The US
president has visited Saudi Arabia, where he offered his condolences for the
late king. Obama also held his first formal talks with the newly enthroned King
Salman.
Deutsche Welle, 27 Jan 2015
President
Barack Obama was in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh on Tuesday, leading an
array of current and former US statesmen to pay their respects to late King
Abdullah and to hold talks with his brother, the new King Salman (pictured).
The US
dignitaries, some of whom flew in separately from Obama, included current
Secretary of State John Kerry and several prominent Republicans including
Condoleezza Rice and James Baker II, both former secretaries of state, and
Senator John McCain. CIA head John Brennan was also in attendance.
Air Force
One landed at King Khalid International Airport, where the president and first
lady, Michelle Obama, disembarked onto red carpet to a Saudi welcoming
delegation that included King Salman and his younger half-brother Muqrin, the
heir to the throne. In stark contrast to the niqab, or face veil, and long
black abaya worn by Saudi women in public, Michelle Obama left her hair
uncovered and wore dark blue slacks.
The two
leaders talked privately for about an hour, and the discussion focused mainly
on security issues, such as sectarian divisions in Iraq, the campaign against
the "Islamic State" jihadists, the precarious situation in Yemen and
support for the Syrian opposition fighting President Bashar al Assad.
The
situation in Syria has at times strained relations between the two nations, as
Saudi Arabia, like most governments in the area, wishes to get rid of the Assad
regime. The late Abdullah had more than once pressed the US to take more
aggressive action to force Assad from power.
Humans
rights issue not on the agenda
Obama had
to cut short his trip to India for the Riyadh meeting, but before he left he
defended the government's willingness to cooperate so closely with Saudi Arabia
despite human rights concerns. Obama told a CNN reporter that he felt the best
course was to apply steady pressure about human rights "even as we are
getting business done that needs to get done."
"Sometimes
we need to balance our need to speak to them about human rights issues with
immediate concerns we have in terms of counterterrorism or dealing with
regional stability," the president said. The talks with King Salman are
likely to cover the ongoing crises in Syria and Yemen.
He added
that he would not be raising US concerns over the flogging of liberal blogger
Raif Badawi, who was sentenced to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes for
insulting Islam: "On this visit, obviously a lot of this is just paying
respects to King Abdullah, who in his own fashion presented some modest reform
efforts within the kingdom."
After his
conversation with King Salman, an official speaking anonymously said the
president had "raised the issue of human rights with the king but did not
discuss specific cases."
Abdullah
died at the age of 90 on Friday. was attended by several region leaders, with
Western leaders and dignitaries coming in over the following days to offer
their condolences and meet the newly enthroned 79-year-old Salman.
Despite
occasionally deep ideological differences between the two nations, Saudi Arabia
is a key US ally in the region.
es/kms (AP, AFP)
![]() |
Barack and
Michelle Obama meet a Saudi delegation including King Salman
bin Abdulaziz Al
Saud (far right) on Tuesday. Photograph: Saudi Press Agency/EPA
|
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