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Deputy King confirms a strong relationship with Iraq in all areas


I forgot that Saudia (the national carrier) announced that they would resume flights to Iraq in July this year.

https://sabq.org/الخطوط-الجوية-السعودية-تستعد-لتسيير-رحلات-من-المملكة-إلى-العراق

Flynas is a low-cost airline.

Anyway the government should allow ordinary travel (without dispensation) to Iraq once again. Otherwise this move would make little sense.
 
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First Saudi Arabian commercial flight jets to Baghdad after 27 years
260ba4cb-d3ba-4baa-a28f-30e4b4834b78_16x9_788x442.jpg

Saudi budget carrier flynas on Wednesday made the first commercial flight from Riyadh to Baghdad since 1990. (Courtesy: Flynas)



AFP, Riyadh, Wednesday, 18 October 2017

Saudi budget carrier flynas on Wednesday made the first commercial flight from Riyadh to Baghdad since 1990, as ties with neighboring Iraq show signs of improvement.

"Our first flight took off today from Riyadh to Baghdad," the company wrote on Twitter, posting pictures of the cabin crew and passengers.

Tickets for the maiden flight were advertised for as low as $7 (six euros) excluding taxes as flynas CEO Bandar al-Muhanna said the move to reopen the route would help "link the two sisterly countries".

Flights between Iraq and Saudi Arabia were suspended some 27 years ago in August 1990 after former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein ordered his troops into neighbouring Kuwait.

In recent months, ties between Saudi Arabia and Iraq have begun looking up .

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubair headed to Baghdad in February for talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on the first visit of its kind since 2003.

Abadi then visited Riyadh in June, followed the next month by influential Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, who led a militia that fought against the US occupation of Iraq.

Private carrier flynas, in which Saudi billionaire Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal holds a 34-percent stake, plans to expand its routes from Saudi airports to major cities across Iraq.

National flag carrier Saudia, also known as Saudi Arabian Airlines, is also scheduled to operate a flight to Baghdad from Thursday.


https://english.alarabiya.net/en/bu...l-flight-jets-to-Baghdad-after-27-years-.html

DMWZS4NW4AEj0cu.jpg


DMaNgs9WAAAGEQe.jpg



DMaNgtGXkAAcZPO.jpg

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The plane was completely full.

@TheCamelGuy @Malik Alashter @SALMAN F

Saudi Arabia to Launch Coordination Council with Iraq

ABDUL HADI HABTOR
download-1-17-620x394.jpg

Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (R) talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, June 19, 2017. Bandar Algaloud/Courtesy of Saudi Royal Court/Handout via REUTERS

Riyadh- Saudi Arabia and Iraq will be cosigning the establishment of a joint Saudi-Iraqi Coordinating Council in Riyadh next week, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat.

The body is said to cover various political, economic, security and cultural fields.


Abdul Aziz al-Shammari, charge d’affaires of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques in Baghdad, said that an Iraqi delegation is expected to arrive in Riyadh next week under the chairmanship of Dr. Sulaiman al-Jumaili, head of the Coordination Council from the Iraqi side. Six other Iraqi ministers will also be part of the delegation.

“The Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council will cover all vital and important areas between the two countries, political, economic, commercial, security, cultural and others,” Shammari told Asharq Al-Awsat.


Shammari stressed that this step is vital in rebooting good ties between Riyadh and Baghdad, which will then bring relations to broader horizons, in various fields, and through the establishment of joint sub-committees to discuss the promotion of cooperation between the two countries.

https://english.aawsat.com/abdul-ha...saudi-arabia-launch-coordination-council-iraq

 
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First Saudi Arabian commercial flight jets to Baghdad after 27 years
260ba4cb-d3ba-4baa-a28f-30e4b4834b78_16x9_788x442.jpg

Saudi budget carrier flynas on Wednesday made the first commercial flight from Riyadh to Baghdad since 1990. (Courtesy: Flynas)



AFP, Riyadh, Wednesday, 18 October 2017

Saudi budget carrier flynas on Wednesday made the first commercial flight from Riyadh to Baghdad since 1990, as ties with neighboring Iraq show signs of improvement.

"Our first flight took off today from Riyadh to Baghdad," the company wrote on Twitter, posting pictures of the cabin crew and passengers.

Tickets for the maiden flight were advertised for as low as $7 (six euros) excluding taxes as flynas CEO Bandar al-Muhanna said the move to reopen the route would help "link the two sisterly countries".

Flights between Iraq and Saudi Arabia were suspended some 27 years ago in August 1990 after former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein ordered his troops into neighbouring Kuwait.

In recent months, ties between Saudi Arabia and Iraq have begun looking up .

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubair headed to Baghdad in February for talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on the first visit of its kind since 2003.

Abadi then visited Riyadh in June, followed the next month by influential Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, who led a militia that fought against the US occupation of Iraq.

Private carrier flynas, in which Saudi billionaire Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal holds a 34-percent stake, plans to expand its routes from Saudi airports to major cities across Iraq.

National flag carrier Saudia, also known as Saudi Arabian Airlines, is also scheduled to operate a flight to Baghdad from Thursday.


https://english.alarabiya.net/en/bu...l-flight-jets-to-Baghdad-after-27-years-.html

DMWZS4NW4AEj0cu.jpg


DMaNgs9WAAAGEQe.jpg



DMaNgtGXkAAcZPO.jpg

DMaNgtAX4AI0iYR.jpg



The plane was completely full.

@TheCamelGuy @Malik Alashter @SALMAN F

Saudi Arabia to Launch Coordination Council with Iraq

ABDUL HADI HABTOR
download-1-17-620x394.jpg

Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (R) talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, June 19, 2017. Bandar Algaloud/Courtesy of Saudi Royal Court/Handout via REUTERS

Riyadh- Saudi Arabia and Iraq will be cosigning the establishment of a joint Saudi-Iraqi Coordinating Council in Riyadh next week, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat.

The body is said to cover various political, economic, security and cultural fields.


Abdul Aziz al-Shammari, charge d’affaires of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques in Baghdad, said that an Iraqi delegation is expected to arrive in Riyadh next week under the chairmanship of Dr. Sulaiman al-Jumaili, head of the Coordination Council from the Iraqi side. Six other Iraqi ministers will also be part of the delegation.

“The Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council will cover all vital and important areas between the two countries, political, economic, commercial, security, cultural and others,” Shammari told Asharq Al-Awsat.


Shammari stressed that this step is vital in rebooting good ties between Riyadh and Baghdad, which will then bring relations to broader horizons, in various fields, and through the establishment of joint sub-committees to discuss the promotion of cooperation between the two countries.

https://english.aawsat.com/abdul-ha...saudi-arabia-launch-coordination-council-iraq

KSA decision on the Kurdish parasites was great when they sided with Iraq unity
 
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KSA decision on the Kurdish parasites was great when they sided with Iraq unity

It was no surprise really. KSA and Iraq have had very close and cordial ties ever since modern-day Iraq appareled on the map. I am here only talking politically as everything else such as ancient history, Islamic history, extremely close ethnic and ancestral, tribal and clan kinship, culture, language, cuisine, geography etc. is self-exlpnatory and will never change.

The unfortunate (IMO) coup in 1958 destroyed the ties for a while but they quickly improved and continued to be relatively cordial up to the 1970's when there was a divide in ideology/foreign allies between the Ba'athi regime in power and KSA.

Anyway those ties improved in the late 1970's. The First Gulf War in the early 1990's, as we all know, damaged the ties with Saddam Hussein.

Post 2003 chaos erupted and it was first until now (post Al-Maliki) that things have returned back to what they should always have been and hopefully will remain in the future as well.

If Al-Maliki had been in power I am not sure if relations could have improved to such a degree. For the sake of Saudi Arabian-Iraqi relations (if not wider Arab-Iraqi relations as Al-Maliki did a good joke at ruining many Arab-Iraqi relations) I really hope that this individual stays away from power. Of course it is no surprise which entity was behind him back then and such actions.
Thankfully he is not young any longer (67) so one can only hope that this cretin somehow disappears from public office. Let him retire in his native Al-Hindiya. No, in fact he should have been executed a long time ago for treason and severe incompetence and for all the evil that he has caused directly.
 
