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#Saudi
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Skymur スカイマー

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
The revolution in Saudi will happen when the women want it to... So all of you feminists arguing about trivial things in the UK or US, how about you fight for Saudi's women in Saudi? one person on there own can't do anything however, if a lot of you push this on Saudi... and the women of Saudi push this the government of Saudi will be forced to change it's ways due to pressure from western governments... #StandUp #FeminismIsNeeded #Saudi (also please share this...)
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Arab News

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Egg prices drop, no rise in #Ramadan
http://goo.gl/V6u3g5 #Saudi
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MADINAH: Egg prices have dropped, with prices SR9 to SR13 for a tray containing 30 eggs, largely because of oversupply and producers wanting to get rid of their stock before the high summer temperatures hit the Kingdom. Dealers were quoted as saying by a local publication on Friday that production is between 3.5 billion and 4 billion eggs a day, which has created a surplus of 1 billion in local markets.Sales supervisor Sameh Abu Allatah said that...
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תמונת הפרופיל של Forain ahmed
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Sonja P

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Winter Sunrise by almalki abdullrahman
#saudi   #sunrise   #morning   #light   #fog   #rays   #landscape   #mountains  
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תמונת הפרופיל של 관음
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AMTV

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Saudi Press: US Blew Up TWIN Towers #SAUDI #US #WWE AMTV

The Saudi press is still furious over the U.S. Senate’s unanimous vote approving a bill that allows the families of 9/11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia.

http://www.amtvmedia.com/saudi-press-us-blew-up-twin-towers-on-91101/
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תמונת הפרופיל של B Powellתמונת הפרופיל של Ranjeet Raj
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Before It's News

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Saudi Oil Sheiks Face Coming US Military Overthrow and Occupation http://rgn.bz/ghTf

1. Saudi refused to stop undercutting the US shale oil producers. For almost a year and a half now, Saudi has set its oil price lower than market prices causing mass US shale oil bankruptcies. At a February 23, 2016 energy meeting in Houston, Saudi oil minister made it clear: let US shale oil go bankrupt.

Apparently, Saudi liked the high oil price until shale oil began to take away market share and less market share plus high oil price began to cause declining revenues for Saudis. Saudi made it clear in Houston on February 23, 2016 that it will continue to maintain low oil price, well below US shale oil’s capacity to survive, and let the shale oil companies go bust.

2. Then a few Freemason US congressmen demand public release of 28 classified pages from a congressional report which are said to implicate Saudi government in the World Trade Center crime.

3. Then Saudi threatens to sell about $750 billion of US treasuries if a congressional bill becomes law allowing US citizens to file suit against Saudi Arabia in US courts. The Senate has approved the bill, the House of Representatives has yet to vote on the bill and is said will pass by a large margin. Obama said he will veto, and the reason is the US wants to keep Saudi off-balance, not show the hand before the action is undertaken to take over Saudi by the US military.

4. Then Saudi says to US, gives us $2 trillion. May be Saudi gets paid off that way, and then Saudi will let the Federal Reserve control the oil futures markets again by not underselling the market price...

More http://rgn.bz/ghTf #oil   #shale   #Saudi  
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תמונת הפרופיל של Jessica Chanelתמונת הפרופיל של Jessica Denisseתמונת הפרופיל של Steve Killebrewתמונת הפרופיל של Raveendran NARAYANAN
 
this just proves that we need to get away from oil.
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Arab News

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#Saudi reforms on right track: #IMF
http://goo.gl/TuiMyQ #KSA
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RIYADH: The International Monetary Fund has welcomed accelerated economic reforms by Saudi Arabia to reduce its reliance on oil but said more measures are needed to cover a fiscal deficit.Over the past 12 months “there has been a significant acceleration in reforms in Saudi Arabia,” an IMF team said in a statement following a visit to the Kingdom.It said the Vision 2030 plan, announced by Riyadh last month, sets a bold and far-reaching transforma...
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תמונת הפרופיל של Iftekhar Alam
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Aliakbar Raefipoor English

