Why did Obama add Saudi Arabia to his itinerary?

Thu, 05/28/2009 - 7:49am

 The Arab media is buzzing today over the announcement that President Obama will travel to Riyadh before arriving in Cairo for his big address to the Islamic world.   Why the late addition to his itinerary? 

 The first wave of response was a pure reflection of endemic inter-Arab rivalries.  The Saudis and their advocates are exultant, the Egyptians seem a bit deflated and defensive, and the "resistance camp" is alternately complaining about the concentration on the usual "Axis of Sunni Dictators" and egging on the Saudi-Egyptian sniping.

The Egyptians had been making much hay off of Obama's choice of Cairo for the speech, arguing that this vindicated Egypt's (deeply unpopular) foreign policy and signaled Egypt's return to the forefront of Arab leadership.  This seeming support for Egypt's (deeply unpopular) foreign policy was one of the reasons for my reservations about the choice of locale in the first place, although as with everything it depends on whether Obama endorses or challenges that approach in his speech.   With the Saudis now the American President's first port of call, the Egyptian claim to renewed leadership is weaker. 

 After that inter-Arab rivalry business, Arabs are trying to puzzle out the greater political significance of the trip.  One group sees it as tied closely to the Israeli-Palestinian track, focusing on the Arab Peace Initiative and the coming unveiling of the Obama approach to Israeli-Arab relations.  Another sees it as tied more closely to Iran, preparing the Saudis for the coming engagement (or confrontation) with Tehran. 

 The key question for Obama's trip the region, his speech, and his strategic approach both to Iran and the Israeli-Arab tracks is this:  will he reinforce or challenge the "moderates vs resistance" frame which he inherited from the Bush administration?   The Arab leaders he has been meeting, like the Israelis, are perfectly comfortable with that approach, dividing the region between Israel and Arab "moderates" vs Iran and Arab "resistance" groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.  That's the easy path.  If followed it is likely to fail badly, destroy the hopes for change which his engagement policy has raised, and leave the region right back where Bush left it. But I think -- and hope -- that Obama will not fall into that trap. 

He has an opportunity over the next few weeks -- with the unveiling of his approach to Israel and the Palestinians, the response to the Lebanese and Iranian elections, and his Cairo speech --  to break down those tired, dangerous, and unpopular lines of division. And if he chooses to do that, to really challenge the unsustainable status quo, then Riyadh and Cairo are the right place to start. 



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Saudi -Palestin connection

Mr. Barac Hussan Obama has not bowed to the Palestinians yet and only wants the Saudis to help support him with the Palestinians and demonstrate his policy plan to the Iraelies.

Didn't he already screw up

Didn't he already screw up once with the Saudis by not calling them while calling Mubarak? Perhaps his staffers have become rather sensitive and wary of the idea of being seen as snubbing Saudi Arabia, so they pulled a last-minute change.

The Misconception of the American Leftists

This article is full of misconceptions of the Middle East, usually displayed by American leftists and by those who have strong ties with so- called "the resitance camp"

The Misconceptions of the American Leftists

First: The professional Arab media persons are not buzzing over president Obama's visit to Saudi Arabia. American leftists, democrats, and simple-minded laypersons are inflating Mr. Obama which will lead to nothing. People in the Middle East do not expect a lot, and they should not expect, a lot from your inflated Obama and the inflated media behind him. Obama’s visit to Riyadh and Cairo is of limited significance.
Second: Why will Egyptians feel deflated or defensive, they should not. The visit is not that important and will not be. And the "resistance camp" is dominated by dictators, the Iranian leaders, the Syrian fascistic leader, and terrorists.
Third: Only simple-minded Egyptians who had been making much hay off of Obama's choice of Cairo for the speech. Egypt’s foreign policy is more rational and helpful than others’.
Fourth: Your reservations about the choice of locale indicate very well the source of your information and misconceptions. Egypt does not seek any leadership. For me and for many, Obama represents nothing.
Fifth: When the great late president Anwar Alsadat started the peace process with Israel, more than thirty years ago, and the Arab states cut relations with Egypt, years passed and all Arabs have realized that they can do nothing significant without Egypt. This is the lesson, many have failed to admit.
Last: Please check your sources of information about the Arab world and its history.

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