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Former Saudi foreign minister Saud Al Faisal dies

July 9, 2015

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Prince Saud Al Faisal

Saudi ex-Foreign Minister Saud Al Faisal dead at 75
Prince Saud was world’s longest-serving top diplomat

Saudi Arabia's former Foreign Minister, Prince Saud Al-Faisal, has died on Thursday, family members and a foreign ministry spokesman said late Thursday.

AFP has reported that a nephew of the former Saudi diplomat has confirmed the death.

"May God accept him in paradise," the prince's nephew Saud Mohammed al-Abdullah al-Faisal said on Twitter.

Prince Saud, 75, was the world's longest-serving top diplomat. He was replaced on April 29 by Adel Al Jubeir, the then Saudi ambassador to Washington, who took over the portfolio after Prince Saud relinquished it for health reasons.

Astute diplomat

Prince Saud was born in 1940 and was the world’s longest-serving foreign minister, having stepped down in April after 40 years.

The astute diplomat had developed a reputation for his formidable intellect on the world stage.

When he was appointed in October 1975, the region was dominated by Cold War rivalries, and secular pan-Arab nationalism seemed to be the future.

Egypt and Israel had not yet made peace, and Yasser Arafat led the Palestine Liberation Organisation from shell-pocked refugee camps in Lebanon. Iran's shah still ruled from his Peacock Throne, while in Iraq a young Saddam Hussein was plotting his path to power.

During his tenure, he saw Israel invade Lebanon in 1978, 1982 and 2006, the eruption of Palestinian intifadas in 1987 and 2000, Iraq's invasions of Iran in 1980 and Kuwait in 1990, and the occupation of Iraq by a U.S.-led coalition in 2003.

Riyadh's relationship with Saddam, which went from wary support during the Iran-Iraq war to fierce enmity after the invasion of Kuwait, dominated foreign policy for long periods during Prince Saud's tenure.

For four dacades, Prince Saud was at the forefront of Saudi diplomacy and took the Kingdom’s message of peace across the length and breadth of the planet.

Apart of Arabic, Prince Saud spoke several languages, including English, French, Italian, German and Spanish.

Prince Saud was imbued with an intense desire for knowledge.

Education
His quest for knowledge led him to the prestigious Princeton University in the United States, where he earned a degree in economics and became a member of the exclusive Ivy League club.

He is considered one of the oldest ministers of foreign affairs in the world, where he took office in 1975 and stayed in office until April 29 2015.

He joined the Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, where he worked as an economic adviser to the Ministry and a member of the Higher Coordinating Committee of the ministry. He was then transferred to the General Organization for Petroleum and Minerals' Petromin 'and became responsible for the petroleum Relations Office, which oversees the relationship coordination between the Ministry and Petromin'

He was appointed deputy director for planning affairs of Petromin in 1970 and Undersecretary of the Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources in 1971.

Timeline
1940 - Prince Saud, a son of King Faisal, was born in 1940 in Taif near Makkah

1964 - Received his Bachelor’s degree in economics from Princeton University, in New Jersey. That same year, Prince Saud became a consultant to the Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources and a member of its High Coordination Committee.

1970 - Appointed deputy governor of the General Organization for Petroleum and Mineral Resources (Petromin)

1971 - Named Deputy Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, a post he kept until 1975

October 1975 - King Khaled asked him to become minister of foreign affairs at a time when the consequences of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War resonated strongly through the Middle East. He then highlighted the Kingdom’s concern over the plight of the Palestinian people.

1989 - He helped negotiate the agreement in Makkah that ended Lebanon's 15-year civil war.

2001 – The prince was grieved to hear of the terrorist attack on Sept. 11, 2001, even more so when he learned about the number of Saudis involved. He said then: “You must understand how shocking it was for Saudi Arabia to have heard the news that 15 Saudis were part of that.” He also let the world know about the distinction Saudis draw between the true Islam and the murderous acts perpetrated by Al-Qaeda.

2002 - Prince Faisal launched King Abdullah's biggest foreign policy initiative, an Arab plan for peace with Israel in return for a withdrawal from all occupied land and a resolution of the refugee problem. "All the neighbourhood, if you will, will be at peace with Israel, will recognise their right to exist. If this doesn't provide security of Israel, I assure you the muzzle of a gun is not going to provide that security," he said at the time. Israel never agreed to the plan and Prince Saud said frequently that the failure to help create a Palestinian state was the biggest disappointment of his career.

2003 - Prince Saud publicly argued against the US invasion of Iraq, presciently warning of a chaotic aftermath that could destabilise the region. "If change of regime comes with the destruction of Iraq, then you are solving one problem and creating five more problems," he said in a British television interview.

2004 - During a moment of tension in Saudi ties with its main ally the United States, he described the relationship as "a Muslim marriage" in which the kingdom could retain different wives if it treated them all with fairness. He retained that incisiveness even as a chronic back complaint and other maladies in recent years made his hands shaky and his speech slurred.

2008 – In a speech before the UN General Assembly, he said: “Israeli occupation of Arab land continues to transform the whole region into multiple crisis zones accompanied by the dramatic suffering of Palestinians causing the spread of despair and extremism.”

2012 - Asked if it would be a good idea to arm Syria's rebels, he said briskly: "I think it's an excellent idea."

April 29, 2015 - Prince Saud relinquishes his post for health reasons. Adel Al Jubeir, then Saudi ambassador to Washington, took over the portfolio.

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File picture taken, Sept. 24, 1996 shows US ex-President Clinton with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal before a meeting at the United Nations

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In this June 26, 1945, file photo, Saudi Arabia's Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Faisal bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud, sitting, signs the UN Security Charter, in San Francisco, as members of his delegations sit behind him. Seventy years ago leaders of 50 war-weary countries gathered in San Francisco to create an international order that would save future generations “from the scourge of war.” With that, the United Nations was created.


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U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, talks with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, after Kerry arrived in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Sunday, Nov. 3, 2013.

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Iranian President Mohammad Qutami, right, shakes hand with Prince in this Aug. 3, 2002 file photo.

Breaking: Saudi ex-Foreign Minister Saud Al Faisal dead at 75 | GulfNews.com

*Iranian President Mohammad Khatami
 
Last edited:
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Former Saudi foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal dies
REUTERS — UPDATED 38 minutes ago
WHATSAPP
4 COMMENTS
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559ec0997f0a2.jpg

A file picture taken in the coastal city of Jeddah, on October 13, 2014, shows Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal looking on during a press conference.– AFP
Riyadh: Saudi Arabia's Prince Saud al-Faisal, who was the world's longest-serving foreign minister, has died, family members and a foreign ministry spokesman said late Thursday, over two months after he was replaced following 40 years in the job.

Read: Saudi king names new heir to throne in govt shakeup.

“May God accept him in paradise,” the prince's nephew Saud Mohammed al-Abdullah al-Faisal said on Twitter.

Prince Saud, who was appointed in 1975, was the world's longest-serving foreign minister when he was replaced on April 29 by Adel al-Jubeir, the then ambassador to Washington.

His tenure saw Israel invade Lebanon in 1978, 1982 and 2006, the eruption of Palestinian intifadas in 1987 and 2000, Iraq's invasions of Iran in 1980 and Kuwait in 1990, and the occupation of Iraq by a US-led coalition in 2003.

Equally at home in Arab robes or a tweed suit and tie, and as fluent in English as in Arabic, Prince Saud proved adept at cutting through diplomatic niceties to deliver Saudi Arabia's message with pith and wit.

During a moment of tension in Saudi ties with its main ally the United States in 2004, he described the relationship as “a Muslim marriage” in which the kingdom could retain different wives if it treated them all with fairness.

He retained that incisiveness even as a chronic back complaint and other maladies in recent years made his hands shaky and his speech slurred.

Asked in early 2012 if it would be a good idea to arm Syria's rebels, he said briskly: “I think it's an excellent idea.”

Prince Saud, a son of King Faisal, was born in 1940 in Taif near Mecca, where in 1989 he helped negotiate the agreement that ended Lebanon's 15-year civil war.

A degree at Princeton in the 1960s was followed by years at the Petroleum Ministry, where he was taken under the wing of his father's canny and charismatic oil minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani.

His career as a diplomat began traumatically: the new King Khaled named him as foreign minister following the assassination of Prince Saud's father Faisal, who had retained the foreign affairs portfolio after being made king in 1962.

For all his talents as a diplomat, however, Prince Saud failed to build the kingdom's foreign ministry into a body with great institutional depth.

Diplomats in Riyadh have described Saudi foreign policy as being like a searchlight: intensely focused, but only on the issues of most interest to the king and Prince Saud.

Complicated history
When he was appointed in October 1975, the region was dominated by Cold War rivalries, and secular pan-Arab nationalism seemed to be the future.

Egypt and Israel had not yet made peace, and Yasser Arafat led the Palestine Liberation Organisation from shell-pocked refugee camps in Lebanon. Iran's shah still ruled from his Peacock Throne, while in Iraq a young Saddam Hussein was plotting his path to power.

Riyadh's relationship with Saddam, which went from wary support during the Iran-Iraq war to fierce enmity after the invasion of Kuwait, dominated foreign policy for long periods during Prince Saud's tenure.

But despite that complicated history, Prince Saud publicly argued against the 2003 invasion, presciently warning of a chaotic aftermath that could destabilise the region.

“If change of regime comes with the destruction of Iraq, then you are solving one problem and creating five more problems,” he said in a British television interview.

In 2002, he launched Abdullah's biggest foreign policy initiative, an Arab plan for peace with Israel in return for a withdrawal from all occupied land and a resolution of the refugee problem.

“All the neighbourhood, if you will, will be at peace with Israel, will recognise their right to exist. If this doesn't provide security of Israel, I assure you the muzzle of a gun is not going to provide that security,” he said at the time.

Israel never agreed to the plan and Prince Saud said frequently that the failure to help create a Palestinian state was the biggest disappointment of his career.

PM Nawaz extends condolences
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif expressed his heartfelt condolences on the sad demise of Prince Saud al-Faisal.

In his condolence message, the prime minister said his death was a great loss not only for the people of Saudi Arabia but also for the people of Pakistan.

He said the late Saudi foreign minister was a great friend and supporter of Pakistan.
Only a lunatic would be happy, at anyone's death!
rest in peace
he was one of the very smart and articulate Saudi Royal.
 
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Rest in peace.

A very beloved guy. Well-known for his extreme hard work and endurance of the Middle Eastern political insanity. Non of his uncles were willing to give him up (despite him resigning 3 times). I wish he had written something about his political memories. That would have been quite a document!
 
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In fact he was right .

May he rest in hell with Ibn Taymiyyah and Muhhamad Ibn Abd Al Wahhab .

Common. Is that you that is saying this? I haven't known you to ever be disrespectful towords anybody (unlike me).
 
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Common. Is that you that is saying this? I haven't known you to ever be disrespectful towords anybody (unlike me).

I don't say that because he was Saudi or anti Iran , I have same view for many people in Islamic republic like him .

The only one rotting in hell is your Mahdi and the rest of your 12 Imams.

That's not our bussines to judge but Allah's , we can only wish .
 
. .
Former Saudi foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal dies
REUTERS — UPDATED 38 minutes ago
WHATSAPP
4 COMMENTS
PRINT
559ec0997f0a2.jpg

A file picture taken in the coastal city of Jeddah, on October 13, 2014, shows Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal looking on during a press conference.– AFP
Riyadh: Saudi Arabia's Prince Saud al-Faisal, who was the world's longest-serving foreign minister, has died, family members and a foreign ministry spokesman said late Thursday, over two months after he was replaced following 40 years in the job.

Read: Saudi king names new heir to throne in govt shakeup.

“May God accept him in paradise,” the prince's nephew Saud Mohammed al-Abdullah al-Faisal said on Twitter.

