What's new

Saudi Arabia and Turkey rolling back on rhetoric to send troops into Syria

Daneshmand

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 5, 2014
Messages
3,109
Reaction score
43
Country
Iran, Islamic Republic Of
Location
Pakistan
Saudi Arabia and Turkey rolling back on rhetoric to send troops into Syria | Middle East | News | The Independent


Officials say they will wait to see if a planned ceasefire transpires and for a sign-off from the US-led coalition.

Adel-al-Jubeir.jpg

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir delivers a statement after a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at the State Department in Washington, Reuters


Saudi Arabia and Turkey appeared Monday to be rolling back rhetoric on sending troops to Syria, as officials said they’d wait to see if a planned cease-fire transpires and for a sign-off from the US-led coalition.

A Saudi diplomat said Sunday that Saudi Arabia was “very serious” about sending ground troops into Syria, but will first wait to see whether plans for a pause in hostilities agreed by the United States and Russia transpires.

However, speaking in Riyadh, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir also said late Sunday that the decision whether to have a ground component on the ground is up to the US-led coalition.

“The timing is not up to us,” he said.

Turkey is also considering sending in ground troops, the Saudi diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic.

The Saudi force would be made up of special forces soldiers but details are still being planned, he said.

An already tangled conflict has become more complex even as world powers push for a pause in hostilities due to be implemented later this week. Russia has been bombing from the air as Syrian government forces, including Iranian and Iraqi fighters, close in on Aleppo.

An array of rebel groups backed by the United States, Turkey and Saudi Arabia have been losing ground.

The “disarray” has spurred Saudi to action, the diplomat said, adding that Riyadh wanting to both counter Islamic State militants and Iranian influence in the country.

“Time is running out,” he said. “We are waiting for the peace process to end. We believe it will fail and when it does the situation will be completely different.”

He said Saudi Arabia and Turkey are largely “on the same page” but that Ankara is also focused on countering Kurdish forces inside Syria.

“The Turkish government has made some progress in their thinking, they realized Daesh is a threat,” the diplomat said, using an Arabic acronym for Isis. “But they are also using this as a time to eliminate the Kurdish groups.”

Turkey has been shelling Kurdish forces this weekend after they seized an airbase in northern Syria, leading to appeals from US officials for a de-escalation.

Turkish Defence Minister Ismet Yilmaz Monday denied that Turkish forces had entered Syria following a complaint by the Syrian government to the UN Security Council. It claimed that Turkish forces were among 100 gunmen that entered the country on Saturday.

“It’s not true,” Yilmaz said according to the state-run Anadolu Agency. “There is no thought of Turkish soldiers entering Syria.”

That statement jarred with the Saudi diplomat’s comments. He said Saudi officials discussed the possibility of sending troops with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, during a recent three-day visit to Saudi Arabia.

“Turkey isn’t against the ground troops, but they want to say ‘we gave the peace process a chance’,” he said.

He said a force would only consist of special forces, and the size of it is still being planned.

Yilmaz confirmed that a decision had been reached for Saudi Arabia to send four F-16 fighter jets to Turkey’s Incirlik air base.

“The Kingdom’s deployment of aircraft to the Incirlik air base in Turkey is part of this campaign,” foreign minister Jubeir told a news conference in Riyadh Sunday, Reuters reported. “The kingdom’s readiness to provide special forces to any ground operations in Syria is linked to a decision to have a ground component to this coalition against Daesh in Syria - this US-led coalition ."
 
From the Article:

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir also said late Sunday that the decision whether to have a ground component on the ground is up to the US-led coalition.

“The timing is not up to us,” he said.


Now that is something.

Basically the Master told them, STFU.

So now, Saudis are waiting for US to give them the order to go in. So much so for any self respect, or sovereignty. The strings are now evident for everyone to see.

The problem is, the Master does not appear in a mood for a show down there.
 
...
Now that is something.

Basically the Master told them, STFU.

So now, Saudis are waiting for US to give them the order to go in. So much so for any self respect, or sovereignty. The strings are now evident for everyone to see.

The problem is, the Master does not appear in a mood for a show down there.



No ! It's not that, mon chéri. Tout le monde a bien la main sur le flingue...

“We will wait to see if a planned ceasefire transpires (Friday, 19 February 2016)”, so patience.





Vlad Putin
has disappeared completely however the moment is extreme. Medvedev was sent to calm and test the waters. ^ ^


...
 
