position:crown prince

  • How Saudi Arabia got its Yemen campaign so wrong
    http://theconversation.com/how-saudi-arabia-got-its-yemen-campaign-so-wrong-45664

    Recent reports from the front line of Saudi Arabia’s war will superficially be encouraging to Riyadh. Coalition forces have taken over Al-Anand airbase; a tank brigade from the UAE has joined the effort. The Houthis have been pushed out of several of their positions in Aden, though the fighting has intensified and shows no signs of waning.

    The latest success should not detract from the fact that the Saudi army did very badly in Yemen. It has proved unable to coordinate with Yemeni forces loyal to Hadi in Aden and in the South – indeed, on many occasions it has apparently dropped bombs on them by mistake.

    Things aren’t looking good back in Saudi Arabia either. The defence minister in charge of the war, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, is flailing. He is mocked as “the little general” because of his disastrous war, especially since he ignored warnings from his advisers that a war in Yemen would be a huge debacle for the Saudi Army.

  • Saudi to restructure its oil giant Aramco - Al Arabiya News

    http://english.alarabiya.net/en/2015/05/01

    Saudi Arabia approved on Friday the restructuring of the kingdom’s oil giant Aramco, a move that will see it separated from the oil ministry, sources told Al Arabiya News Channel.

    The country’s Supreme Economic Council approved the restructure plan that had been proposed by Deputy Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.

    The restructuring comes soon after Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz announced a major government reshuffle.

    Prince Mohammad bin Salman, also minister of defense, was appointed as the deputy crown prince earlier this week. King Salman also appointed Saudi Aramco’s chief executive Khaled Al-Falih as chairman of the state oil firm and health minister.

    In a statement on Wednesday, Aramco described Falih as the outgoing CEO and president, and also as chairman of its board of directors.

    The state-owned giant is a world leader in crude exports. Aramco is involved in hydrocarbons exploration, production, refining, distribution, shipping and marketing.❞

  • Saudi King Salman purging monarchy of Abdullah’s inner circle - Middle East - Israel News | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/.premium-1.654210

    After the first purge carried out by Saudi Arabia’s King Salman in January, a few days after the death of his predecessor King Abdullah, comes the second round. It is not likely to be the last.

    The first to be ousted was Abdullah’s inner orbit of loyalists, including his bureau chief, Khaled al-Tuwaijri, his two sons, Mashal (governor of Mecca) and Turki (governor of Riyyad), his intelligence chief Khalid bin Bandar and the latter’s father, Bandar bin Sultan, who headed the National Security Council.

    The current round aims to ensure the line of succession. Among others, Salman ousted the crown prince, Muqrin bin Abdulaziz – Abdullah’s favorite – replacing him with the powerful Interior Minister Mohammed bin Nayef. The king appointed his son, Mohammed bin Salman, as deputy crown prince – that is, the man who will inherit the kingdom if Mohammed bin Nayef departs.

    These moves are not surprising. From the beginning of Salman’s rule, it was clear that Prince Muqrin, once the failed intelligence chief, would not remain crown prince for long. Even Mohammed bin Salman’s appointment as deputy crown prince was expected, and not only because of his diplomatic skills and expertise on terrorism, which he acquired in numerous courses he took at the FBI Academy.

    The distancing of Abdullah’s loyalists and strengthening of the Sudairi branch of the ruling family, of which Mohammed bin Nayef is a member, is part of a settling of scores with King Abdullah, whose reign saw a waning of the influence of the Sudairi princes – the sons of Hassa al-Sudairi, one of the 10 wives of Saudi Arabia’s first king, Abdulaziz (Ibn Saud).

    If there is a surprise appointment, it is that of Adel al-Jubeir as foreign minister, replacing Saud al-Faisal, who designed and implemented Saudi Arabia’s foreign policy for four decades. Al-Faisal, 75, has Parkinson’s disease and it seems his request to leave office was authentic. Jubeir is the first Saudi foreign minister who is not a member of the royal family.

    No change in foreign policy due

    These appointments are part of internal housekeeping; they do not change the kingdom’s foreign policy. King Salman, despite his own health issues – he apparently suffers from Alzheimer’s – immediately made his mark when he intensified official public discourse against Iran, supported the establishment of an Arab intervention force and initiated the attack on the Houthis in Yemen to root out Iran’s influence in that country.

