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Saudi king slams ‘illegitimate occupation’ of Iraq
Lydia Georgi, AFP
Saudi King Abdullah, whose country is a close US ally, on Wednesday slammed the “illegitimate foreign occupation” of
Iraq in an opening speech to the annual Arab summit in Riyadh.
“In beloved Iraq, blood is being shed among brothers in the shadow of an illegitimate foreign occupation, and ugly sectarianism threatens civil war,” Abdullah said.
He also said that Arab nations, which are planning to revive a five-year-old Middle East peace plan at the summit, would not allow any foreign force to decide the future of the region.
(28 March 2007)
Bush’s Royal Trouble
Why Is King Abdullah Saying No to Dinner?
Jim Hoagland, Washington Post
President Bush enjoys hosting formal state dinners about as much as having a root canal. Or proposing tax increases. So his decision to schedule a mid-April White House gala for Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah signified the president’s high regard for an Arab monarch who is also a Bush family friend.
Now the White House ponders what Abdullah’s sudden and sparsely explained cancellation of the dinner signifies. Nothing good — especially for Condoleezza Rice’s most important Middle East initiatives — is the clearest available answer.
Abdullah’s bowing out of the April 17 event is, in fact, one more warning sign that the Bush administration’s downward spiral at home is undermining its ability to achieve its policy objectives abroad. Friends as well as foes see the need, or the chance, to distance themselves from the politically besieged Bush.
(2X March 2007)
FACTBOX-The Strait of Hormuz, Iran and the risk to oil
Reuters via AlertNet
Oil prices hit a 2007 high this week on tensions over Iran’s nuclear plans and its capture of 15 British servicemen.
Analysts fear Iran could seek to impede trade through the Strait of Hormuz if it were threatened or attacked.
The strategic channel at the entrance to the Gulf is the world’s most important waterway or choke point because of the huge volume of oil exported through it daily.
— Oil flows through the Strait account for roughly two-fifths of all globally traded oil, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
— Some 16-17 million barrels of oil are carried through the narrow channel on oil tankers every day, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).
Some 2 million barrels of oil products, including fuel oil, are exported through the passage daily.
— Ninety percent of oil exported from Gulf producers is carried on oil tankers through the Strait.
— Iran, which sits adjacent to the strait, has in the past talked of impeding traffic through it if threatened. …
(27 March 2007)





