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    Mideast upheavals open doors for Saudi strategies

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Saudi Arabia is getting bolder in its strategy for dealing with the Middle East's uprisings. No longer waiting for Washington's cue, the kingdom is aggressively trying to influence the regional turmoil and boost its two goals — protect fellow royal houses and isolate its rival, Iran.

    The more decisive policies by King Abdullah were on full display this week as he took the lead among Arab nations by yanking his ambassador from Syria and demanding an "end to the killing machine" of President Bashar Assad's regime in a startlingly strong condemnation of Damascus' bloody suppression of protesters.

    It was the first time the predominantly Sunni kingdom has weighed in publicly on Syria's upheaval — and demonstrated the Saudis' willingness to shift gears dramatically as needed.

    Saudi Arabia has tried to snuff out or buy off dissent at home and around the Gulf, most notably sending troops to Bahrain to help its Sunni monarch crush a Shiite protest movement in a deadly crackdown.

    "It's a big move for Saudi Arabia," said Christopher Davidson, who studies Gulf affairs at Durham University in Britain. "Before, Saudi was seen as the main anti-Arab Spring power and interested mostly in preserving the status quo in the region. Now, you have the Saudis actively and openly against the Syrian regime."

    "The reason, of course, is Iran," he added.

    For the Saudis, the revolt in Syria is a chance to strike at one of the pillars of Iran's influence.

    Assad's ruling clique is dominated by his Alawite sect, a Shiite offshoot that comprises about 11 percent of the country and maintains close ties with Shiite power Iran. It's unclear how much further the Iranian influence reaches in Syria, but the country's Sunni majority looks more toward Western-allied neighbors in Lebanon and Turkey.

    "Saudi sees this as a golden opportunity to further chip away at Iran's influence in the Arab Middle East and also ... to change the strategic map," said Theodore Karasik, a regional affairs expert at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis. "This is going to make your foreign policy more robust and aggressive."

    But that doesn't come without some potential complications for OPEC's No. 1 producer.

    Stronger Saudi policies open the risks of friction with Washington, which is Saudi Arabia's main arms supplier and had counted on Saudi support to push U.S. interests in the Arab world. There is virtually no chance of a serious rift, and U.S. and Saudi officials are on the same page on other pivotal showdowns, such as efforts to get Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down after months of protest and bloodshed. Saleh is recovering in Saudi Arabia after being badly injured in a June attack on his palace compound.

    But even small rough patches between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia take on heightened significance in the tense Mideast climate.

    The Saudi statement on Syria followed White House urging for the Saudis and their Arab allies to take a sharper stance on Assad's government. Days later, the U.S. imposed new sanctions on Syria, and presidential spokesman Jay Carney said Thursday that Syria "would be a much better place" without Assad in charge.

    In March, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Bahrain was on the "wrong track" to allow Saudi-led forces to help crush protests in the island kingdom — which is home to the Pentagon's main military force in the region, the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet. Rights groups also have called on U.S. officials to take a sharper stance against Saudi Arabia's crackdowns on internal dissent, including a proposed law that Amnesty International said would allow authorities to prosecute peaceful protests as a terrorist act.

    In Iraq, Saudi officials are deeply wary of the U.S.-backed government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite who owes his power to Iranian-allied political groups.

    Meanwhile, a higher regional profile invites uncomfortable scrutiny about Saudi royal succession with both King Abdullah and Crown Prince Sultan in their mid-80s and undergoing medical treatment this year.

    Christopher Boucek, who follows Mideast security issues at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, believes Saudi leaders view U.S. policymakers as more preoccupied with "being on the right side of history instead of standing by its friends."

    "Increasingly, it seems that Saudi Arabia looks out into the world and thinks that its foreign policy interests do not overlap with the United States and Washington's security interests," Boucek said. "Saudi Arabia is now in a position to pursue its own interests."

    And that resonates throughout the Arab world.

    Saudi objections in April also led the Arab League to shelve plans to hold its summit in Baghdad despite hopes by Washington that it would be a showcase for Iraq's regional bonds with the last U.S. troops possibly leaving in December. The snub was seen as payback for Iraqi support of Bahrain's Shiite-led protests — which Saudi Arabia and others claim are aided by Iran.

    "The Saudi vision of the region is one where Iran is not welcome," said Shadi Hamid, director of research at The Brookings Doha Center in Qatar. "The Arab Spring became a time for the Saudis to act."

    Saudi Arabia also is leading plans to transform the Gulf's once-sleepy political bloc, the Gulf Cooperation Council, into a kind of fortress for Middle East monarchs and sheiks. Jordan and Morocco — the region's two non-Gulf kingdoms — are in line for membership in a change that could have the council leapfrog over the Arab League as the region's more dynamic political voice with a clear anti-Iran agenda.

    But even the possible end of Assad's power in Syria does not necessarily mean that Iran's regional influence would vanish, said Mohamad Chatah, a senior diplomatic adviser to former Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri. He said Iran still has deep ties with Hezbollah and Hamas and is widely viewed as a "defender of the Palestinians."

