U.S. Says 500 Troops Sent to Saudi Arabia on Mideast Deployment

Comment by Jim Campbell

July 18th, 2019

Of course, Congressional bleeding hearts would be carrying on about an increase in armed conflict.

They have no plans what else are they going to do?

The Saudi’s still remain our allies in the Middle East when the jihadists in the area start throwing sand in the sandbox again.

Bloomberg News Service

By Anthony Capaccio

July 18, 2019

The U.S. sent 500 soldiers to Saudi Arabia as part of an earlier deployment of forces to the Middle East, according to a U.S. official, boosting support for the kingdom in its increasingly hostile rivalry with Iran.

Bloomberg has reported earlier that they would be based at the Prince Sultan air base and comprised half the additional 1,000 troops the Pentagon announced last week would be headed to the region.

The U.S. official, who asked not to be identified, declined to detail what role the forces have in Saudi Arabia nor when they arrived.

The U.S. withdrew most of its troops from Saudi Arabia in 2003 and handed control of the Prince Sultan base to Saudi officials the same year.

It simultaneously transferred its Combined Air Operations Center to neighboring Qatar.

The stationing of U.S. soldiers in the kingdom has been a flash point, with some objecting to non-Muslim forces in a country that hosts Islam’s holiest sites. Their presence until 2003 had helped to radicalize militants, including Osama bin Laden.

Pentagon spokeswoman Commander Rebecca Rebarich said the U.S. had “no official announcement at this time,” adding that the military “continually works to manage our force posture in the region and will continue to do this in cooperation with our partners and allies.”

Tensions between the U.S. and Iran have soared, rattling oil markets, amid a spate of attacks on tankers in the Persian Gulf region, the shooting down of an American drone, the British capture of a ship carrying Iranian crude and Iran’s seizure of a tanker that it said was smuggling fuel. Last month President Donald Trump said he called off a planned strike on Iran to retaliate over the downing of the drone.

Arms Sales

The deployment to Saudi Arabia comes as both houses of Congress have voted to block arms sales to the kingdom. Members of the two main U.S. political parties criticized Trump’s use of an emergency declaration to push through $8 billion in arms sales to Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and other countries.

relates to U.S. Says 500 Troops Sent to Saudi Arabia on Mideast Deployment
Prince Sultan air base in Saudi Arabia.Source: Bing Maps

Read More: House Votes To Block Saudi Arms Sales, Setting Up Trump Veto

The objections in Congress stem from a desire to punish Saudi Arabia for the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last year. Lawmakers are also increasingly questioning the Saudi-led war in Yemen that has resulted in one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

The move is likely to be seen as an escalation in Iran. In an interview with Bloomberg in New York on Wednesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said that the U.S. presence in the region foments instability, while its arms sales to Saudi Arabia make the situation “flammable.”

“The problem in our region is not the $16 billion a year that we spend on defense, it’s the $67 billion that Saudi Arabia spends on buying weapons from the U.S. and other Western countries,” Zarif said. “That has to stop.”

Foreign policy is one of the few areas where Trump has faced some resistance from congressional Republicans, particularly in his approach to Saudi Arabia. Trump has cultivated a close relationship with the kingdom — it was the first country he visited as president –and he has described the traditional ally as a bulwark against what he calls Iran’s malign activity in the region.

Trump last year pulled the U.S. out of a 2015 accord designed to prevent Iran from developing capabilities that would allow it to build a nuclear weapon. Iran has since been taking steps to reinvigorate its nuclear program, which it says is designed for peaceful purposes.

Zarif, the foreign minister, said work on nuclear enrichment would continue and that while Iran has the capacity to build a weapon “very rapidly,” it wouldn’t.

“If we wanted to build nuclear weapons, we could’ve built it a long time ago,” he said. “If we wanted to, but we don’t.”

— With assistance by Ladane Nasseri, and Zainab Fattah

THE END

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1 Response to U.S. Says 500 Troops Sent to Saudi Arabia on Mideast Deployment

  1. Pamela Kelly says:

    In 1810, a former member of Napoleon Bonaparte’s Egyptian commission of sciences, Olivier de Coraricez, wrote a book called, “The History of the Wahhabis” in which he declared, “These Arabs (the Wahhabis) appear destined to play a great role in history.”
    Fast forward to the early 20th century when the Wahhabite King Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud, granted a concession for the development of petroleum deposits in his kingdom to the Standard Oil Company of California, paving the way for the eventual decline of Great Britain’s monopoly on the oil there and providing the way for America to gain a tenacious foothold in the Near East.
    According to the book, “The Near East” by William Yale, “The Wahhabite movement is both religious and political.” It is further described as both “fanatical” and “reactionary” and has enabled the wealthy House of Saud to maintain control in the desert kingdom since the year 1800. While I am not sure why our president felt compelled to give all this emergency aid to Saudi Arabia-may be it has less to do with the war drums beating in Tehran and a whole lot more with protecting oil investments?- I do remember that 15 of the 19 hijackers whom murdered over 3,000 innocent American citizens on September 11th, 2001 not only hailed from the desert kingdom, but were dedicated Wahhabis. I also remember that shortly after that horrible day, when all Americans were restricted from air travel, the family members of Osama Bin Ladin living here were flown back home to Saudi Arabia, compliments of the United States Government.
    And it is perhaps for this reason, more than any other, that I do not trust Saudi Arabia. I wish President Trump was not so chummy with them either, however, in the course of international politics, I guess it is a good rule of thumb to keep your friends close and your enemies closer?

    Like

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