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Inside Saudi Arabia: Butchery, Slavery & History of Revolt // Empire_File005
#EmpireFiles #Saudi #slavery #History #US #USA #SaudiArabia  
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תמונת הפרופיל של ‫حسن پروانه‬‎תמונת הפרופיל של Hamed Bakhshian
 
تف تف ابن حرامین
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Tom Heneghan

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Iran says its Muslim pilgrims will not attend haj in Saudi Arabia http://reut.rs/20QfGU8 #iran #shi'ite #sunni #haj #saudi #islam #mecca
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Iran said on Sunday its pilgrims would not attend the annual Muslim haj pilgrimage, blaming regional rival Saudi Arabia for "sabotage" and failing to guarantee the safety of pilgrims.
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Ali Mohamad

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
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Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said Sunday that Iran's regime must stop meddling in Iraq and that the presence of Iranian military units there is "unacceptable." "Iraq's problem is religious conflicts caused by the Iranian...
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Rick Clark

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
China’s Nuclear Opportunities in Iran

How the nuclear program controversy and deal opened West Asia to Beijing.

Credit: IAEA Imagebank www.flickr.com

Takeaways


With sanctions now to be lifted off Iran, China sees Iran as major market in Middle East.

China and Iran plan to build economic ties worth up to $600 billion.

China’s Asian rival, Japan, is also moving ahead to strengthen nuclear cooperation with Iran.

Western ability to re-impose sanctions would become difficult with cooperation between China and Iran.

China can exert greater influence in the Persian Gulf region by forging a strong relationship with Iran. 

China’s nuclear cooperation with Iran is, in some ways, an old story. In 1991, China secretly exported “natural uranium” to Iran, which was used in experiments for testing parts of uranium conversion process.

China also agreed to provide the uranium conversion facility (UCF) to the Atomic Energy Agency of Iran and Iran received documents for conversion process and also engineering designs.

Iran was also able to acquire from China small research reactors and laser enrichment equipment. In 1992, Beijing also signed a contract for the sale of a Light Water Reactors and a large research reactor that was capable of producing plutonium for nuclear weapons.

Even though later on Beijing succumbed to U.S. pressures and severed nuclear ties with Iran, Iran managed to carry on with their nuclear program with the help of the Chinese UCF.

That being said, throughout the Iranian nuclear impasse, China has stood beside its #Shia friend. This tie had enabled Iran to stand strong amid the sanction period. This has also been"acknowledged by President Rouhani.

China’s big partnership push

After the nuclear deal, with sanctions now to be slowly lifted off Iran, China sees Iran as major market in Middle East. During the January 2016 visit of China’s President Xi Jinping, Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani announced that China and Iran plan to build economic ties worth up to $600 billion.

Cooperation on peaceful nuclear energy, however, remains a crucial agenda item. In January 2016, Iran’s Atomic Energy Commission head, Ali Akbar Salehi, announced that Tehran was planning to take help from China on reconfiguration of the Arak nuclear facility.

With Chinese help, Iran is expected to reduce the plutonium production in its reactors to prevent any possibility to develop nuclear weapons.

The head of Atomic Energy Organization Ali Akbar Salehi, has confirmed that Iran is working on redesigning the reactors. Any alterations to the designs are then to be reviewed

Takeaways

With sanctions now to be lifted off Iran, China sees Iran as major market in Middle East.

China and Iran plan to build economic ties worth up to $600 billion.

China’s Asian rival, Japan, is also moving ahead to strengthen nuclear cooperation with Iran.

Western ability to re-impose sanctions would become difficult with cooperation between China and Iran.

China can exert greater influence in the Persian Gulf region by forging a strong relationship with Iran. 

China’s nuclear cooperation with Iran is, in some ways, an old story. In 1991, China secretly exported “natural uranium” to Iran, which was used in experiments for testing parts of uranium conversion process.

China also agreed to provide the uranium conversion facility (UCF) to the Atomic Energy Agency of Iran and Iran received documents for conversion process and also engineering designs.

Iran was also able to acquire from China small research reactors and laser enrichment equipment. In 1992, Beijing also signed a contract for the sale of a Light Water Reactors and a large research reactor that was capable of producing plutonium for nuclear weapons.