    "If the Syrian regime goes, yes, Iran will be dealt a major blow," he said. "But it won't be a fatal blow. Iran will still be an influential player."

    ___

    Associated Press writers Adam Schreck in Dubai, Elizabeth A. Kennedy in Beirut, Jamal Halaby in Amman, Jordan, and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed to this report.

     

    102 comments

    • Abrahim  •  8 mths ago
      "Operation Northwoods & Operation Mongoose", Operation Pear Harbal false-flag WWII, Operation 9/11 are all inter-twine for US interventions. To Americans, ride your country of Zionism. Kennedy was probably killed by his refusal to carried-out these missions.

      Operation Northwoods was a series of false-flag proposals that originated within the United States government in 1962. The proposals called for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), or other operatives, to commit acts of terrorism in U.S. cities and elsewhere. These acts of terrorism were to be blamed on Cuba in order to create public support for a war against that nation, which had recently become communist under Fidel Castro.[2] One part of Operation Northwoods was to "develop a Communist Cuban terror campaign in the Miami area, in other Florida cities and even in Washington."

      Operation Northwoods proposals included hijackings and bombings followed by the introduction of phony evidence that would implicate the Cuban government. It stated:

      "The desired resultant from the execution of this plan would be to place the United States in the apparent position of suffering defensible grievances from a rash and irresponsible government of Cuba and to develop an international image of a Cuban threat to peace in the Western Hemisphere."

      Several other proposals were included within Operation Northwoods, including real or simulated actions against various U.S. military and civilian targets. The plan was drafted by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, signed by Chairman Lyman Lemnitzer and sent to the Secretary of Defense. Although part of the U.S. government's Cuban Project anti-communist initiative, Operation Northwoods was never officially accepted and the proposals included in the plan were never executed.
    • Abrahim  •  8 mths ago
      The fact is who in benefiting the most of 911. Zionists are controlling US economy, foreign policy, and every Media in America. The most victimize of 911 are Islamic countries that more than million killed, Millions injured, and billions distribution in Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and sad part is wars is orchestrated by Zionist and funded by US is keep going and no one knows when and where will end.
    • Abrahim  •  8 mths ago
      Please everyone, read about "Operation Northwoods" & "Operation Mongoose" to understand the extent US government will go to kill its own citizens, to create total disaster within the country in order to blame them on another country to justify bombing & invasion of that country. The 9/11 incident was very mild compared to the mentioned operations. By the way, several of the "hijackers" named by US government turned out to be alive & well living their lives peacefully in other countries.
    • Abrahim  •  8 mths ago
      Read about USS Liberty which Israel bombed & wanted every US sailor on that ship killed & blame Egypt to make USA drop nuclear bombs on Egypt. In fact, USA was sending bombers to nuke Egypt but were stopped because some sailors did not die, called for help & truth was told. US government threatened US navy & survivors of the ship to keep their mouths shut about Israel's terrorism against US naval ship & its sailors. So, both Israel & USA work together to kill US citizens to attack other countries.
    • Phil Lovecraft  •  9 mths ago
      Isn't Saudi Arabia a repressive dictatorship?
      • Norman 9 mths ago
        Why no, they're America's ally. Didn't our president dutifully bow down to their royal dick-tater?
      • zauriel 9 mths ago
        Saudi is a terrible police state but since they sell oil, American Presidents have been cozy with them for decades. Check pics of Bush snuggling with Saudi royalty and holding hands if you don't believe me.
    • Agri  •  9 mths ago
      This is a complicated relationship of America and Saudi Arabia. The western world needs Saudi Arabia's oil for their economies. Even though the United States doesn't tolerate other absolute rulers anywhere else. It is a matter of survival for the United States and Saudi Arabia which needs each other. Sometimes people have to compromised their values in order to survive. The bible mentions in the book of proverbs that, if you are bad you will destroy yourself, if you are extremely good you will also destroy yourself. The advice is don't be to bad neither too good in order to survive.
      • Adam Gahool 9 mths ago
        please give the verse number, and anyone? I would like to look it up.
      • jack 9 mths ago
        alaska has more oil than saudis, more natty gas in US/Canada then they have...
        so we are supporting a evil royal family and their values for what reason?
        to sell them war planes, bombs?
        or has SIR Kissinger and SIr bush1 and cfr doing yr thinking?
      • Agri 9 mths ago
        Adam Gahool: Even though the focus of the book of proverbs is wisdom, intelligence and knowledge. All of which are not synonyms. We first must have intelligence to make the right choices, then acquire knowledge in line with God's words and finally apply the word of god to our lives. That is wisdom the application of God's knowledge to our lives.

