From Yahoo:
“Iraq, Saudi
reopen land border after 30 years”
Iraq and Saudi
Arabia on November 18, 2020 reopened the Arar desert crossing, a long-awaited
sign of closer trade ties after 30 years of sealed land borders between the two
countries Iraq and Saudi Arabia on Wednesday reopened their land border for the
first time in 30 years, with closer trade ties between the two countries irking
allies of Riyadh's rival, Tehran. Top officials including Iraq's interior
minister and the head of its border commission travelled from Baghdad to
formally open the Arar crossing. They met up with a delegation who had joined
them from Riyadh, all in masks, and cut a red ribbon at the border crossing as
a line of cargo trucks waited behind them.
Arar will be
open to both goods and people for the first time since Riyadh cut off its diplomatic
relationship with Baghdad in 1990, following Iraqi ex-dictator Saddam Hussein's
invasion of Kuwait. Ties have remained rocky ever since, but current Iraqi
Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi has a close personal relationship with Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Kadhemi was to travel to Saudi Arabia on his
first foreign trip as prime minister in May, but the visit was cancelled at the
last minute when Saudi King Salman was hospitalised. He has yet to make the
trip, although Iraqi ministers have visited Riyadh to meet with their
counterparts and a top-level Saudi delegation travelled to Baghdad last week. Baghdad
sees Arar as a potential alternative to its crossings with eastern neighbour
Iran, through which Iraq brings in a large share of its imports. The two Arab
states are also exploring the reopening of a second border point at Al-Jumayma,
along Iraq's southern border with the Saudi kingdom.
- 'Let them
invest' - But pro-Iran factions in Iraq, which call themselves the
"Islamic Resistance," have stood firmly against closer ties with
Saudi Arabia. Ahead of Arar's opening, one such group identifying itself
as Ashab al-Kahf published a statement announcing its "rejection of the
Saudi project in Iraq". "The intelligence cadres of the
Islamic Resistance are following all the details of the Saudi enemy's
activities on the Iraqi border," it warned. Speaking to reporters
on Tuesday evening, Kadhemi fired back against those describing the
rapprochement as Saudi "colonialism". "This is a lie.
It's shameful," he said. "Let them invest. Welcome to
Iraq," Kadhemi added, saying Saudi investment could bring in a flood of
new jobs to Iraq where more than one-third of youth are unemployed.
The closer ties
have been a long time coming. They did not improve much after Saddam's
toppling in the 2003 US-led invasion, as Riyadh looked at the new
Shiite-dominated political class with suspicion due to their ties to Iran. A
thaw began in 2017 when then Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir travelled to
Baghdad -- the first such visit in decades -- followed by a Riyadh trip by
Iraqi premier Haider al-Abadi. The first commercial flights resumed
between the two countries and officials began discussing Arar, with
high-profile US diplomat Brett McGurk even visiting the crossing in 2017 to
support its reopening. But those plans were repeatedly delayed, with
Arar only opened on rare occasions to allow through Iraqi religious pilgrims on
their way to Mecca for the hajj.
- More in
the works? - Iraq is the second-largest producer in the OPEC oil cartel,
outranked only by Saudi Arabia. Its oil, gas and electricity
infrastructure is severely outdated and inefficient but low oil prices this
year have stymied efforts to revamp it. Baghdad is also notoriously slow
to activate external investment, with international firms and foreign countries
complaining that rampant corruption hamstrings more investment. Kadhemi's
government has sought to fast-track foreign investment including Saudi support
for energy and agriculture. On his trip to Washington this summer, he
agreed to a half-dozen projects that would use Saudi funding to finance US
energy firms. Last year, Iraq signed a deal to plug into the Gulf
Cooperation Council's power grid and add up to 500 MW of electricity to its
dilapidated electricity sector. Those deals too have been criticised by
pro-Iran factions in Iraq.
^ It’s good to
see Iraq expand it’s international ties to other countries besides Iran. Iran
has long dominated everything inside Iraq as well as the rest of the Middle East
and hopefully that is now being challenged. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/iraq-saudi-reopen-land-border-111418685.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.