Bahrain Refutes Media Reports of Plans for ‘Boots on the Ground’ in Syria
Media outlets including Reuters have cited the
kingdom’s ambassador to the UK, Sheikh Fawaz bin Mohammed Al Khalifa,
who allegedly claimed his country will send troops to Syria “with the
approval of Saudi Arabia.” Last week, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates (UAE) stated their readiness to join the ground operation in
Syria to fight ISIS/ISIL.
“The statement made by the Bahraini ambassador in
London was misunderstood. Our ambassador did not say that Bahrain plans
to send or is even ready to send its ground troops to Syria or any other
country to fight terrorism,” Khalid Al Khalifa told RT Arabic. “Bahrain
is true to its commitment to fighting terrorism, within the framework
of the international coalition established in October 2014.”
However, Bahrain does not wish to be part of a
ground operation in Syria:“We take great interest in the stability of
the brother nation [of Syria] and the expulsion of terrorists from its
land. In this regard, the international community must have full mutual
understanding, and understand our position on the need to fight
internationally recognized terrorists of all colors.”
“Syria is a great global problem and the leading
powers must find common ground on how to solve it. We will continue to
be part of the international effort to establish peace in the region,”
the minister concluded.
Ahmed Asiri, official advisor to the Saudi defense
minister, said Thursday that the country was ready to send troops to
take part in ground operations in Syria, provided that the move was in
accord with the international coalition led by the United States. He
suggested that this decision can be agreed upon at the NATO summit in
Brussels next week. US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter confirmed that
the NATO summit is set to discuss the initiative of Saudi Arabia with
the country’s representatives.
Citing sources within the kingdom, British
newspaper the Guardian earlier reported that Riyadh could send several
thousand soldiers to Syria to fight ISIL. According to the paper, the
operation could be carried out in coordination with Turkey.
CNN has reported that Saudi Arabia and its Persian
Gulf allies are preparing up to 150,000 troops for a possible operation
in Syria.
Meanwhile, the Russian operation in the country –
which started at the end of September at the request of President Bashar
Assad – continues to carry out airstrikes targeting terrorist sites.
With the support of militias and Russian airstrikes, the Syrian Army has
managed to destroy the main ISIL stronghold in the city of Salma, in
Latakia province, on the border with Turkey, and in the towns of Sheikh
Miskin and Osman in the south. Last week, a four-year blockade was
lifted in Nubl and Al-Zahra – two Shiite cities in the province of
Aleppo.
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