        I will look the for the chapter and verse that says that by being bad we destroy ourselves and by being too good, or given the impression that we are perfect in in an imperfect world put us in a collision course against the mainstream ideas and concepts of most people. I recalled a book I read in French called the Misanthrope, a man thinking that he was perfect in an imperfect world. Blessings!
    • Thomas Jeferson  •  9 mths ago
      Saudi are the main culprit in region. Just the recent news of Saudi paying millions of dollars to Pakistan for protecting Osama bin Laden is a good example of how Saudi are playing their dirty game. They spent billions to spread their version of Vahabi to Afghanistan and Pakistan during Soviet occupation until now, the roots of all terrorism in region.
      • joe_blue 9 mths ago
        politics is and has always been a dirty, perpetual combination of monopoly and chess where who has the gold makes the rules and has the power.
      • L E 9 mths ago
        I do think that we should remember that the 9/11 terrorists were, for the most part, Saudi.
      • X 9 mths ago
        And how much to Iran spend to spread their version of Islam, along with its hate and killing, to Lebanon? They murdered a democratically elected Prime Minister, and refuse to submit to the law. Iran held US citizens hostage for over a year and a half. You are lying or incompetent if you think Iran is innocent, or better than anyone else.
    • Anthony  •  9 mths ago
      Saudia Arabia one of the biggest sponsers of terror, slaughtered protesters in Baharain and are now complaining that Assad is doing the same thing. Shut up and mind your business terrorist lovers.
    • Anthony  •  9 mths ago
      Saudia Arabia one of the biggest sponsers of terror, slaughtered protesters in Baharain and are now complaining that Assad is doing the same thing. Shut up and mind your business terrorist lovers.
    • Steven Spill-The-Milk  •  9 mths ago
      Saudi Arabia is the only country that gains in ALL events. They gained from the 1st and 2nd Gulf wars, they gained from the Arab Israeli war of 1973 by quadropoling the price of oil. They gained from the war in Iraq, they never lost a penny or a single man in any of these conflicts. They own lots of corporations in the Us and they own media outlets. Prince Alwalid Ebn Telal is a partner of Rupert Murdoch in the media business. Saudis are in control of the congress and they will influence any decision against them. They now want to control egypt and turn it into a Wahabi Islamic country causing a disaster for over 15 million Coptic Egyptian Christians who will be suffering a genoside type of a deal under Islamic Wahabi Sharea law. Saudi Arabia is the cause and reason for ALL distability in the region and the Islamic terrorism that we suffer everywhere!!!
      • MeBob 9 mths ago
        better them than Iran...that's the reality..They control a lot..they have the money...go figure......but if push comes to shove...it's hello Saudi...and boo on Iran..
      • Norman 9 mths ago
        they own the U.S. president too ... obama, bush, carter, eisenhower, even reagan.
      • tc f-14 9 mths ago
        really!!? how many iranians were on the planes that attacked us on 9/11 again? how many saudis were there? yea, ok, hello saudi...
    • tc f-14  •  9 mths ago
      armed up the #$%$ by the US and still scared of iran. true arab attitude.
    • tex  •  9 mths ago
      Remember it all started with the British and their royalty influence across the globe. Try to get rid of the Queen of England.......fat chance. Saudi and the rest will fight and kill anyone that tries to take away their pie. You are seeing it all over the planet now. People are educated and fed-up with the #$%$ Look no further than Washington and the crooks that have run the US over the years.
      • jack 9 mths ago
        yet another American who sees it. Thanks for posting!
    • GDB  •  9 mths ago
      Price of oil is going up. We better switch to Nat. Gas for our cars.
    • pikeguy  •  9 mths ago
      you know why the muslim world really hates us? after 5,000 years of civilization, our 235-year-old country arrogantly waltzes in and tries to tell them how to live. we will never, ever change anything in the middle east. we need to butt out. if they want to buy our goods...fine. if we want to buy their oil...fine. if they want to kill each other...fine. it's their countries, their laws, their history and culture. it's this hatred that breeds the terrorists. just stay out of the leper colonies, and we won't get leprosy.
    • castroite  •  9 mths ago
      so Saudi Arabia supplies terrorists and we supply Saudi Arabia with weapons
    • Take that  •  9 mths ago
      The Saudis are right about one thing- we need to pick a side in the muslim struggle. That would be the Sunni side, by the way. They're much, much closer to making peace, and I bet they'd make some serious concessions for our explicit help against the Shiites.
    • Wyliecoyote  •  9 mths ago
      "protect fellow royal houses and isolate its rival, Iran."
      Ahh.......here is the REAL Middle Eastern US policy and WHAT IT IS ALL ABOUT.
    • GDB  •  9 mths ago
      If Saudi and Iran started a war. Goodbye to our economy. $200-$300 a barrel of crude overnight.
    • potato  •  9 mths ago
      Someone is misunderstanding Saudi Arabia's strategy big time. What would Saudi leaders consider their highest possible achievement?
    • pikeguy  •  9 mths ago
      yeah...ok...whatever. saudis have the oil, the money, the military and they hate iran...so lets just stay friends. they can police their neighbors better than we can.
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