China and Saudi Arabia Sign Strategic Partnership as Xi Visits
Kingdom
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Saudi
moves closer to China, loosens tie with USA?
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Grand
welcome to Xi in Riyadh, bigger show compared to Biden Visit to Jeddah
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Huawei
Welcome to Saudi
The Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s trip to Saudi Arabia
showcases Beijing’s growing ties with the kingdom, a longtime
American ally that is seeking greater self-reliance.
Saudi Arabia and
China signed a strategic partnership agreement on Thursday during a visit by
the Chinese leader Xi Jinping to the kingdom, underlining the growing ties
between Beijing and a longstanding American ally that is seeking greater self-reliance.
Mr. Xi held talks
with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 37, the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia,
in the first of a series of summits planned for the Chinese president’s
three-day visit. After his bilateral meetings with Saudi officials, Mr. Xi is expected
to attend twin summits with leaders from other Gulf, Arab and African
countries, including Egypt, Djibouti and Iraq. The Palestinian Authority
president, Mahmoud Abbas, is also expected to join.
“This will be the
largest and highest-level diplomatic event between China and the Arab world
since the founding of the People’s Republic of China,” a Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman, Mao Ning, told reporters on Wednesday. “It will be an
epoch-making milestone in the history of China-Arab relations.”
Saudi Arabia has long
been a close ally of the United States, but its ties to China have been
strengthening rapidly, turning what was once a mostly oil-based relationship
into a more complex one involving arms sales, technology transfers and
infrastructure projects. That shift predates the leadership of Prince Mohammed,
who became heir to the throne in 2017: China eclipsed the United States as
Saudi Arabia’s main trading partner years ago.
But Prince Mohammed
has accelerated efforts to diversify Saudi Arabia’s alliances, trying to move
beyond its reliance on the United States as its main security guarantor and
weapons supplier to forge a more independent path.
Some of that is
because of growing perceptions among officials, scholars and businesspeople in
Saudi Arabia and the broader Middle East that the United States has lost
interest in their region and is a superpower in long-term decline.
“I still think that
the world is living within an American international security order,” though it
is “stumbling quite frequently,” said Mohammed Alyahya,
a Saudi fellow at the Belfer Center
for Science and International Affairs at Harvard. “The worry is what will come
in five years or 10 years.”
Saudi Arabia’s ties
with the United States have been especially strained in the past few years,
with President Biden pledging on the campaign trail to treat the kingdom like a
“pariah” and pressing Prince Mohammed about the murder of Jamal
Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and Saudi citizen killed by Saudi
agents in Istanbul in 2018.
Early in his
administration, Mr. Biden released a U.S. intelligence report that said Prince
Mohammed had most likely ordered the killing — a charge the crown prince
denies. More recently, the two countries have clashed over a decision to cut
oil production by the OPEC Plus cartel, which Saudi Arabia effectively leads.
The official Saudi
Press Agency reported that King Salman of Saudi Arabia and Mr. Xi had met and
signed a “comprehensive strategic partnership” agreement, without providing
further details.
Under the agreement,
the two sides agreed to hold meetings between their heads of state every two
years, according to the Chinese news agency Xinhua. Beijing also agreed to list
Saudi Arabia as a destination for group travel and to expand cultural and
people-to-people exchanges, Mr. Xi said on Thursday during his talks with
Prince Mohammed.
Other pacts signed by
officials during the state visit included a memorandum of understanding on
hydrogen energy and an “alignment plan” between China’s Belt and Road
Initiative and Saudi Arabia’s economic
diversification program, the Saudi Press Agency report said.
Upon arrival on
Wednesday, Mr. Xi was met by a grander reception than Mr. Biden received in
July, when the American president visited the coastal city of Jeddah, partly in
a bid to repair ties
with the Saudi government.
Footage of Mr. Xi’s
reception on Wednesday showed jets flying overhead with smoke trails in the red
and yellow colors of the Chinese flag.
On Thursday, he was taken
to the palatial royal court, where his car, a luxury Chinese sedan, was
escorted by horse riders carrying Saudi and Chinese flags. Prince Mohammed
greeted him with a warm handshake, contrasting with Mr. Biden’s greeting of a
fist bump.
The crown prince’s
moves to deepen relationships with countries like China, Russia and South Korea
are partly driven by his desire to establish Saudi Arabia a power in its own
right, rather than an expectation that any of them could replace the United
States. In that context, the pomp and circumstance around Mr. Xi’s visit is as
much a signal to his domestic and regional audiences as it is to the United
States. Many officials in the Gulf are preparing for what they believe is an
emerging multipolar world, in which the United States no longer plays as
central a role as it has since World War II.
“The American
hegemony today over the international order won’t continue, in my estimation,”
Anwar Gargash, a diplomatic adviser to the president
of the neighboring United Arab Emirates, said at a
public lecture earlier this year. “China has become a central economic player,
a central technological player, a very important political actor.”
Prince Mohammed wants
to diversify the oil-dependent kingdom’s economy, develop a civilian nuclear
program and build a robust local defense industry.
Securing technology and know-how from China is key to those goals, and Saudi
pundits often compare the kingdom’s economic transformation to China’s decades
ago.
ٍSaudi and
Chinese companies signed 34 agreements on Wednesday in fields including
information technology, genetics, mining, hydrogen energy and manufacturing.
One Saudi firm partnered with a Chinese company to set up an electric vehicle
plant in the kingdom.
Huawei, the telecommunications
conglomerate targeted by American sanctions, signed a memorandum of
understanding with a Saudi government ministry, partly to enable Huawei to
build a data center in the kingdom.