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@Sharif al-Hijaz
@The SC
@Khafee
@Full Moon
@EgyptianAmerican
@somebozo
@Arabi


Quote :

Why we stuck with Maliki — and lost Iraq

By Ali Khedery July 3, 2014

Ali Khedery is chairman and chief executive of the Dubai-based Dragoman Partners. From 2003 to 2009, he was the longest continuously serving American official in Iraq, acting as a special assistant to five U.S. ambassadors and as a senior adviser to three heads of U.S. Central Command. In 2011, as an executive with Exxon Mobil, he negotiated the company’s entry into the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.


To understand why Iraq is imploding, you must understand Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki — and why the United States has supported him since 2006.

I have known Maliki, or Abu Isra, as he is known to people close to him, for more than a decade. I have traveled across three continents with him. I know his family and his inner circle. When Maliki was an obscure member of parliament, I was among the very few Americans in Baghdad who took his phone calls. In 2006, I helped introduce him to the U.S. ambassador, recommending him as a promising option for prime minister. In 2008, I organized his medevac when he fell ill, and I accompanied him for treatment in London, spending 18 hours a day with him at Wellington Hospital. In 2009, I lobbied skeptical regional royals to support Maliki’s government.

By 2010, however, I was urging the vice president of the United States and the White House senior staff to withdraw their support for Maliki. I had come to realize that if he remained in office, he would create a divisive, despotic and sectarian government that would rip the country apart and devastate American interests.

America stuck by Maliki. As a result, we now face strategic defeat in Iraq and perhaps in the broader Middle East.


Finding a leader

Born in Tuwairij, a village outside the Iraqi holy city of Karbala, Abu Isra is the proud grandson of a tribal leader who helped end British colonial rule in the 1920s. Raised in a devout Shiite family, he grew to resent Sunni minority rule in Iraq, especially the secular but repressive Baath Party. Maliki joined the theocratic Dawa party as a young man, believing in its call to create a Shiite state in Iraq by any means necessary. After clashes between the secular Sunni, Shiite and Christian Baathists and Shiite Islamist groups, including Dawa, Saddam Hussein’s government banned the rival movements and made membership a capital offense.

Accused of being extensions of Iranian clerics and intelligence officers, thousands of Dawa party members were arrested, tortured and executed. Many of the mutilated bodies were never returned to their families. Among those killed were some of Maliki’s close relatives, forever shaping the psychology of the future premier.

Over a span of three decades, Maliki moved between Iran and Syria, where he organized covert operations against Hussein’s regime, eventually becoming chief of Iraq’s Dawa branch in Damascus. The party found a patron in Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s Islamic Republic of Iran. During the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, when Iraq used Western-supplied chemical weapons, Tehran retaliated by using Shiite Islamist proxies such as Dawa to punish Hussein’s supporters. With Iran’s assistance, Dawa operatives bombed the Iraqi Embassy in Beirut in 1981 in one of radical Islam’s first suicide attacks. They also bombed the American and French embassies in Kuwait and schemed to kill the emir. Dozens of assassination plots against senior members of Hussein’s government, including the dictator himself, failed miserably, resulting in mass arrests and executions.

During the tumultuous months following America’s invasion of Iraq in 2003, Maliki returned to his home country. He took a job advising future prime minister Ibrahim al-Jafari and later, as a member of parliament, chaired the committee supporting the De-Baathification Commission, an organization privately celebrated by Shiite Islamists as a means of retribution and publicly decried by Sunnis as a tool of repression.

I volunteered to serve in Iraq after watching the tragedy of 9/11 from the Texas governor’s conference room. The son of Iraqi immigrants, I was dispatched to Baghdad by the Office of the Secretary of Defense for a three-month assignment that ultimately lasted almost a decade. As special assistant to Ambassador Patrick Kennedy and the Coalition Provisional Authority’s liaison to the Iraqi Governing Council, and as one of the few American officials there who spoke Arabic, I became the Iraqi leaders’ go-to guy for just about everything — U.S.-furnished weapons, cars, houses or the much-coveted Green Zone access passes.

After the formal U.S. occupation ended in 2004, I stayed in Baghdad to facilitate the transition to a “normalized” American diplomatic presence, and I often shared tea and stale biscuits with my Iraqi friends at the transitional parliament. One of those friends was Maliki. He would quiz me about American designs for the Middle East and cajole me for more Green Zone passes. These early days were exhausting but satisfying as Iraqis and Americans worked together to help the country rise from Hussein’s ashes.

Then disaster struck. During Jafari’s short tenure, ethno-sectarian tensions spiked catastrophically. With Hussein’s criminal excesses still fresh in their minds, Iraq’s new Shiite Islamist leaders concocted retribution schemes against Sunnis, resulting in horrifying episodes of torture, rape and other abuses. Displaced Baath Party members launched a bloody insurgency, while al-Qaeda recruited young men to stage suicide and car bombings, kidnappings, and other terrorist attacks in a bid to foment chaos.

After the February 2006 bombing of the Askariya mosque in Samarra, a sacred shrine for Shiite Islam’s 200 million adherents, Shiite Islamist leaders launched a ferocious counterattack, sparking a civil war that left tens of thousands of innocent Iraqis dead. Jafari initially refused American overtures to institute a curfew after al-Qaeda bombed Samarra, insisting that citizens needed to vent their frustrations — effectively sanctioning civil war and ethnic cleansing.

Washington decided that change at the top was essential. After the December 2005 parliamentary elections, U.S. Embassy officials combed the Iraqi elite for a leader who could crush the Iranian-backed Shiite militias, battle al-Qaeda, and unite Iraqis under the banner of nationalism and inclusive government. My colleague Jeffrey Beals and I were among the few Arabic-speaking Americans on good terms with the country’s leading figures. The only man we knew with any chance to win support from all Iraqi factions — and who seemed likely to be an effective leader — was Maliki. We argued that he would be acceptable to Iraq’s Shiite Islamists, around 50 percent of the population; that he was hard-working, decisive and largely free of corruption; and that he was politically weak and thus dependent on cooperating with other Iraqi leaders to hold together a coalition. Although Maliki’s history was known to be shadowy and violent, that was hardly unusual in the new Iraq.

With other colleagues, Beals and I hashed over the options with U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, who in turn encouraged Iraq’s skeptical but desperate national leaders to support Maliki. Leading a bloc with only a handful of parliamentarians, Maliki was initially surprised by the American entreaties, but he seized the opportunity, becoming prime minister on May 20, 2006.

He vowed to lead a strong, united Iraq.


‘There will be no Iraq’

Never having run anything beyond a violent, secretive Shiite Islamist political party, Maliki found his first years leading Iraq enormously challenging. He struggled with violence that killed thousands of Iraqis each month and displaced millions, a collapsing oil industry, and divided and corrupt political partners — as well as delegations from an increasingly impatient U.S. Congress. Maliki was the official ruler of Iraq, but with the surge of U.S. forces in 2007 and the arrival in Baghdad of Ambassador Ryan Crocker and Gen. David Petraeus, there was little doubt about who was actually keeping the Iraqi state from collapse.

Crocker and Petraeus met with the prime minister several hours a day, virtually every day, for nearly two years. Unlike his rivals, Maliki traveled little outside the country and routinely worked 16-hour days. We coordinated political, economic and military policies, seeking to overcome legislative obstacles and promote economic growth while pursuing al-Qaeda, Baathist spoilers and Shiite Islamist militias. As Crocker’s special assistant, my role was to help prepare him for and accompany him to meetings with Iraqi leaders, and I often served as his proxy when the Iraqis squabbled among themselves. The United States was compelled to mediate among the Iraqis because we felt that the country would become stable only with united and cohesive Iraqi leadership, backed by the use of force against violent extremists.

