Biden signals US-Saudi thaw

Biden signals US-Saudi thaw

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Biden signals US-Saudi thaw

US president expected to push for more oil production

US President Joe Biden delivers remarks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 24, 2022, after a gunman shot dead 18 young children at an elementary school in Texas.

US President Joe Biden will meet with Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) in July, abandoning efforts to ostracize the kingdom’s de facto leader over the horrific murder of a dissident.

The White House ended weeks of speculation Tuesday, announcing that Biden will travel to Israel, the Palestinian West Bank, and Saudi Arabia from July 13-16 – his first trip to the Middle East since taking office.

In addition to meetings with individual leaders in all three places, he will attend a regional Gulf Cooperation Council summit in Saudi Arabia.

Biden is expected to press for increased Saudi oil production, in the hope of taming spiraling fuel costs and inflation at home ahead of midterm congressional elections in which his Democratic party risks a drubbing. But his meeting with the crown prince will mark a controversial shift.

As a presidential candidate, Biden said the 2018 murder and dismemberment of Jamal Khashoggi – a Saudi-born US resident known for writing critical articles about the kingdom’s rulers for The Washington Post – had made the country a “pariah.”

US intelligence findings released by the Biden administration identified MBS as the mastermind of the operation.

The White House sought to play down the encounter, not specifically mentioning MBS in its statement.

Pressed by reporters, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said “the president is going to see over a dozen leaders on this trip… We can expect the president to see the crown prince as well.”

Saudi Arabia’s statement was more direct, noting simply that Biden would meet with King Salman and then the young heir to the throne.

US inflation is at 8.6 percent, the highest rate in 40 years, with high fuel costs largely to blame. Political fallout has been swift as voters vent over Biden’s inability to change global oil markets.

John Kirby, a White House foreign policy spokesperson, told MSNBC on Tuesday that oil production “absolutely… is going to be part” of Biden’s discussions in Saudi Arabia.

But while the White House also confirmed that “energy security” will be a topic, officials stressed that the whole trip has broader aims.

Jean-Pierre emphasized that “this visit to the Middle East region culminates months of diplomacy,” as opposed to being driven by recent domestic political concerns.

Biden’s multiple leader-level engagements during the brief yet intense journey will demonstrate “the return of American leadership” to the region, a senior US official told reporters.