    The strong man in the kingdom is no doubt Nayef, who will continue to serve both as interior minister and head of the National Security Council. He is the man who will implement foreign policy, one of whose principles is the effort to establish a “Sunni axis” against Iran.

    As part of this effort, Saudi Arabia has changed its policy toward Turkey, and despite the rift between Egypt and Turkey, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was invited to visit the king. Nayef, who met with Erdogan in Turkey before that visit, set its agenda.

    It seems that as part of the efforts toward a “Sunni axis,” Saudi Arabia will encourage Hamas to cut itself off entirely from Iran and return to the “Arab fold,” despite the ongoing enmity between Egypt, Saudi Arabia’s ally, and Hamas.

    Salman’s son Mohammed, who is defense minister, is in his 30s, too young to be seen as successor to the throne, but that could change.

    The main challenge before the new regime is to absorb the strategic changes expected to accompany the emerging nuclear agreement with Tehran, and the rapprochement between Iran and the United States. If and when sanctions on Iran are lifted, new oil will flow that is expected to grab an important share of the Saudi market. Saudi Arabia will also have to build up its influence in Syria and Iraq as a bulwark against Iranian power in those countries, especially if Iran proposes its own solution to the crisis in Syria.

  • Kuwait appoints new electricity minister - Politics & Economics - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/kuwait-appoints-new-electricity-minister-586415.html

    Ahmad Khaled Ahmad Al Jassar has been appointed as Kuwait’s electricity minister days after the former minister stepped down over a black-out.
    The former Kuwait Petroleum Corporation board member was sworn in at the Bayan Palace in front of Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Jaber Al Sabah, Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al Ahmad Al Jaber Al Sabah and Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al Mubarak Al Hamad Al Sabah.
    Abdulaziz Al Ibrahim resigned from the post last week, a month after a widespread power cut hit the Gulf state, although that was not formally given as the reason for his stepping down.
    Kuwait experienced a widespread power outage on February 11. At the time, Ibrahim had attributed the outage to a technical failure at a power station.

  • King says growth to continue as KSA unveils largest budget
    *Arab News - *26 December, 2014

    Saudi Arabia unveiled Thursday the largest budget in history for 2015, projecting spending at record SR860 billion, despite a sharp fall in oil prices. The budget projected revenue at SR715 billion showing a huge deficit of SR145 billion for the first time since 2011.

    Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah expressed optimism that the Kingdom would continue its economic growth, driven by private sector activity, integration of public and private sectors and improvement of private sector performance.

    Crown Prince Salman, deputy premier and minister of defense, chaired the Cabinet’s special budget session to approve the budget on behalf of King Abdullah.

    In his address to the nation on the occasion, King Abdullah said the expansionary budget was aimed at enhancing the citizens’ progress and prosperity and creating more job opportunities for them.

    In his keynote speech, which was delivered by the Cabinet’s Secretary-General Abdul Rahman Al-Sadhan, King Abdullah said the budget was aimed at boosting comprehensive and balanced development. “My brothers, you are well aware that the global economy is showing weakness in growth, in addition to what the global oil market is going through, which contributed to a significant drop in oil prices,” the king told citizens.

    “We have issued our directives to officials that the next year’s budget shall take into consideration these developments and rationalize expenditures, taking care of everything that serves citizens, improves services provided to them, implements strictly and efficiently the budget’s programs and projects.”

    King Abdullah said the Kingdom was seeking sustainability of strong public finances status, and giving priority in the next fiscal year for completing the implementation of projects approved in previous budgets, which are huge projects.

    King Abdullah said the government would continue to focus on education, address labor market imbalance to create more job opportunities for citizens and ensure optimal use of resources. The 2015 budget has allocated funds for three new universities.

    King Abdullah also urged citizens to preserve the country’s security and stability. He urged all ministers and officials to exert maximum efforts to implement the budget’s programs and projects efficiently and with quality to achieve its goals.

    Finance Minister Ibrahim Al-Assaf said the 2015 deficit would be covered by the country’s huge reserves from previous surpluses. Speaking to Saudi Television after presenting the budget, he said the government would continue spending actively on economic development projects “over the medium term.”

