BY: IFEANYI OKOYE After experience gained in Yemen, Saudi says it's set to send ground troops to Syria [Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP]Saudi
Arabia is prepared to deploy ground troops to Syria to fight the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) if US-led coalition leaders
agree to the offer. Saudi's air force has targeted ISIL with air strikes since the
campaign began in Syria in September 2014, but the Gulf kingdom is now
ready to provide ground forces to defeat the armed group, a military
spokesman said on Thursday.
"Today, the Saudi kingdom announced its readiness
to participate with ground troops with the US-led coalition against
ISIL, because we now have the experience in Yemen," Brigadier General Ahmed Asseri told Al Jazeera. "We know that air strikes cannot be
enough and that a ground operation is needed. We need to combine both to
achieve better results on the ground." Asseri didn't elaborate on how many soldiers the kingdom could send.
The Saudi offer is expected to be discussed when the United States
convenes a meeting of defence ministers from coalition countries
fighting ISIL in Brussels next week.
Lawrence Korb, a former US assistant secretary of defence, said while
Middle East countries have armed and supplied rebels during the
five-year Syrian civil war, putting boots on the ground would mark major
shift. He noted it may also signal to Russia - whose air power has greatly aided President Bashar al-Assad's recent major military gains - a need to return to Geneva peace negotiations that were postponed this week. "The fact that you will have Saudi
troops on the ground fighting with the rebels against the government is a
very significant escalation, and hopefully will get the Russians to
these peace talks, rather than thinking they can create a mini-Alawite
state in Syria," Korb told Al Jazeera. Air strikes worsen Syria's humanitarian situation
US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter welcomed the Saudi offer to participate in ground operations in Syria. Carter said increased activity by other countries would make it
easier for the United States to accelerate its fight against ISIL. "That kind of news is very welcome," he told reporters on Thursday. Saudi Arabia is deeply involved in neighbouring Yemen's civil
war, where it is fighting Iranian-backed Houthi rebels both on the
ground and from the air. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries have long viewed Iran as a
regional menace, and Riyadh and Tehran back opposite sides in the wars
in Syria and Yemen.
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