By the time Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken wrapped up a visit to Saudi Arabia on Thursday, he and Saudi officials had discussed cooperation on a smorgasbord of issues: Iran, Sudan, the Islamic State, regional infrastructure, clean energy and the potential normalization of Saudi-Israel relations.
Mr. Blinken gave effusive remarks on the work being done at a news conference in Riyadh: “It is critical for expanding opportunity and driving progress for our people and for people around the world.”It was the type of bonhomie that American officials usually reserve for close allies.
Mr. Blinken’s three-day visit to Saudi Arabia, which included a meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the nation’s de facto leader, is the most obvious effort yet by the Biden administration to move past the hostility that President Biden expressed at the prince and his government last fall.
The blowup took place after Saudi officials cut oil production despite a perception by U.S. officials that they had agreed to increase it.
Mr. Biden vowed to impose “consequences.” But in the months since, the president and his top aides have come to accept what they see as a hard reality of the new geopolitical landscape, say analysts and people familiar with U.S. officials’ discussions: that Washington cannot afford to alienate powerful partners if it intends to compete with China and Russia across the globe.
Persons:
Antony J, Blinken, Blinken’s, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Biden
Organizations:
Saudi, Crown, U.S
Locations:
Saudi Arabia, Iran, Sudan, Islamic State, Saudi, Israel, Riyadh, “, Washington, China, Russia