LMAO. The same farsi mullahs you criticize knocked out half of your country's oil production and you didnt do anything. hell , i dont blame you, US didnt do anything either!
IF ONLY SAUDI ARABIA'S ACTIONS ON THE GROUND WERE AS TOUGH AS THE PROPAGANDA YOU MANUFACTURE ON THIS FORUM:
Saudi Arabia Seeks to Ease Tensions With Iran
September attack on oil facilities was ‘game-changer’ for Riyadh; new stance aims to protect economy
A September strike widely blamed on Iran caused damage to a Saudi Aramco oil facility in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. HAMAD L MOHAMMED/REUTERS
By
Benoit Faucon in Paris,
Summer Said in Dubai and
Warren P. Strobel in Washington
Dec. 12, 2019 2:16 pm ET
Saudi Arabia is quietly trying to mend fences with Iran and other regional foes as officials in the kingdom have grown more worried about the risks conflict poses to its oil-dependent economy.
Riyadh’s newfound interest in better relations with regional rivals comes as Saudi officials question how much backing it has from the U.S. and other allies. Saudi calculations changed after a cruise-missile and drone strike—blamed on Tehran—temporarily disabled a large portion of the country’s crude production earlier this year. Washington didn’t hit back at Iran after the attack, but it sent troops to strengthen Saudi defenses.
“The Sept. 14 attack was a game-changer,” one Saudi official said.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attending a heavyweight boxing match last week in in Diriya, Saudi Arabia. PHOTO: BANDAR AL-JALOUD/SAUDI ROYAL PALACE/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
Representatives of Saudi Arabia and Iran have directly exchanged messages in recent months and also communicated through intermediaries in Oman, Kuwait and Pakistan, according to Saudi, European and U.S. officials. The main focus of the communications, these officials say, has been easing tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
According to Iran’s ambassador to Paris, Bahram Ghasemi, and other officials, Tehran has floated a peace plan to the Saudis that includes a mutual pledge of nonaggression and cooperation, aimed at securing oil exports following a spate of tanker attacks.
Mine explosions struck Saudi, Emirati and Japanese oil tankers this summer near the strategic Strait of Hormuz. Those attacks, which the U.S. blamed on Iran, were followed by explosions in October on an Iranian tanker that Tehran blamed on an unnamed foreign government. The incidents have driven up the cost of shipping and forced oil buyers to delay loadings.
Riyadh has also engaged in secret talks with Iranian-backed Houthi rebels it has been fighting in Yemen for years, according to Arab and U.S. officials. The conflict there has created what the United Nations has described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. The two sides now have a hotline in an effort to minimize potential clashes, said a Western official.
Houthi forces initiated the push for talks in September with a proposal for a unilateral cease-fire; the
Saudis responded with a partial cease-fire of their own.
“Realpolitik has set in,” one senior U.S. official said, with the Saudis recognizing that “they’ve just got to pare down on the challenges they have on multiple fronts.”
The mine-damaged Japanese-owned oil tanker Kokuka Courageous is seen behind a U.S. sailor in June off Fujairah, United Arab Emirates. PHOTO: FAY ABUELGASIM/ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Saudi Embassy in Washington and the Royal Court in Riyadh didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Iran’s delegation to the U.N. likewise didn’t respond to a request for comment. “Iran doesn’t want the continuation of tensions. We are seeking peace,” Mr. Ghasemi said in an Oct. 30 interview. He couldn’t be reached for comment on the status of any direct consultations with Saudi Arabia.
Support has eroded for Saudi Arabia in key world capitals, especially Washington, where lawmakers from both parties want to see Riyadh end the war in Yemen and hold people accountable for the
killing of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi.
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Riyadh is facing
renewed questions from U.S. lawmakers about its reliability as an ally after a Saudi Air Force trainee killed three American sailors last week at a Florida military base.
In an effort to aid the investigation into the killings and assuage U.S. concerns, Saudi authorities have been contacting the man’s relatives, reviewing his
Twitter account as well as speaking to former colleagues and friends to learn more about how he came to hold his extremist views, according to a Saudi official familiar with the matter.
The Saudi outreach also comes at a pivotal time for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is trying to remake the kingdom’s economy.
The
initial public offer of Saudi Aramco, which started trading Wednesday, is a catalyst for raising funds to seed real estate, tourism and technology projects in the kingdom. But following the September attack, concerns have grown over
the security of Aramco’s assets.
A second Saudi official said the kingdom was compelled to engage with Iran as it prepared for Aramco’s listing. The initial public offering from the oil giant was valued last week at $1.7 trillion. Aramco’s shares rose on Thursday, briefly hitting Prince Mohammed’s valuation target of $2 trillion, before ending the day’s trading just shy of that mark.
The prospect of a wider conflict with Iran jeopardizes Saudi oil exports and also risks scaring away overseas investors the kingdom needs for fresh capital, cutting-edge technology and management know-how.
Other players in the region, including the United Arab Emirates, are skeptical of Riyadh’s outreach to Iran. U.S. officials have also publicly warned that Iran may be planning a new attack in the region.
Graves including those of people killed in Yemen's prolonged fighting at a cemetery in the country’s capital, Sana’a, last week. PHOTO: YAHYA ARHAB/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK
Saudi Arabia doesn’t “trust the Iranians,” said a Saudi official, but Riyadh hopes it “can at least come to an agreement to stop possible attacks in the future.”
Tehran, hard hit by the Trump administration’s “maximum-pressure” campaign of economic sanctions, has expressed an interest in detente. Despite years of enmity, Iranian officials have previously raised the hope that Saudi Arabia could act as an intermediary in an economic-relief package—using its special relationship with Washington to end sanctions rather than encourage them.
Transforming back-channel diplomacy into overt peace talks and an end to the two countries’ shadow war has been a challenge. While Iranian moderates have backed rapprochement with regional powers, conservatives see a robust security role in the region as a prerequisite for maintaining the Islamic Republic’s clout beyond Iran.
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Similar obstacles confront other fence-mending efforts. In Yemen, the Saudis and Emiratis face a struggle persuading a fractured Houthi movement and the internationally backed government of Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi to share power, officials said.
Riyadh is also trying to find a way to end a two-year deadlock with Qatar, its tiny Persian Gulf neighbor. Saudi Arabia and more than a dozen allies abruptly cut off diplomatic ties with Qatar in 2017 after accusing it of supporting terrorism.
All the moves suggest things are moving on “positive trajectories” in the Gulf, the senior U.S. official said, describing the diplomatic efforts as the “slimmest of shoots” that will take time to bear fruit.
In one sign of the persistent impasse, Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani decided to skip a summit of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council that started Tuesday in Riyadh. The emir sent the country’s prime minister in his place, one possible factor in the meeting having produced no breakthroughs.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/saudi-arabia-seeks-to-ease-tensions-with-iran-11576178194