Prince Saud, who was appointed in 1975, was the world's longest-serving foreign minister when he was replaced on April 29 by Adel al-Jubeir, the then ambassador to Washington.

His tenure saw Israel invade Lebanon in 1978, 1982 and 2006, the eruption of Palestinian intifadas in 1987 and 2000, Iraq's invasions of Iran in 1980 and Kuwait in 1990, and the occupation of Iraq by a US-led coalition in 2003.

Equally at home in Arab robes or a tweed suit and tie, and as fluent in English as in Arabic, Prince Saud proved adept at cutting through diplomatic niceties to deliver Saudi Arabia's message with pith and wit.

During a moment of tension in Saudi ties with its main ally the United States in 2004, he described the relationship as “a Muslim marriage” in which the kingdom could retain different wives if it treated them all with fairness.

He retained that incisiveness even as a chronic back complaint and other maladies in recent years made his hands shaky and his speech slurred.

Asked in early 2012 if it would be a good idea to arm Syria's rebels, he said briskly: “I think it's an excellent idea.”

Prince Saud, a son of King Faisal, was born in 1940 in Taif near Mecca, where in 1989 he helped negotiate the agreement that ended Lebanon's 15-year civil war.

A degree at Princeton in the 1960s was followed by years at the Petroleum Ministry, where he was taken under the wing of his father's canny and charismatic oil minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani.

His career as a diplomat began traumatically: the new King Khaled named him as foreign minister following the assassination of Prince Saud's father Faisal, who had retained the foreign affairs portfolio after being made king in 1962.

For all his talents as a diplomat, however, Prince Saud failed to build the kingdom's foreign ministry into a body with great institutional depth.

Diplomats in Riyadh have described Saudi foreign policy as being like a searchlight: intensely focused, but only on the issues of most interest to the king and Prince Saud.

Complicated history
When he was appointed in October 1975, the region was dominated by Cold War rivalries, and secular pan-Arab nationalism seemed to be the future.

Egypt and Israel had not yet made peace, and Yasser Arafat led the Palestine Liberation Organisation from shell-pocked refugee camps in Lebanon. Iran's shah still ruled from his Peacock Throne, while in Iraq a young Saddam Hussein was plotting his path to power.

Riyadh's relationship with Saddam, which went from wary support during the Iran-Iraq war to fierce enmity after the invasion of Kuwait, dominated foreign policy for long periods during Prince Saud's tenure.

But despite that complicated history, Prince Saud publicly argued against the 2003 invasion, presciently warning of a chaotic aftermath that could destabilise the region.

“If change of regime comes with the destruction of Iraq, then you are solving one problem and creating five more problems,” he said in a British television interview.

In 2002, he launched Abdullah's biggest foreign policy initiative, an Arab plan for peace with Israel in return for a withdrawal from all occupied land and a resolution of the refugee problem.

“All the neighbourhood, if you will, will be at peace with Israel, will recognise their right to exist. If this doesn't provide security of Israel, I assure you the muzzle of a gun is not going to provide that security,” he said at the time.

Israel never agreed to the plan and Prince Saud said frequently that the failure to help create a Palestinian state was the biggest disappointment of his career.

PM Nawaz extends condolences
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif expressed his heartfelt condolences on the sad demise of Prince Saud al-Faisal.

In his condolence message, the prime minister said his death was a great loss not only for the people of Saudi Arabia but also for the people of Pakistan.

He said the late Saudi foreign minister was a great friend and supporter of Pakistan.
In hell inshallah say hi to sultan and naif and fahad
 
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now with his death , Ikhwan wing will become more powerful in Saudi Arabia (don't misunderstood Saudi Ikhwan with Ikhwan al Muslimin )
 
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Rest in peace.

A very beloved guy. Well-known for his extreme hard work and endurance of the Middle Eastern political insanity. Non of his uncles were willing to give him up (despite him resigning 3 times). I wish he had written something about his political memories. That would have been quite a document!
May he rest in hell with naif and sultan and fahad and inshallah salman who follow soon

عقبال ملك الزهايمر سلمان
 
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