Even though later on Beijing succumbed to U.S. pressures and severed nuclear ties with Iran, Iran managed to carry on with their nuclear program with the help of the Chinese UCF.

That being said, throughout the Iranian nuclear impasse, China has stood beside its Shia friend. This tie had enabled Iran to stand strong amid the sanction period. This has also been acknowledged by President Rouhani.

China’s big partnership push

After the nuclear deal, with sanctions now to be slowly lifted off Iran, China sees Iran as major market in Middle East. During the January 2016 visit of China’s President Xi #Jinping, Iran’s President Hassan #Rouhani announced that China and Iran plan to build economic ties worth up to $600 billion.

Cooperation on peaceful nuclear energy, however, remains a crucial agenda item. In January 2016, Iran’s Atomic Energy Commission head, Ali Akbar Salehi, announced that Tehran was planning to take help from China on reconfiguration of the #Arak nuclear facility.

With Chinese help, Iran is expected to reduce the #plutonium production in its reactors to prevent any possibility to develop nuclear weapons.

The head of Atomic Energy Organization Ali Akbar Salehi, has confirmed that Iran is working on redesigning the reactors. Any alterations to the designs are then to be reviewed by China and the U.S.

The (civil) nuclear race is on

Under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action #JCPOA, P5+1 countries (Britain, China, France, Russia and the U.S.+ Germany) are allowed to help Iran develop its civil nuclear program for peaceful purposes.

Ever since the Iranian nuclear deal was secured, countries like Russia and China have vied to grab an opportunity for their own civil nuclear sectors in the Iranian nuclear energy market.

For Iran, this cooperation – along with nuclear cooperation with several other countries like Japan, South Korea and Spain – would enable the country to develop its nuclear program which has been stalled for a while now as a result of the nuclear impasse.

With the lifting of sanctions from Tehran, the economy will now open up and there would be an increasing need for energy – including nuclear energy. Thus, cooperation in this field would benefit Tehran. China wishes to be the main beneficiary of this restored demand.

China’s Asian rival, #Japan, is also moving ahead to strengthen nuclear cooperation with Iran. China would want to ensure that Japan does not share its advantages.

China brings a number of political and diplomatic advantages to make its case to Iran for a close and more exclusive economic and civil nuclear relationship.

Iran, being a Non-Proliferation Treaty #NPT signatory, has the right to pursue peaceful use of nuclear energy program under Article IV of the Treaty.

Beijing agrees that the nuclear deal would uphold Iran’s right to peaceful use of nuclear energy. Hence, Iran is likely to be tilted more towards China.

Iran’s suspicion towards the Western powers would likely also factor in when Iran decides to choose its partners for cooperation in nuclear program.

Iran has already joined the China led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. Meanwhile, both China and #Russia are pushing forward for Iran’s full time membership in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO).

Chinese geopolitics in the Middle East

As cooperation between countries like China and Iran continue to strengthen, Western ability to re-impose sanctions would become a difficult task despite the framework provisioning for this.

China still views Iran as a reliable supplier of crude #oil. Tehran also plays an important role due its strategic location in the China led “One Belt One Road” agenda.

This is also crucial as China strengthens its“good neighbor diplomacy.” It is premised on the principles of amity, sincerity, mutual benefit and inclusiveness, and deepen mutually beneficial cooperation with neighboring countries.

Moreover, a strong relationship with Iran would enable China to exert greater influence in the Persian Gulf region. Beijing has previously conducted joint naval exercise with Iran in 2014.

China’s anti-access area denial strategy to prevent the United States to gain any supremacy there would mean that :Tehran’s close cooperation played an integral part in this strategy.

China has realized the great potential that nuclear energy market in West #Asia can provide.

A balancing act with Iran’s adversaries

To avoid picking sides too firmly (and thus fostering needless peril), Beijing is also working to enhance cooperation with Saudi Arabia, an arch-rival of Iran.

But Beijing views #Riyadh also crucial for the success of the One Belt One Road plan, too. Cooperation with Saudi Arabia is also crucial to increase China’s influence in Middle East.

