1.1326159-1932916625
Saudi soldiers march during Abdullah's Sword military drill in Hafar Al-Batin, near the border with Kuwait April 29, 2014. Image Credit: REUTERS

Riyadh: Saudi Arabia ended military exercises on Tuesday along the borders of Iraq and Kuwait, as well as other regions, in what the media described as the largest in the kingdom’s history.

“We are preparing our armed forces to protect” the nation, daily Al Eqtisadiah website quoted general staff chief Lieutenant General Hussain Al Qabeel as saying.

The armed forces “do not aim to attack anyone as this is not our wise government’s policy,” Al Qabeel added.

The Saudi press said “tens of thousands of soldiers, backed by military jets, helicopters and ships as well as tankers and anti-missile systems, are participating” in the “largest military exercise in the kingdom’s history.”

The operation, in which elite National Guard and interior ministry units also took part, was carried out in the eastern, southern, and northern regions, Al Eqtisadiah website aleqt.com reported.

It “aims at increasing the level of training and testing the capability of our armed forces in deterring any attack from any of these sides,” the daily quoted Al Qabeel as saying.

In 1990, Iraqi president Saddam Hussain’s forces invaded and occupied Kuwait. They were expelled the following year in the Gulf War.

Some of the exercises took place in Hafr Al Batin, which borders Iraq.

Relations have been strained between predominantly Saudi Arabia and Saddam’s successor, Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki, whose Shiite-led government is backed by Tehran.

In March, Al Maliki charged that Saudi Arabia and neighbouring Qatar were supporting extremists, which drew harsh criticism from the kingdom,

In November, Iraqi pro-Iranian Shiite group Jaish Al Mukhtar claimed it had fired six mortar rounds into a remote area of northeastern Saudi Arabia as a “warning” to the kingdom.

Meanwhile, three Saudi soldiers were killed by gunmen who fired from across the border with Yemen to the south, which is frequently crossed by smugglers and by Islamists seeking to join Al Qaida militants in the impoverished nation.

In 2009, Saudi forces fought a war against Al Houthi rebels on the Yemeni border.

The rebels, accused by Sana’a of being backed by Iran, frequently clash with Yemeni troops as they try to extend their influence over more areas in the north and towards the capital.