One of the biggest breakthroughs of this era was the Awakening movement, in which, thanks to long negotiations, Sunni Arab tribal and Baathist insurgents turned their guns away from U.S. troops and pointed them toward al-Qaeda, thereby reintegrating into the Iraqi political process. Initially hostile to the idea of arming and funding Sunni fighters, Maliki eventually relented after intense lobbying from Crocker and Petraeus, but only on the condition that Washington foot the bill. He later agreed to hire and fund some of the tribal fighters, but many of his promises to them went unmet — leaving them unemployed, bitter and again susceptible to radicalization.

Settling into power by 2008, and with the northern half of the nation becoming pacified, Maliki was growing into his job. He had weekly videoconferences with President George W. Bush. During these intimate gatherings, in which a small group of us sat quietly off screen, Maliki often complained of not having enough constitutional powers and of a hostile parliament, while Bush urged patience and remarked that dealing with the U.S. Congress wasn’t easy, either.

Over time, Maliki helped forge compromises with his political rivals and signed multibillion-dollar contracts with multinational companies to help modernize Iraq. Few of us had hope in Iraq’s future during the depths of the civil war, but a year after the surge began, the country seemed to be back on track.

Maliki didn’t always make things easy, however. Prone to conspiracy theories after decades of being hunted by Hussein’s intelligence services, he was convinced that his Shiite Islamist rival Moqtada al-Sadr was seeking to undermine him. So in March 2008, Maliki hopped into his motorcade and led an Iraqi army charge against Sadr’s Mahdi Army in Basra. With no planning, logistics, intelligence, air cover or political support from Iraq’s other leaders, Maliki picked a fight with an Iranian-backed militia that had stymied the U.S. military since 2003.

Locked in the ambassador’s office for several hours, Crocker, Petraeus, the general’s aide and I pored over the political and military options and worked the phones with Maliki and his ministers in Basra. We feared that Maliki’s field headquarters would be overrun and he’d be killed, an Iraqi tradition for seizing power. I dialed up Iraq’s Sunni Arab, Shiite Arab and Kurdish leaders so Crocker could urge them to publicly stand behind Maliki. Petraeus ordered an admiral to Basra to lead U.S. Special Operations forces against the Mahdi Army. For days, I received calls from Maliki’s special assistant, Gatah al-Rikabi, urging American airstrikes to level entire city blocks in Basra; I had to remind him that the U.S. military is not as indiscriminate with force as Maliki’s army is.

Although it was a close call, Maliki’s “Charge of the Knights” succeeded. For the first time in Iraq’s history, a Shiite Islamist premier had defeated an Iranian-backed Shiite Islamist militia. Maliki was welcomed in Baghdad and around the world as a patriotic nationalist, and he was showered with praise as he sought to liberate Baghdad’s Sadr City slum from the Mahdi Army just weeks later. During a meeting of the Iraqi National Security Council, attended by Crocker and Petraeus, Maliki blasted his generals, who wanted to take six months to prepare for the attack. “There will be no Iraq in six months!” I recall him saying.

Buoyed by his win in Basra, and with massive U.S. military assistance, Maliki led the charge to retake Sadr City, directing Iraqi army divisions over his mobile phone. Through an unprecedented fusion of American and Iraqi military and intelligence assets, dozens of Iranian-backed Shiite Islamist militant cells were eliminated within weeks. This was the true surge: a masterful civil-military campaign to allow space for Iraqi politicians to reunite by obliterating the Sunni and Shiite armed groups that had nearly driven the country into the abyss.


Maliki ascendant

By the closing months of 2008, successfully negotiating the terms for America’s continued commitment to Iraq became a top White House imperative. But desperation to seal a deal before Bush left office, along with the collapse of the world economy, weakened our hand.

In an ascendant position, Maliki and his aides demanded everything in exchange for virtually nothing. They cajoled the United States into a bad deal that granted Iraq continued support while giving America little more than the privilege of pouring more resources into a bottomless pit. In retrospect, I imagine the sight of American officials pleading with him only fed Maliki’s ego further. After organizing Bush’s final trip to Iraq — where he was attacked with a pair of shoes at Maliki’s news conference celebrating the signing of the bilateral agreements — I left Baghdad with Crocker on Feb. 13, 2009. After more than 2,000 days of service, I was ill, depleted physically and mentally, but hopeful that America’s enormous sacrifices might have produced a positive outcome.

With the Obama administration vowing to end Bush’s “dumb war,” and the continued distraction of the global economic crisis, Maliki seized an opportunity. He began a systematic campaign to destroy the Iraqi state and replace it with his private office and his political party. He sacked professional generals and replaced them with those personally loyal to him. He coerced Iraq’s chief justice to bar some of his rivals from participating in the elections in March 2010. After the results were announced and Maliki lost to a moderate, pro-Western coalition encompassing all of Iraq’s major ethno-sectarian groups, the judge issued a ruling that awarded Maliki the first chance to form a government, ushering in more tensions and violence.

This was happening amid a leadership vacuum at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. After two months without an ambassador, Crocker’s replacement had arrived in April 2009 while I settled into a new assignment shuttling across Middle East capitals with Petraeus, the new head of U.S. Central Command. But reports from Iraqi and U.S. officials in Baghdad were worrisome. While American troops bled and the global economic crisis flared, the embassy undertook an expensive campaign to landscape the grounds and commission a bar and a soccer field, complementing the existing Olympic-size indoor swimming pool, basketball court, tennis courts and softball field at our billion-dollar embassy. I routinely received complaints from Iraqi and U.S. officials that morale at the embassy was plummeting and that relations between America’s diplomatic and military leadership — so strong in the Crocker-Petraeus era, and so crucial to curtailing Maliki’s worst tendencies and keeping the Iraqis moving forward — had collapsed. Maliki’s police state grew stronger by the day.

In a meeting in Baghdad with a Petraeus-hosted delegation of Council on Foreign Relations members shortly after the 2010 elections, Maliki insisted that the vote had been rigged by the United States, Britain, the United Nations and Saudi Arabia. As we shuffled out of the prime minister’s suite, one stunned executive, the father of an American Marine, turned to me and asked, “American troops are dying to keep that son of a b---- in power?”

With the political crisis dragging on for months, a new ambassador for whom I had worked previously, James Jeffrey, asked me to return to Baghdad to help mediate among the Iraqi factions. Even then, in August 2010, I was shocked that much of the surge’s success had been squandered by Maliki and other Iraqi leaders. Kurds asked how they could justify remaining part of a dysfunctional Iraq that had killed hundreds of thousands of their people since the 1980s. Sunni Arabs — who had overcome internal divisions to form the secular Iraqiya coalition with like-minded Shiite Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen and Christians — were outraged at being asked to abdicate the premiership after pummeling al-Qaeda and winning the elections. Even Shiite Islamist leaders privately expressed discomfort with Iraq’s trajectory under Maliki, with Sadr openly calling him a “tyrant.” Worst of all, perhaps, the United States was no longer seen as an honest broker.

After helping to bring him to power in 2006, I argued in 2010 that Maliki had to go. I felt guilty lobbying against my friend Abu Isra, but this was not personal. Vital U.S. interests were on the line. Thousands of American and Iraqi lives had been lost and trillions of dollars had been spent to help advance our national security, not the ambitions of one man or one party. The constitutional process had to be safeguarded, and we needed a sophisticated, unifying, economics-minded leader to rebuild Iraq after the security-focused Maliki crushed the militias and al-Qaeda.

In conversations with visiting White House senior staff members, the ambassador, the generals and other colleagues, I suggested Vice President Adel Abdul Mahdi as a successor. A former Baathist, moderate Shiite Islamist and French-educated economist who had served as finance minister, Abdul Mahdi maintained excellent relations with Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds as well as with Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

On Sept. 1, 2010, Vice President Biden was in Baghdad for the change-of-command ceremony that would see the departure of Gen. Ray Odierno and the arrival of Gen. Lloyd Austin as commander of U.S. forces. That night, at a dinner at the ambassador’s residence that included Biden, his staff, the generals and senior embassy officials, I made a brief but impassioned argument against Maliki and for the need to respect the constitutional process. But the vice president said Maliki was the only option. Indeed, the following month he would tell top U.S. officials, “I’ll bet you my vice presidency Maliki will extend the SOFA,” referring to the status-of-forces agreement that would allow U.S. troops to remain in Iraq past 2011.

