U.S. Relies
Heavily on Saudi Money to Support Syrian Rebels
By Mark Mazzetti
January 23,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "NYT"
- WASHINGTON
— When President Obama secretly authorized the
Central Intelligence Agency to begin arming
Syria’s embattled rebels in 2013, the spy agency
knew it would have a willing partner to help pay for
the covert operation. It was the same partner the
C.I.A. has relied on for decades for money and
discretion in far-off conflicts: the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia.
Since then,
the C.I.A. and its Saudi counterpart have maintained
an unusual arrangement for the rebel-training
mission, which the Americans have code-named Timber
Sycamore. Under the deal, current and former
administration officials said, the Saudis contribute
both weapons and large sums of money, and the C.I.A
takes the lead in training the rebels on AK-47
assault rifles and tank-destroying missiles.
The support
for the Syrian rebels is only the latest chapter in
the decadeslong relationship between the spy
services of
Saudi Arabia and the United States, an alliance
that has endured through the Iran-contra scandal,
support for the mujahedeen against the Soviets in
Afghanistan and proxy fights in Africa. Sometimes,
as in
Syria, the two countries have worked in concert.
In others, Saudi Arabia has simply written checks
underwriting American covert activities.
The joint
arming and training program, which other Middle East
nations contribute money to, continues as America’s
relations with Saudi Arabia — and the kingdom’s
place in the region — are in flux. The old ties of
cheap oil and geopolitics that have long bound the
countries together have loosened as America’s
dependence on foreign oil declines and the Obama
administration tiptoes toward a diplomatic
rapprochement with Iran.
And yet the
alliance persists, kept afloat on a sea of Saudi
money and a recognition of mutual self-interest. In
addition to Saudi Arabia’s vast oil reserves and
role as the spiritual anchor of the Sunni Muslim
world, the long intelligence relationship helps
explain why the United States has been reluctant to
openly criticize Saudi Arabia for its human rights
abuses, its treatment of women and its support for
the
extreme strain of Islam, Wahhabism, that has
inspired many of the very terrorist groups the
United States is fighting. The Obama administration
did not publicly condemn Saudi Arabia’s
public beheading this month of a dissident
Shiite cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, who had
challenged the royal family.
Although the
Saudis have been public about their help arming
rebel groups in Syria, the extent of their
partnership with the C.I.A.’s covert action campaign
and their direct financial support had not been
disclosed. Details were pieced together in
interviews with a half-dozen current and former
American officials and sources from several Persian
Gulf countries. Most spoke on the condition of
anonymity because they were not authorized to
discuss the program.
From the
moment the C.I.A. operation was started, Saudi money
supported it.
“They
understand that they have to have us, and we
understand that we have to have them,” said Mike
Rogers, the former Republican congressman from
Michigan who was chairman of the
House
Intelligence Committee when the C.I.A. operation
began. Mr. Rogers declined to discuss details of the
classified program.
American
officials have not disclosed the amount of the Saudi
contribution, which is by far the largest from
another nation to the program to arm the rebels
against President Bashar al-Assad’s military. But
estimates have put the total cost of the arming and
training effort at several billion dollars.
The White
House has embraced the covert financing from Saudi
Arabia — and from Qatar, Jordan and Turkey — at a
time when Mr. Obama has pushed gulf nations to take
a greater security role in the region.
Spokesmen for
both the C.I.A. and the Saudi Embassy in Washington
declined to comment.
When Mr. Obama
signed off on
arming the rebels in the spring of 2013, it was
partly to try to gain control of the apparent
free-for-all in the region. The Qataris and the
Saudis had been funneling weapons into Syria for
more than a year. The Qataris had even smuggled in
shipments of Chinese-made FN-6 shoulder-fired
missiles over the border from Turkey.
The Saudi
efforts were led by the flamboyant Prince Bandar bin
Sultan, at the time the intelligence chief, who
directed Saudi spies to buy thousands of AK-47s and
millions of rounds of ammunition in Eastern Europe
for the Syrian rebels. The C.I.A. helped arrange
some of the arms purchases for the Saudis, including
a large deal in Croatia in 2012.
By the summer
of 2012, a freewheeling feel had taken hold along
Turkey’s border with Syria as the gulf nations
funneled cash and weapons to rebel groups — even
some that American officials were concerned had ties
to radical groups like Al Qaeda.
The C.I.A. was
mostly on the sidelines during this period,
authorized by the White House under the Timber
Sycamore training program to deliver nonlethal aid
to the rebels but not weapons. In late 2012,
according to two former senior American officials,
David H. Petraeus, then the C.I.A. director,
delivered a stern lecture to intelligence officials
of several gulf nations at a meeting near the Dead
Sea in Jordan. He chastised them for sending arms
into Syria without coordinating with one another or
with C.I.A. officers in Jordan and Turkey.
Months later,
Mr. Obama gave his approval for the C.I.A. to begin
directly arming and training the rebels from a base
in Jordan, amending the Timber Sycamore program to
allow lethal assistance. Under the new arrangement,
the C.I.A. took the lead in training, while Saudi
Arabia’s intelligence agency, the General
Intelligence Directorate, provided money and
weapons, including TOW anti-tank missiles.
The Qataris
have also helped finance the training and allowed a
Qatari base to be used as an additional training
location. But American officials said Saudi Arabia
was by far the largest contributor to the operation.
