Stabroek News Sunday

Saudi Arabia confident Biden will pursue regional stability, foreign minister says

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RIYADH/BEIRUT, (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister said yesterday he was confident that Democrat Joe Biden’s incoming U.S. administra­tion would pursue policies that help regional stability and that any discussion­s with it would lead to strong cooperatio­n. Riyadh is bracing itself for a new U.S. president who pledged on the election campaign trail to reassess ties with Saudi Arabia, a state he described as a “pariah” in 2019. “I’m confident that a Biden administra­tion would continue to pursue policies that are in the interest of regional stability,” Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud told Reuters in a virtual interview on the sidelines of the G20 Leaders Summit, which his country is hosting.

“Any discussion­s we will have with the future administra­tion will lead to strong cooperatio­n.”

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman enjoyed close personal ties with President Donald Trump and their relationsh­ip provided a buffer against internatio­nal criticism over Riyadh’s rights record following the murder of Saudi journalist and U.S. resident Jamal Khashoggi, Riyadh’s role in Yemen’s war and the detention of women’s rights activists.

Those areas may now become points of friction between Biden and Saudi Arabia, a major oil exporter and buyer of U.S. arms.

Prince Faisal emphasized the 75-year history of “strong defence cooperatio­n” between the two countries and said he expected it to continue.

He said it would be “entirely appropriat­e” for the United States to designate the Iran-aligned Houthi movement in Yemen as a foreign terrorist organisati­on.

“We all know much of their weapons and a significan­t part of their ideology comes from Iran. So they are certainly a foreign-backed terrorist organizati­on,” he said. Washington sees the group as an extension of Iranian influence in the region. Trump’s administra­tion has been threatenin­g to blacklist the group, sources have told Reuters, as part of its “maximum pressure” campaign against Tehran. Iran denies that it gives financial and military support to the Houthis.

Saudi Arabia lobbied hard for the campaign against rival Iran, and at issue is how Biden will address Tehran’s ballistic missiles and support for regional proxies in any talks to revive an internatio­nal nuclear pact with Iran that Trump quit in 2018.

Prince Faisal also said the kingdom enjoyed “good, amicable” relations with Turkey, which has been at odds with the kingdom for some years over foreign policy and attitudes towards Islamist political groups.

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