Saudi forms 34-nation anti-‘terrorist’ military coalition
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AFP) – Saudi Arabia announced yesterday the formation of a military coalition of 34 countries to fight “terrorism” in the Islamic world, in the latest sign of a more assertive foreign policy by the kingdom.
The regional Sunni power said the alliance would share intelligence, combat violent ideology and deploy troops if necessary.
“Nothing is off the table. A number of countries are in desperate need of assistance,” Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said.
“Terrorism has hit Islamic countries. It is time that the Islamic world takes a stand,” he told reporters in Paris.
The alliance was announced by Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is also defence minister, on the same day that peace talks between the Yemeni government and Iran-backed rebels began in Switzerland, accompanied by a ceasefire.
Adam Baron, a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said the coalition fits into “the larger, more assertive policy” of Saudi King Salman and Mohammed, his powerful son.
The prince told a rare news conference that the Riyadh-based coalition will tackle “the Islamic world’s problem with terrorism and will be a partner in the worldwide fight against this scourge”.
Some coalition members like Nigeria have mixed Muslim-Christian populations, but all belong to the Jeddah-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.
They range from tiny African nations such as Guinea to major regional powers including Turkey.
Farea al-Muslimi, a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Middle East Centre, called most of them “honorary members” in a coalition that “seemed to have been cooked at the last minute” without clear goals.
Muslimi said the coalition seems like an attempt by Saudi Arabia to ease some of the international pressure it has faced on the issue.
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters in Ankara yesterday that his country backed the alliance’s formation.
“Turkey is ready to contribute by all its means to all gatherings that aim to fight terrorism, no matter where or by whom it is organised,” he said.
Sunni Islam’s leading seat of learning, Al-Azhar, urged all Muslim countries to join the coalition, expressing hope that it would defeat the “evils of terrorism”.
The coalition will fight “any terrorist organisation that appears”, Mohammed said when asked if it would concentrate only on the Islamic State (IS) group of Sunni extremists in Syria and Iraq.
Saudi Arabia has repeatedly denounced international “terrorism” and has itself seen an upsurge of attacks claimed by IS over the past year, against minority Shiites and members of the security forces.
The kingdom is founded on the teachings of fundamentalist cleric Mohammed bin Abdul Wahhab, whose thought has been accused of fuelling deadly Sunni extremism around the world, including that of IS.