While the
Obama administration saw this coalition as a selling
point in Congress, some, including Senator Ron
Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, raised questions about
why the C.I.A. needed Saudi money for the operation,
according to one former American official. Mr. Wyden
declined to be interviewed, but his office released
a statement calling for more transparency. “Senior
officials have said publicly that the U.S. is trying
to build up the battlefield capabilities of the
anti-Assad opposition, but they haven’t provided the
public with details about how this is being done,
which U.S. agencies are involved, or which foreign
partners those agencies are working with,” the
statement said.
When relations
among the countries involved in the training program
are strained, it often falls to the United States to
broker solutions. As the host, Jordan expects
regular payments from the Saudis and the Americans.
When the Saudis pay late, according to a former
senior intelligence official, the Jordanians
complain to C.I.A. officials.
While the
Saudis have financed previous C.I.A. missions with
no strings attached, the money for Syria comes with
expectations, current and former officials said.
“They want a seat at the table, and a say in what
the agenda of the table is going to be,” said Bruce
Riedel, a former C.I.A. analyst and now a senior
fellow at the
Brookings Institution.
The C.I.A.
training program is separate from another program to
arm Syrian rebels, one the Pentagon ran that has
since ended. That program was designed to train
rebels to combat Islamic State fighters in Syria,
unlike the C.I.A.’s program, which focuses on rebel
groups fighting the Syrian military.
While the
intelligence alliance is central to the Syria fight
and has been important in the war against Al Qaeda,
a constant irritant in American-Saudi relations is
just how much Saudi citizens continue to support
terrorist groups, analysts said.
“The more that
the argument becomes, ‘We need them as a
counterterrorism partner,’ the less persuasive it
is,” said William McCants, a former State Department
counterterrorism adviser and the author of a
book on the Islamic State. “If this is purely a
conversation about counterterrorism cooperation, and
if the Saudis are a big part of the problem in
creating terrorism in the first place, then how
persuasive of an argument is it?”
In the near
term, the alliance remains solid, strengthened by a
bond between spy masters. Prince Mohammed bin Nayef,
the Saudi interior minister who took over the effort
to arm the Syrian rebels from Prince Bandar, has
known the C.I.A. director, John O. Brennan, from the
time Mr. Brennan was the agency’s Riyadh station
chief in the 1990s. Former colleagues say the two
men remain close, and Prince Mohammed has won
friends in Washington with his aggressive moves to
dismantle terrorist groups like Al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula.
The job Mr.
Brennan once held in Riyadh is, more than the
ambassador’s, the true locus of American power in
the kingdom. Former diplomats recall that the most
important discussions always flowed through the
C.I.A. station chief.
Current and
former intelligence officials say there is a benefit
to this communication channel: The Saudis are far
more responsive to American criticism when it is
done in private, and this secret channel has done
more to steer Saudi behavior toward America’s
interests than any public chastising could have.
The roots of
the relationship run deep. In the late 1970s, the
Saudis organized what was known as the “Safari Club”
— a coalition of nations including Morocco, Egypt
and France — that ran covert operations around
Africa at a time when Congress had clipped the
C.I.A.’s wings over years of abuses.
“And so the
kingdom, with these countries, helped in some way, I
believe, to keep the world safe at a time when the
United States was not able to do that,” Prince Turki
al-Faisal, a former head of Saudi intelligence,
recalled in a speech at Georgetown University in
2002.
In the 1980s,
the Saudis helped finance C.I.A. operations in
Angola, where the United States backed rebels
against the Soviet-allied government. While the
Saudis were staunchly anticommunist, Riyadh’s
primary incentive seemed to be to solidify its C.I.A.
ties. “They were buying good will,” recalled one
former senior intelligence officer who was involved
in the operation.
In perhaps the
most consequential episode, the Saudis helped arm
the mujahedeen rebels to drive the Soviets out of
Afghanistan. The United States committed hundreds of
millions of dollars each year to the mission, and
the Saudis matched it, dollar for dollar.
The money
flowed through a C.I.A.-run Swiss bank account. In
the book “Charlie
Wilson’s War,” the journalist George Crile III
describes how the C.I.A. arranged for the account to
earn no interest, in keeping with the Islamic ban on
usury.
In 1984, when
the Reagan administration sought help with its
secret plan to sell arms to Iran to finance the
contra rebels in Nicaragua, Robert C. McFarlane, the
national security adviser, met with Prince Bandar,
who was the Saudi ambassador to Washington at the
time. The White House made it clear that the Saudis
would “gain a considerable amount of favor” by
cooperating, Mr. McFarlane later recalled.
Prince Bandar
pledged $1 million per month to help fund the
contras, in recognition of the administration’s past
support to the Saudis. The contributions continued
after Congress cut off funding to the contras. By
the end, the Saudis had contributed $32 million,
paid through a Cayman Islands bank account.
When the
Iran-contra scandal broke, and questions arose about
the Saudi role, the kingdom kept its secrets. Prince
Bandar refused to cooperate with the investigation
led by
Lawrence E. Walsh, the independent counsel.
In a letter,
the prince declined to testify, explaining that his
country’s “confidences and commitments, like our
friendship, are given not just for the moment but
the long run.”
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