peakprosperity | Given its situation, is it really any surprise that King Salman and
his son have decided to pivot to China? In need of a new partner that
would align better with their current and future interests, China is the
obvious first choice.
So in March 2017, only a very short while after Obama's failed visit,
a large and well-prepared KSA entourage accompanied King Salman to
Beijing and inked tens of billions in new business deals:
China, Saudi Arabia eye $65 billion in deals as king visits
Mar 16, 2017
BEIJING (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia’s King Salman oversaw the signing of deals worth as much as $65 billion on the first day of a visit to Beijing on Thursday, as the world’s largest oil exporter looks to cement ties with the world’s second-largest economy.
The deals included a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between giant state oil firm Saudi Aramco and China North Industries Group Corp (Norinco), to look into building refining and chemical plants in China.
Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) and Sinopec, which already jointly run a chemical complex in Tinajin, also agreed to develop petrochemical projects in both China and Saudi Arabia.
Salman told Xi he hoped China could play an even greater role in Middle East affairs, the ministry added.
Deputy Chinese Foreign Minister Zhang Ming said the memorandums of understanding and letters of intent were potentially worth about $65 billion, involving everything from energy to space.
(Source)
This was a very big deal in terms of Middle East geopolitics. It
shook up many decades of established power, resulting in a shift away
from dependence on America.
The Saudis arrived in China with such a huge crowd in tow that a
reported 150 cooks had been brought along to just to feed everyone in
the Saudi visitation party.
The resulting deals struck involved everything from energy to
infrastructure to information technology to space. And this was just on
the first visit. Quite often a brand new trade delegation event
involves posturing and bluffing and feeling each other out; not deals
being struck. So it’s clear that before the visit, well before,
lots and lots of deals were being negotiated and terms agreed to so
that the thick MOU files were ready to sign during the actual visit.
The scope and size of these business deals are eye catching, but the
real clincher is King Salman's public statement expressing hope China
will play "an even greater role in Middle East affairs."
That, right there, is the sound of the geopolitical axis-tilting.
That public statement tells us everything we need to know about the sort
of change the Salman dynasty intends to pursue.
So it should have surprised no one to hear that, in August this year, another $70 billion of new deals were announced between China and KSA. The fanfare extolled that Saudi-Sino relations had entered a new era, with “the agreements covering investment, trade, energy, postal service, communications, and media.”
This is a very rapid pace for such large deals. If KSA and China
were dating, they’d be talking about moving in together already. They're
clearly at the selecting furniture and carpet samples stage.
As for the US? It seems KSA isn't even returning its calls or texts at this point.
0 comments:
Post a Comment