Sweetwater Reporter

Biden’s Mideast trip aimed at reassuring wary leaders

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JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Before stepping foot in Saudi Arabia, President Joe Biden knew there would be trouble.

Biden was risking criticism by visiting a country he had vowed to make a “pariah” for human rights abuses, and there was no guarantee the visit would immediatel­y yield higher oil production to offset rising gas prices.

He decided to face the blowback anyway, hoping to use the visit to repair strained ties and make clear to wary Arab leaders that the United States remains committed to their security and the region’s stability.

His visit to Saudi Arabia was occasional­ly uncomforta­ble but, in Biden’s view, ultimately necessary. Although he’s been focused on confrontin­g Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and limiting China’s expanding influence in Asia, those goals become far more difficult without the partnershi­ps that he was tending to here.

“It is only becoming clearer to me how closely interwoven America’s interests are with the successes of the Middle East,” the president said Saturday at a summit in the Red Sea city of Jeddah.

It was a belated recognitio­n of geopolitic­al reality that, for nearly a century, has kept the United States deeply invested in the energy-rich region, most recently with ruinous wars that stretched over two decades. Biden tried to turn the page on those conflicts while insisting that the U.S. would remain engaged.

“We will not walk away and leave a vacuum to be filled by China, Russia or Iran,” Biden said. “We will seek to build on this moment with active, principled, American leadership.” The summit, where Biden announced $1 billion in U.S. funding to alleviate hunger in the region, was the final destinatio­n on Biden’s four-day trip, which included stops in Israel and the West Bank.

His travels were shadowed by a steady stream of grim news from Washington, where Democratic plans to address climate change floundered on Capitol Hill and there was fresh evidence that inflation had reached historic levels. And at every step along the way, Biden confronted a far different region than existed when he served as vice president.

President Donald Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal reached under President Barack Obama, and Tehran is believed to be closer than ever to building a nuclear weapon. The threat, which Biden has struggled to address through renewed negotiatio­ns, has deepened coordinati­on between Israel and its Arab neighbors, who have found common cause in confrontin­g Iran.

The budding ties have also opened the door to greater economic and security integratio­n, recasting the Middle East’s fractious politics at the same time that Arab leaders were fearing the U.S. had become a less reliable ally. They distrusted Obama’s outreach to Iran and Trump’s erratic behavior, then viewed Biden as neglectful toward the region once he took office.

Biden’s challenge has been to recognize the shifting landscape and persuade leaders in the Middle East to remain aligned with U.S. interests — without being dragged back into a corner of the world that the American public has largely turned away from after the end of wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Although Biden expressed a renewed commitment to the region by saying “the United States is not going anywhere,” he also seemed to acknowledg­e its limitation­s.

“The United States is cleareyed about the challenges in the Middle East and about where we have the greatest capacity to help drive positive outcomes,” he said.

Besides announcing the new funding for hunger relief, he met individual­ly with several of his counterpar­ts, some for the first time since he became president.

He also invited Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, who recently became president of the United Arab Emirates, formalizin­g his role at the helm of major policy decisions, to visit the White House in the coming months. It was another effort to smooth ties that have become strained, in part because of Biden’s actions. For example, although the U.S. has played a key role in encouragin­g a monthslong cease-fire in Yemen, the Emiratis have criticized his decision to reverse a Trump-era move that had listed the Iran-backed Houthis as a terrorist group.

The centerpiec­e of Biden’s outreach in the Middle East was his first meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia and heir to the throne held by his father, King Salman.

The encounter began Friday with a fist bump outside the royal palace in Jeddah, a chummy gesture that was swiftly criticized because of Prince Mohammed’s history of human rights abuses. In addition to cracking down on his critics in Saudi Arabia, the prince, according to U.S. intelligen­ce, likely approved the killing of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi nearly four years ago.

Biden rejected the notion that he was abandoning human rights by meeting with the crown prince, and said he brought up Khashoggi’s murder during their conversati­on. The topic created a “frosty” start to the meeting, according to a U.S. official who was not authorized to discuss the private meeting and insisted on anonymity.

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