Thus, despite being an ally of Iran, Beijing has maintained a diplomatic stand on the crisis in Yemen where Saudi Arabia is fighting against Iran backed #Houthi rebels.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson was quoted saying that China hopes “clashes in #Yemen can come to an end as soon as possible and there can be reconciliation so the country can return to stability.”

The civil nukes race

Still, it all comes back to the region’s nuclear opportunities – now a civil race, instead of an arms race. As Beijing revamps itself from a nuclear customer to a supplier, Middle Eastern countries seeking to expand their nuclear energy market have turned to Beijing. China is cooperating with #Saudi Arabia itself on the nuclear front, despite its closer nuclear ties to Iran.

China has also sought to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with #Egypt to cooperate in the construction of nuclear power reactors.

In 2015, China and #Jordan agreed to strengthen their nuclear cooperation. China is also cooperating with Turkey for construction of nuclear power plants for #Turkey.

Therefore, it is clear that #Beijing would grab every opportunity it can to expand its nuclear energy market in the Middle East. China’s early assistance with Iran’s controversial and often-covert nuclear program ended up encouraging a regional push toward #nuclear programs – with China at the ready to supply.

Conclusion

The #China-Iran cooperation in nuclear field on its peaceful use is likely to grow from strength to strength. #China views Iran as a great scope for investment opportunity.

For #Iran, Chinese investments would play an important role to revive the Iranian economy long stalled by the receding nuclear impasse.
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How the nuclear program controversy and deal opened West Asia to Beijing.
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[[UC News]#Saudi Man Shoots Male Doctor For Assisting In His Wife's Delivery#
http://m.indiatimes.com/news/weird/saudi-man-shoots-male-doctor-for-assisting-in-his-wife-s-delivery-255793.html?entry=browser&entry1=shareback&entry2=widget] is good,have a look at it!
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Stop The War On Yemen

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#Yemeni_Resistance against #US-#Saudi aggression. How can such a people be defeated?
#YemenUnderAttack
#No2Saudi
#Yemen
#Saudisrael
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תמונת הפרופיל של IranClipsתמונת הפרופיל של Mrs. Alast
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AMTV

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#Citigroup: #Saudi 2030 Vision Is #OPEC’s Death AMTV

The Saudi Vision 2030 budget strategy introduced by Riyadh a month ago is the death knell for OPEC, according to Seth Kleinman, head of European energy research at Citigroup in London, cited by Bloomberg.

http://www.amtvmedia.com/citigroup-saudi-2030-vision-is-opecs-death/
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תמונת הפרופיל של Joy Lavionneתמונת הפרופיל של B Powell
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SharingFOCUS

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#Turkey is everybody's enemy except the #US , #Saudi and #ISIS . No idea about #Israel - well Israel buys ISIS oil from them of course.
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European officials are accusing Ankara of foul play within the EU-Turkey refugee deal, claiming that Ankara is not allowing qualified Syrian refugees to leave the country.Top EU officials have expressed anger at Turkey’s selective approach to sending Syrian refugees – currently living in the country – to Europe, according to Spiegel magazine.
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תמונת הפרופיל של Jocelyne Affricanoתמונת הפרופיל של Silver Soulתמונת הפרופיל של charles bombalierתמונת הפרופיל של Echo drop
 
Well, what did the European "officials" (greedy lying assholes, in my books) expect from Erdogan? Honesty?!!!?
It takes one to know one, of course, so it's quite a good match, really.
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Rick Clark

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
U.S. State Department sanctions Islamic State branches in Libya, Yemen, Saudi Arabia

The U.S. State Department said on Thursday it had designated Islamic State's branch in Libya as a "foreign terrorist organization."

The department also designated the #Sunni militant group's branches in #Libya, Yemen and #Saudi Arabia as "specially designated global terrorists."

It said that designation "imposes sanctions and penalties on foreign persons that have committed, or pose a serious risk of committing, acts of terrorism that threaten the security of U.S. nationals or the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States."

The #terrorism designations are one way to deny sanctioned individuals and groups access to the U.S. #financial system.

