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They won't export anything to EuropeWOW
Even the Russians welcome it and want to make use of it.
No but this route passes through the SA and UAE. The Gulf in totalThey won't export anything to Europe
Russia has nothing the UAE and SA needs. They have their own oil and gas.No but this route passes through the SA and UAE. The Gulf in total
True.Russia has nothing the UAE and SA needs. They have their own oil and gas.
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India, the US, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Europe are set to unveil an unprecedented and groundbreaking infrastructure initiative of a railway and shipping corridor that will enhance commerce, energy and digital connectivity on Saturday on the sidelines of the G20 summit, US principal deputy national security advisor Jon Finer has said.
Speaking to reporters on Saturday morning, Finer said that the project will fill a major infrastructure gap and will be “high-standards, transparent, sustainable, non-coercive” and based on the demand signal from the region instead of being an imposition, drawing an indirect but sharp contrast with China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
BRI is widely criticised for locking countries into unsustainable debts, being non-transparent, coercive, and compromising standards.
Finer said that the initiative fits in with the Joe Biden administration’s larger strategy in West Asia.
Laying out the strategic case for the project, he said that there was first a “value proposition” of a corridor linking three regions of the world as it would enhance prosperity.
Second, it filled a broader infrastructure gap in low and middle-income countries, with the US doing what it can with partners and allies to fill the gap. Third, he said that for the Middle East, “which has been a net exporter of turbulence and insecurity,” the project was a major opportunity in line with the American efforts to “reduce the temperature and enhance connectivity”.
While the project has not been implemented under the I2U2 framework (which includes India, Israel, UAE, and US), most likely because the efforts at normalisation between Israel and Saudi are still a work in progress, officials believe that Israel will be an obvious partner in the project if and when there are formal diplomatic ties between Tel Aviv and Riyadh. On a question on Israel’s participation, Finer said he will let countries speak for themselves.
“We have an approach focused on turning the temperature down, de-escalating conflicts underway in the region, and incentivising stability and connectivity in the region. The railway and shipping project is wholly in line with that,” Finer said.
Asked about the contrast with BRI, Finer claimed that while he understood the appeal of that narrative, the US saw the infra project as a “positive affirmative agenda” that had appeal in countries.
"This is not zero-sum, we are not asking countries to make zero-sum choices, it is a high-value proposition,” he said. But, he added that other efforts were not as “ambitious, high standard, and transparent” and were “more coercive” in nature. “We feel good about the contrast,” added Finer.
India, US, UAE, Saudi, Europe to launch unprecedented infra project: US official
While the project has not been implemented under the I2U2 framework (which includes India, Israel, UAE, and US), most likely because the efforts at normalisation between Israel and Saudi is still work in progress, officials believe that Israel will be an obvious partnerwww.google.com
G20 Summit: US, India, UAE, Saudi to finalise Middle-East shipping, railway deal
The project first came into spotlight in May after top national security officials from the four countries met in Saudi Arabia to discuss the deal.www.google.com
Why is everybody skipping Jordan here are they even onboard with this plan and have the political stability to execute this route
I was mentioning same thing other dayMost of big infrastructure projects promised by the West nowadays are just empty words. They have no skills, no technology to do such large projects without sub-contracting, at least partially to China, which is not acceptable to them. If contracted to Western contractors, the project will cost at least twice to ten times in capital investment and take twice or three times the schedule, provided that they have the technology and know-how to do such projects, and lower quality.
Even Norway, one of the richest countries in the world, had to employ Chinese contractors for their largest sea bridge (completed some years ago), which obviously European and American contractors were not capable. Same for the Brazil's South America largest sea bridge under president Bonosaro, who hated China to the core but still had to sign deal with Chinese contractors.
If we dig this canal, we might as well dig it around Gaza, make it an island and push it the **** away from us lolIf Israel were to have this canal, it would be a real alternative to the Suez canal, as it seems that the Gaza Strip is now completely isolated (UN can't even open its mouth about it, the whole world is just watching what is happening, just like what nazis did to jews decades ago) and Israel has the infrastructure to overcome various security risks.
L&T, GMR, Adani getting active along India-ME-Europe Corridor - ET Infra
While Adani Group has been the most high profile one among Indian conglomerates, with acquisition of Haifa Port in Israel last year in July, other infrastructure heavyweights such as Larsen & Toubro and GMR Group have also lined up their investments.www.google.com