Last edited:
Saudi and Turks should concentrate to revive their economy, rather spending millions on this adventurism. Learn from Pakistan. Pakistan still getting the heat of Afghan war. Plus, oil market is not going to revive anymore. US oil needs are very limited. Australian recently establish LNG plant of 40 million dollars to capture surrounding markets.
US and EU are not interested to touch Syrian subject. Because its all money. Now, middle eastern has only one option left, follow Isreal as regional leader.
 
No ! It's not that, mon chéri. Tout le monde a bien la main sur le flingue...

“We will wait to see if a planned ceasefire transpires (Friday, 19 February 2016)”, so patience.

Vlad Putin has disappeared completely however the moment is extreme. Medvedev was sent to calm and test the waters. ^ ^


...

What I find ridiculous about this whole situation is the idea from the Salibi Putin and Ayatollahs side that it'll be over once we've captured 'X' amount of territory...

.....when this whole thing began, how much territory did the Syrian people hold, and how much was held by Bashar barrel-bomber?

Now there are 20 million vengeful angry people, thousands of weapons, and lots of well-trained battle-hardened soldiers who have grown used to tremendous suffering.

The Salibi has brought hell-fire and the Ayatollahs have brought Hazara terrorists with 'faces like shields' to the battlefield to enable the barrel-bomber to capture cities. He will be unable to secure let alone bring any form of urban life back to those cities. This war has been prolonged, it can only end in one way.
 
Saudi and Turks should concentrate to revive their economy, rather spending millions on this adventurism. Learn from Pakistan. Pakistan still getting the heat of Afghan war. Plus, oil market is not going to revive anymore. US oil needs are very limited. Australian recently establish LNG plant of 40 million dollars to capture surrounding markets.
US and EU are not interested to touch Syrian subject. Because its all money. Now, middle eastern has only one option left, follow Isreal as regional leader.

Turkey reviving its economy?.................wut?
 
From the Article:

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir also said late Sunday that the decision whether to have a ground component on the ground is up to the US-led coalition.

“The timing is not up to us,” he said.


Now that is something.

Basically the Master told them, STFU.

So now, Saudis are waiting for US to give them the order to go in. So much so for any self respect, or sovereignty. The strings are now evident for everyone to see.

The problem is, the Master does not appear in a mood for a show down there.

Once again, analist is jumping to conclusions, so feaverish in his zeal to prove how "right" he is....while not even knowing basics of geopolitics and interests. Two bit analists, yo :lol:
 
Ayatollahs have brought Hazara terrorists with 'faces like shields' to the battlefield
well thats some emperor's rehtoric:tup:, cannibal zombies deserve more than that--anything, which can scare the hell out of em
 
well thats some emperor's rehtoric:tup:, cannibal zombies deserve more than that--anything, which can scare the hell out of em

It is a hunting season down there, with zombies being culled to extinction. Where are Turkey and Saudi Arabia now when their zombie rebels need them?

This is from yesterday.

 
Saudi Arabia and Turkey rolling back on rhetoric to send troops into Syria | Middle East | News | The Independent


Officials say they will wait to see if a planned ceasefire transpires and for a sign-off from the US-led coalition.

Adel-al-Jubeir.jpg

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir delivers a statement after a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at the State Department in Washington, Reuters


Saudi Arabia and Turkey appeared Monday to be rolling back rhetoric on sending troops to Syria, as officials said they’d wait to see if a planned cease-fire transpires and for a sign-off from the US-led coalition.

A Saudi diplomat said Sunday that Saudi Arabia was “very serious” about sending ground troops into Syria, but will first wait to see whether plans for a pause in hostilities agreed by the United States and Russia transpires.

However, speaking in Riyadh, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir also said late Sunday that the decision whether to have a ground component on the ground is up to the US-led coalition.

“The timing is not up to us,” he said.

Turkey is also considering sending in ground troops, the Saudi diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic.

The Saudi force would be made up of special forces soldiers but details are still being planned, he said.

An already tangled conflict has become more complex even as world powers push for a pause in hostilities due to be implemented later this week. Russia has been bombing from the air as Syrian government forces, including Iranian and Iraqi fighters, close in on Aleppo.

An array of rebel groups backed by the United States, Turkey and Saudi Arabia have been losing ground.

The “disarray” has spurred Saudi to action, the diplomat said, adding that Riyadh wanting to both counter Islamic State militants and Iranian influence in the country.

