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Saudi Arabia Hires Pakistan to Train Insurrgents
Townhall.com ^ | November 10, 2013 | Nightwatch

Posted on 11/10/2013 5:24:10 AM PST by Kaslin

China: For the record. The third plenary session of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party convened on 8 November. In its report announcing the opening of the four-day meeting in Beijing, state news agency Xinhua said it would discuss "major issues concerning comprehensively deepening reforms".

Comment: Senior Chinese officials have hinted that this meeting will discuss and decide significant social and economic reforms, such as more liberal market conditions and more measures to reduce official corruption. In the past two weeks, authorities also have made clear that political reform is not on the agenda.

Syria-al Qaida: Al-Qaida chief Ayman al-Zawahiri has ordered the Iraqi faction of his network to stop meddling in Syria and anointed Al-Nusra Front jihadists as al-Qaida's proxy in the Syrian fighting. The order for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant to shut down in Syria was included in an audiotape broadcast by Al-Jazeera.

Comment: This is potentially a setback to the Iraq-based al Qaida franchise. Zawahiri's order was written in June but ignored. Most fighting reports indicate the two groups cooperate in fighting Syrian government and Lebanese Hizballah forces. Zawahiri might be trying to head off a future challenge to his leadership or to prevent decentralization of the movement from evolving into fragmentation.

Syria-Saudi Arabia: Two western news services reported this week that Saudi Arabia is preparing to finance the training and arming of a new Syrian non-jihadi rebel force. The force is to be built around the Jaish al-Islam (Army of Islam) which was created in September 2013 by a merger of 43 fighting groups.

According to the news services, Saudi Arabia reportedly has hired Pakistan to help train the re-purposed force. It supposedly would start as two brigades and would be supplied through Jordan. It would not be jihadist, but also would not be a secular force.

Comment: If this information is accurate, it implies that the Saudis judge the fighting will go one for two more years because that is about how long it would take to develop an effective fighting force. By that time, the Syrian government is likely to have stabilized the security situation or, less likely, to have fallen to the jihadists.

The amount of time, energy and multi-national coordination required in this effort, with highly uncertain prospects for a return on the investment, plus the direct involvement of Jordan as pivotal to the logistics raise suspicions that this is not a serious initiative. Rather it looks like a perception management stratagem to prompt more US assistance, if not intervention.

Egypt: For the record. Egypt will be holding presidential elections early in summer next year, Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy said on Friday. Parliamentary elections are due in February or March, two months after a vote on a new constitution currently being drafted by a 50-member panel. The referendum on the constitution is scheduled for December 2013.

On 8 November a spokesman said the 50-person constitution drafting panel voted to add an amendment that would eliminate the upper house of parliament, the Shura Council, so that Egypt would have a unicameral legislature.

Comment: The interim government is making steady progress towards restoring the forms of elected government, though the Army will remain the ultimate guardian of the state. The elimination of the Shura Council removes one irritant to the groups that removed Mursi. He used the Shura Council as an ersatz legislature to rubber stamp his executive orders. The Council was stacked with Brotherhood members or supporters.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
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1 posted on 11/10/2013 5:24:11 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Our friends....the ***** Saudi's and the *********** Paki's. We should have kicked the crap out of them instead of wasting time on Iraq.

You can almost smell the next conflict.

2 posted on 11/10/2013 5:49:58 AM PST by Sarajevo
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To: Sarajevo

I’m sure Pakistan will be the next to destabilize.


3 posted on 11/10/2013 5:56:18 AM PST by miliantnutcase
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To: Sarajevo

When does the US learn that you can not trust an Arab?


4 posted on 11/10/2013 6:02:12 AM PST by Kaslin (He needed the ignorant to reelect him, and he got them. Now we all have to pay the consequenses)
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To: Kaslin

So the Saudi’s blatantly public army of al Qaeda and others will now be trained in real warfare in Syria and then exported around the world to other places needing extremist law. And we support that bullshit. Nice.


5 posted on 11/10/2013 7:15:13 AM PST by lafarge (Withhold your votes!)
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To: Kaslin
Al-Qaida chief Ayman al-Zawahiri has ordered the Iraqi faction of his network to stop meddling in Syria and anointed Al-Nusra Front jihadists as al-Qaida's proxy in the Syrian fighting. The order for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant to shut down in Syria was included in an audiotape broadcast by Al-Jazeera.

This is odd. Why would Zawahiri not want Iraqi Al Qaeda and Syrian Al Qaeda to cooperate?

Two western news services reported this week that Saudi Arabia is preparing to finance the training and arming of a new Syrian non-jihadi rebel force. The force is to be built around the Jaish al-Islam (Army of Islam) which was created in September 2013 by a merger of 43 fighting groups. According to the news services, Saudi Arabia reportedly has hired Pakistan to help train the re-purposed force.

I suppose this is partially in response to the fact that the world is dimly waking up to the fact that aiding the Syrian rebels means helping Al Qaeda. So they will create a "non" Al Qaeda fighting force.

This may also line up with the remarks made supposedly by the Saudi intel chief to Putin, that while they would use Al Qaeda to bring Assad down they would not allow them to take power. And he pointed to the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, implying that they had used MB to bring down Mubarak and then used the Egyptian Army to take down MB.

So, games within games.

6 posted on 11/10/2013 10:52:14 AM PST by marron
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To: Kaslin

And yet our foreign policy seems to be tied at the hip to the Saudis.


7 posted on 11/10/2013 12:37:55 PM PST by FBD (My carbon footprint is bigger than yours)
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