Saudi foreign minister questions political settlement, says West has not done enough to support rebels

ed note-for the readers of his site, it goes without saying, but we’ll say it anyway.

The Jews LOOOOOVE it when they can co-opt their lackeys to do their dirty work for them, and for several reasons. First and foremost it feeds into the Judaic ideology that Gentiles were born to serve them and therefore the ‘natural’ order of things is allowed to proceed according to its own inertia.

More than this though is that–just like a professional pool player whose every shot is always done in such a way as to line up the next one and thus increase his chances of winning, likewise the Jews always make sure that in each and every one of their operations there is someone else there to take the heat for it so as to support the narrative that they are blameless on the matter and that it was really ‘the other guy, over there’ who did it all.

That ISIS, ISIL, etc are Israeli creations is not a matter up for debate, but in order to insulate Israel and to provide a script for her supporters toiling out there in the fields known as Hasbara, she makes sure that lackeys such as–in this case–the Saudis do all the dirty work so that later, after Israel can declare ‘mission accomplished’ that it will be always remembered that the entire ‘get Assad’ operation was done by ‘The AY-rabs’ rather then by ‘The JOOZ’.

Likewise with some of those other ‘neighborhoods’ in this ‘movement’ who do not realize that they are actually doing the Jews’ dirty work for them while believing/presenting themselves to be anti-Judaic/anti-Zionist, including certain sectors of the anti-IMMEEGRAYSHUN brigade, various groups making up ‘White Nationalism’, the ‘Sandy Hook Hoaxers’, the ‘No Planes on 911’, etc, who fail to see how their words/actions will come back to haunt them later when the various positions they have taken actually become part of the machinery that advances the agenda of organized Jewish interests to the detriment of Gentiles everywhere.

Times of Israel

Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister said Tuesday there is a military option in Syria that will end with the removal of President Bashar Assad if the preferred political option does not lead to his departure.

Adel Al-Jubeir told a small group of journalists the military option could be lengthier and more destructive, but the choice is entirely up to Assad and whether he accepts the political roadmap agreed to by key nations in 2012. That deal would have him hand power to a transitional government.

The Saudi minister would not say what Western and Arab opponents of Assad’s regime may or may not do to counter the new military buildup in Syria by Russia, Assad’s closest ally along with Iran. “We’re not talking about” it, he said.

But Al-Jubeir said the Free Syrian Army and moderate opposition forces are fighting against Assad and receiving support from a number of countries and that “will be intensified.”

His comments appeared to mark a striking divergence from the position of the United States and its Western allies that there is no military solution to the conflict — that it must be solved politically.

President Barack Obama said in his speech to the General Assembly on Monday that “while military power is necessary, it is not sufficient to resolve the situation in Syria. Lasting stability can only take hold when the people of Syria forge an agreement to live together peacefully.”

But Al-Jubeir said “there are two options for a settlement in Syria. One option is a political process … where there would be a transitional council that would have executive authority … and that’s the preferred option.”

“The other option is a military option which also will end with the removal of Bashar Assad from power,” he said.

Obama has said he is willing to talk to Russia and Iran about how to end the Syrian conflict, now in its fifth year with more than 250,000 people killed and millions displaced and fleeing the country. Russia and Turkey have proposed a meeting that would include the United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Turkey. The United States has insisted Assad must leave power.

US President Barack Obama has said he is willing to talk to Russia and Iran about how to end the Syrian conflict, now in its fifth year with more than 250,000 people killed and millions displaced and fleeing the country. Russia and Turkey have proposed a meeting that would include the United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Turkey. The United States has insisted Assad must leave power.

Al-Jubeir said Saudi Arabia hasn’t said “no” to sitting down with the Iranians. But he called Iran “an occupying force in Syria” and said it cannot be part of the solution until it withdraws its forces from Syria, as well as the Hezbollah fighters and other Shiite militias that it sent to the country to support the Assad regime.

The Saudi minister said the political roadmap based on the 2012 Geneva agreement included a governing council composed of elements of the existing government and the opposition would assume executive power — leaving Assad aside — to work on maintaining state institutions, drafting a new constitution, and holding elections to form a new government.

“Sometime between the formation of this council and elections, the theory of this is that — whether it’s a day or a week or a month, I don’t know— Assad would sail into the sunset,” Al-Jubeir said.

