Newly
Translated WikiLeaks Saudi Cable
Overthrow the Syrian Regime, but Play Nice with
Russia
By Brad
Hoff
February 26, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Levant
Report"
-
IT IS NO
SECRET that Saudi Arabia, along with its Gulf and
Western allies, has played a direct
role in fueling the fires of grinding sectarian
conflict that has kept Syria burning for the past
five years. It is also no secret that Russian
intervention has radically altered the kingdom’s
“regime change” calculus in effect since at least
2011. But an internal Saudi government cable sheds
new light on the kingdom’s current
threats of military escalation in Syria.
Overthrow the Regime “by all means available”
A WikiLeaks
cable released as part of
“The Saudi Cables” in the summer of 2015, now
fully translated here for the first time, reveals
what the Saudis feared most in the early years of
the war: Russian military intervention and Syrian
retaliation. These fears were such that the kingdom
directed its media “not to oppose Russian figures
and to avoid insulting them” at the time.
Saudi
Arabia had further miscalculated that the “Russian
position” of preserving the Assad government “will
not persist in force.” In Saudi thinking, reflected
in the leaked memo, Assad’s violent ouster (“by all
means available”) could be pursued so long as Russia
stayed on the sidelines. The following section is
categorical in its emphasis on regime change at all
costs, even should the U.S. vacillate for “lack of
desire”:
The
fact must be stressed that in the case where the
Syrian regime is able to pass through its
current crisis in any shape or form, the primary
goal that it will pursue is taking revenge on
the countries that stood against it, with the
Kingdom and some of the countries of the Gulf
coming at the top of the list. If we take into
account the extent of this regime’s brutality
and viciousness and its lack of hesitancy to
resort to any means to realize its aims, then
the situation will reach a high degree of danger
for the Kingdom, which must seek by all means
available and all possible ways to overthrow the
current regime in Syria. As regards the
international position, it is clear that there
is a lack of “desire” and not a lack of
“capability” on the part of Western countries,
chief among them the United States, to take firm
steps…
Amman-based
Albawaba News—one of the largest online news
providers in the Middle East—was the first to call
attention to the WikiLeaks memo, which “reveals
Saudi officials saying President Bashar al-Assad
must be taken down before he exacts revenge on Saudi
Arabia.” Albawaba offered a brief partial
translation of the cable, which though undated, was
likely produced in early 2012 (based on my best
speculation using event references in the text;
Russia began proposing informal Syrian peace talks
in
January 2012).
Russian Hardware, a Saudi Nightmare
Over the
past weeks Saudi Arabia has ratcheted up its
rhetoric on Syria, threatening direct military
escalation and the insertion of special forces on
the ground, ostensibly for humanitarian and
stabilizing purposes as a willing partner in the
“war on terror.” As many pundits are now
observing, in reality the kingdom’s saber
rattling stems not from confidence, but utter
desperation as its proxy anti-Assad fighters face
defeat by overwhelming Russian air power and Syrian
ground forces, and as the Saudi military itself is
increasingly
bogged down in Yemen.
Even as the
Saudi regime dresses its bellicose rhetoric in
humanitarian terms, it ultimately desires to protect
the flow of foreign fighters into Northern Syria,
which is its still hoped-for “available means” of
toppling the Syrian government (or at least, at this
point, permanent sectarian
partition of Syria).
The U.S.
State Department’s own 2014
Country Report on Terrorism confirms that
the rate of foreign terrorist entry into
Syria over the past few years is unprecedented among
any conflict in history: “The rate of foreign
terrorist fighter travel to Syria – totaling more
than 16,000 foreign terrorist fighters from more
than 90 countries as of late December – exceeded the
rate of foreign terrorist fighters who traveled to
Afghanistan and Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen, or Somalia at
any point in the last 20 years.”
According
to
Cinan Siddi, Director of the Institute for
Turkish Studies at Georgetown’s prestigious School
of Foreign Service, Russian military presence in
Syria was born of genuine geopolitical interests. In
a public lecture recently given at Baylor
University, Siddi said that Russia is fundamentally
trying to disrupt the “jihadi corridor” facilitated
by Turkey and its allies in Northern Syria.
The below
leaked document gives us a glimpse into Saudi
motives and fears long before Russian hardware
entered the equation, and the degree to which the
kingdom utterly failed in assessing Russian red
lines.
For
the first time, here’s a full translation of the
text
THE
BELOW original translation is courtesy of my
co-author, a published scholar of Arabic and Middle
East History, who wishes to remain unnamed. Note:
the cable as published in the SaudiLeaks trove
appears to be incomplete.
[…] shared
interest, and believes that the current Russian
position only represents a movement to put pressure
on him, its goals being evident, and that this
position will not persist in force, given Russia’s
ties to interests with Western countries and the
countries of the Gulf.
If it pleases Your Highness, I support the idea of
entering into a profound dialogue with Russia
regarding its position towards Syria*, holding the
Second Strategic Conference in Moscow, working to
focus the discussion during it on the issue of
Syria, and exerting whatever pressure is possible to
dissuade it from its current position. I likewise
see an opportunity to invite the head of the
Committee for International Relations in the Duma to
visit the Kingdom. Since it is better to remain in
communication with Russia and to direct the media
not to oppose Russian figures and to avoid insulting
them, so that no harm may come to the interests of
the Kingdom, it is possible that the new Russian
president will change Russian policy toward Arab
countries for the better. However, our position
currently in practice, which is to criticize Russian
policy toward Syria and its positions that are
contrary to our declared principles, remains. It is
also advantageous to increase pressure on the
Russians by encouraging the Organization of Islamic
States to exert some form of pressure by strongly
brandishing Islamic public opinion, since Russia
fears the Islamic dimension more than the Arab
dimension.
In what pertains to the Syrian crisis, the Kingdom
is resolute in its position and there is no longer
any room to back down. The fact must be stressed
that in the case where the Syrian regime is able to
pass through its current crisis in any shape or
form, the primary goal that it will pursue is taking
revenge on the countries that stood against it, with
the Kingdom and some of the countries of the Gulf
coming at the top of the list. If we take into
account the extent of this regime’s brutality and
viciousness and its lack of hesitancy to resort to
any means to realize its aims, then the situation
will reach a high degree of danger for the Kingdom,
which must seek by all means available and all
possible ways to overthrow the current regime in
Syria.
As regards the international position, it is clear
that there is a lack of “desire” and not a lack of
“capability” on the part of Western countries, chief
among them the United States, to take firm steps […]
*[in the
Arabic text: Russia, but this is a typo]
LEVANT
REPORT is composed of a network of Texas
professionals who are deeply alarmed by what
Washington is doing in the Middle East. The LR
Editors are primarily made up of educators—at the
university and high school levels—who have lived,
studied, and traveled extensively in the region.
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