ATP -Saudi
Arabia said Tuesday that 34 nations have agreed to form a new "Islamic
military alliance" to fight terrorism with a joint operations center based
in the kingdom's capital, Riyadh.
The
announcement published by the state-run Saudi Press Agency said the alliance
will be Saudi-led and is being established because terrorism "should be
fought by all means and collaboration should be made to eliminate it." The
statement said Islam forbids "corruption and destruction in the
world" and that terrorism constitutes "a serious violation of human
dignity and rights, especially the right to life and the right to
security."
The
new counterterrorism coalition includes nations with large and established
armies such as Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt as well as war-torn countries with
embattled militaries such as Libya and Yemen. African nations that have
suffered militant attacks such as Mali, Chad, Somalia and Nigeria are also
members.
Saudi
Arabia's regional rival, Shiite Iran, is not part of the coalition. Saudi
Arabia and Iran support opposite sides of in the wars raging in Syria and
Yemen. Saudi Arabia is currently leading a military intervention in Yemen
against Shiite Houthi rebels and is part of the U.S.-led coalition bombing the
Sunni extremist Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.
At
a rare news conference, Saudi Deputy Crown Prince and Defense Minister Mohammed
bin Salman said the new Islamic military coalition will develop mechanisms for
working with other countries and international bodies to support
counterterrorism efforts. He said their efforts would not be limited to only
countering the Islamic State group.
"Currently,
every Muslim country is fighting terrorism individually ... so coordinating
efforts is very important," he said.
He
said the joint operations center will be established in Riyadh to
"coordinate and support military operations to fight terrorism"
across the Muslim world.
Smaller
member-states included in the coalition are the archipelago of the Maldives and
the Gulf Arab island-nation of Bahrain, which is home to the U.S. Navy's 5th
Fleet.
Other
Gulf Arab countries such as Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates are also
in the coalition, though notably absent from the list is Oman, a neighbor of
Saudi Arabia. In recent years, Oman has maintained a neutral role and has
emerged as a mediator in regional conflicts, serving as a conduit from the Gulf
Arabs to Iran.
However,
Iraq and Syria, whose forces are battling to regain territory taken by the
Islamic State group and whose governments are allied with Iran, are not in the
coalition.
Benin,
while it does not have a majority Muslim population, is another member of this
new counterterrorism coalition. All the group's members are also part of the
larger Organization of Islamic Cooperation, which is headquartered in Saudi
Arabia.
Turkey
is the only country in the coalition that is also a NATO member.
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