Posted on 05/31/2004 4:26:08 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Saudis Rush to Assure World After Qaeda Attack Mon May 31, 2004 06:55 PM ET KHOBAR, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's leaders rushed to assure the world they were in full control, hours before global markets pass judgment on Tuesday on a suspected al Qaeda attack on their oil industry. Many oil sector analysts said the militants' shooting and hostage-taking rampage at the weekend in the world's biggest oil exporter, in which 22 people were killed, could push fuel prices higher. Britain warned more attacks were probable in the kingdom. "(Attacks) are clearly possible. I would go further than that and say they are probable," said Britain's ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Sherard Cowper-Coles, whose country is the second largest investor in the kingdom behind the United States. A Briton was among 19 foreigners killed in the attack in the eastern city of Khobar, the second major strike in a month on the Saudi oil industry that includes a large Western workforce. "These criminal acts by deviants will only strengthen our resolve to fight terrorism," said Saudi Arabia's King Fahd, as security forces stepped up efforts to crack down on Saudi-born Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda, which has vowed to topple him. The king has been in poor health since a stroke in 1995 and his rare public statement seemed to signal the importance the royal family attached to showing it was on top of the situation. BUSH CONDEMNS ATTACK President Bush called Crown Prince Abdullah to condemn the attack and praised Saudi security forces for "saving many hostages," the state Saudi Press Agency said. But as pictures of the bloodbath were beamed around the world, Western countries urged their citizens to either leave Saudi Arabia or not to go the kingdom unless it was essential. "There were pools of blood. Blood is everywhere," said a member of the staff at the luxury Oasis compound, scene of a 25-hour hostage standoff. He declined to be identified. "This raises the fear factor," Tony Nunan, manager of risk management at Mitsubishi Corp in Tokyo, said of the latest raid on the Saudi oil industry. Many analysts doubt U.S. crude prices will break new ground above a 21-year peak this month at $41.85 a barrel, but say the attack serves as a sharp reminder of the vulnerability of already stretched global supplies. The test will come on Tuesday (7 p.m. EDT on Monday) when markets reopen after a long holiday weekend. The heavily protected Saudi oil infrastructure has not been hit, but some traders fear militants may shift from soft targets to production and export facilities. Saudi authorities, who dropped commandos onto a rooftop in the Oasis compound to end the hostage standoff, set up security checkpoints across the country after three of the militants escaped by using hostages as human shields. MILITANTS IN MILITARY GARB Officials said nine hostages -- including some Westerners -- were killed by the militants, dressed in military uniforms and armed with grenades and machine guns. The building where the hostages were held was still sealed off after the siege, but bullet holes, blood stains, shattered glass, empty cartridges and grenades provided evidence of the havoc, said one witness, declining to be named. Westerners were also among those killed earlier when the militants opened fire on the Al-Khobar Petroleum Center building, housing offices of major Western oil firms, and then swept through housing compounds. The militants dragged the body of the dead Briton through the streets behind a car, witnesses said. The body of an American suffered the same fate in an attack on a petrochemical site in the Red Sea town of Yanbu earlier in May. The Interior Ministry listed the dead as an American, a Briton, an Italian, a South African, a Swede, eight Indians, two Sri Lankans, three Filipinos, an Egyptian boy and three Saudis. It said 25 people were wounded. Officials said 41 people had been held hostage and that 201 were trapped inside the compound during the standoff. They said Saudi forces wounded and captured the leader of the militants. It was unclear how many militants were involved. AL QAEDA CLAIM A purported al Qaeda statement on the Internet said the group carried out the attack. Al Qaeda's top leader in Saudi Arabia, Abdulaziz al-Muqrin, vowed 2004 would be "bloody and miserable" for the kingdom. Last week he issued plans for urban guerrilla warfare. In 1996, the then little known group chose Khobar for one of its first big attacks, killing 19 U.S. soldiers. Arab countries joined in the condemnation and many will be at an OPEC meeting later this week at which Saudi Arabia is proposing production increases to help ease present high oil prices that threaten to stunt global economic growth. State-owned oil company Saudi Aramco has vowed to keep supplies flowing smoothly. |
Ah, assure the world of what???
well, they are on shaky ground internally
we need alternative oil sources ...
Maybe this is the reason that there is a sudden massive aircraft carrier deployment that is being talked about only in whispers as an "exercise". The House of Saud is as fragile as a house of cards. We were freaked about Saddam getting control of Kuwaiti oilfields in 1990-91. Try al-Qaeda control of Saudi Arabian oil on for size. This could make the Iraqi conflict look like a firecracker.
yes 20k vs 25 million
most of the infrastructure is ran by infidels once we leave
they are fu'ed
We must act in our own national interest....and do whatever is necessary to insure
US national security and US sovereignty
If oil is used to fund islmo fascist aggression and terrorism...then by all means let us shut them all down once and for all....
Send them back to the desert to their tents and camels and let them languish on their oasis
We can take over the oil fields and assure the world of and uninterupted supply at fair prices
Of course this might interfer with some American and Anglo Euro business interests which probably usurp our national security...
imo
WE should have seized the oil fields way back when these bozos and the other arab drones nationalized them
President Bush called Crown Prince Abdullah to condemn the attack and praised Saudi security forces for "saving many hostages," the state Saudi Press Agency said.
Bush is no idiot.
They made a deal to save lives of the hostages. If it was me or my family or loved ones they saved, I would be grateful. Wouldn't you?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.