    Asked whether he meant three to five years, the minister replied: “Yes, over three to five years...The (economic) depth we have, God willing, will be enough until prices get better.”
    Al-Assaf said everybody expected prices to rise eventually but there was a difference over when; some people said the second half of next year while others said 2016.

    “We have the ability to endure low oil prices over the medium term,” he said. The Kingdom’s total cash reserves stood at SR1.492 trillion in October 2014 while its total reserves in assets amounted to SR2.78 trillion, enough to cover deficits of the size projected in 2015 for several years.

    The stock market reacted positively as the Tadawul All-Share Index rose 49.56 points or 0.57% to close at 8,749.34 points.

    The value of traded shares reached SR11.32 billion. Petrochemical industries index dropped 0.14% while industrial investment index rose 4.18% and hotel and tourism index was up 2.8%.

    Financial markets had feared the Kingdom might cut spending sharply, but the plan suggests Saudi authorities are confident of their ability to ride out a period of low oil prices and see no need for major austerity.

    Al-Assaf said the Kingdom would continue spending actively on economic development projects, social welfare and security despite the oil price slide and challenging conditions in the global economy.

    He said the Kingdom’s GDP was to reach SR2,821.7 ($ 752.5) billion by the end of 2014 with a growth rate of 1.09 percent compared to 2013. The nonoil GDP is estimated to grow 8.21 percent, whereas the nonoil public and private sectors 6.06 percent and 9.11 percent, respectively, and the oil sector to decline by 7.17 percent.

    Labor Minister Adel Fakeih said the new budget would accelerate growth and enhance welfare of citizens. “It also reflects the strength of Saudi economy and its ability to withstand challenges…It also gives the message that citizens are the real asset of the Kingdom and the driving force for growth.”

    Higher Education Minister Khaled Al-Sabti said the budget has allocated more than SR80 billion for higher education projects. “During the past 10 years there was 86 percent growth in number of universities, which has reached 28,” he said, adding that they accommodate over 1.5 million students.

    • D’autres réactions au budget saoudien

      New budget demonstrates strength of KSA economy | Arab News
      http://www.arabnews.com/economy/news/680211

      New budget demonstrates strength of KSA economy
      

      JEDDAH: ARAB NEWS
      Published — Saturday 27 December 2014
      Last update 26 December 2014 11:12 pm
      | | A A

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      The new budget demonstrates the strength of the Saudi economy to withstand the challenges posed by the global economic crisis, including the sharp drop in the crude prices, says Muhammad Al-Jaffri, deputy chairman of the Shoura Council.
      “The government of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah has spectacularly succeeded in making use of the financial surplus accumulated by the Kingdom, thanks to the high oil prices during the past years, in a strong fiscal reserve after employing the revenues for development in various provinces,” Al-Jaffri said in a statement, commending the new budget.
      The general budget for 2015, with an estimated expenditure outlay of SR 860 billion, reflects the soundness of the economic policies of the government, which adopted all necessary measures to fortify the country’s economy against the upheavals of recent times, including the tumbling price of oil, a major source of revenue for the Kingdom, he was quoted as saying in an SPA report.
      The budget signified the continuation of the government‘s current policies to spend generously for the development of human resources, which is the foundation for sustainable growth.
      The budget also stressed the improvement of the government sector’s performance, and integration of the private and public sectors besides rectification of the anomalies in the job market to generate plenty of job opportunities for the Saudis, he added.
       
