http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/world/middleeast/13saudi.html?_r=1&bl&ex=1166158800&en=e7382703d5b0a0f6&ei=5087%0A&oref=slogin

Saudis Give a Grim What If Should U.S. Opt to Leave Iraq

WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 --- Saudi Arabia has told the Bush administration that 
it might provide financial backing to Iraqi Sunnis in any war against 
Iraq's Shiites if the United States pulls its troops out of Iraq, 
according to American and Arab diplomats.

  King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia conveyed that message to Vice President 
Dick Cheney two weeks ago during Mr. Cheney's whirlwind visit to Riyadh, 
the officials said. During the visit, King Abdullah also expressed 
strong opposition to diplomatic talks between the United States and 
Iran, and pushed for Washington to encourage the resumption of peace 
talks between Israel and the Palestinians, senior Bush administration 
officials said.

The Saudi warning reflects fears among America's Sunni Arab allies about 
Iran's rising influence in Iraq, coupled with Tehran's nuclear 
ambitions. King Abdullah II of Jordan has also expressed concern about 
rising Shiite influence, and about the prospect that the 
Shiite-dominated government would use Iraqi troops against the Sunni 
population.

A senior Bush administration official said Tuesday that part of the 
administration's review of Iraq policy involved the question of how to 
harness a coalition of moderate Iraqi Sunnis with centrist Shiites to 
back the Iraqi government led by Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki.

The Saudis have argued strenuously against an American pullout from 
Iraq, citing fears that Iraq's minority Sunni Arab population would be 
massacred. Those fears, United States officials said, have become more 
pronounced as a growing chorus in Washington has advocated a draw-down 
of American troops in Iraq, coupled with diplomatic outreach to Iran, 
which is largely Shiite.

"It's a hypothetical situation, and we'd work hard to avoid such a 
structure," one Arab diplomat in Washington said. But, he added, "If 
things become so bad in Iraq, like an ethnic cleansing, we will feel we 
are pulled into the war."

The Bush administration is also working on a way to form a coalition of 
Sunni Arab nations and a moderate Shiite government in Iraq, along with 
the United States and Europe, to stand against "Iran, Syria and the 
terrorists," another senior administration official said Tuesday.

Until now Saudi officials have promised their counterparts in the United 
States that they would refrain from aiding Iraq's Sunni insurgency. But 
that pledge holds only as long as the United States remains in Iraq.

The Saudis have been wary of supporting Sunnis in Iraq because their 
insurgency there has been led by extremists of Al Qaeda, who are opposed 
to the kingdom's monarchy. But if Iraq's sectarian war worsened, the 
Saudis would line up with Sunni tribal leaders.

The Saudi ambassador to the United States, Prince Turki al-Faisal, who 
told his staff on Monday that he was resigning his post, recently fired 
Nawaf Obaid, a consultant who wrote an opinion piece in The Washington 
Post two weeks ago contending that "one of the first consequences" of an 
American pullout of Iraq would "be massive Saudi intervention to stop 
Iranian-backed Shiite militias from butchering Iraqi Sunnis."

Mr. Obaid also suggested that Saudi Arabia could cut world oil prices in 
half by raising its production, a move that he said "would be 
devastating to Iran, which is facing economic difficulties even with 
today's high oil prices." The Saudi government disavowed Mr. Obaid's 
column, and Prince Turki canceled his contract.

But Arab diplomats said Tuesday that Mr. Obaid's column reflected the 
view of the Saudi government, which has made clear its opposition to an 
American pullout from Iraq.

In a speech in Philadelphia last week, Prince Turki reiterated the Saudi 
position against an American withdrawal from Iraq. "Just picking up and 
leaving is going to create a huge vacuum," he told the World Affairs 
Council. "The U.S. must underline its support for the Maliki government 
because there is no other game in town."

Prince Turki said Saudi Arabia did not want Iraq to fracture along 
ethnic or religious lines. On Monday a group of prominent Saudi clerics 
called on Sunni Muslims around the world to mobilize against Shiites in 
Iraq. The statement called the "murder, torture and displacement of 
Sunnis" an "outrage."

The resignation of Prince Turki, a former Saudi intelligence chief and a 
son of the late King Faisal, was supposed to be formally announced 
Monday, officials said, but that had not happened by late Tuesday.

"They're keeping us very puzzled," a Saudi official said. Prince Turki's 
resignation was first reported Monday in The Washington Post.

If Prince Turki does depart, he will leave after 15 months on the job, 
in contrast to the 22 years that his predecessor, Prince Bandar bin 
Sultan, spent as ambassador in Washington.

In Riyadh, there was a sense of disarray over Prince Turki's resignation 
that was difficult to hide. A former adviser to the royal family said 
that Prince Turki had submitted his resignation several months ago but 
that it was refused. Rumors had circulated ever since that Prince Turki 
intended to resign, as talk of a possible government shake-up grew.

Prince Saud al-Faisal, Saudi Arabia's foreign minister and Prince 
Turki's brother, has been in poor health for some time. He is described 
as eager to resign, with his wife's health failing, too, just as the 
United States has been prodding Saudi Arabia to take a more active role 
in Iraq and with Iran.

The former adviser said Prince Turki's resignation came amid a growing 
rivalry between the ambassador and Prince Bandar, who is now Saudi 
Arabia's national security adviser. Prince Bandar, well known in 
Washington for his access to the White House, has vied to become the 
next foreign minister.

"This is a very high-level problem; this is about Turki, the king and 
Bandar," said the former adviser to the royal family. "Let's say the men 
don't have a lot of professional admiration for each other."

Hassan M. Fattah contributed reporting from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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