Also on Thursday, the Treasury Department said it had imposed sanctions on six individuals to disrupt the fundraising efforts of Islamic State, al Qaeda, the Nusra Front as well as al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

"Today's action targets critical #al-Qaida, al-Nusrah Front, AQAP, and #ISIL financiers and facilitators responsible for moving money, weapons, and people on behalf of these terrorist organizations," said Adam J. Szubin, Acting Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence.

The individuals include Yemen-based Nayif al-Qaysi, whom the department said was a senior #AQAP official and financial supporter of the group who had obtained money for AQAP from parties outside #Yemen. Another person, Mostafa Mohamed, was sanctioned for providing financial support to the #Syria based #Nusra Front.

In September 2015, the United States imposed sanctions on more than 30 leaders, supporters and affiliates of Islamic State around the world.

The U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic State has said that in addition to attacking the group's fighters and leaders, it would go after financial infrastructure.

Air strikes have reduced #IslamicState's ability to extract, refine and transport oil, a major source of revenue that was already shrinking because of the drop in the price of #oil.
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תמונת הפרופיל של Elizabeth Halloway
הוסף תגובה...

Rick Clark

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
US reveals Saudi Arabia’s US debt holdings for the first time (and it’s big)

Saudi Arabia tops all other #oil exporting countries in holding US debt, with $116 billion, US Treasury documents reveal. The first such disclosure in four decades ranks the kingdom alongside China, Japan, and other Treasury securities-owning nations.

The US Treasury Department released its data on foreign ownership of its securities on Monday, showing that total holdings had risen 0.8 percent to a record $6.29 trillion.

#China, the largest holder of US debt, has $1.24 trillion despite trimming its portfolio by 0.6 percent this year, followed by Japan, which increased its holdings by 0.4 percent to $1.14 trillion in March. The #Cayman Islands ranked behind China and #Japan with $265 billion in holdings, up 3.9 percent since February.

Among the oil exporting countries, Saudi Arabia leads the pack, while ranking 13th overall, holding $116.8 billion in US debt.

Treasury spokeswoman Whitney Smith said oil exporting nations had previously always been lumped together, but for the first time since 1974, the department broke down ownership by country to make the data more useful.

“We concluded that it was consistent with transparency and the law to disclose the data in disaggregated fashion,” Smith said in a statement, according to the Associated Press.

Saudi Arabia had previously been grouped together with 14 other mostly #OPEC nations, including Kuwait, Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates.

Of the total $6.29 trillion in foreign holdings, 65 percent is owned by governments, primarily central banks.

The breakdown of US debt holdings was released in response to a Freedom of Information Act request submitted by #Bloomberg News.

The Saudi Arabian government said last month that it would begin selling off its $750 billion in US securities if #Congress passed a law allowing it to be held responsible in #US courts for any role it may have played in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. However, the #Treasury spokesperson said the decision to list Saudi Arabia’s holdings separately was not linked to those threats in any way.

Bloomberg reported that the Treasury disclosures raise further questions, as the amounts don’t match. #Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves amount to $587 billion, while central banks typically keep about two-thirds of the funds in their coffers in dollars, according to International Monetary Fund data.

“The politics have always been secretive, so have their finances,”David Ottaway, a Middle East Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center, a research center in Washington, DC, told Bloomberg. “It does answer the question of how much they own, which is surprisingly not that much.”

US national debt currently stands at $19.16 trillion, but the federal budget deficit is projected to grow over the next decade.
 ·  תרגם
Saudi Arabia tops all other oil exporting countries in holding US debt, with $116 billion, US Treasury documents reveal. The first such disclosure in four decades ranks the kingdom alongside China, Japan, and other Treasury securities-owning nations.
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תמונת הפרופיל של Elizabeth Halloway
הוסף תגובה...

SharingFOCUS

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Swedish Feminists have hailed the Saudi decision, emphasizing that Sharia will soon be welcomed as the default law in Scandinavian countries, for better #diversity.

