Exclusive: U.S. weighs possible resumption of offensive arms sales to
Saudis - sources
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[July 11, 2022]
By Matt Spetalnick, Aziz El Yaakoubi and Mike Stone
WASHINGTON/RIYADH (Reuters) - The Biden
administration is discussing the possible lifting of its ban on U.S.
sales of offensive weapons to Saudi Arabia, but any final decision is
expected to hinge on whether Riyadh makes progress toward ending the war
in neighboring Yemen, according to four people familiar with the matter.
Senior Saudi officials pressed their U.S. counterparts to scrap a policy
of selling only defensive arms to its top Gulf partner in several
meetings in Riyadh and Washington in recent months, three of the sources
said ahead of President Joe Biden’s visit to the kingdom this week.
The internal U.S. deliberations are informal and at an early stage, with
no decision imminent, two sources said, and a U.S. official told Reuters
there were no discussions on offensive weapons under way with the Saudis
“at this time.”
But as Biden prepares for a diplomatically sensitive trip, he has
signaled that he is looking to reset strained relations with Saudi
Arabia at a time when he wants increased Gulf oil supplies along with
closer Arab security ties with Israel to counter Iran.
At home, any move to rescind restrictions on offensive weapons is sure
to draw opposition in Congress, including from Biden’s fellow Democrats
and opposition Republicans who have been vocal critics of Saudi Arabia,
congressional aides say.
Soon after taking office early last year, Biden adopted a tougher stance
over Saudi Arabia's campaign against the Iran-aligned Houthis in Yemen,
which has inflicted heavy civilian casualties, and Riyadh’s human rights
record, in particular the 2018 killing of Washington Post journalist and
political opponent Jamal Khashoggi.
Biden, who as a presidential candidate denounced Saudi Arabia as a
“pariah,” declared in February 2021 a halt to U.S. support for offensive
operations in Yemen, including “relevant arms sales.”
Saudi Arabia, the biggest U.S. arms customer, has chafed under those
restrictions, which froze the kind of weapons sales that previous U.S.
administrations had provided for decades.
Biden’s approach has softened since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in
March, which has prompted the United States and other Western countries
to appeal to Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter, to pump more
oil to offset loss of Russian supplies.
Saudi Arabia also won White House praise for agreeing in early June on a
two-month extension of a U.N.-brokered truce in Yemen, scene of the
world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
Washington would now like to see it turned into a permanent ceasefire.
A person in Washington familiar with the matter said the administration
had begun internal discussions about the possibility of removing Saudi
weapons restrictions but indicated they had not reached a
decision-making stage.
Among the times when Saudi officials raised the request was during
Deputy Minister of Defense Khalid bin Salman's visit to Washington in
May, according to a second source.
The Saudi government did not respond to a request for comment.
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United States' and Saudi Arabia's flags are seen on Mecca Road as
part of celebrations to welcome United States President Donald
Trump, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 19, 2017. REUTERS/Faisal Al
Nasser/Files
YEMEN CONFLICT
The sources stressed, however, that no announcement was expected
around Biden’s July 13-16 trip, which will include stops in Israel
and the West Bank.
Any decision, they said, is expected to depend heavily on whether
Riyadh is deemed to have done enough to find a political settlement
to the Yemen conflict.
Among the biggest-ticket items the Saudis would likely seek are
precision-guided munitions (PGM) such as those approved under former
President Donald Trump in the face of objections from members of
Congress.
But the Biden administration is expected to move cautiously as it
discusses which systems might be offered, two sources said. Amnesty
International said U.S.-made precision-guided bombs were used in a
Saudi-led coalition air strike on a detention center in Yemen in
January that killed scores.
If Washington eases the ban, it may be easier to push through sales
of less-lethal equipment such as armored personnel carriers or
replenish stocks of less-sophisticated ground-to-ground and
air-to-ground weaponry.
Even under existing restrictions, the United States began stepping
up its military support for Saudi Arabia earlier this year following
Houthi missile strikes on the kingdom.
Washington approved missiles and an anti-ballistic defense system
sales to Saudi Arabia, the Pentagon said in November, and the United
States sent Patriot missiles this year as well - all deemed by U.S.
officials to be defensive in nature.
The Biden administration has also maintained backing for the Saudis
to receive a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system
first approved in 2017 to counter ballistic missile threats.
While lawmakers have mostly acquiesced to such sales, Biden could
face fallout on Capitol Hill if he decides to sell Riyadh offensive
weapons again.
Some have questioned Biden’s decision to visit Saudi Arabia, seeing
it as lending legitimacy to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the
Saudi de facto leader who the U.S. intelligence community concluded
was behind Khashoggi’s murder.
Among the likely opponents would be Democratic Senator Chris Murphy,
a staunch critic of the Saudi campaign in Yemen who praised Biden
when he froze offensive arms sales.
An aide said Murphy does not believe now is the time to resume such
supplies.
(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick and Mike Stone in Washington and Aziz
El Yaakoubi in Riyadh; Editing by Mary Milliken and Howard Goller)
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