“Time is running out,” he said. “We are waiting for the peace process to end. We believe it will fail and when it does the situation will be completely different.”

He said Saudi Arabia and Turkey are largely “on the same page” but that Ankara is also focused on countering Kurdish forces inside Syria.

“The Turkish government has made some progress in their thinking, they realized Daesh is a threat,” the diplomat said, using an Arabic acronym for Isis. “But they are also using this as a time to eliminate the Kurdish groups.”

Turkey has been shelling Kurdish forces this weekend after they seized an airbase in northern Syria, leading to appeals from US officials for a de-escalation.

Turkish Defence Minister Ismet Yilmaz Monday denied that Turkish forces had entered Syria following a complaint by the Syrian government to the UN Security Council. It claimed that Turkish forces were among 100 gunmen that entered the country on Saturday.

“It’s not true,” Yilmaz said according to the state-run Anadolu Agency. “There is no thought of Turkish soldiers entering Syria.”

That statement jarred with the Saudi diplomat’s comments. He said Saudi officials discussed the possibility of sending troops with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, during a recent three-day visit to Saudi Arabia.

“Turkey isn’t against the ground troops, but they want to say ‘we gave the peace process a chance’,” he said.

He said a force would only consist of special forces, and the size of it is still being planned.

Yilmaz confirmed that a decision had been reached for Saudi Arabia to send four F-16 fighter jets to Turkey’s Incirlik air base.

“The Kingdom’s deployment of aircraft to the Incirlik air base in Turkey is part of this campaign,” foreign minister Jubeir told a news conference in Riyadh Sunday, Reuters reported. “The kingdom’s readiness to provide special forces to any ground operations in Syria is linked to a decision to have a ground component to this coalition against Daesh in Syria - this US-led coalition ."

The title of the article is misleading, it doesnt represent the content at all. The article clearly suggest that both sides are waiting how the peacetalks will turn out. If that doesnt work out, expect a full fledged invasion of Saudi-Turkish forces.

I am still amazed as to how you managed to become a Think Tank.

Saudi and Turks should concentrate to revive their economy, rather spending millions on this adventurism. Learn from Pakistan. Pakistan still getting the heat of Afghan war. Plus, oil market is not going to revive anymore. US oil needs are very limited. Australian recently establish LNG plant of 40 million dollars to capture surrounding markets.
US and EU are not interested to touch Syrian subject. Because its all money. Now, middle eastern has only one option left, follow Isreal as regional leader.

The Turkish economy is doing fine. Growth is expected to be well above average. That problem will solely be for Saudi-Arabia.

Did you really just suggest that we should follow Israel as a regional leader? I hope thats sarcasme.
 
The title of the article is misleading, it doesnt represent the content at all. The article clearly suggest that both sides are waiting how the peacetalks will turn out. If that doesnt work out, expect a full fledged invasion of Saudi-Turkish forces.

I am still amazed as to how you managed to become a Think Tank.



The Turkish economy is doing fine. Growth is expected to be well above average. That problem will solely be for Saudi-Arabia.

Did you really just suggest that we should follow Israel as a regional leader? I hope thats sarcasme.

Your personal attack on me and management of PDF will do no good for zombies.

And "peace talks" as you mentioned, are turning out just fine. As you can see in the video above, the talks are being done by SAA missiles and peace will return when zombies are exterminated.

Turkey and Saudi Arabia are just full of hot air. They do not have it in themselves to go in. If they had, they would have gone in 2012. This is the bottom line.
 
''The article clearly suggest that both sides are waiting how the peacetalks will turn out. If that doesnt work out, expect a full fledged invasion of Saudi-Turkish forces.''

What if the peace talks fail and the Turks and Saudi's do nothing ? Will the moron that wrote that $hit confess being a idiot with no insight ?
 
It is a hunting season down there, with zombies being culled to extinction. Where are Turkey and Saudi Arabia now when their zombie rebels need them?

This is from yesterday.

Never seen such straight and clean shot...seems this rough environment made these soldier battle hardened and mentally very composed. Whoever this guy, he took aim and shot, no hurry...
 
Saudi and Turks should concentrate to revive their economy, rather spending millions on this adventurism.

Spent over 10 billion $ already by hostingmillions of refugees, beside dozens of terrorist groups just next to border which is a threat for national security so now we should sit and wait if everything will be ok ?
 
Back
Top Bottom