#sharia #saudi
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Women in Saudi Arabia could be sent to jail and flogged if they check their husband’s telephone without his knowledge and consent. The matter is not covered in the Kingdom’s Islamic laws, but would instead be seen as a violation of privacy.
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תמונת הפרופיל של SharingFOCUSתמונת הפרופיל של Rabid Rottyתמונת הפרופיל של Wandering “Lost” Soulתמונת הפרופיל של Jo Ann Freeboom
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+alfred key
Interesting vision...
Personally, I would prefer an entertaining world to an equalized one... but that's easily said. I have a refuge in the mountains of Portugal, where people held out against the romans and later the Muslims, for hundreds of years ;)
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Mugtama Mag

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Iraq's problem is #religious conflicts caused by #Iranian #interference, #Saudi #FM Adel al-Jubeir
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RIYADH, Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister on Sunday accused Iran of interfering in Iraq's internal affairs, during his meeting with B...
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Rick Clark

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Keeping Iran and Saudi Arabia From War

Getting Riyadh and Tehran to Talk

Conflicts in the Middle East, whether in #Iraq, #Lebanon, Syria, or Yemen, share a common factor: the rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia. For years, this rivalry has inflamed violence in areas already torn by war and created new battlefields where there had been relative peace before.

It is thus hard to imagine that the two countries could come together for the region’s greater good. But they’ll have to find a way to coexist if the region is ever to be peaceful. Even if they can’t fully resolve their rivalry, they can still contain their hostility. Making this happen will be a challenge, but both sides can take steps now that will help bring the Middle East back from the brink of destruction.

U.S. President Barack #Obama, among others, has suggested that the conflict between Saudi Arabia and Iran “dates back millennia.” But history says otherwise. Despite some periods of heightened tension, particularly following the June 1996 bombing of Khobar Towers, Iran and Saudi Arabia were civil toward each other from 1989–2005. In fact, Iranian Presidents Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatemi took a more moderate tone than their predecessor and pursued improved relations with the Gulf states. This led to Iran and Saudi Arabia restoring diplomatic relations and conducting reciprocal visits between their leaders. Relations even remained polite during the early days of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s rule. But the 2011 Arab Spring changed the region’s political power structure. Longstanding dictatorships fell, leaving disorder in their place. Iran and Saudi Arabia took the opportunity to try to establish their primacy in newly destabilized countries, and proxy wars followed.

Things could easily escalate into outright war between the two countries. For example, in April 2015, an Iranian plane attempted to break the Saudi-imposed blockade on #Yemen by landing in Sanaa. Saudi fighter jets flew extremely close to the Iranian craft, and destroyed airport runways to prevent the jet from landing. Two Saudi F-15s came so close to the Iranian plane that the pilots could see each other’s faces. If an accident had occurred, the Iranian media would have reported that Saudi Arabia had intentionally downed the Iranian jet. Iran might have had little choice but to retaliate. Such near-misses highlight the need for broader and smarter communication between the two countries. As difficult as is for Iran and Saudi Arabia to speak to one another, this is still the best way for both powers to avoid war. 

Beyond avoiding war, Saudi Arabia and Iran have every reason to try to get along. Indeed, their futures are inextricably linked. They are the two strongest powers within the #Muslim world, and both have a hand in shaping the trajectory of the #MiddleEast. Neither can succeed unilaterally—they both need one another to accomplish their goals, whether they like it or not. This is due to the high level of interdependence between the two neighbors, especially in the areas of the security of the Gulf and the economic interdependence in the region. 

Both countries do say that they want to avoid conflict with one another and that they prefer to have good, neighborly relations. In January, Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Crown Prince and Minister of Defense, Muhammad bin Salman, said that anyone pushing for war between Iran and Saudi Arabia “is not in their right mind. Because a war between Saudi Arabia and Iran is the beginning of a major catastrophe in the region…. For sure we will not allow any such thing.” Speaking about Iranian–Saudi relations in February, Iran’s foreign minister, Javad Zarif, advocated forchanging “our paradigm” and assured his Saudi “brothers” that Iran is “prepared to work with Saudi Arabia.” The following month, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said,  “If Iran changes its way and its policies, nothing would prevent turning a page and building the best relationship based on good neighborliness, with no meddling in the affairs of others.” With both countries harboring deep mistrust of the other, direct dialogue is necessary to provide opportunities for the parties to better understand each other and begin to reduce their mutual suspicions. To be sure, that is easier said than done. Riyadh refuses to talk to Tehran because of Iran’s involvement in Saudi and Arab affairs. Iran, for its part, argues that talks must happen before it alters its policies. This dialogue, Tehran argues, would make sure that its so-called security needs are represented fairly before it made any strategic changes.

