Iran Won’t Allow Turkey, Saudi Arabia to Exacerbate
Syria Situation: Deputy Commander
By GPD on February 14,
2016
Iran Won’t Allow Turkey, Saudi Arabia to Exacerbate
Syria Situation: Deputy Commander
In an interview with Al-Alam TV, Deputy Chief of Staff
of Iran’s Armed Forces Brigadier General Massoud Jazzayeri underlined the
country’s opposition to the deployment of foreign forces in Syria, and said
Tehran will not allow outside actors to foment more insecurity in the war-torn
country.
“Saudi Arabia has exhausted its military muscles in
the Syrian battlefield. It has failed both in Syria and Yemen. If they had had
the ability, they would have already sent troops to Syria,” Jazzayeri said in
an interview with Al-Alam News Network on Sunday.
On whether Iran would send more military advisors to
Syria to counter possible Saudi deployment, he said, “We will not let the
situation in Syria get out of control so that some rogue states could implement
their policies. If needed, we will take some appropriate decisions.”
Elsewhere, Jazzayeri stressed Iran’s support for
Russia’s military assistance to the Syrian nation in the war on terror, adding
that Tehran and Moscow coordinate their political and military measures in Syria.
In relevant remarks earlier this month, Commander of
the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari had said
that Saudi Arabia doesn’t have the guts to send its armed forces to Syria.
“They claim they will send troops (to Syria) but I
don’t think they will dare do so. They have a classic army and history tells us
such armies stand no chance in fighting irregular resistance forces,” Jafari
told reporters in Tehran.
“This will be like a coup de grâce for them.
Apparently, they see no other way but this, and if this is the case, then their
fate is sealed,” he added.
Jafari, said this is just cheap talks, but Iran
welcomes the Saudi decision if they decide to walk on this path.
The Saudi Defense Ministry announced early February
that it stood ready to deploy ground troops to Syria to allegedly aid the
US-led anti-ISIL, also known as Daesh (ISIS/ISIL), coalition.
Riyadh has been a nominal member of the US-led
coalition that has been launching air strikes against Daesh in Syria since
September 2014, without the permission of Damascus or the United Nations. In
December 2015, Saudi Arabia started its own Muslim 34-nation coalition to
allegedly fight Islamic extremism.
Daesh is a Wahhabi group mentored by Saudi Arabia and
has been blacklisted as a terrorist group everywhere in the world, including
the United States and Russia, but Saudi Arabia.
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