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Saudi Arabia foils US Embassy attack, arrests 93 suspects


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Saudi Arabia foils US Embassy attack, arrests 93 suspects
By AYA BATRAWY

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Saudi Arabia on Tuesday announced the arrest of 93 suspects with ties to the Islamic State group who it says were planning multi-pronged attacks on the U.S. Embassy, security forces and residential compounds where foreigners live.

The list of targets recalls a wave of attacks launched by al-Qaida inside the kingdom from 2004 to 2007, which killed dozens of people, including foreigners, and threatened the stability of one of the world's most important oil-producing nations. Saudi Arabia is also home to Islam's holiest sites, in Mecca and Medina.

Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Mansour al-Turki told The Associated Press that Saudi Arabia's security forces are better prepared than ever to fight back against the Islamic State group. The kingdom is part of a U.S.-led coalition bombing the group in Iraq and Syria.

He said there have been five IS-related attacks across the kingdom in recent months that have killed 15 civilians and security personnel. But he said Saudis have largely ignored the IS group's calls to take up arms against their government and attack the Shiite minority, security forces and foreigners living in the kingdom.

"We do have a number of people who do respond to such calls and do try to carry out such terrorist organizations' orders, but these people do not represent the Saudi population, do not represent the 20 million Saudis," he said in remarks to the AP a day before the announcement of the arrests, which took place over several months.

Al-Turki said the security raids included a cell of 65 people arrested in March who were involved in a plan to target residential compounds and prisons. They also allegedly planned to carry out attacks aimed at creating sectarian strife. All but two in the cell were Saudi citizens.

Authorities also disrupted a plot for a suicide car bomber to attack the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh after receiving information about the plan in mid-March, he said. Two Syrians and a Saudi citizen were arrested in relation to the plot.

The timing of the alleged attack coincides with a U.S. decision to halt all consular services for a week starting March 15 at the embassy and diplomatic missions in Jiddah and Dhahran over security fears.

The U.S. Embassy in Riyadh is located in a large and heavily guarded compound with other embassies. The embassy is surrounded by fortified barriers and guarded by police, and a U.S. Marine checks visitor passes inside.

Last week, Saudi Arabia increased security around shopping centers and oil installations for a few days, also in response to security threats.

Al-Turki said another group of nine Saudis, including one woman, were arrested on suspicion they tried to use social media to lure a military officer into a trap and assassinate him.

Other arrests involving alleged IS operatives included a cell of 15 Saudis broken up around New Year's. That group, which called itself "Soldiers of the Land of the Two Holy Mosques" in reference to sites in Mecca and Medina, trained in desolate areas in the central ultraconservative region of al-Qassim, al-Turki said.

They built explosives, setting off two test bombs, and also engaged in firearms training.

Earlier in the day, al-Turki said police arrested a suspected IS operative wanted for the killing of two police officers in Riyadh, who were shot dead April 8 while on patrol. Nawaf al-Enezi, a 29-year-old Saudi citizen, was taken into custody early Tuesday morning after callers tipped the police off, he said.

Al-Enezi was found in a hideout about 100 kilometers (60 miles) east of Riyadh and was wounded by police gunfire during the arrest.

The Interior Ministry last week announced a $267,000 reward for information leading to his arrest.

IS group members have previously been blamed for an attack on Saudi border guards near Iraq that killed three security personnel in January and a shooting attack on Shiite worshippers in al-Ahsa in the Eastern Province in November that killed eight people. Two police officers died in raids that led to the arrests of suspects behind the al-Ahsa shooting.

Other IS attacks in the kingdom in recent months include the shooting and wounding of a Danish citizen in Riyadh and a separate shooting directed at police in the city that did not kill anyone.

Al-Turki told the AP that a total of seven IS-linked suspects have been killed by police in raids.

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-- (c) Associated Press 2015-04-29

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Unless you have been involved with their security forces since the Khobar Towers bombing, you don't have a clue what they have done to stop terrorism in Saudi.

I still get Warden's messages and send them on to friends working there.

Saudi Arabian authorities are doing much more against ISIS and Al-Qaeda than any of you know.

Given jihadist advances in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen, the Saudis don't seem to be succeeding in the region as a whole.

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Unless you have been involved with their security forces since the Khobar Towers bombing, you don't have a clue what they have done to stop terrorism in Saudi.

I still get Warden's messages and send them on to friends working there.

Saudi Arabian authorities are doing much more against ISIS and Al-Qaeda than any of you know.

Given jihadist advances in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen, the Saudis don't seem to be succeeding in the region as a whole.

Please explain why they have any responsibility for stopping Jihad advances in Iraq and Syria.

They are helping in Yemen and, seemingly doing some good by killing many of the Iranian backed Shiites.

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Share on other sites

Unless you have been involved with their security forces since the Khobar Towers bombing, you don't have a clue what they have done to stop terrorism in Saudi.

I still get Warden's messages and send them on to friends working there.

Saudi Arabian authorities are doing much more against ISIS and Al-Qaeda than any of you know.

Any of us Chuck?

Really?

wink.png

Edited by Chicog
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Unless you have been involved with their security forces since the Khobar Towers bombing, you don't have a clue what they have done to stop terrorism in Saudi.

I still get Warden's messages and send them on to friends working there.

Saudi Arabian authorities are doing much more against ISIS and Al-Qaeda than any of you know.

Given jihadist advances in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen, the Saudis don't seem to be succeeding in the region as a whole.

Please explain why they have any responsibility for stopping Jihad advances in Iraq and Syria.

They are helping in Yemen and, seemingly doing some good by killing many of the Iranian backed Shiites.

Killing the Houthi is "doing some good"?

For IS and Al Qaeda, almost certainly.

Edited by Chicog
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Unless you have been involved with their security forces since the Khobar Towers bombing, you don't have a clue what they have done to stop terrorism in Saudi.

I still get Warden's messages and send them on to friends working there.

Saudi Arabian authorities are doing much more against ISIS and Al-Qaeda than any of you know.

Given jihadist advances in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen, the Saudis don't seem to be succeeding in the region as a whole.

Please explain why they have any responsibility for stopping Jihad advances in Iraq and Syria.

They are helping in Yemen and, seemingly doing some good by killing many of the Iranian backed Shiites.

Killing the Houthi is "doing some good"?

For IS and Al Qaeda, almost certainly.

IS and Al Qaeda is imagined/supposed/is a counterballance to Iran, thats their problem. :)

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Unless you have been involved with their security forces since the Khobar Towers bombing, you don't have a clue what they have done to stop terrorism in Saudi.

I still get Warden's messages and send them on to friends working there.

Saudi Arabian authorities are doing much more against ISIS and Al-Qaeda than any of you know.

Any of us Chuck?

Really?

wink.png

Naw, not you. I know you already know everything so you are never included in one of my blanket statements.

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