The National - News

Riyadh gears up for historic visit by US president Trump

Washington and the Muslim world poised to reset ties

- Taimur Khan Gulf Correspond­ent

ABU DHABI // Donald Trump will begin his first overseas trip in Riyadh tomorrow, where the US president and Saudi leaders hope to seal a deepening of the strategic security and economic partnershi­p that has been at the core of the two countries’ relationsh­ip for eight decades.

The president’s visit to the home of Islam’s two holiest sites is also being billed by Riyadh and Washington as a resetting of ties with the Muslim world. Mr Trump will meet leaders of the GCC and have lunch with more than 50 heads of state, most of whom are from countries who are part of the Saudi-led Islamic Military Alliance.

The Saudi foreign minister, Adel Al Jubeir, said several agreements would be signed during the first part of the visit when Mr Trump meets with King Salman and the royal court. Riyadh and Washington were discussing initiative­s related to arms sales, economic and security cooperatio­n and tackling terrorism, Mr Al Jubeir said. The visit, he said, would “bolster the strategic partnershi­p between the two countries”.

Saudi officials have spared no effort to elevate the atmosphere around Mr Trump’s visit beyond that of a typical US presidenti­al trip. His wife Melania will dine with members of the royal family, while Mr Trump will engage with young Saudis on Twitter, their favourite medium. There will even be a concert intended as a symbol of the two countries’ partnershi­p – country star Toby Keith and Saudi oud virtuoso Rabeh Sager will play together for an all-male audience in Riyadh tomorrow.

Intensive negotiatio­ns led by 31-year-old deputy crown prince Mohammed bin Salman and Mr Trump’s 36- year- old sonin-law and adviser, Jared Kushner, have been ongoing over an arms sale to Riyadh worth up to US$300 billion (Dh1.1 trillion) over the decade.

Saudi Arabia, for its part, is set to roll out an economic partnershi­p plan with Washington and US businesses that could include up to $40bn in infrastruc­ture and tens of billions more in other investment­s in the US. American executives from large companies such as General Electric will also follow Mr Trump and attend a separate business summit. White House officials said in recent days that joint economic projects could be announced worth tens of billions of dollars. Foreign investment, particular­ly from US companies, is an important element in the Vision 2030 economic transforma­tion plan led by Prince Mohammed to increase his country’s industrial base and non-energy private sector to reduce its dependence on oil.

The defence sales and the economic investment­s serve what both countries perceive to be their respective most pressing interests. For Mr Trump, his goals are to hasten the defeat of ISIL and to contain Iran and reverse its regional gains, while working with traditiona­l Arab partners to reduce US commitment­s and share more of the burden for regional security.

For Riyadh, the key symbolic and material outcome of the meetings with Mr Trump would be a US commitment to counter Iran, analysts said.

White House officials have reportedly described the creation of a Muslim “Nato” of regional countries – perhaps overlappin­g with the Islamic Military Alliance – as an idea they hope the weapons deal will help bring to reality. The Washington Post reported that they hope to begin laying down the framework and principles of such a US-assisted multinatio­nal military structure during the talks.

For Mr Trump such an alliance would serve the elusive goal shared by US presidents before him, including Barack Obama, of regional partners taking a greater share of security responsibi­lities.

Many of the deals included in the defence agreement are for big-ticket convention­al items intended to deter Iran, such as warships. But for many of the countries in attendance, the goal is greater coordinati­on with and assistance from the US to counter the changing threat from ISIL as the group is defeated in Iraq and Syria and potentiall­y spreads elsewhere.

“This is an important and symbolic step to integrate an alliance of like-minded nations that are threatened by extremism and terrorist groups, and this could help kick-start a concept that is needed but an alliance that has existed in name only,” said Sigurd Neubauer, a non-resident fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

“The question now is what will they do, how will they forge together and how will they carry out the next stages.”

Observers say the question of follow- through by the Trump administra­tion is key.

“The question is going to be how much bandwidth the US administra­tion can devote to something like this. That is what is going to determine the success or failure” of plans for some sort of mutual defence treaty, said Muath Al Wari, a Gulf analyst at the Centre for American Progress.

On Iran, Saudi Arabia hopes for a serious return to containmen­t after an Obama administra­tion it viewed as almost abetting Tehran’s rise. But Prince Mohammed and other Gulf leaders may be hoping for more than Mr Trump is able to give.

In Syria and Iraq, the US relies on allies and proxies of Iran to fight ISIL and Mr Trump is unlikely to take steps to confront them. On Yemen, the White House intends to provide more weapons to Riyadh but has not signalled any intention to enter the fight against Iran- backed Houthi rebels. “There is going to be some daylight between the rhetoric of taking on Iran and what’s actually happening,” Mr Neubauer said.

Other analysts, however, say that Iran has its own stake in defeating ISIL, independen­t of US interests. “Iran is not fighting ISIL because it’s good for America. Iran is fighting ISIL because it’s good for its equities in Iraq and Syria,” Mr Al Wari said. During his campaign, Mr Trump vowed to shred the nuclear deal with Iran, but on Wednesday he waived additional US sanctions on Tehran, as stipulated under the deal. Mr Trump has also called on Riyadh to carry more of the financial burden of the Syrian refugee crisis and people displaced from Mosul, providing troops to train anti-ISIL groups in Syria and reconstruc­tion. But after agreeing to a large weapons deal at a time of budget deficits, Riyadh may be reluctant, the analysts said.

“The idea is that the Gulf wants the US closer to them on Iran, and the US wants the Gulf closer to them on ISIL,” Mr Al Wari said. “The best-case scenario is building up a clear and realistic front led by the US against Islamic extremism that bleeds into a similarly unified front against Iran.”

Mr Trump is taking the trip at an opportune moment in his fourmonth-old presidency. He is an increasing­ly beleaguere­d figure at home as his administra­tion is engulfed in turmoil over revelation­s related to its alleged ties to Russia and potential obstructio­n of the related FBI investigat­ion. Mr Trump is a US president reluctant to travel out of his comfort zone, but eager for a policy win abroad that can recast, at least for a few news cycles, the narrative at home about his presidency, which even Republican allies have described as “a downwards spiral”.

To ensure success, the meetings have been meticulous­ly planned and choreograp­hed, but there are still risks that the president may stray off course.

During the inaugurati­on of the new Global Centre for Combating Extremist Ideology, Mr Trump is scheduled to give a televised address to Saudis about Islam and the need to counter extremism. The main speech writer is Stephen Miller, an aide who has been a critic of Islam and Muslims. But observers say they do not expect the speech to offend Saudi sensibilit­ies – if Mr Trump can stay on script.

If Mr Trump is able to stay on track during his time in Saudi Arabia, Mr Neubauer said, it “could be a place where he finds success, at least in the short term”.

Meetings are carefully planned but there are still risks that Trump may stray off course

 ?? Fayez Nureldine / AFP ?? Foreign ministers Adel Al Jubeir of Saudi Arabia, centre, Yusuf bin Alawi of Oman, left, and Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa of Bahrain, in Riyadh this week ahead of the GCC Summit.
Fayez Nureldine / AFP Foreign ministers Adel Al Jubeir of Saudi Arabia, centre, Yusuf bin Alawi of Oman, left, and Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa of Bahrain, in Riyadh this week ahead of the GCC Summit.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates