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China, Saudi Arabia eye $65 billion in deals as king visits

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Saudi Arabia and China sign agreements worth about $65 billion

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Reuters, BeijingThursday, 16 March 2017

China and Saudi Arabia on Thursday signed memorandums of understanding and letters of intent potentially worth about $65 billion during Saudi King Salman’s visit to Beijing, a senior Chinese diplomat said.

Deputy Chinese Foreign Minister Zhang Ming said the agreements involved investment, energy, space and other areas, but did not give details. King Salman, who has overseen the launch of an ambitious economic reform plan since his accession two years ago, is on a month-long Asian tour.

The visits to countries that are some of world’s fastest growing importers of Saudi oil aim to promote investment opportunities in the kingdom, including the sale of a stake in its giant state firm Saudi Aramco.

Chinese President Xi Jinping told Salman his visit showed the importance he attached to relations with China. “This visit will push forward and continue to improve the quality of our relations and bear new fruit,” Xi said.

China’s Middle East engagement
A visit to Beijing by King Salman is highlighting China’s budding engagement with the Middle East, which provides a crucial source of energy to fuel its economy and represents a key component in Beijing’s bid to link China to Europe through infrastructure development.

Salman was holding talks Thursday with President Xi Jinping following a formal welcoming ceremony. His visit is part of a month-long swing through Asia that has included stops in Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei and Japan in a push to develop a less oil-dependent growth strategy.

Beijing is rolling out a trade and investment initiative across Central Asia and the Middle East called “One Belt One Road” and sees Saudi Arabia as a regional linchpin. King Salman is next due to visit the Indian Ocean island nation of the Maldives. Along with Japan, he earlier visited Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.

Projects under development
In opening remarks at their meeting, Xi said he looked forward to discussing projects under development, and said results so far “have surpassed our expectations.” Security ties between the two have also grown significantly, with the Saudi air force deploying Chinese unmanned attack drones and the two militaries holding joint counter-terrorism exercises in western China.

Chinese navy vessels have also visited the Saudi port of Jeddah as part of increasingly active maneuvers in the Gulf of Aden. Chinese officials say their overriding security interest in the Middle East is to prevent ethnic Uighur fighters who have left western China and joined militant groups in Syria and Iraq from returning to strike at China.

Xi has signaled his desire to play a bigger role in the region as part of China’s quest for resources, markets and increased global influence on a par with its economic heft. In a major speech before the Arab League in Cairo last year, Xi indirectly alluded to how the US presence had waned and how China hoped to present an alternative.

“Instead of looking for a proxy in the Middle East, we promote peace talks,” Xi said. “Instead of attempting to fill the vacuum, we build a cooperative partnership network for win-win outcomes.”



Next week Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits China.
 
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china can become a key peace keeper in the region with cpec it has signaled its interest in middle east now
 
china can become a key peace keeper in the region with cpec it has signaled its interest in middle east now

What you expect may happens 50 years later. China now even can't guarantee Korean peninsula and SCS hundred percent peace, hardly can extend resources to middle east. Let's America and Russia play there as usual.
 
* King seeking investments after launching reforms

* Saudi Arabia, China looking at refinery, petrochemical projects

* China trying to play "honest broker" role in Middle East-diplomat

I would advise:

*Do business but buy less oil to reduce dependency and diversify.

*Never allow the KSA (or any others, for that matter, including the Vatican) to establish any financial/political linkages on the basis of religious ideology

*Never get involved deeply in the Peace Process. Do the vetoing at the UNSC, but that's it. No physical involvement in any crisis situation outside the purview of the UN.

***
 
The world’s largest oil producer seeks to boost sales to world’s second-largest oil market

PUBLISHED : Thursday, 16 March, 2017, 4:05pm
UPDATED : Thursday, 16 March, 2017, 11:43pm

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China and Saudi Arabia yesterday signed US$65 billion worth of deals during Saudi King Salman’s visit to Beijing, at a time when China is expanding its influence in the Middle East and seeking Riyadh’s support for its “One Belt, One Road” trade scheme.

Deputy Foreign Minister Zhang Ming said the agreements involved investment, energy, space and other areas.

A statement posted later on Saudi state news agency SPA said the documents included a plan for the kingdom to participate in China’s Chang’e-4 moon mission and a partnership agreement for manufacturing drones.

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The two leaders also witnessed the signing of agreements in energy, culture, education, and technology, according to a statement released by the foreign ministry.

President Xi Jinping was quoted in the statement as saying that China welcomed Saudi Arabia as a “global partner” in its belt and road initiative, which aims to boost trade and connectivity among nations from Asia to Africa.

China was a “stable export market” for Saudi Arabia’s crude oil, Xi added.

The visit to China came as the Saudi king wrapped up a month-long tour of Asia that took him to Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan and China.

Saudi king’s visit puts Beijing in Middle East spotlight

Chinese analysts said the king’s Asia tour, topped by his China visit, showed that Riyadh was “looking east” in its diplomacy amid uncertainties under the Donald Trump administration in the US and China’s more active approach in the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia was China’s biggest oil supplier until last year, when it was replaced by Russia.

Despite its reliance on the region for oil, China has traditionally limited its participation in the Middle East.

What King Salman’s grand tour of Asia says about Saudi Arabia’s new priorities

Beijing’s recent decision to side with Russia in vetoing a UN resolution on Syria sanctions has put the spotlight on Beijing’s role in trying to end Syria’s six years of civil war, where Saudi Arabia has been supporting rebel groups that are fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad .

“There is a need for Saudi Arabia to shift its focus to Asia, as Trump’s Middle East policy has yet to take shape,” said Li Guofu, a Middle East specialist with the China Institute of International Studies.

Li said Saudi Arabia would still rely on the US for security, but that Riyadh had realised that it could no longer “put all of its eggs in one basket”.

Additional reporting by Reuters


This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as:
China and Saudi Arabia sign US$65b in deals

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/poli...di-arabia-sign-us65-billion-deals-king-salman
 
Whooping USD 65 billion wow :woot::cheesy:
...a lot of people in white house and EU will get heart burns on this news...so Burnol is in high demand required...That may become a one of the historic turns in the middle east.... So Asia's wealth will stay in Asia...future really belong to Asia now :)
 
Whooping USD 65 billion wow :woot::cheesy:
...a lot of people in white house and EU will get heart burns on this news...so Burnol is in high demand required...That may become a one of the historic turns in the middle east.... So Asia's wealth will stay in Asia...future really belong to Asia now :)
And, add CPEC, Raheel Pasha commanding 40-nation force, Pak brigade in KSA etc.....
 
Whooping USD 65 billion wow :woot::cheesy:
...a lot of people in white house and EU will get heart burns on this news...so Burnol is in high demand required...That may become a one of the historic turns in the middle east.... So Asia's wealth will stay in Asia...future really belong to Asia now :)

$65 billion is enormous indeed, though it's also quite expected, considering the huge potential of future China-Saudi cooperation.

Looking for more of the same in the near future. :cheers:
 
Whooping USD 65 billion wow :woot::cheesy:
...a lot of people in white house and EU will get heart burns on this news...so Burnol is in high demand required...That may become a one of the historic turns in the middle east.... So Asia's wealth will stay in Asia...future really belong to Asia now :)
$200 billion investments with the US in the next 4 years..Only the EU might get heart burns..

$65 billion is enormous indeed, though it's also quite expected, considering the huge potential of future China-Saudi cooperation.

Looking for more of the same in the near future. :cheers:
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$200 billion investments with the US in the next 4 years..Only the EU might get heart burns..
The problem is not what they have got or will get but their eyes are on what they didn't get or why China got...otherwise both China and KSA have huge investments in USA.
 
The problem is not what they have got or will get but their eyes are on what they didn't get or why China got...otherwise both China and KSA have huge investments in USA.
The $200 billion comprises The US investments in KSA too, both will invest in each other's markets..
They surely understand by now that KSA is diversifying its investments, arms procurements and strategies..
 

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