No deal offering rich arms contacts and protection of Moscow’s gas interests in exchange for Russia withdrawing support for Syrian President Assad was discussed during Vladimir Putin’s talks with Saudi intelligence chief Prince Bandar, the Kremlin said.
“Putin didn’t discuss any deals,” the Russian president’s
aide, Yury Ushakov, answered when asked by RT about media reports, which claimed that a $15 billion
Saudi offer was put on the table during the Moscow talks on July
31.
"Specific issues of military-technical cooperation development
and other aspects of bilateral cooperation weren’t on the
agenda,” he stressed.
According to Ushakov, the talks were organized to clarifying the
stance which each country takes in the Syrian conflict.
Despite having opposing views on the issue, Moscow and Riyadh
have “demonstrated a similar amount of concern” about the
events in the war-torn Middle Eastern state, the aide said.
Ushakov also informed that Bandar had other contacts in Moscow
besides meeting with Putin, but the Kremlin is unaware of the
contents of those negotiations.
Moscow’s official comments come after more than a week since the
meeting took place, while the Saudi side remains silent on the
agenda of Prince Bandar’s talks in the Russian capital.
The Saudi Arabian intelligence chief has allegedly offered to buy
up to $15 billion of Russian weapons as well as ensure that Gulf
gas nations won’t threaten Russia's position as Europe’s main gas
supplier, Reuters and AFP reported this week, citing diplomatic
sources.
The terms of the bargain reportedly included Kremlin
dropping its support of Assad, as well as not opposing any future
Security Council resolutions on Syria.
An undisclosed Arab diplomat told AFP that the Russian president
listened to the offer and rejected it, saying that “his country wouldn’t
change its strategy” of backing the Syrian government.
Bandar allegedly replied by saying that the only option left in
Syria is a military one – and that Russia should forget about the
Geneva-2 international peace conference because the opposition
would not attend, the source said.
Efforts to stage the peace conference – which has been put forth
by Washington and Moscow – have so far been fruitless, mainly
because of the absence of unity within the opposition ranks.
The civil war between the government forces and the
Western-backed rebels is raging in Syria since March 2011,
leading to the deaths of over 100,000 people, according to the UN
data.