      إعلان
      -00:26What’s this? inRead™ invented by Teads.tv

      “Allocation of SR 217 billion for the education sector accounting for 25 percent of the total budget reflects the central role assigned to the youth with the aim of establishing an outstanding educational structure to suit the needs of the job market. The budget also stresses advanced health care for the people with the allocation of SR 160 billion to the health sector,” Al-Jaffri said.
      “A close examination of the new budget reveals Custodian of Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah’s keenness to promote the careers and welfare of Saudi youths,” he said.
      Under royal directives, the development schemes give priority to youth empowerment with a focus on education, employment, social welfare and sports.
      Commenting on the budget, Basil Al-Ghalayini, CEO of BMG Financial Group, told Arab News: “After much speculation, the Saudi leadership has ruled out its counter cyclical budget by continuing its expansionary spending irrespective of oil prices. With huge cushion of financial reserves, the government can afford to finance its projected 2015 deficits if not borrowing from the international markets at competitive rates considering its AA rating.”
      He added: “Having said that, looking long term, there should be serious concerted efforts to speed up preparing other sectors to be reliable income generating beside oil revenues.”
      Al-Ghalayini said: “Considering its unique status as the host of the two holy mosques, a well-managed Islamic tourism could be a sizable and sustainable revenue driver for the economy.”
      According to SAMA, surging oil prices over the past decade helped Saudi Arabia boost its net foreign assets to a record SR2.9 trillion in October.

  • UAE pays Hamas hush money after attempting to facilitate Dahlan’s return
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/uae-pays-hamas-hush-money-after-attempting-facilitate-dahlan%E2%8

    Certainly, readers can be struck by such a paradox, and may not grasp why the UAE – a part of the anti-Muslim Brotherhood alliance – would fund Hamas, even if it did so through the security portal (ousted Fatah strongman Mohammed Dahlan is currently a security adviser for Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed).

    According to sources close to Hamas, “the UAE money is the price it paid to cover up the scandal of having sent an intelligence delegation to Gaza, along with its medical personnel, for security reasons that include delivering money to Dahlan supporters in order to cause unrest.”

    “Millions of dollars were seized from the UAE delegation which were brought to support some parties affiliated to Dahlan,” the sources told Al-Akhbar, without revealing the exact amount.

  • Indian Punchline - Reflections on foreign affairs
    http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar

    he invitation extended to attend the swearing-in ceremony of the newly elected Egyptian president Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi in Cairo on Sunday didn’t exactly come out of the blue. Tehran got five days to mull over the invitation and it decided to depute Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian, FO’s topmost diplomat on Arab affairs, to represent President Hassan Rouhani who was on a visit to Turkey. It’s been a measured response in diplomatic terms — appropriate but not effusive,
    (...)
    However, the highlight of Amir Abdollahian’s stay in Cairo was his meeting with the Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud. He later said the meeting was “constructive”. [ here : http://english.farsnews.com/print.aspx?nn=13930320001433].
    The meeting is a diplomatic scoop for Tehran.
    Riyadh has been flooding Tehran with invitations to senior Iranian officials to visit Saudi Arabia (including Foreign Minister Mohammad Zarif and Expediency Council chairman Hashemi Rafsanjani), but no visit has been worked out so far. Meanwhile, Tehran has been focusing on building up its ties with Saudi Arabia’s GCC partners as well as Turkey and Egypt.
    What does this rapid flow of events add up to? Clearly, in a nutshell, Middle Eastern politics is entering an altogether new era with Iran’s integration with the West. In sum, intra-regional politics has surged to the centre stage.
    There was a time when the US ensured that Egypt and Iran didn’t draw close together. From all appearance, the US’ influence has waned on the Nile banks. On the other hand, US diplomacy may be acquiring greater flexibility.
    The US’ bilateral talks with Iran this week in Geneva have reverberated all over the Middle East, including in Cairo. Meanwhile, the ‘Obama Doctrine’ is also at work. Nothing brings this out more vividly than that the Obama administration is quietly fostering a Saudi-Iranian normalization.
    With a successful visit by Rouhani to Ankara and the warming up of Iran-Egypt ties, it is about time Tehran gets around to mending relations with Riyadh. Conceivably, Amir Abdollahian’s meeting in Cairo with the Saudi Crown Prince aimed at preparing the ground for a pathbreaking visit by a senior Iranian official to Riyadh. To my mind, the Iranian-Saudi ‘thaw’ is on the cards, finally. The Middle Eastern politics is tiptoeing toward a paradigm shift.

