Owner59
Posts: 17033
Joined: 3/14/2006 From: Dirty Jersey Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Yachtie FR - Until a few weeks ago, Saudi Arabia was riding high. Its regional policies, based on countering revolutionary fervour and containing Iran, appeared to be bearing fruit. Egypt’s army ousted the Islamist president, to plaudits and generous funding from Riyadh; the Syrian opposition elected a new pro-Saudi leadership; and the US seemed poised to launch military strikes on the regime in Damascus that Saudi Arabia has tried to dislodge. But Riyadh’s satisfaction turned to dismay as a US and Russian deal to destroy Syria’s chemical weapons removed the need for military strikes; leading rebel factions turned against the leadership of the Syrian National Coalition; and relations between the US and Iran appear to be warming as the new president, Hassan Rouhani, pledged to negotiate over Tehran’s nuclear programme. s the challenges in Syria grow, there are fears in Riyadh that the war could drag on for more than a decade, draining Saudi coffers and destabilising the region. There are also concerns in Tehran that the proxy conflict between the two countries is getting out of control. “Regional tensions will not ease if Iran and Saudi Arabia do not reach some kind of agreement over Syria and Iraq,” said one senior adviser to the Iranian government. “If such hostilities are not contained, Saudis will continue doing their best to sabotage any nuclear deal between Iran and the US.” Yeah<said sarcastically>...the ME is a complicated and intricate universe of conflicting interests and factions within factions within factions.We knew that,thanks. Thank God we have a leader who`s up to the task and who puts America`s interests FIRST, during any calculations and/or policy decisions on the ME.
< Message edited by Owner59 -- 10/7/2013 6:44:14 AM >
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"As for our common defense, we reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals" President Obama
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