I was not the only official who made a case against Abu Isra. Even before my return to Baghdad, officials including Deputy U.S. Ambassador Robert Ford, Odierno, British Ambassador Sir John Jenkins and Turkish Ambassador Murat Özçelik each lobbied strenuously against Maliki, locking horns with the White House, U.S. Ambassador Christopher Hill and Maliki’s most ardent supporter, future deputy assistant secretary of state Brett McGurk. Now, with Austin in the Maliki camp as well, we remained at an impasse, principally because the Iraqi leaders were divided, unable to agree on Maliki or, maddeningly, on an alternative.

Our debates mattered little, however, because the most powerful man in Iraq and the Middle East, Gen. Qassim Soleimani, the head of the Quds Force unit of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps, was about to resolve the crisis for us. Within days of Biden’s visit to Baghdad, Soleimani summoned Iraq’s leaders to Tehran. Beholden to him after decades of receiving Iran’s cash and support, the Iraqis recognized that U.S. influence in Iraq was waning as Iranian influence was surging. The Americans will leave you one day, but we will always remain your neighbors, Soleimani said, according to a former Iraqi official briefed on the meeting.

After admonishing the feuding Iraqis to work together, Soleimani dictated the outcome on behalf of Iran’s supreme leader: Maliki would remain premier; Jalal Talabani, a legendary Kurdish guerilla with decades-long ties to Iran, would remain president; and, most important, the American military would be made to leave at the end of 2011. Those Iraqi leaders who cooperated, Soleimani said, would continue to benefit from Iran’s political cover and cash payments, but those who defied the will of the Islamic Republic would suffer the most dire of consequences.


Washington’s choice

I was determined not to let an Iranian general who had murdered countless American troops dictate the endgame for the United States in Iraq. By October, I was pleading with Ambassador Jeffrey to take steps to avert this outcome. I said that Iran was intent on forcing the United States out of Iraq in humiliation and that a divisive, sectarian government in Baghdad headed by Maliki would almost certainly lead to another civil war and then an all-out regional conflict. This might be averted if we rebuffed Iran by forming a unity government around a nationalist alternative such as Abdul Mahdi. It would be extremely difficult, I acknowledged, but with 50,000 troops still on the ground, the United States remained a powerful player. The alternative was strategic defeat in Iraq and the Middle East writ large. To my surprise, the ambassador shared my concerns with the White House senior staff, asking that they be relayed to the president and vice president, as well as the administration’s top national security officials.

Desperate to avert calamity, I used every bit of my political capital to arrange a meeting for Jeffrey and Antony Blinken, Biden’s national security adviser and senior Iraq aide, with one of Iraq’s top grand ayatollahs. Using uncharacteristically blunt language, the Shiite cleric said he believed that Ayad Allawi, who had served as an interim prime minister in 2004-05, and Abdul Mahdi were the only Shiite leaders capable of uniting Iraq. Maliki, he said, was the prime minister of the Dawa party, not of Iraq, and would drive the country to ruin.

But all the lobbying was for naught. By November, the White House had settled on its disastrous Iraq strategy. The Iraqi constitutional process and election results would be ignored, and America would throw its full support behind Maliki. Washington would try to move Talabani aside and install Allawi as a consolation prize to the Iraqiya coalition.

The next day, I appealed again to Blinken, Jeffrey, Austin, my embassy colleagues and my bosses at Central Command, Gen. Jim Mattis and Gen. John Allen, and warned that we were making a mistake of historic proportions. I argued that Maliki would continue to consolidate power with political purges against his rivals; Talabani would never step aside after fighting Hussein for decades and taking his chair; and the Sunnis would revolt again if they saw that we betrayed our promises to stand by them after the Awakening’s defeat of al-Qaeda.

Mattis and Allen were sympathetic, but the Maliki supporters were unmoved. The ambassador dispatched me to Jordan to meet with a council of Iraq’s top Sunni leaders, with the message that they needed to join Maliki’s government. The response was as I expected. They would join the government in Baghdad, they said, but they would not allow Iraq to be ruled by Iran and its proxies. They would not live under a Shiite theocracy and accept continued marginalization under Maliki. After turning their arms against al-Qaeda during the Awakening, they now wanted their share in the new Iraq, not to be treated as second-class citizens. If that did not happen, they warned, they would take up arms again.

Catastrophe followed. Talabani rebuffed White House appeals to step down and instead turned to Iran for survival. With instructions from Tehran, Maliki began to form a cabinet around some of Iran’s favorite men in Iraq. Hadi al-Amiri, the notorious Badr Brigade commander, became transportation minister, controlling strategically sensitive sea, air and land ports. Khudair Khuzaie became vice president, later serving as acting president. Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the Dawa party mastermind

behind the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait in 1983, became an adviser to Maliki and his neighbor in the Green Zone. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Sadrist detainees were released. And Maliki purged the National Intelligence Service of its Iran division, gutting the Iraqi government’s ability to monitor and check its neighboring foe.

America’s Iraq policy was soon in tatters. Outraged by what it perceived as American betrayal, the Iraqiya bloc fractured along ethno-sectarian lines, with leaders scrambling for government positions, lest they be frozen out of Iraq’s lucrative patronage system. Rather than taking 30 days to try to form a government, per the Iraqi constitution, the Sunni Arab leaders settled for impressive-sounding posts with little authority. Within a short span, Maliki’s police state effectively purged most of them from politics, parking American-supplied M1A1 tanks outside the Sunni leaders’ homes before arresting them. Within hours of the withdrawal of U.S. forces in December 2011, Maliki sought the arrest of his longtime rival Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi, eventually sentencing him to death in absentia. The purge of Finance Minister Rafea al-Essawi followed a year later.

Maliki never appointed a permanent, parliament-confirmed interior minister, nor a defense minister, nor an intelligence chief. Instead, he took the positions for himself. He also broke nearly every promise he made to share power with his political rivals after they voted him back into office through parliament in late 2010.

He also abrogated the pledges he made to the United States. Per Iran’s instructions, he did not move forcefully at the end of 2011 to renew the Security Agreement , which would have permitted American combat troops to remain in Iraq. He did not dissolve his Office of the Commander in Chief, the entity he has used to bypass the military chain of command by making all commanders report to him. He did not relinquish control of the U.S.-trained Iraqi counterterrorism and SWAT forces, wielding them as a praetorian guard. He did not dismantle the secret intelligence organizations, prisons and torture facilities with which he has bludgeoned his rivals. He did not abide by a law imposing term limits, again calling upon kangaroo courts to issue a favorable ruling. And he still has not issued a new and comprehensive amnesty that would have helped quell unrest from previously violent Shiite and Sunni Arab factions that were gradually integrating into politics.

In short, Maliki’s one-man, one-Dawa-party Iraq looks a lot like Hussein’s one-man, one-Baath Party Iraq. But at least Hussein helped contain a strategic American enemy: Iran. And Washington didn’t spend $1 trillion propping him up. There is not much “democracy” left if one man and one party with close links to Iran control the judiciary, police, army, intelligence services, oil revenue, treasury and the central bank. Under these circumstances, renewed ethno-sectarian civil war in Iraq was not a possibility. It was a certainty.

I resigned in protest on Dec. 31, 2010. And now, with the United States again becoming entangled in Iraq, I feel a civic and moral obligation to explain how we reached this predicament.

The crisis now gripping Iraq and the Middle East was not only predictable but predicted — and preventable. By looking the other way and unconditionally supporting and arming Maliki, President Obama has only lengthened and expanded the conflict that President Bush unwisely initiated. Iraq is now a failed state, and as countries across the Middle East fracture along ethno-sectarian lines, America is likely to emerge as one of the biggest losers of the new Sunni-Shiite holy war, with allies collapsing and radicals plotting another 9/11.

Maliki’s most ardent American supporters ignored the warning signs and stood by as an Iranian general decided Iraq’s fate in 2010. Ironically, these same officials are now scrambling to save Iraq, yet are refusing to publicly condemn Maliki’s abuses and are providing him with arms that he can use to wage war against his political rivals.


