Last week Saudi ruler Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud arrived to Moscow with a state visit to find an impressive reception prepared by Russia’s officials for the 81-year-old king. This visit marked the begging of a widely advertised week of Saudi culture in Moscow, while the Saudi delegation that is known for its adherence to luxury, has taken over the entire Moscow Ritz-Carlton.
Russia receives the Saudi monarch in a time when it tries to establish itself as an independent force in the Middle East, searching for an alliance with Saudi Arabia. It wants to prove that it is capable of forming oil prices and determining the outcome of regional conflicts, at a time when pro-Western states like Egypt, Israel and Turkey are eying every Moscow’s steps, various media sources note.
The significance and the pomp of the event is easily understandable: this is the first official visit of the King of Saudi Arabia to Russia in the history of bilateral relations of the two states. This event has been covered widely all over the world and, first of all, in the West. This, in particular, has been openly admitted by the Washington Post, while explaining Washington’s zealous by the fact that the United States of America has been Saudi Arabia’s most important ally for more than 70 years. With Moscow, however, Riyadh would established relations only when the USSR collapsed. And even then it took some for their relations to get established between the two countries.
In its article “Putin Hosts Saudi King on ‘Landmark’ Russia Visit” the Bloomberg would note that:
President Vladimir Putin said the Kremlin talks on Thursday with King Salman, the first monarch of the Gulf kingdom to come to Russia, were a “landmark event.
King Salman’s journey to Moscow, ahead of planned talks with President Donald Trump in Washington early next year, is a recognition by Riyadh of the changing political balance in the Middle East after Putin successfully countered indecisive U.S. efforts to topple Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad.
No more than two years ago the very idea of Saudi monarch visiting Russia would seem absurd, as Moscow and Riyadh have been opposing each other for decades in all the major regional conflicts, from Afghanistan to the so-called uprising of the Muslim Brotherhood, adds The Guardian. And now the parties have decided to put their differences aside by approach each other in a series of meetings and negotiations, which has already resulted in a number of commercial deals being signed. Additionally, the parties have agreed to consult each other while regulating oil prices, while discussing the prospects of a peaceful settlement in Syria. Which is particularly relevant against the backdrop of the growing role of Iran in regional issues, since Tehran increasing influence in Syria, Iraq and Yemen is being reported by pretty much every media source. Now, when it’s clear that there’s no way Syria’s rivals would be able to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad, players have to make adjustments to their policies. And Saudi Arabia is no exception, especially against the backdrop of the recent successful offensive of Syrian troops that was carried out with Russia’s support. Moreover, it is no secret that across the Persian Gulf states are getting engaged in mutual accusations due to the failure of the Syrian opposition and the successes of Syria and Russia. Some people blame Saudi Arabia for this, since it refuses to arm groups related to the Muslim Brotherhood. Many Saudi commentators voice discontent over the absence of any clear cut policy on Syria in the White House today, notes The Guardian. Against the backdrop of an ongoing shift in diplomatic alliances in the Middle East, Moscow hopes that the historic four-day visit of King Salman will show that Moscow can establish alliances with all the key players in the region, including Turkey, Iran and now Saudi Arabia, concludes the media source.
As it’s been noted by the deputy director of the French Russian Analytical Center Observo, Igor Delanoë in his interview for Le Figaro, Moscow is no longer perceived as a problem in Syria by Riyadh, instead it is seen as an integral part of a possible solution to the Syrian crisis. Previously, Saudi Arabia believed that Bashar Assad would be forced to leave, but now-a-days Assad is no longer losing the war. In this situation Riyadh faces a difficult dilemma, of course, it cannot approach its Shia enemy (Iran), but it is not inclined to turn towards its regional rival (Turkey), especially after the crisis with Qatar, during which the latter was supported by Ankara. In a situation when isolation is on the table, Saudi Arabia has no choice but to turn in the direction of the Russians.
The importance of the visit of King Salman to Russia is being underlined by a handful of Saudi media sources. In particular, Al Mowaten emphasizes that there is an urgent need for the both states to seek mutual consultations on various issues including political, economic and military.
The Russian president and the King of Saudi Arabia are the two leaders who compete in almost every aspect, stresses Spanish El Mundo, yet it argues that times are changing, as the US is gradually leaving the Middle Eastern stage, and Riyadh wants to secure a quiet future on the energy markets for itself. The meeting has shown that Russia has returned to the Middle East in all the three major components: it builds gas pipelines and nuclear power plants in Turkey, revives Iran as an energy player, and approaches such pro-American states like Iraq, which wants to buy Russian tanks, or Saudi Arabia, with has agreed to freeze oil production in hopes of stabilizing prices, Moscow is filling the vacuum created in the Middle East with the departure of the United States, El Mundo concludes.
It’s been noted Saudi Arabia has promised to invest more than 10 billion dollars in Russia’s economy. The Newsweek would add that:
The investment agreements thwart the U.S.- and EU-led sanctions regime, and Russian rapprochement with Saudi Arabia, a critical U.S. partner in the region, intentionally needles Washington. While Russia is not the only actor with influence—Saudi Arabia perhaps holds an outsized degree of leverage in the relationship—it is enough to complicate U.S. policy in the region, whether through OPEC or in Syria.
Russia’s economic activity in the region provides an important signal to the U.S. As the architect of the global economic system, the U.S. made that system compelling enough so that most other countries signed on to honor the institutional rules because they too would benefit economically.
The Russian economic interactions in the Middle East are more subtle than that country’s overt military intervention in Syria, but their effect may be equally costly to U.S. interests and complicating to U.S. policy goals in the long-term.
Against the backdrop of successful bilateral economic negotiations and positive prospects of the upcoming settlement of regional conflicts, a lot of attention of foreign media sources was attracted to the memorandum of understanding signed by Saudi Arabian Military Industries (SAMI) and Rosoboronexport on the localization and production of a number Russian weapons systems in Saudi Arabia. Al Arabiya reports that the agreement, which is preliminary, includes the transfer of Russian technologies that allows the production of anti-tank missile systems Kornet-EM, heavy flame-throwing systems TOS-1A “Solyurek.” and grenade launchers AGS-30. Earlier, the Pan-Arab TV channel, referring to a statement by representatives of SAMI, announced a preliminary agreement between Russia and Saudi Arabia on the sale of S-400 Triumph air defense missile systems to the Kingdom.
Vladimir Odintsov, expert politologist, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.“
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