The United States is forging new military aid pacts with Middle East allies to
counter “negative” influences by al-Qaeda and Hizbullah, as well as Syria and
Iran, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Monday.
Ahead of her trip to the Middle East with Defence Secretary Robert Gates, she
confirmed that efforts were under way to conclude new 10-year military
assistance deals with Israel providing a total of $30 billion and with Egypt
worth $13 billion.
“In advance of my trip to the Middle East with Secretary Gates, I am pleased to
announce a renewed commitment to the security of our key strategic partners in
the region,” Rice said in a statement before her trip beginning on Monday.
To support continued US diplomatic engagement in the region, she said Washington
was “forging new assistance agreements with the Gulf States, Israel, and Egypt.
“This effort will help bolster forces of moderation and support a broader
strategy to counter the negative influences of al-Qaeda, Hizbullah, Syria, and
Iran,” she said.
Washington was beginning discussions with Cairo on a new 10-year, $13-billion
military assistance agreement “which will strengthen Egypt’s ability to address
shared strategic goals,” she said.
She confirmed Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announcement at the weekend of
a new $30 billion US defence package to preserve Israel’s regional military
superiority. “We will move soon to conclude a new 10-year military assistance
agreement with Israel. This agreement will provide a total of $30 billion to
ensure Israel’s ability to defend itself,” she said.
Rice also said the United States planned to “initiate discussions” with Saudi
Arabia and the other Gulf states on a proposed package of military technologies
“that will help support their ability to secure peace and stability in the Gulf
region.”
She did not provide any figures for the package but reports have cited arms
deals worth at least $20 billion with Saudi Arabia and the five other Gulf
states — the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman. President
George W Bush had asked US Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns to travel to
Israel and the region in mid-August to finalize these agreements, Rice said.
“Further modernising the Egyptian and Saudi Armed Forces and increasing
interoperability will bolster our partners’ resolve in confronting the threat of
radicalism and cement their respective roles as regional leaders in the quest
for Middle East peace and in ensuring Lebanon’s freedom and independence,” she
explained.
The Bush administration plans to consult closely with Congress and its allies on
the specifics of these agreements, she said. Rice and Gates will make rare joint
visits to Egypt and Saudi Arabia before separate trips to other parts of the
region.
In Egypt, they are scheduled to meet ministers of the Gulf Cooperation Council
countries as well as Jordan and Egypt in the Red Sea resort of Sharm El Sheikh.
Amid growing calls at home to withdraw US forces in Iraq, the duo are also
expected to reaffirm US commitment to regional security against possible threats
from Iran and its nuclear programme.
In addition, Washington is expected to underline concerns that some Sunni Arab
nations are offering financial aid to foreign fighters fuelling the insurgency
against the fragile Shia-led, US-backed government in Baghdad. Washington is
particularly concerned that its most powerful Sunni Arab ally, Saudi Arabia, is
bankrolling Sunni militants and serving as a conduit for them to stoke the
insurgency in Iraq.
Aside from Saudi Arabia, foreign fighters flowing into Iraq via US arch-enemy
Syria come from Qatar and Yemen, among other Middle East allies, US officials
said. But in a bid to soothe concerns of the pro-Western Sunni nations worried
about Shia Iran, Washington is expected to discuss the military aid packages and
arms sales with them. Rice will travel separately to Jerusalem and Ramallah for
meetings with Israeli and Palestinian officials.
The News International