To break this deadlock, both countries should take steps to appease the other. First, they can create a crisis management hotline between #Riyadh and #Tehran. The hotline would link the two countries’ foreign ministries, which would each establish a new office dedicated to handling regional events taking place independently from the official decision making processes of their governments. Each office will establish a system for managing the logistics of the communications between them. This way, the leaders could speak with one another directly, rather than letting violence do the talking. Indeed, wars often occur as a series of escalatory events, rather than a singular decision. A war between Iran and Saudi Arabia would likely follow such a trajectory, since neither country has declared an interest in declaring war outright. A hotline could help both sides talk about issues as they arise, negating the need for violence.

For example, a Riyadh–Tehran hotline could have been invaluable if Saudi Arabia had downed Iran’s jet in Yemen. It would have allowed both sides to discuss the incident privately, instead of bringing it to the court of public opinion. Future events like this one are more than likely: Iran has troops in Syria, and Saudi Arabia is interested in sending forces to the country as well. A hotline could help reduce the risk of misfires, accidental attacks, and other incidents that would otherwise bring both countries to the brink of war. It should be mentioned that following the Iranian attack on the Saudi embassy in Tehran in January, Saudi Arabia cut relations with Iran, exacerbating the crisis significantly and opening the door for possible conflict. Such a hotline was not necessary in the past, when tensions were not this high and the countries could use more conventional diplomatic channels to communicate.

If both sides are unwilling to speak to one another directly, they could consider creating technical committees to prevent all-out war. These committees would include policy experts and technocrats from Iran and Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministries, who could coordinate without involving political officials. Policy experts could work with one another to find approaches that address each other’s interests without involving their governments directly. For example, technical committees could explore how Saudi Arabia can begin official talks with Iran without having to validate #Tehran’s role in #Arab affairs. They could also propose solutions that address Iran’s security needs, such as protection from spillover coming from neighboring, unstable Iraq, without making Tehran support Iraqi and Yemeni militias, or by sending troops into #Syria. These committees could also address other difficult issues, such as falling oil prices, which have put Iran, which is trying to rapidly boost its oil production and exports after years of sanctions, at odds with Saudi Arabia, which is intent on maintaining its share of the #oil market.

Lastly, both sides could contain their rivalry by agreeing to curtail their interventions in regional conflicts. Saudi Arabia is worried about #Iran becoming a regional hegemon, and it has developed a foreign policy to stop that from happening. Iran could address this concern by assuring regional leaders that it wants to be their partner, rather than their ruler. In fact, Iranian Foreign Affairs Minister Javad #Zarif has repeatedly emphasized the need for Iran and Saudi Arabia to work together to resolve the region’s political crises, as well as his country’s willingness to do so. But Saudi Arabia has yet to buy his argument. #Tehran could prove itself by using its leverage with #Yemen’s #Houthi rebels, which are fighting the Saudi-backed Yemeni government, to bring about a peace deal in the country. This would serve as a good faith measure without giving up an issue that is central to Iranian security.

At this point, the intervention of a third party would be helpful in encouraging Iran to take such an initiative and #Saudi Arabia to reciprocate, perhaps by reining in media incitement. Reciprocity is essential here, as it would allow confidence to grow and the parties to move toward direct talks. This is more likely than it might seem. Both parties are currently entrapped in a damaging cycle of escalation, without a military solution on the horizon. Embracing these crisis management tactics could be the first steps of a way out of their increasingly costly rivalry.
 ·  תרגם
Conflicts in the Middle East, whether in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, or Yemen, share a common factor: the rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia. For years, this rivalry has inflamed violence in areas already torn by war and created new battlefields where there had been relative peace before.
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