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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 11, 2015
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman skipping Camp David summit
Secretary
of State John F. Kerry with Saudi Arabia's King Salman in Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia, on May 7. (Pool photo by Andrew Harnik/via Reuters)
King Salman of Saudi Arabia, a key ally of the United States, will not
attend a summit this week at Camp David called to address security
concerns among Persian Gulf nations about a potential nuclear deal with
Iran, the Saudi foreign minister said Sunday.
In a statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency, Foreign Minister Adel
al-Jubeir attributed Salman’s decision to skip Thursday’s summit to the five-day cease-fire in the bombing campaign against Houthi rebels in Yemen, slated to begin Tuesday night.
American officials said the king’s absence at the summit did not signal
any displeasure with security assurances the United States is preparing
to offer the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council at Camp David.
But the Saudi announcement represented an abrupt about-face and came as a
surprise after Secretary of State John F. Kerry was assured of the
king’s attendance when he met with Saudi officials last week in Riyadh
and Paris. As recently as Friday, when Kerry and Jubeir jointly
announced the cease-fire in Riyadh, Salman was expected to lead the
Saudi delegation to Camp David.
A senior administration official said that Jubeir confirmed to Kerry on
Friday afternoon in Paris that Salman was coming to Washington and that
the king had ended his meeting with Kerry on Thursday in Riyadh saying,
“I’ll see you next week.”
A senior State Department official said the Saudis notified them of a
possible change of plans Friday night. On Saturday, the Saudis confirmed
that the king would not be coming, the official said.
The official denied that the king’s decision to stay home was a
brushoff. “There is zero tension,” the official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity to comment openly about the summit preparations.
“In fact, the relationship is as strong as it has been in quite some
time. Our understanding is that the Saudis and other GCC leaders are
quite pleased with U.S. positions and the substance of Camp David,
including any assistance we are going to provide.”
A person close to the Saudi government, speaking on the condition of
anonymity, said the decision was a combination of the situation in Yemen
and what is to be the “technical nature” of the conversations about
Iran at the summit, which the king felt the senior officials in the
delegation, led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, and including
Defense Minister Prince Mohammed bin Salman, were better equipped to
handle.
“They did not mean it as a snub,” the person close to the Saudi government said. “They were not trying to send a message.”
Another senior administration official said Washington and Riyadh had
worked closely to coordinate the timing of the announcement.
“We look forward to the attendance of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef,
with whom the President has met on several occasions, including in the
Oval Office in December 2014 and January 2013, as well as Deputy Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who the president met when he traveled to
Riyadh in January,” the official said.
Still, the sudden change of plans, and the king’s disinclination to come
to an intimate setting like Camp David, gave the appearance of Saudi
displeasure.
“The president was opening up his private retreat to leaders who felt he
didn’t have their back, and he was going to make a personal connection
with them,” Jon B. Alterman, who directs the Middle East program at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, said by e-mail.
“. . . It suggests disappointment at minimum, and perhaps underlying
anger that the president doesn’t understand their position and doesn’t
want to.”
Jean-Francois Seznec, who teaches gulf politics at John Hopkins
University’s School of Advanced International Studies, said Mohammed bin
Nayef representing the kingdom “only underlines that he is really the
strong person in the country just now.”
“In other words, I do not think this is a snub,” Seznec added. “I think
on the other hand that it is a proof that the Saudis want substantive
talks.”
The Saudi announcement reduced to two the heads of state of the
six-member Gulf Cooperation Council who plan to attend. Sheikh Khalifa
bin Zayed al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates has been in ill health
and will be represented by Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed. Sultan Qaboos
bin Said of Oman has also been ill for some time and will be
represented by the Omani prime minister.
This weekend, King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa of Kuwait also said he would be represented by that country’s crown prince.
Among the Persian Gulf countries, Saudi Arabia has expressed the most
concern over Iran’s spreading influence in the region. A Saudi-led
coalition has been conducting air strikes against the Shiite Houthi
rebels in Yemen, and Saudi officials have said they think the Iranians
are the Houthis’ primary backers.
On Friday, Jubeir declined to provide details about what assurances the
Saudis were seeking, though they are believed to want written guarantees
and to be allowed to purchase advanced weapons systems.
Kerry spoke only vaguely of what the United States is prepared to offer,
saying the talks Friday involved “fleshing out a series of new
commitments that will create between the U.S. and GCC a new security
understanding, a new set of security initiatives that will take us
beyond anything that we have had before.”
The gulf countries have been wary about the nuclear talks underway
between the United States and five other world powers. The talks are in
their final stage, aiming toward a deal that would curb Iran’s ability
to build nuclear weapons in exchange for lifting sanctions. The concern
in the gulf states, which are Sunni, is that Iran would use the infusion
of cash that would accompany an easing of sanctions to expand its
influence in the region even further. The talks face a deadline of June
30.
Juliet Eilperin contributed to this report.
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