“If Bashar Assad accepts the political process where he transitions out of the country, I think we can get somewhere,” Al-Jubeir said, “but we haven’t seen any indication that he would do this, nor have we seen any indication that his two main supporters, Russia and Iran, are prepared to push him in that direction. So while we hope that the process will succeed, I believe, given the position of Russia and Iran, our hope is not that great.”

Al-Jubeir dismissed widespread belief that Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia is in an intense battle with Shiite Iran to be the dominant power in the Middle East.

“We’ve been living in the Middle East all our lives,” he said. “We’re not the ones meddling in the affairs of other countries. The Iranians are. So you should look at it as Iranian aggression against other countries in the region.”

Al-Jubeir added that if the Russians were serious about fighting Islamic State extremists known as Daesh, who control large regions of Syria, “they could join the existing international coalition.”

“But for them to go out and insert forces into Syria, which is the first time that the Russians have done so in decades, is a big step, and is an indication that their objective may be to prop up the Assad regime, more than it is to fight Daesh,” he said.

Al-Jubeir implicitly criticized the US and other opponents of the Assad regime for sparking the current exodus of thousands of Syrians to Europe to escape the conflict. He said Saudi Arabia was calling early on for a no-fly zone and robust arming of the Syrian opposition, and if this had been done early on, “we would not be in this situation.”

0 thoughts on “Saudis push military option to oust Assad”
  1. Bismillaah.
    Thank you Mark. To me this is a classic case of where the river card came up a 2 of clubs and the jews were hoping for their straight flush but missed it, all the while all the other players recognized their reaction so the jews are going all in to try and bluff their way out. It makes me sick to see what the world sees as Sunni Islam to be the biggest frauds in the history of the ummaah in my opinion. But let me make the record straight from someone who is a member of those who follow the sunnah of Sayiddinah Muhammad, Allah’s peace and blessings be upon him, I stand against the Saudi Regime and their entire claim to any ‘throne.’ Hatred for the shia’a is old and I am tired of it. Their intolerance smells of jewish M.O. and their destruction of the legacy of the family and companions of the prophet is inexcusable. And now so many people who might not like Saud’s and the government, are supporting the overthrow of Assad, because they have been fooled by the hundreds if not thousands of groups helping the refugees here in America. The groups themselves are great and they are actually helping refugees. But what the good hearted Muslims don’t recognize is that the news stories and pictures they receive to use to fund-raise with are all brought to us by Soros and company. I don’t know how many times I see pictures of thousands of dead or severly injured syrians and they are told by Avaaz and others that these are people who were killed or hurt by Assad and his evil regime. The eat it up because they are still in the matrix. They didn’t get the memo that most humanitarian organizations have been set up by the enemy to make tons of money, harvest tons of organs, and to lead us astray. Every time I try to explain how they are wrong and they can’t just say it was Assad who did this in ‘x’ picture or ‘y’ story, they say that we can’t believe there is a conspiracy in everything. They say that the refugees themselves say it is Assad. But don’t we know firsthand that the people who end up actually being victims are the ones who are told the lie to the most. Then everyone just repeats it. Let me say this: I am not a fan of Assad’s religious beliefs, and maybe he is not the best candidate for president, but that gives no one the right to cause unrest, blame it on him, then proceed to create a foreign backed insurgency, creating violence, fassad, mayhem, and destruction upon the earth. This is not the sunnah of our beloved Prophet Muhammad, may Allah’s peace and blessings be upon him, nor the way of his righteous companions, nor of his beloved family, may Allah be pleased with them all. I am tired of the lies. I am tired of the need to spill blood over and over and over. I am so glad I was guided to the Ugly truth in 2008 or so, and I am glad I was guided to Islam a year and a half ago. I pray that God frees occupied Hijjaz & Arabia as well as Jerusalem. But I guess as far as the prophecies of Muhammad, salAllahu alayhe wa salaam go, we are going to have to make an alliance with Rum(pronounced room, and refers to Eastern Orthodoxy, not Rome) to find victory of the forces of Shaytan and Dajjal. Oh and gotta love the ever so foolish, and utterly reprehensible John Hagee looking like a stuffed pig with his pants down. I find it hard to see a way out for him now. But then again Evangelic American Christians tend to have quite the short memory and attention span.

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