The Washington Post



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Good to see peace and prosperity in neighborhood. 1400 year old route from Mecca to Najaf, never break. Mecca and Madina link with Najaf.
 
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King Salman calls Iraq’s Al-Abadi
Arab News | Published — Friday 20 October 2017

JEDDAH: King Salman called Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi on Thursday, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
The pair reviewed bilateral relations and ways to enhance them through the Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1180266/saudi-arabia

King invites Abadi to attend Riyadh meeting


Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman

Okaz/Saudi Gazette

RIYADH — Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman made on Thursday a telephone call to Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi. During the telephone conversation, the leaders reviewed bilateral relations between the two countries in various fields and ways of enhancing them through the Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council.

This was the second time King Salman was making a phone call to Abadi in 72 hours. Earlier, King Salman held phone conversation with Abadi on Monday. The office of Abadi in Baghdad said that the King invited Abadi to attend the meeting of the council, which will be held in Riyadh in the coming week. US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is also expected to attend the council meeting.

“King Salman greeted Abadi and the people of Iraq for the victory they have achieved against terrorism, and the King emphasized the Kingdom’s keenness to further bolster bilateral relations. In his reply, Abadi reiterated that Iraq wants to enhance ties with the Kingdom in various fields,” the office said, adding that Abadi informed King Salman that the battle against terrorism and the elimination of Daesh (so called IS) in Iraq has entered its final phase.

http://saudigazette.com.sa/article/519813/SAUDI-ARABIA/King-invites-Abadi-to-attend-Riyadh-meeting

Saudi-Iraqi military talks held in Riyadh
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The visit was the first of its kind in decades for a senior Iraqi military official (Courtesy Aawsat)

Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Thursday, 19 October 2017

The Iraqi Defense Ministry said that Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Othman Al-Ghanmi headed a high-level military delegation on Monday for a two-day official visit to Saudi Arabia at the invitation of his Saudi counterpart General Abdul Rahman Al-Bunyan, Chief of Staff of the Saudi Armed Forces.

The visit was the first of its kind in decades for a senior Iraqi military official, according to Alsharq Alawsaat newpaper.

The visit aimed to “discuss important issues through cooperation and coordination in combating terrorism and opening border crossings,” the statement said, adding that the visit “is an important step to enhance relations between the two countries and exchange intelligence, and discuss regional issues”.

ALSO:

Saudi Arabia to launch joint trade council with Iraq

Saudi-Iraqi negotiations to form a new alliance

Last Update: Thursday, 19 October 2017 KSA 14:46 - GMT 11:46

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...audi-Iraqi-military-talks-held-in-Riyadh.html

Wonderful news. KSA should help Iraq militarily against Barzanistani land grabbing if needed in a perfect world and also against remnants of Daesh! Why not? There is no need for this Arab-Arab government hostility/rivalry as most people do not support it and it makes no sense. Cooperation on all fronts is needed instead. Thus such news is a wise step.
 
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we want better brotherly ties with saudi and we hope theier intentions are genuine.

It is interests in of KSA and Iraq to have cordial and brotherly ties as this is what both the Saudi Arabian and Iraqi people want to have. Blood will always be thicker than water. The reactions on both sides after the increase of warmer ties by the governments in power speak for themselves. People have been calling for this for years.

Brother it is not by mistake that Al-Abadi visited KSA as the first country on his most recent tour. The meeting was extremely cordial and it was a great success for all parties involved, state institutions and private firms alike.


King Salman stresses Saudi support for the unity and stability of Iraq

ARAB NEWS | Published — Wednesday 25 October 2017

RIYADH: King Salman briefed the Cabinet on Tuesday on his talks with the Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi and the inaugural meeting this week of the Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council.
The new council must contribute to realizing the common interests of the two countries and to facing the dangerous challenges in the region, the king said, stressing Saudi support for the unity and stability of Iraq.
The Cabinet welcomed the new council’s joint statement on the importance of enhancing economic and trade relations, and the agreement on opening border crossings and the development of ports and roads.
The king also briefed the Cabinet on letters he sent to the Algerian President, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, and the Iraqi President, Fuad Masum, and the results of his meeting with the US Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson.
Minister of Culture and Information, Awwad Al-Awwad, said the Cabinet valued the royal decree establishing the King Salman Complex for the Prophet’s Hadith in the city of Madinah.
The Cabinet also appreciated the king’s patronage of the Future Investment Initiative, which was launched on Tuesday in Riyadh and explores the evolving role of sovereign wealth in driving the next wave of business, innovation, technology and investment. Ministers commended the launch by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of the Neom future destination project.
The Cabinet discussed the appeal by Arab environment ministers to raise the issue of the systematic destruction by Israeli occupation forces of the Arab environment in the occupied territories, and to mobilize support for Arab issues.
Ministers strongly condemned the attack on security forces in the Egyptian city of Giza, the terrorist bombing of a police truck in Quetta, Pakistan, and the suicide attacks in Afghanistan. They renewed the solidarity of Saudi Arabia with these states against terrorist attacks.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1182816/saudi-arabia

Saudi commerce minister upbeat on Saudi-Iraq trade boost
MOHAMMED RASOOLDEEN | Published — Tuesday 24 October 2017
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Commerce and Investment Minister Dr. Majid Al-Qassabi

RIYADH: Commerce and Investment Minister Dr. Majid Al-Qassabi said on Monday that Saudi-Iraqi relations are entering a new era with an ambitious program.
He said the leaders of the two countries are working to establish an ambitious phase of unlimited trade, economic and investment activities, especially with the launch of the Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council, which is the cornerstone of the medium- and long-term businesses and planning programs.
The minister’s remarks follow the council’s maiden session that took place in Riyadh on Sunday in the presence of King Salman and Iraqi Premier Haider Al-Abadi during the visit of US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.
He said that the bilateral meetings between the leaders of the two countries contributed to shaping trade relations in the next phase by opening all channels of cooperation to serve the interests of the two countries.
Al-Qassabi recalled that the bilateral trade volume between the Kingdom and Iraq reached SR23 billion ($6.13 billion) over the last 10 years (2006 to 2016. The trade balance was in favor of the Kingdom.
The volume of trade exchange during 2016 reached SR2.23 billion, which includes exports worth SR2.2 billion to Iraq and SR24 million in imports from Iraq to the Kingdom.
Crude oil and relevant products, fruit juices, fruits, vegetables and cheese topped the list of key Saudi goods exported to Iraq in 2016, while the list of imported goods from Iraq included aluminum sheets and transport containers.
Following a recent Cabinet decision, the Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council was set up under the joint chairmanship of Al-Qassabi from the Saudi side, and Dr. Salman Al-Jumaili, minister of planning and acting minister of trade, from the Iraqi side.
It was geared toward illustrating Saudi Arabia’s desire to improve relations and to enhance the trade opportunities under joint cooperation.
In August, Al-Qassabi headed a high-level delegation of government officials and businessmen to Baghdad to develop and deepen strategic and economic relations between both sides, as well as to discuss and review promising investment opportunities.
Besides trade and investment opportunities, the two parties also concentrated on other sectors such as industry, agriculture, education, health and others.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1182316/saudi-arabia

Saudi-Iraqi joint council stresses oil, trade and private sector partnerships
ARAB NEWS | Published — Monday 23 October 2017
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RIYADH: Following its establishment, the Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council (SICC) issued a statement on Sunday stressing the brotherly bonds between the two countries and peoples.
The council expressed its satisfaction with the state of the oil market following an agreement between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and non-OPEC producers to cut supply to shore up prices.
The SICC stressed the importance of participants’ full commitment to the agreement until its target is achieved.
“The Council was briefed on the results of the Kingdom’s participation in the Baghdad International Fair, which was a great contribution to economic and trade relations. The Saudi side also noted the level of welcome and hospitality enjoyed by the Saudi delegation from reception to departure,” the statement said, adding that the two sides stressed the need to work together to reduce obstacles and facilitate bilateral trade.
They also agreed to develop private sector partnerships, inform businessmen of trade and investment opportunities, and encourage the exchange of technical and scientific expertise and research.
The Iraqi side thanked the Kingdom for its initiative in studying the implementation of customs ports, which will facilitate bilateral trade.
The two sides reached an agreement on opening border crossings and developing ports, roads and border areas. They also agreed to review an agreement on customs cooperation and study bilateral trade.
The SICC announced the resumption of flights from the Kingdom to Iraq, the opening of a Saudi Consulate there, and the reopening of Saudi chemical manufacturing company SABIC’s office in Iraq.
As part of the promotion of bilateral ties, it was agreed that Saudi Arabia will participate in exhibitions in Iraq, including the Baghdad International Fair, the Basra Oil and Gas Exhibition, and the Business and Investment Forum.
During the SICC’s first meeting, it discussed its priorities for the next two years, implementation of its work and the formation of a working group.
Its second meeting will be held in Iraq’s capital Baghdad in the presence of ministers and senior officials from both countries.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1181951/saudi-arabia