    By M K Bhadrakumar – June 12, 2014

  • Salam and the Christians in government work to prevent presidential vacuum
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/salam-and-christians-government-work-prevent-presidential-vacuum

    A picture provided by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) shows Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud (R) meeting with Lebanese Prime Minister #Tammam_Salam in Jeddah during the latter’s visit to the kingdom on May 20, 2014. (Photo: AFP/HO/SPA) A picture provided by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) shows Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud (R) meeting with Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam in Jeddah during the latter’s visit to the kingdom on May 20, 2014. (Photo: AFP/HO/SPA)

    Since the presidential post will soon be vacant, the government of Prime Minister Tammam Salam will take center stage. Salam’s visit to #Saudi_Arabia will be the first step taken by the post-May-25-government. (...)

    #Opinion #Articles #Beshara_al-Rai #Free_Patriotic_Movement #King_Abdullah_bin_Abdul_Aziz #Lebanese_presidential_elections #Lebanon #Maronite #Michel_Aoun #Michel_Suleiman

  • Undermining the #Sudairi_clan: The king manages the power struggle
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/undermining-sudairi-clan-king-manages-power-struggle

    Saudi Crown #Prince_Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud speaks during the opening session of the Gulf Cooperation Council on May 14, 2014 in Jeddah, #Saudi_Arabia. (Photo: AFP-Mandel Ngan) Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud speaks during the opening session of the Gulf Cooperation Council on May 14, 2014 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Photo: AFP-Mandel Ngan)

    Since Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz was crowned king on August 2, 2005 as successor to his half brother Fahd bin Abdul Aziz - who died on July 31, 2005 - he designed a policy for himself aimed at changing the balance of power. He put new rules for the transfer of power stemming from a background that is clearly inconsistent with the direction of his primary competition, the (...)

    #Mideast_&_North_Africa #Allegiance_Commission #Articles #King_Abdul_Aziz #Prince_Nayef

  • Saudi Arabia joins the killer drone arms race | The Verge
    http://www.theverge.com/2014/4/25/5652804/saudi-arabia-has-joined-the-global-drone-arms-race

    Last week, Saudi Arabia bought its first drone fleet, according to a dispatch from Tactical Reports. Saudi Crown Prince Salman met with Chinese General Wang Guanzhong to sign a contract for a shipment of Chinese Wing Loong drones, also known as Pterodactyls. The drones that make up the shipment are designed to mimic America’s Predator drone, with surveillance capabilities and enough lift to carry two matched air-to-ground missiles.

  • Saudi crown prince slams banks for “giving little” to society
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/19354

    Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Muqrin Bin Abdulaziz speaks during the inauguration of the first Saudi Human Genome Project in the Middle East at the King Abdulaziz City for Science in Riyadh on December 8, 2013. (Photo: AFP - Fayez Nureldine)

    The second-in-line to the Saudi Arabian throne has denounced banks in the kingdom, saying they are contributing too little to society compared to what they take, Saudi media reported on Wednesday. There were no indications that the comments by Deputy Crown Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz, who was appointed to the post last month, would be followed by any concrete policies against banks in the oil-rich country. read (...)

    #finance #Saudi_Arabia #Top_News

  • Saudi Prince Muqrin named second-in-line to succeed king
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/saudi-prince-muqrin-named-second-line-succeed-king

    Saudi Arabia’s Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz, a former intelligence chief, has been appointed deputy crown prince, Saudi state television reported on Thursday, making it more likely he will one day become king. The appointment makes Muqrin, the youngest son of the kingdom’s founder King Abdulaziz al-Saud, next in line to succeed in the world’s top oil exporter after his half-brothers King Abdullah and Crown Prince Salman. read more

    #monarchy #Saudi_Arabia #Top_News

  • #Saudi_Arabia, #Bahrain, #UAE pull ambassadors from #Qatar
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/saudi-arabia-bahrain-uae-pull-ambassadors-qatar

    Crown Prince, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (2R) arrives at the airport in New Delhi on February 26, 2014. (Photo: AFP - Raveendran) Crown Prince, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (2R) arrives at the airport in New Delhi on February 26, 2014. (Photo: AFP - Raveendran)

    Updated 11:40 am: Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates recalled their ambassadors from Doha on Wednesday in protest at Qatar’s interference in their internal affairs, they announced in a joint statement. The statement said the move came “to protect their security and stability,” accusing Qatar of (...)

