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Blair
in secret Saudi mission
Expulsions link to £40bn arms deal London Guardian/David Leigh and Ewen MacAskill | September 27 2005 Tony Blair and John Reid, the defence secretary, have been holding secret talks with Saudi Arabia in pursuit of a huge arms deal worth up to £40bn, according to diplomatic sources. Mr Blair went to Riyadh on July 2, en route to Singapore, where Britain was bidding for the 2012 Olympics. Three weeks later, Mr Reid made a two-day visit, when he sought to persuade Prince Sultan, the crown prince, to re-equip his air force with the Typhoon, the European fighter plane of which the British arms company BAE has the lion's share of manufacturing. Defence, diplomatic and legal sources say negotiations
are stalling because the Saudis are demanding three favours. These are
that Britain should expel two anti-Saudi dissidents, Saad al-Faqih and
Mohammed al-Masari; that British Airways should resume flights to Riyadh,
currently cancelled through terrorism fears; and that a corruption investigation
implicating the Saudi ruling family and BAE should be dropped. Crown
prince Sultan's son-in-law, Prince Turki bin Nasr, is at the centre
of a "slush fund" investigation by the Serious Fraud Office. The Typhoon, currently entering service with the RAF, has a price of more than £45m a plane. Saudi Arabia previously bought a fleet of its predecessor Tornados from Britain in the Al Yamamah arms deal. Mike Turner, the chief executive of BAE, Britain's biggest arms company, was quoted in Flight International magazine on June 21, just before Mr Blair's Riyadh trip, saying: "The objective is to get the Typhoon into Saudi Arabia. We've had £43bn from Al Yamamah over the last 20 years and there could be another £40bn." There is concern within the Foreign Office at the
apparent partiality of No 10 to BAE's commercial interests. Jonathan
Powell, Mr Blair's chief of staff, and his brother Charles, Lady Thatcher's
former adviser and now a BAE consultant, are believed to be in favour
of the deal. |