King Salman receives Iraqi PM in Riyadh
Arab News | Published — Sunday 22 October 2017
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King Salman (L) receives Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi upon his arrival in Riyadh on Saturday. (Bandar Al-Jaloud/Saudi Royal Palace handout photo)

RIYADH: Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi arrived in Riyadh on Saturday in a visit aimed at further enhancing strategic ties.
King Salman received the prime minister and his accompanying delegation at the king's palace, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said.
Abadi is to take part in a meeting on Sunday to establish a joint Saudi-Iraqi coordination council aimed at boosting cooperation.
US State Secretary Rex Tillerson, who arrived also on Saturday, is to take part in the meeting, officials said.
Abadi's visit to Saudi Arabia is the second this year since Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir visited Baghdad in February, the first such visit by a top Saudi official since 1991.
After former dictator Saddam Hussein’s August 1990 invasion of Kuwait, Riyadh severed relations with Baghdad and closed its border posts with its northern neighbor.
Ties remained strained even after Saddam’s ouster in the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, since when successive Shiite-dominated governments in Baghdad have stayed close to Tehran.
Iraq is seeking economic benefits from closer ties with Saudi Arabia as both countries suffer from a protracted oil slump. Saudi Arabia is also seeking to counter Iranian influence in Iraq.
Abadi's visit coincides with Saudi Energy Minister Khaled Al-Falih’s high profile visit to Baghdad where he called for the strengthening of economic relations to boost oil prices.
(With AFP)

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1181461/saudi-arabia

60 Saudi firms participate in Baghdad trade fair
Arab News | Published — Sunday 22 October 2017
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Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih, center, with Iraq’s Trade Minister Salman Al-Jumaili, second right, open the 44th Baghdad International Fair in Baghdad on Saturday. (SPA)

BAGHDAD: Under the title “We liberated our land and with your cooperation we will build it,” Iraqi Trade Minister, Salman Al-Jumaili, launched the 44th Baghdad International Fair running from 21-30 October with Saudi Minister of Energy, Industry and Mineral Resources, Khalid Al-Falih, attending. The opening ceremony was also attended by the governor of Baghdad, Hashem Mohammed Hatem, with the participation of 18 countries and 400 local and international companies.

Al-Jumaili welcomed guests participating in this important economic fair, which serves as a platform for strengthening friendship bonds between Iraq and other Arab, regional and international.
“The launch of the 44th Baghdad International Fair coincides with the complete liberation of many Iraqi areas, and this is a clear and true message that Iraq is ready to cooperate in the fields of investment and reconstruction and is capable of fighting and combating terrorism and strengthening its relationships through real and constructive partnerships,” he said.
Saudi minister, Al-Falih, expressed his delight to be present in his second country, Iraq, and said that Saudi participation was characterized by including more than 60 companies of different purposes in the largest section in the fair.
He also explained that there are strong, cultural, economic and historical bonds between Saudi Arabia and Iraq and said, “Today, the two countries share the same vision, which aims to build a promising future for their people through building national capacities, investing in resources and establishing business and industrial partnerships in order to build a strong, diversified economy.”
Al-Falih pointed out that the two countries share many factors, including a comprehensive economy, as well as true potential, such as human capital, a strategic geographical location, energy, water, mineral and agricultural resources, exceptional industrial capabilities and tourism potential.
“Investing in these sectors will allow for better cooperation between the two countries,” he added.
“A good example of the importance of a successful cooperation between the two countries is the stability and improvement the oil market has witnessed as a result of cooperation between OPEC countries,” Al-Falih added.
Saudi Exports Development Authority (SEDA) Secretary-General Saleh Al-Salami said that the participation of the authority in the Baghdad International Fair stems from its role in promoting Saudi products to reach international markets.
Al-Salami clarified that the Kingdom, through its participation, stresses the political and economic openness between the two countries; its concern to include its best companies in the Iraqi market in order to increase the exchange between the two countries; its determination to show the high quality of Saudi products and their competitiveness with international products; and the capacity of Saudi products to efficiently and effectively cover neighboring states.
This step also stresses the authority’s desire to “contribute in boosting the national economy by focusing on non-oil exports and diversifying the sources of income to achieve Vision 2030 and encourage national companies to participate in the exhibitions organized by the authority.”
Al-Salami said: “The choice of the Iraqi market is a result of many discussions held between the authority and a number of exporters to discuss and determine major challenges they have been facing, find solutions to overcome them, and find ways that facilitate the arrival of Saudi products on the Iraqi market.”

He added that the authority, through its participation, aims to discover new market opportunities for Saudi products in a promising market like the Iraq, and facilitate the export process to the country in cooperation with the relevant authorities.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1181441/saudi-arabia

Saudi Airlines to operate regular Baghdad route late October
Arab News | Published — Saturday 21 October 2017
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Passenger disembark from a plane belonging to Saudia airline, at Baghdad International Airport, in Iraq, Thursday, Oct. 19, 2017. Saudi Arabia's national carrier, Saudia, launched its inaugural flight to Baghdad on Thursday. (AP)

RIYADH: Saudi Airlines inaugurates its first flight to the Iraqi capital Baghdad on 30 October 2017 according to Sabq. This will be the first flight after 27 years of interruption.
The Saudi chargé d’affaires in Baghdad, Abdul Aziz Al-Shammari, had previously confirmed that over 20 weekly flights will be operating between Iraq and Saudi Arabia.
On Wednesday, Saudi Arabian budget airline, Flynas, made the first direct flight from the kingdom to Iraq since 1990.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1181211/saudi-arabia

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Not a surprise at all that the capable and well-educated Al-Abadi has a good relationship with an equal on this front in King Salman. Had this been the village idiot Al-Maliki, I doubt that such a cordial relationship could be developed or even attempted.

"Kurds ran in that direction from Kirkuk and elsewhere":lol:

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:lol: :enjoy:

Go ahead given for border point with Iraq in Arar


Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman chairs the weekly session of the Council of Ministers at Al-Yamamah Palace in Riyadh on Tuesday. — SPA

Saudi Gazette report

RIYADH — In a remarkable step to further strengthen bilateral relations with Iraq, the Council of Ministers on Tuesday gave the go ahead for setting up a border point with the neighboring country in Arar.

The weekly session of the Cabinet, chaired by Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman at Al-Yamamah Palace in Riyadh, authorized the minister of finance or his deputy to discuss and sign an agreement with the Iraqi government to set up the border point.

The minister was asked to present the final copy of the agreement to the Cabinet to complete the necessary legal procedures.

The Cabinet’s approval follows the decision of the first meeting of the Saudi-Iraqi Coordination Council held in Riyadh on Oct. 22. The meeting agreed to open border points and set up a Saudi consulate in Iraq. The two countries also announced their decision to develop ports, roads and border zones as well as to conduct studies to establish a trade exchange zone.

Minister of Culture and Information Awwad Al-Awwad said in a statement to Saudi Press Agency following the session that the Cabinet also approved the law to combat crimes related to terrorism and terror-funding.

The Shoura Council approved the final draft of the law on Monday after making necessary amendments on the basis of Article 17 of the Shoura’s Regulations.

The Shoura had approved the draft on Oct. 16, but it was returned to it from the highest authorities with a directive to make some amendments.

