U.S. Denies Ties with Saudis Under Strain
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
Relations between the United States and Saudi Arabia remain strong, a U.S. official insisted Tuesday, brushing aside a report its key Gulf ally was seeking to distance itself from Washington amid differences over Syria.
Asked if Riyadh had told Washington that it planned to cut back cooperation, the official replied: "Not to my knowledge has that message been sent to the State Department by the Saudis."
"The fundamental relationship and partnership with the Saudis is a strong one. We value their efforts on a wide range of issues," added State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf.
Her comments came after the Wall Street Journal reported that the Saudi intelligence chief, Prince Bandar Bin Sultan al-Saud, told European diplomats he would scale back cooperation with the U.S. on arming and training Syrian rebels.
It also coincides with Riyadh's rejection of a prized seat as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, in protest at the world body's failure to do more to end the Syrian war.
"This was a message for the U.S., not the U.N.," Prince Bandar was quoted by diplomats as saying, according to the Journal.
Prince Bandar also told the diplomats, in a private weekend meeting in Riyadh, that he would roll back Saudi Arabia's work with the CIA to train Syrian rebels, and work with other allies including Jordan and France.
The Saudis had been particularly angered by the U.S. decision not to go ahead with strikes against the chemical weapons arsenal of Syrian President Bashar Assad, the Journal said.
And they wanted the U.S. or the U.N. "to come up with a more effective plan of action for helping rebels overthrow Mr Assad and end the Syrian war," the U.S. business daily added.
The Sunni majority Gulf kingdom has also watched warily as Washington has made moves to improve ties with Shiite Muslim Iran.
"We're working together on some challenging issues, and we share the same goals, whether it's ending the civil war in Syria, getting back to a democratic government in Egypt, preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon," Harf said.
"The question of how you get there on all of these issues is what we're working through right now with the Saudis and our other international partners."
She highlighted that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry held a "productive" two-hour meeting over lunch in Paris with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal on Monday.
"They have a warm friendship and even during moments of disagreement have always found ways to have honest and open discussion," she said.
During the meeting, Kerry pressed Faisal to reconsider Riyadh's decision not to take up the Security Council seat.
Top decisions in Saudi Arabia come from King Abdullah, and it was not immediately clear whether Prince Bandar's remarks signified a division within the monarchy on how to pressure the U.S. to take a more hands-on role in Syria, the Journal added.

The foreign policy of the KSA gets murkier and murkier. Who is in charge? The opening of the UN and the Security seat dramas speak little of any plan.
Bandar acts out on his own frustrations over his spectacular failures spreading his new policies to get attention. The Saudis are behaving like spoiled children ...