Los Angeles Times

Biden’s Saudi visit raises rights concerns

The president is to meet with leaders of the oil-rich kingdom that he had pledged to make a ‘pariah.’

- By Aamer Madhani, Zeke Miller and Ellen Knickmeyer Madhani, Miller and Knickmeyer write for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — President Biden confirmed on Tuesday that he will visit Saudi Arabia next month for talks with its leaders, a dramatic change in his stance on the kingdom that he pledged to make a “pariah” as a Democratic candidate for the White House.

With the visit at the tail end of a July 13-16 Middle East trip that includes stops in Israel and the West Bank, Biden is edging off his adversaria­l stance on the Saudis’ human rights record. He’s looking to reset the relationsh­ip at a time when the U.S. could use help from the oilrich kingdom to alleviate soaring prices at the pump for motorists at home and around the globe.

The stop in Saudi Arabia will include talks with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the de facto leader of the kingdom, according to White House and Saudi officials. U.S. intelligen­ce officials have determined Mohammed probably ordered the 2018 killing of U.S.-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

In a brief exchange with reporters on Tuesday, Biden bristled when asked about his upcoming visit to Jidda and noted that his team had laid out in a statement “everything I’m doing in the Middle East.”

Human rights advocates and some Democratic allies cautioned Biden about visiting the kingdom, saying such a move without first getting human rights commitment­s would send a message to Saudi leaders that there are no consequenc­es for egregious rights violations. The Saudis have been accused of using mass arrests, executions and violence to squelch dissent.

But at a time of skyrocketi­ng prices at the gas pump, growing worries about Iran’s nuclear program and perpetual concern that China is expanding its global footprint, Biden and his national security team have determined that freezing out the Saudis, particular­ly the crown prince, is not in U.S. interests.

Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), the No. 2 Senate Democrat, told CNN that Biden “has a tough job dealing with gasoline prices and trying to find ways to find new sources and supplies to bring down inflation in the energy sector.”

But Durbin said he had “mixed feelings” about the visit, calling the Saudis’ human rights record “an outrage.”

The Senate’s No. 2 Republican leader accused Biden of paying too little attention to American energy.

John Thune of South Dakota said: “It just seems having to go hat in hand to the Saudis to try and get them to increase energy production because we won’t do it here — I think it’s unfortunat­e that an American president is put in that position.”

The Saudi Embassy in Washington described the visit as coming at the king’s invitation “to strengthen the historical bilateral relations and the distinguis­hed strategic partnershi­p between” the two countries.

The White House announced the trip after Saudi Arabia this month helped nudge OPEC Plus to ramp up oil production by 648,000 barrels per day in July and August, and the kingdom agreed to extend a United Nations-mediated ceasefire in its seven-year war with Yemen. Biden called the Saudi cease-fire decision “courageous.”

Mohammed, who is commonly referred to by his initials, MBS, played a “critical role” in brokering an extension of the cease-fire, according to a senior administra­tion official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said King Salman invited Biden to visit the kingdom during a gathering in the port city of Jidda of the six Gulf Cooperatio­n Council nations — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — as well as Egypt, Iraq and Jordan.

Jean-Pierre suggested that Biden would raise human rights concerns with Saudi officials but did not directly say whether the president would speak to Mohammed about the Khashoggi killing.

“It’s important to also emphasize that while we recalibrat­e relationsh­ips, we are not looking to rupture relationsh­ips,” Jean-Pierre said. “But human rights issues, human rights conversati­ons [are] something that the president brings up with many leaders and plans to do so.”

Hala Dosari, a prominent rights advocate in Saudi Arabia now living and teaching in the United States, said Biden’s decision to meet with the crown prince is “a betrayal.”

She also raised concerns that Biden’s visit to Israel glosses over last month’s fatal shooting of prominent Palestinia­n American Al Jazeera journalist Shireen abu Akleh in the West Bank. Independen­t investigat­ions by the Associated Press and some other news organizati­ons concluded Israeli fire probably killed the veteran journalist. Israel has said it would investigat­e.

Dosari accused the administra­tion of “prioritizi­ng immediate interests over long-term goals of supporting democratic transition­s” in Arab countries and “the immediate interests of securing more oil, and support for Israel.”

Biden’s first stop during the Middle East swing will be in Israel for a long-planned visit with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in Jerusalem. He will then meet with Palestinia­n Authority leaders, including Mahmoud Abbas, in the West Bank. Biden will cap the whirlwind trip with the visit to Jidda.

The trip to Israel comes at a fraught time for Bennett’s fragile coalition, as he tries to avert another election and the potential return to power of former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and as Iran’s nuclear program advances.

While in Israel, Biden will take part in a virtual meeting of “I2-U2” leaders, an economic forum establishe­d last year that includes Israel, India, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.

The president’s time in Israel also coincides with the Maccabiah Games, a sporting competitio­n that brings together thousands of Jewish and Israeli athletes from around the globe. Biden is expected to meet with athletes taking part in the games.

Israeli officials in their engagement with the Biden administra­tion have pressed their point of view that U.S. relations with Arab capitals, including Riyadh, are critical to Israel’s security and overall stability in the region. The visit could also provide an opportunit­y to kick off talks for what the administra­tion sees as a longer-term project of normalizin­g Israeli-Saudi relations.

Bennett said in a statement that the visit will “reveal the steps that are being taken by the U.S. to integrate Israel into the Middle East and increase the prosperity of the entire region.”

The Palestinia­ns, meanwhile, will be looking for progress on reopening the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem. It served Palestinia­ns before the Trump administra­tion shut it in 2018 and folded its work into the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem as part of the controvers­ial recognitio­n of the city as Israel’s capital.

Israel captured East Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East War and annexed it in a move not recognized internatio­nally. The Palestinia­ns want East Jerusalem to be the capital of their future state. They also hope the Biden administra­tion will make greater efforts to rein in Israeli settlement constructi­on and other unilateral actions that they say hinder the eventual revival of the peace process.

Hussein Sheikh, a top aide to Palestinia­n Authority President Abbas, said the Palestinia­ns welcome Biden’s visit and hope for “positive results” but feel stymied in their decadeslon­g quest for an independen­t state alongside Israel.

“What is the American vision for resolving the conflict?” he asked.

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT Biden, stepping off Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, is to visit Israel, the West Bank and Saudi Arabia during his July trip.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press PRESIDENT Biden, stepping off Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, is to visit Israel, the West Bank and Saudi Arabia during his July trip.

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