Federica Mogherini saying the operation “dramatically worsened the already fragile situation” and “risk having serious regional consequences”.

“I’m convinced that military action is not a solution,” she said, calling for an immediate return to negotiations to resolve the conflict.

Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, saudi, yemen

Saudi beheaded for torturing his toddler to death

August 5, 2014 By administrator

Agence France Presse
RIYADH: A Saudi man was beheaded Tuesday for torturing and beating his two-year-old boy to death, the interior ministry said.

img650x420_cropMaqbul bin Madi al-Sharari hit his son Mohammad “repeatedly with a cane on the back of his head and the rest of his body,” the ministry said in a statement carried by SPA state news agency.

He also punched the toddler in the face repeatedly and “burned him in different parts of his body, torturing him several times, which led to his death,” the ministry said.

Sharari’s execution in the northern Jawf region, brings to 18 the number of death sentences carried out this year in the ultra-conservative kingdom.

Saudi Arabia beheaded 78 people in 2013, according to an AFP count.

Last year, the U.N. High Commission for Human Rights denounced a “sharp increase in the use of capital punishment” there since 2011.

According to rights group Amnesty International, the number of executions rose from 27 in 2010, including five foreigners, to 82 in 2011, including 28 foreigners.

In 2012, the number of executions dipped slightly to 79, among them 27 foreigners.

Rape, murder, apostasy, armed robbery and drug trafficking are all punishable by death under Saudi Arabia’s strict version of Islamic sharia law.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: beheaded, saudi

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