Al-Awwad said the Cabinet welcomed the tremendous response from Arab and other countries around the world to the announcement of the ambitious NEOM project by Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman, deputy premier and minister of defense.

The Cabinet lauded the fruitful meetings of the Crown Prince with several world leaders, senior economists and presidents of international companies in promoting investment opportunities and concluding agreements on the sidelines of the recently concluded Future Investment Initiative conference in line with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030.

“The Vision comes in response to domestic developmental needs and emphasizes the policy of striving toward building an economy with diverse sources and multiple development goals.

Al-Awwad said the Cabinet commended the program launched by the Public Investment Fund (PIF) for the period of 2018-2020, including 30 initiatives that contribute to the achievement of four main objectives to enhance the role of the Fund as an effective engine to diversify the Kingdom’s economy and enhance the role of the Kingdom on the regional and global arena.

The Cabinet strongly condemned the recent terror attacks that targeted a bus transporting policemen in Bahrain and the horrific car bombs in Mogadishu that claimed the lives of scores of people and injured of many others.

http://saudigazette.com.sa/article/...head-given-for-border-point-with-Iraq-in-Arar
 
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Saudi oil minister talks of strengthening ties on Iraq visit


DEC 05, 2017 | 5:00 AM

Saudi Arabia's oil minister says relations between the kingdom and Baghdad are improving.

Khalid al-Falih spoke during a visit to the southern Iraqi port city of Basra on Tuesday where he attended an energy conference.

He says Saudi Arabia wants to expand investment projects in Iraq to include energy, manufacturing and natural resources. The visit comes amid months of improving ties between the two countries.

Iraq is looking for regional support as the country struggles to rebuild after ousting the Islamic State
group from major cities and as it deals with an independence movement in its northern Kurdish region.

While Iraq remains a key Iranian ally, the United States has encouraged Baghdad to also improve relations with Saudi Arabia in an effort to counterweight to Iranian influence in the region.

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

http://beta.latimes.com/sns-bc-ml--iraq-saudi-arabia-20171205-story.html

DECEMBER 5, 2017 / 1:30 PM / UPDATED 5 HOURS AGO
Saudi's SABIC to open office in Iraq as relations improve

Reuters Staff

3 MIN READ

DUBAI (Reuters) - Petrochemical giant Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) plans to open an office in Iraq soon, Saudi Arabia’s energy minister said during a visit to Iraq’s southern oil city of Basra, as relations between Riyadh and Baghdad thaw.


The headquarters of Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) is seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia April 19, 2016. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser
Speaking at an oil and gas conference in Basra, Khalid al-Falih called for increased economic cooperation and praised existing coordination with Iraq to help balance the oil market and boost crude prices.

“I would like to announce that SABIC is in the final stages of reopening its office in Iraq, which will result in the availability of petrochemical materials and offers opportunities for (the company) to expand its investment in this sector,” Falih said in a speech late on Monday.

Saudi Arabia’s Industrialization & Energy Services Co (TAQA) is also opening an office in Iraq which will “enhance the presence of the Saudi private sector in Iraq and support initiatives to expand investments,” he added.

Falih, who is also the minister of industry and mineral resources, said that soon the two countries would discuss a power-grid link initiative and investments in renewable energy and power generation projects.

“Cooperation and integration with Iraq represents a strategic direction in the top priorities of the kingdom,” Falih said.

Saudi Arabia is wooing Baghdad in an effort to halt the growing regional influence of arch-foe Iran.

The two countries began taking steps towards detente in 2015 after 25 years of troubled relations starting with the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990.

Tension remained high after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, which toppled Saddam Hussein. The American occupation of Iraq empowered political parties representing Iraq’s Shi‘ite majority, close to Saudi Arabia’s regional rival Iran.

Iraq is seeking economic benefits from closer ties with Riyadh while Saudi Arabia hopes a stronger relationship with Baghdad would help rollback Iran’s influence in the region.


In August the two countries said they planned to open the Arar land border crossing for trade for the first time since 1990.

Saudi Arabia and Iraq are respectively the biggest and second biggest producers of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

OPEC and non-OPEC producers led by Russia agreed on Nov. 30 to extend oil output cuts until the end of 2018 to help lower global inventories and support prices.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ce-in-iraq-as-relations-improve-idUSKBN1DZ1OQ

Glorious news. Certain bonds are unbreakable and cemented in millennia upon millennia of historical excellence. No amount of inferior foreign cancerous influence from a certain Mullah terrorist regime will ever change this.

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New beverage factory heralds new era for Iraq, Saudi Arabia and UAE

In a show of confidence in Iraq’s future, a Saudi beverage maker is planning a large facility south of Baghdad

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Published: 17:02 November 30, 2017
Ed Clowes, Staff Reporter

DUBAI: A recently announced factory south of Baghdad, part owned by Coca-Cola, symbolises a new era in economic relations between Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. A push by the two countries to improve ties with Iraq helped to secure a Dh250 million bottled beverage factory, part-owned by Coca-Cola, a senior executive said on Tuesday.

“The UAE and Saudi Arabia rally to open the relationship with Iraq and its market has been extremely positive for us … Let’s not dodge around the question,” said Meshal Al Kadeeb, vice president of strategy and business development, at Aujan Coca-Cola.

Scheduled to come online in 2018, the factory will be located southwest of the capital Baghdad, between Al Hillah, Najaf and Karbala, in what is known as the country’s industrial belt.

According to Al Kadeeb, the improved trilateral relations have “made our job, and our project, easier. That rally between Saudi Arabia and the UAE … has definitely helped us.”

“Business works on common sense,” he added.

Back in 2011, Coca-Cola purchased a $980 million stake in Saudi Arabian drinks company Aujan Industries, best known for its popular Vimto and Rani drinks. A coordination council was established this year between Saudi Arabia and Iraq to strengthen ties between the two countries.

The pair are expected to boost cooperation in various sectors including oil, economy, trade, intelligence and counter-terrorism, said Ahmad Jamal, a spokesman for the Iraqi foreign ministry speaking exclusively to Gulf News in April.


Through such economic initiatives, Saudi Arabia is attempting to push back against what it sees as undue Iranian influence in Iraq.

The toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003 by US-led coalition forces created a power vacuum that allowed Iran to gain a foothold in Iraq.

Following a return to relative stability after years of conflict that saw much of the country devastated, Iraq’s government is trying to attract foreign money back into the country and create jobs to ease social discontent.

Iraq is also hoping Saudi Arabia will foot the bill of Mosul’s reconstruction after the Iraqi army liberated the city from Daesh control.

In an interview with Gulf News, Al Kadeeb said his company expected the factory to create at least 150 jobs for Iraqis, whilst positioning them closer in the supply chain to an important and growing consumer market.

“It’s all about maximising the return on your supply chain. With the Iraq situation, a closer to market manufacturing solution will be a better fit at this time,” he said.

“We’re already the biggest there, and distance, especially with fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) is a function,” Al Kadeeb added.

On the issue of security, the vice president was unconcerned.

Iraq’s energy facilities, particularly in the north, have been attacked multiple times by Daesh fighters, causing many companies to beef up their security measures.

“We’re a little bit boring! Our industry is consumer goods, it’s not like oil and gas,” Al Kadeeb said.

“Our security is the same as any other food or beverage company in Iraq at the moment,” he said in response to a question about the level of security Aujan Coca-Cola would have in place at the facility.

On the overall safety of operating in Iraq, Al Kadeeb said: “We believe that the country is at the right place now. Every country has a risk, but we’re at a stage now where we’re comfortable to proceed with our manufacturing investment in Iraq, from a stability point of view.”

The beverage company has said it hopes the factory will help it to penetrate neighbouring countries, including Jordan, Turkey and Kuwait.

Picking the right location for a factory will help Aujan Coca-Cola to maximise its returns, said Al Kadeeb, noting: “It will give us that door to knock on for neighbouring countries. The closer to the market you are, the more your costs would be optimised.”

The senior executive added that entering the Iraqi marketing would help Aujan Coca-Cola to increase its overall capacity in the country, where it has seen sales rise, buoyed by a youthful population.

