[...]
Publicly, the Saudis expressed patience, with pro-monarchy newspapers
saying that the *negotiations over Syrian chemical weapons would probably
founder and that American military strikes would follow sooner or later*.
But behind the scenes, analysts say, leaders in Saudi Arabia and allies
like Qatar chafed as rebel leaders fumed that their larger need — *a way to
shift the balance in the two-year-old civil war* and end the army’s
bombardment of towns and neighborhoods — was being ignored.

*The greatest fear of gulf leaders, said Hassan Hassan, who analyzes the
gulf role in the Syria conflict at The National, a newspaper based in Abu
Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates, is that talks over Syria’s chemical
weapons will shift the American focus to “talking with the Iranians and the
regime and Russia rather than with the gulf.”*

The gulf states, especially Saudi Arabia and Qatar, have positioned
themselves as crucial players in Syria, working closely with the United
States.

“Now all of a sudden the limelight has been taken away from them,” Mr.
Hassan said. *“They are afraid the situation can take another course.”*
[...]
The situation points to the many competing interests the United States is
trying to balance in the Syria crisis. *The Americans’ stated goal in Syria
is a political settlement, but that outcome is all but impossible to
achieve without talking to Syria’s allies.* And the close association among
Saudi Arabia, Qatar and rebel groups has been a source of mistrust for
government supporters inside Syria and others outside the country who fear
the Islamic militants who have risen to prominence on the battlefield on
the strength of financing from private donors in the gulf.
[...]

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/13/world/middleeast/syrian-rebels-say-saudi-arabia-is-stepping-up-weapons-deliveries.html

-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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