Report: Saudi Arms Grant Stalled over Remarks on Yemen War

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

A Saudi grant to the Lebanese army to purchase French weapons is reportedly frozen over stances by some Lebanese officials regarding Riyadh's war against Shiite Huthi rebels in Yemen.

French diplomatic sources said in comments published in As Safir newspaper Tuesday that France's chief of Staff General Jean-Pierre Bosser expressed belief that Saudi Arabia is delaying the accomplishment of the second delivery of French arms.

The chief of staff reportedly informed Lebanese authorities that Saudi Arabia “could have decided to freeze the grant over stances by Lebanese officials regarding its war on Yemen (in particular, Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah),” the sources pointed out.

Saudi Arabia is leading an Arab coalition that launched an air war on the Huthi rebels and their allies in Yemen on March 26.

Nasrallah had slammed Saudi Arabia as the source of the “takfiri ideology” in the world, vowing that it will suffer a “major defeat” in the Yemeni conflict.

The French diplomatic sources expressed pessimism over the deal, hinting that Saudi Arabia froze the grant in an indirect manner.

According to As Safir, Lebanese officials were supposed to schedule a new arms delivery with French counterparts to ship the second batch of arms. However, Army chief General Jean Qahwaji, who visited Paris at the end of May, was surprised that French officials stalled the signing ceremony.

But observers linked the delay in the delivery to King Salman's reshuffling of the ranks of power at the kingdom.

In April, Lebanon received the first shipment of $3 billion worth of French arms under a Saudi-financed deal to boost the country's defensive capabilities to combat terror threats, along its northeastern border in particular.

Lebanese sources told As Safir that the freezing of the deal could also impact another $1 billion grant.

The sources pointed out that the money of the grant hasn't been cashed yet 10 months after Mustaqbal Movement leader Saad Hariri announced it in August.

Lebanon's allies are seeking to bolster the country's defenses against the Islamic State group and other jihadists pressing along its Syrian border.

France is expected to deliver 250 combat and transport vehicles, seven Cougar helicopters, three small Corvette warships and a range of surveillance and communications equipment over four years as part of the $3 billion (2.8 billion-euro) modernization program.

It is being entirely funded by Saudi Arabia, which is keen to see Lebanon's army defend its borders against jihadist groups, particularly the IS group and al-Nusra Front.

The contract also promises seven years of training for the 70,000-strong Lebanese army and 10 years of equipment maintenance.

Since the conflict in neighboring Syria broke out in 2011, Lebanon has faced mounting spill-over threats, first from the millions of refugees pouring across the border and increasingly from jihadists.

Prime Minister Tammam Salam referred the delay in delivering the arms to technical reasons, downplaying the reports, As Safir said.

“We should all realize that it's a five-year deal... Skepticism will not collapse it.”

Salam considered also in an interview with the pan-Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat published Tuesday that the arms deal is “advanced.”

“It will fortify our state institutions, which will directly affect our unity,” the premier added.

H.K.

G.K.

Comments 14
Thumb Mystic 02 June 2015, 08:46

The Saudis way of keeping leverage on Lebanon.
Their rusted weapons can stay in the french landfills & scrapyards for all I care.
Real thing that matters is the armys lack of action against the Saudi sponsored Nusra/ISIL in Arsal, something we can thank the March 14 alliance dearly.

Thumb cedar 02 June 2015, 09:17

Typical Saudis - two faced. Or maybe even 3or 4 faced... Some sort of evil dragon.

Missing humble 02 June 2015, 10:13

Total and complete disinformation. Big B.S...the specialty of those who want to continue dividing the country.

Missing coolmec 02 June 2015, 10:31

Here we go ! nothing comes free. If we don't bow and blindly support the Saudis they will blackmail us and no deal

Missing coolmec 02 June 2015, 11:50

@ Knesset
well I never trusted the Saudis so..

Thumb -phoenix1 02 June 2015, 13:52

Coolmec, you heard the adage that goes, "beggars have no choice"? Our problem is this: we are a weak nation, reduced to to such lows. We could have become a very strong nation, with a powerful army, a strong economy, a solid peace, but when the PLO is gone and only replaced by another ruthless militia like Hezbollah, what do you expect, that we enjoy a solid state of solid constitutional institutions? When militias exist, the state diminishes to the point where we are today.

Missing coolmec 02 June 2015, 15:57

Phoenix
Good to her from you. I agree with your above comment yet no need to be blackmailed and put down. A grant is a grant either do it to completion or simply don't suggest it

Missing coolmec 02 June 2015, 15:55

shiakiller
please tell me why I am naive

Default-user-icon + oua nabka + (Guest) 02 June 2015, 12:23

just take the arms from whoever is ready to deliver it to our army free
god bless democracy

Default-user-icon Khalid Alammar (Guest) 02 June 2015, 12:23

But they were not Big Mac's delivery.
I don't blame them.

Thumb -phoenix1 02 June 2015, 13:47

Excuse me KSA, since when did Hassan Nasrallah become a Lebanese official? You ya dear KSA know very well our situation in Lebanon, we are divided by M8 and M14. If you want to stall your grant to us, then you will be shooting yourselves in the foot in the very first place and will find that the moderates that could have saved Lebanon from a myriad of catastrophes have been replaced by radicals. No matter what some Lebanese say, especially by people whose mouths have become uncontrollable, just commit to your promise, period. To break a promise is to lie, and to lie has been made clear mention of in the Ten Commandments, so dear KSA, if you're gonna lie, then stop telling people that you're the guardian of the holy sites in Saudia, for God's sake.

Thumb -phoenix1 02 June 2015, 13:49

No blalbla, it just happens that your side is specialist at sabotaging the very existence of Lebanon, and by the same token I hope that your side will not screw up once again our upcoming Summer Season.

Thumb -phoenix1 02 June 2015, 20:25

Blabla, the difference between me and you is s simple one, I focus on the article, you focus to insult. So much for a constructive reply from you, a definite intentional U-turn like most of you yellows, so deviantly being you are, Blabla is the perfect acronym for someone like you. Talk of honor, check were you stand before you mention me. Sheer rubbish from your likes.

Thumb geha 02 June 2015, 14:50

only al safil has reported this, and after several hours nobody else is reporting it :)