“Our Middle East and North Africa (Mena) target market is still young, below thirty and sometimes more. Given the per capita consumption compared to developed markets, the potential for us is very real,” Al Kadeeb said.

http://gulfnews.com/business/sector...w-era-for-iraq-saudi-arabia-and-uae-1.2133202

Iraq, Saudi Arabia sign 18 energy memorandums in Basra

by Mohamed MostafaDec 5, 2017, 2:08 pm

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com)

Iraq and Saudi Arabia have signed 18 memorandums of understanding in the energy field during the kingdom’s participation in an energy exhibition in Iraq.


The signing of the 18 memorandums of understanding came after Saudi Energy Minister Khaled al-Faleh inaugurated the seventh edition of the Basra oil and gas exhibition, according to the Saudi Press Agency.

It quoted the minister saying that 22 Saudi companies took part in the exhibition which comes to reinforce the “strategic partnership” between the two countries.

He said enhanced relations and energy cooperation between both countries will help bring stability to the international oil market, with both being prominent OPEC members.

Relations between Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and the Shia-dominated Iraqi government have been tensional over the past few years due to Saudi Arabia’s opposition to the involvement of Iraqi Shia paramilitary forces in the fight against Islamic State. Saudi Arabia has always been irritated by the influence of Shia Iran, its arch regional enemy, over Iraqi politics.

But the past months have seen an obvious rapprochement between both countries, with top-level officials exchanging visits and expressing eagerness to boost political, security and economic cooperation.

In October, more than 60 Saudi companies attended the Baghdad International Exhibition.

In July, both countries established a joint coordination council to boost ties on all levels.

https://www.iraqinews.com/business-iraqi-dinar/iraq-saudi-arabia-sign-18-energy-agreements/

Trade Bank of Iraq to establish Saudi branch
November 27, 2017 in Construction & Engineering In Iraq

By John Lee.

The state-owned Trade Bank of Iraq (TBI) has reportedly received verbal approval from the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA) to open a branch in Saudi Arabia next year.

Chairman Faisal Al Haimus told The National in Abu Dhabi that the bank will launch an asset management business in Abu Dhabi.

The lender is considering several options to expand its presence in the GCC region.

(Sources: The National, Reuters)

http://www.iraq-businessnews.com/2017/11/27/trade-bank-of-iraq-to-establish-saudi-branch/

Glorious news. Certain bonds are unbreakable and cemented in millennia upon millennia of historical excellence. No amount of inferior foreign cancerous influence from a certain Mullah terrorist regime will ever change this.
 
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Saudi Arabia, Iraq sign 18 key energy deals
BAGHDAD, Iraq, 6 days ago
Saudi Arabian companies have signed 18 agreements with the Iraqi government to jointly develop several key projects in the energy sector, a media report said.

Saudi companies are keen to develop relations with Iraq, Saudi Minister of Energy Khalid Al-Falih was quoted as saying by Iraq Business News.

He added that several important Saudi companies will open their branches in Iraq to “achieve more bilateral cooperation and expand the size of investments in the sectors of oil, gas, industry, importing and infrastructure”.

Saudi Basic Industries Corp (Sabic) and Saudi Arabia’s Industrialization & Energy Services Co (Taqa) are planning to open offices in Iraq, the report added, citing Reuters.

http://tradearabia.com/news/OGN_334017.html

medium-WAM_en.png


Mon 11-12-2017 09:48 AM

UAE Press: Ties that bind Saudi Arabia and Iraq
ABU DHABI, 11th December, 2017 (WAM) -- A UAE newspaper has commented on the newly established joint body between Saudi Arabia and Iraq to coordinate their fight against Daesh, and to rebuild Iraqi territory wrested from the group, which was announced following a meeting on Sunday.

"The coming together of these two stalwarts of the Arab world is very good news for the region. The dream of Arab unity cannot be realised until Iraq is fully brought back into the Arab fold," said Gulf News in an editorial on Monday.

The paper said, "Saudi King Salman bin Abdul Aziz was very clear about his own thoughts and feelings for Iraq when he said 'what links Saudi Arabia to Iraq is not just geography and common interests but ties of fraternity, blood, history and destiny.' The ties are deep, and the bond unbreakable."

The editorial went on to say that the meeting has also led to a slew of decisions aimed at strengthening political and economic ties, which will have a positive impact on the economies of both countries, especially Iraq, as it seeks to rebuild after the devastating war against the Daesh terrorists that has left major Iraqi cities in total ruin.

"Saudi assistance and investment will go a long way in helping Iraq recover, and provide some of its disgruntled citizens social and economic opportunities and the ability to build better lives for themselves and their children," it said.

It continued, "Every diplomatic step only brings the two countries closer, and there have been quite a few in recent months. Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al Jubeir visited Baghdad in February for talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi, the first such visit since 2003. Al Abadi visited Riyadh in June, followed by influential Iraqi cleric Moqtada Al Sadr.

"The new understanding between Riyadh and Baghdad will also help counter Iran’s pernicious influence and expansionism in the region. On his visit to the kingdom, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called out Tehran, and asked it to withdraw its militias from Iraq."

The editorial added, "Iraq has fought a grinding and heroic battle against terrorism, and its efforts have not gone unnoticed. King Salman congratulated 'brothers in Iraq on the achievements made in eradicating and defeating terrorism.'"

"Closer intelligence and security cooperation between Riyadh and Baghdad will ensure that extremism in our region is kept in check, and terrorism is not allowed to rear its ugly head," concluded the Dubai-based daily.

WAM/Esraa Ismail/Rasha Abubaker

http://wam.ae/en/details/1395302653312

Governor of the Central Bank of Iraq visits Saudi Arabia at the invitation of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency
By
rami
-
December 13, 2017

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The Central Bank of Iraq announced that the Governor of the Bank Ali Al-Alak is currently visiting Saudi Arabia at the invitation of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency.
The central bank said in a press statement that the central bank governor Ali al-Alak headed a financial and financial delegation to Saudi Arabia at the invitation of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency.
He added that “the delegation will discuss prospects of cooperation between the two countries, especially with regard to the development of banking relations between Riyadh and Baghdad and the creation of investment opportunities between the two countries.”

http://en.economiciraq.com/2017/12/...itation-of-the-saudi-arabian-monetary-agency/


Saudi Arabia congratulates Baghdad for victory over ISIS
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Saudi Arabia is sending its congratulations to the people and the government of Iraq. (SPA)

Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Sunday, 10 December 2017

An official source at the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is sending its congratulations to the people and the government of Iraq for eliminating the last strongholds of ISIS, reported Saudi Press Agency.

The source considered the end of the Iraq war against the terrorist ISIS organization a great victory over terrorism in the region, wishing Iraq and its brotherly people security, stability, progress and prosperity in the future.

Last Update: Sunday, 10 December 2017 KSA 16:30 - GMT 13:30

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...gratulates-Baghdad-for-victory-over-ISIS.html

Foreign Ministry: Saudi Arabia will provide 700 thousand jobs in Iraq
December 16 2017 01:01 PM
The parliamentary committee on Saturday unveiled a parliamentary delegation from the Saudi Shoura Council to Iraq to improve bilateral relations and invest agricultural land, pointing out that the Saudi investments will provide 700 thousand opportunities for the unemployed.

A member of the committee Hassan Shwaird said in a press statement that a parliamentary delegation from the Saudi Shura Council will arrive in Baghdad in the coming days to improve bilateral relations between the two countries and invest agricultural land in a number of provinces, indicating that this visit comes after a visit of a delegation from the Iraqi- .

He added that the Saudi companies made an offer to Iraq through the investment of 1 million acres of agricultural land in the provinces of Anbar and Samawa and Bahia, indicating that it is enough to consume Iraq and export the remaining agricultural crops to Saudi Arabia.

Schuerd said that if the Saudi project in Iraq was implemented, it would provide 350,000 jobs for the unemployed in each of Anbar and Samawah provinces.

https://nenosplace.forumotion.com/t...arabia-will-provide-700-thousand-jobs-in-iraq


@TheCamelGuy @Malik Alashter @SALMAN F
 
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