    #Top_News

  • Bahrain Urgently Needs Real Negotiations | Brian Dooley
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brian-dooley/bahrain-urgently-needs-re_b_4683011.html

    In his new book, Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War, former U.S Defense Secretary Bob Gates recounts how he tried to push the Bahrain ruling family towards reform in mid-March 2011: “I suggested to both the crown prince and the king that they find a new and different role for the prime minister, who was disliked by nearly everyone but especially the Shia; lift constraints on the media as well as on civil society and human rights groups;...move forward in integrating the Shia into the security services and the Bahrain defense force; and promote basic civil rights in the social, media and political arenas”. Gates concludes that his diplomacy was ’ineffective," and that although the crown prince was “the voice of reason...he was powerless”.

  • #Bahrain attempts to revive reconciliation talks
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/bahrain-attempts-revive-reconciliation-talks

    Bahrain’s crown prince has pulled reconciliation talks back from the brink by organizing a meeting with the opposition. The planned meeting, along with the appointment of a royal delegate and agreed topics for new talks, has raised some hope of progress. However, mistrust between the Shia majority and the ruling Sunni al-Khalifa family is still high three years after the government crushed pro-democracy protests and many Bahrainis regard these reconciliatory gestures with skepticism. read more

    #Top_News

  • Letter to Princess Victoria on Marx (1879)
    http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/bio/media/marx/79_01_31.htm

    In the course of conversation Carl Marx spoke several times both of Your Imperial Highness and of the Crown Prince and invariably with due respect and propriety. Even in the case of eminent individuals of whom he by no means spoke with respect there was no trace of bitterness or savagery — plenty acrid and dissolvent criticism but nothing of the Marat tone.

    Of the horrible things that have been connected with the International he spoke as any respectable man would have done.

    One thing which he mentioned showed the dangers to which exiles who have got a revolutionary name are exposed. The wretched man Nobiling, he had learned, had when in England intended to come to see him. If he had done so he said I should certainly have admitted him for he would have sent in his card as an employe of the Dresden Bureau of Statistics and as I occupy myself with Statistics it would have interested me to talk with him — What a pleasant position I should have been in he added if he had come to see me!

    #coïncidence #princesse #violence #Marx #statistiques via @prac_6

  • Les Etats Unis continuent de miser sur le Prince Héritier pour la réforme au Bahrein, accréditant la thèse du « bad cop/ good cop » au sein de la famille Khalifa. C’est certainement aussi une façon de reprendre la main après que leur accès au pouvoir se soit, aux dires des observateurs politiques, réduit.

    Obama urges ’meaningful reform’ in Bahrain - Americas - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2013/06/20136611456263506.html

    US President Barack Obama has called for “meaningful reform” and respect for universal rights in Bahrain, during talks with Crown Prince Salman at the White House.

    Obama dropped by Deputy National Security Adviser Tony Blinken’s meeting with the prince on Wednesday and stressed the importance of the US partnership in Bahrain and Washington’s support for its stability and security.

    Salman, a reputed moderate, has just been made Bahrain’s first deputy prime minister following months of tensions and unrest between the strategic archipelago’s Sunni government and Shiite majority.

    “The president emphasised US support for Bahrain’s stability and security,” National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said in a statement.

    Obama also stressed that “meaningful reform, dialogue and respect for universal human rights is the best path to achieving the peace and security that all Bahraini citizens deserve,” she said.

  • Mis à part le fait que ce sont des pactes de défense ’clé’ on n’en saura pas plus.

    Saudi Arabia and Turkey announce defense cooperation - Alarabiya.net English | Front Page
    http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2013/05/22/Saudi-Arabia-and-Turkey-announce-defense-cooperation.html

    Saudi Arabia and Turkey signed key defense pacts on Tuesday following a visit to Ankara by the Saudi Crown Prince Salman, deputy premier and minister of defense, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.

    Prince Salman was met with Turkish defense minister Ismet Yilmaz.

    Both officials “reviewed military cooperation relations between the two countries and ways of enhancing them and discussed the latest developments at the regional and international arenas,” the agency reported.

