RIYADH: President Barack Obama indoors in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday on a Middle East work featuring a historic address to the Muslim world and a new US drive to revitalize regional peacemaking.
Obama fly in aboard Air Force One to a red carpet welcome in front of talks with King Abdullah as he seeks backing for an emerging US strategy of binding Arab states into a wider investigate for Israeli-Palestinian peace and to defuse regional tensions.
He will then travel on Thursday to Egypt, another pillar of the Arab world, to deliver a individual appeal for reconciliation to the world's 1.5 billion Muslims, and hold his first talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
King Abdullah has been looking for to relaunch a 2002 Arab-backed Middle East peace initiative, which has been praise by the Obama administration.
But it was unclear whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's tough stand on settlement would scupper US hopes of convincing the Arab world to make concessions towards Israel to inject momentum into the process.
Obama signalled in a consultation with National Public Radio before leaving Washington that he would keep imperative Israel on the issue, despite an emerging rift between the two close allies.
"I've said very clearly to the Israelis both confidentially and publicly that a freeze on settlements including natural growth is part of those obligations."
The Saudi initiative calls for full normalization of relations between Arab states and Israel, a full pulling out by Israel from Arab land, the creation of a Palestinian state and an "equitable" solution for Palestinian refugees.
Obama was also likely to use the talks with King Abdullah, whose country is OPEC's top exporter, to push for stability in oil prices and production.
The US president's trip comes amid a building argument between his administration and the Israeli government over West Bank settlements and Netanyahu's refusal to publicly endorse a two-state solution.
It also coincides with rising concern in the mainly Sunni-ruled region over Shiite Iran's nuclear drive.
Anticipation mounted ahead of Obama's arrival for his first major foray into the Middle East, following a surprise visit of a few hours to Baghdad in April.
"King-Obama summit, key to global stability," Saudi newpaper Okaz proclaimed. Egypt's state-owned Al-Rose al-Youssef warn Obama not to lecture.
"Don't be biased towards Israel, don't interfere in countries' interior affairs and don't give lessons in democracy," it said.
Obama's speech on Thursday at Cairo University fulfills a operation promise to address the of giving an address to the Muslim world after relations soured over the deeply unpopular Iraq war, the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal and the Bush-era stalemate in Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking.
In Israel, there was concern the president's outreach to Muslims could come at the outlay of the US-Israeli alliance.
"The American president has the right to try to reconcile with the Muslim world and compete with Al-Qaeda or Iran for its heart," said Transport Minister Yisrael Katz, a close Netanyahu ally.
"We have to make sure that this will not harm our common interests."
Al-Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri told Egyptians to shun Obama, saying his appointment was at the invitation of the "torturers of Egypt" and the "slaves of America."
"His bloody messages were customary and are still being received by Muslims, and they will not be concealed by public relations campaigns or by farcical visits or elegant words," Zawahiri said in an audiotape, according to the SITE Intelligence Group.
The son of a Kenyan father with Muslim heritage, Obama spent part of his childhood in majority-Muslim Indonesia. His middle name Hussein, which occasionally was seen as a liability on the campaign trail, doubtless will be viewed more charitably in many venues during his Middle East travels.
But some democracy campaigners in Egypt raised concerns at Obama's choice of place for his major address, saying it rewarded an authoritarian regime wit ha poor human rights record.
The White House vowed to let loose all its technological and communications clout to ensure that as many people as possible see and hear the notable address, even through social networking sites.For more information in details log on to www.newssmarttvweb.com
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Barack Obama arrive in Saudi Arabia on Mideast tour
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments on "Barack Obama arrive in Saudi Arabia on Mideast tour"
Subscribe in a Reader
Post a Comment