Kremlin: Putin Did Not Discuss Syria Deal with Saudi Spy Chief
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةThe Kremlin denied Friday that President Vladimir Putin had discussed a deal with the visiting Saudi intelligence chief for Moscow to sell arms to Riyadh in exchange for changing its position on Syria.
Putin held talks with in Moscow with Saudi Arabia's influential intelligence chief Prince Bandar bin Sultan on July 31, in a meeting which was not announced in advance and has intrigued observers.
"Concrete questions about military cooperation were not discussed," said Putin's top foreign policy aide Yury Ushakov, quoted by Russian news agencies.
"Putin did not discuss deals."
Saudi Arabia has been strongly supportive of the rebels battling the regime of President Bashar Assad. But Russia, to the fury of Riyadh and its Western allies, has refused to cut its cooperation with the Damascus regime.
Diplomats in the Middle East have said that Putin rejected a proposal from Prince Bandar for Moscow to abandon its support for Assad in exchange for a huge arms deal.
Bandar proposed that Saudi Arabia buy $15 billion (11 billion euros) of weapons from Russia, diplomatic sources told Agence France Presse in Beirut earlier this week.
Ushakov gave few details on the content of the talks but said the two sides "made clear the positions which our countries have on the Syrian question".
"There was a shared concern about the situation which is being created in the (Middle East) region and the worrying tendencies that are being observed," said Ushakov.
"It was a very substantive conversation, and had a philosophical character," he added.
Prince Bandar, who was formerly ambassador to the United States, also serves as secretary general of Saudi Arabia's National Security Council.
Widely regarded as among the most influential powerbrokers in the entire Middle East, Prince Bandar is the son of the late crown prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, who died in 2011.
An Arab diplomat with contacts in Moscow said: "President Putin listened politely to his interlocutor and let him know that his country would not change its strategy."
And why would anyone discuss anything of international proportions with a "spy" chief whose endeavors have been one big failure after another, not to mention the big bokses and labtat he got when he was booted out of the Kingdom of 3ohr and more recently, slowly but surely, in Syria?
I think the idea that Saudi Arabia has a "spy chief" is just cute as the dickens. It's kind of like saying that Lebanon has an army.
that $15 billions arms deal proposal is BS. If Assad lose, and I should say when, the pipeline from Qatar through Syria will bring qatari gaz to Turkey and EU, so Russia will lose hundreds of billions and political leverage on EU-Turkey. 2 other losers of this pipeline would be Iran and Algeria, 2 other supporters of Assad. All Putin's politics have been based on high gaz and oil prices, thats why he will support Assad to the end, Saudi know it thats why they did not propose 15 billions...
I see, and so what do you think they talked about? Discussions were pretty 'philosophical' apparently.
this is the truth , as big as this 15 Billion number is
and assuming it is a true offer from the Saudis
but Moscow's lose would be much greater if that pipeline was established
that is why this war is not religion based no matter how hard they try to make it sound like that ,and it's not for freedom of the syrian people ,where was the saudis for the last 40 years ??? now they suddenly realize the suffering of the Syrian people !!!
this war is exactly for what you have mentioned
and if Assad would to allow to connect Qatar and the gulf countries with EU-Turkey and beyond
Putin would be the first one to fight and overthrow AL ASSAD
THIS IS A BS OFFER
If that 30 Billions was going to establish anything to the saudi prince
he would not be in Moscow kissing Putins FEET
he would have already spent that money arming his criminal fighters
or even gave it to his good friends in the
GOOD OLD US OF A to help him out
this visit and offer is nothing but another proof of there weakness