  • Ici on t’apprend à faire la différence entre vrai Printemps arabe et faux Printemps arabe : Our Friends in Manama - By Ronald E. Neumann
    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/04/19/united_states_interests_reform_bahrain

    But the calls for reform that began in 2011 have a long history in Bahrain, and almost everything else over the past couple of years is as disputed as it is complicated. There are disputes over whether the government was sincere in offering negotiations led by Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa. Did the opposition miss its best opportunity by rejecting talks and demanding that the government make extensive advance concessions? Or were the negotiations a government ploy to justify forceful suppression? The government’s narrative notes that it released prisoners, allowed exiles to return, and withdrew its forces from the streets until the demonstrators tried to close down central areas of the capital, Manama. The opposition notes deaths of protesters, claims it wants only democratic reform, and says that human rights violations continue in nightly raids on Shiite villages. But one thing is for sure: Bahrain differs markedly from other “Arab Spring” countries with which it is frequently lumped.

  • « Bernie Ecclestone strikes again with ’stupid’ remark in Bahrain »

    F1 supremo criticises Bahrain government over staging of race. Crown Prince laughs it off: ’It’s just Bernie being Bernie’

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2013/apr/20/bernie-ecclestone-bahrain-f1

    Bernie Ecclestone has a habit for maladroitness that has become more noticeable as each of his 82 years has passed. But he sounded alarm bells here when he seemingly called the Bahrain government “stupid” for staging a grand prix because of the opportunities it presented to pro-democracy protesters.

    It was another race and another gaffe for Formula One’s supremo, who once said Adolf Hitler got things done and who on Friday had suggested everything was OK in Bahrain but that, no, he wouldn’t be staging a race in Syria. (...)

    What he actually said to BBC Sport’s Dan Roan, who had asked him if the race had been politicised, was: “We believe the government were in a way really stupid to put this race on [because] it’s a platform for people to use for protesting.”

    Ecclestone added: “It [the race] is good. I don’t think it’s for us to decide the politics, good or bad. It’s a good circuit, a good race, and we think everybody’s happy so we’re here.”

    When his comments were later repeated in the paddock the country’s crown prince laughed them off: “It’s Bernie being Bernie,” said Prince Salman bin Hamad Isa al-Khalifa on his visit to the track. “I love Bernie and his quotes. I think it’s funny. I have a sense of humour. People will know he’s being sarcastic. I think it’s funny, and I can’t be thankful enough for his support.”

    #F1 #Bahreïn #contestation

  • Visite du PM de Bahrein à ses amis saoudiens :

    Bahrain and Saudi Arabia have reiterated strong support for each other’s stability and security as “firm and consistent positions within their policies”.

    The pledge was renewed during a one-day visit by Bahrain’s Prime Minister Prince Khalifa Bin Salman Al Khalifa to Riyadh for a meeting with Saudi Crown Prince Salman Bin Abdul Aziz.

    “HRH Prince Salman, the Crown Prince, Deputy Premier and Defence Minister reiterated the support of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to the Kingdom of Bahrain in all matters that preserve its security, stability and sovereignty,” Bahrain News Agency (BNA) reported. “HRH Prince Salman stressed that this support is a robust and steady position within the Saudi policy.”

    In a statement, Prince Khalifa said that Bahrain “stresses its firm and strong support to the sister state of Saudi Arabia on all measures it takes to preserve its security and boost its stability as it faces terrorism and endeavours to eradicate its roots”.

    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/bahrain/bahrain-saudi-arabia-reiterate-mutual-support-1.1167612

  • Le Prince Héritier commence-t-il à révolutionner les usages du gouvernement ? Un mois après sa nomination en tant que premier vice-premier ministre, il semble que les pratiques du gouvernement prennent un coup de jeune

    Bahrain on Sunday launched the official weekly cabinet press conference in which the spokesperson for the government informed the media about the session.

    The tradition had been that a press statement would be issued, attributed to a senior official carried by the official Bahrain News Agency (BNA) after the session ended.

    However, Sameera Bin Rajab, the state minister for information affairs and the spokesperson for the government, on Sunday started a new format and held a conference at the Gudhaibiya Palace where the cabinet holds its regular meetings every Sunday and read out the statement.

    Habib Toumi, Gulf News
    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/bahrain/bahrain-launches-weekly-media-briefing-of-cabinet-sessions-1.1167851

    • Un nouveau ministre d’état à l’Intérieur

      The King was speaking as he received newly-appointed Minister of State for Interior Affairs Major-General Adel bin Khalifa Al Fadhel who took his oath of office, in the presence of His Royal Highness Prime Minister Prince Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa and His Royal Highness Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, Crown Prince, Deputy Supreme Commander and First Deputy Premier.

      Maj-Gen Al Fadhel graduated from Kuwait College of Police with a BA degree in Law. He was appointed National Security Agency deputy chief on November 28, 2011, and confirmed in his position with the rank of a minister on December 27.

      Gulf Daily News
      http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=351019

    • Visites aux ministères : -de concert avec son oncle

      The Premier underscored the importance of field visits in fast-tracking government work, pointing out his recent visit to the Health Ministry and his inauguration of the new intensive care unit at Salmaniya Medical Complex. He also highlighted his visit to the Municipalities and Urban Planning Affairs Ministry, where he was briefed on plans to renovate old buildings.

      He praised the Crown Prince’s visits to several ministries, and directed officials to follow up quickly on issues.

      The Premier commended the Crown Prince’s initiative of launching communication with government members via e-mails.

      http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=351010

  • Si quelqu’un l’un ou l’une de vous cherche un petit pied-à-terre à Londres, une occasion à ne pas rater

    UK house price record : Hyde Park super-mansion on sale for £300m | Mail Online
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2202491/UK-house-price-record-Hyde-Park-super-mansion-sale-300m.html

    45-bedroom home used to belong to Rafiq #Hariri, the late Lebanese PM
    It has come on the market following the death of owner Sultan bin Abdulaziz, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia
    It is on sale for £300million and being offered to a select list of wealthy international buyers
    Current UK house price record is £140million for Park Place near Henley

  • Statement by the President on the Selection of Prince Nayif bin Abd al-Aziz as Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia | The White House
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/10/28/statement-president-selection-prince-nayif-bin-abd-al-aziz-crown-prince-

    I congratulate King Abdullah and the Saudi people on the selection of Prince Nayif bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud as Crown Prince and Deputy Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

    Oui, félicitations au «peuple séoudien», hein, des fois qu’il ait eu le choix.

    • Pour l’instant, je n’ai trouvé mention de ce haut fait d’arme que dans l’article du Wall Street Journal :

      Saudi Crown Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al Saud - WSJ.com
      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204485304576646451188968760.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

      The largest of these, the 1988 $70 billion al-Yamama contract, was at the time described as the largest contract in history, but was later the subject of corruption probes in the U.K. and U.S.

      Sultan was not himself named in these investigations, but they did encompass close members of his family and former diplomats in Riyadh said Sultan had a reputation for profiting on defense deals.

    • Le même article du WSJ est également l’un des rares que l’on pourra lire aujourd’hui rappelant le rôle de Sultan dans la guerre contre l’Irak de 1991, et l’implication séoudienne au Yémen.

      Three years after al-Yamama, Sultan was instrumental in agreeing to use the kingdom as a launch pad for Western forces in the 1991 Gulf War. That decision cemented the strongest ever period of Saudi-U.S. relations. But the presence of foreign troops in the Arabian Peninsula – the cradle of Islam – was later cited by al-Qaeda as the basis for its quarrel with both Washington and the Al Saud.

      The defense ministry has since come to be seen as Sultan’s personal fiefdom. It looks likely to be inherited by his son, Prince Khaled bin Sultan, a long-time deputy defense minister and commander of Saudi forces during the 1991 hostilities.

      Another son, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, was Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the U.S. for 22 years, forging close relations with both President George H.W. Bush and President George W. Bush.

      As minister, Sultan oversaw the kingdom’s participation in North Yemen’s bloody civil war of the 1960s that pitted Saudi-backed monarchists against a new military regime supported by revolutionary Egypt.

      He maintained a strong relationship with powerful Yemeni figures, and dominated the kingdom’s Yemen policy, until his illness. Sultan’s temper was sometimes fiery, said foreign officials of the 1960s, but his habit of working long into the night earned him the nickname “bulbul” or “nightingale”. It was during this period that he acquired a reputation for acquiring the latest in military technology for the kingdom.