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  • U.S.-Saudi Relations
    Opinion: A New Chapter in the Tangled U.S.-Saudi Relationship

    Obama’s failure to match action to his verbal demand for Assad to leave has been at the heart of what had been an ever deepening malaise in U.S.-Saudi relations. The decline in the relationship dates back to the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq that had led to the 2006 election of a pro-Iranian government, with Washington’s backing, under Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki only now leaving power. The Saudis were furious that the United States, its main foreign protector, had turned Iraq over to Iran “on a silver platter.”

  • Anti-ISIS Coalition
    Here’s a Map of Obama’s Coalition Against the Islamic State

    Currently, more than 50 countries have pledged support in the fight against ISIL, according to the State Department. This includes everyone from strong allies like Canada and Britain to countries like Morocco and Ukraine.

  • Domestic Oil Consumption
    Saudi Arabia uses largest amount of crude oil for power generation since 2010

    Saudi Arabia used an average of 0.7 million bbl/d of crude oil for power generation during the summers from 2009 to 2013. During that same period, Iraq and Kuwait, the next two largest users of crude oil for power generation in the Middle East, each averaged roughly 0.08 million bbl/d of crude burn.

  • Saudi GDP
    Saudi GDP growth falls to 3.8 pct y/y in Q2 as oil sector slows

    Saudi Arabian economic growth is usually at its most robust early in the year, when the weather is favourable and few public holidays halt work; GDP then regularly falls in the second quarter from the previous three months. Growth in the hydrocarbons sector, which accounts for almost half of the $748 billion Saudi economy, slumped to 2.5 percent year-on-year in the second quarter from 6.1 percent in the previous three months, the data showed.

  • Saudi-Iran
    Rouhani Looks to Warmer Ties with Saudis, Tepidly Criticizes US Syria Strikes

    On his second trip to the UN General Assembly as Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani Tuesday said he looked forward to better relations with regional rival Saudi Arabia and only tepidly criticized the US attack on Islamic State (ISIL or ISIS) and Khorasan targets in Syria.

    Speaking at a press breakfast with about two dozen media representatives, Rouhani expressed hope that the P5+1 (US, UK, France, Russia, China plus Germany) and Tehran will conclude a comprehensive agreement on Iran’s nuclear program by the current Nov. 24 deadline but noted that differences remain and that this week’s series of meetings in New York are likely to be critical.

  • U.N. Meetings
    President Barack Obama to meet with Iraqi, Egyptian leaders

    Obama’s meeting with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi Thursday is expected to be the first face-to-face meeting between the two men. Egypt has been pivotal in U.S. efforts to fight terrorism and rein in violence between Israel and Gaza, but the U.S. has objected to strong-arm tactics by al-Sisi’s government, such as the jailing of journalists and figures from the opposition Muslim Brotherhood.

  • ISIS and Iraqi Kurds
    Oil-rich Kirkuk in Iraq’s north fears attack by Islamic State

    In recent weeks, international attention has focused on Islamic State advances elsewhere in the Kurdish region, such as near the strategic Mosul dam and the city of Irbil, capital of semiautonomous Iraqi Kurdistan. U.S. airstrikes have helped push back the militants — and provided a tactical and psychological lift for peshmerga fighters, who fell back last month in a humiliating retreat.

  • Terrorism Funding
    New group plans to spotlight secret funding for Islamic State militants

    It has begun building what it claims will be the best publicly available database of information about extremist groups and their supporters. The information will be provided to governments as well as the private sector, media and other outlets, organizers said.

  • Arabs and ISIS
    Arab Countries Carve Out Role in Anti-Terror Fight

    Arabian Gulf countries, apart from using their bases for coalition forces to conduct military action against Islamic State militants, will play a major role in the fight against the group by cutting its terrorist financing and presenting a counter narrative to Islamic State leaders. The Jeddah Communique Coalition, formed to battle Islamic State militants, has been growing, however, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) leaders are remaining cautious of the Obama administration’s leadership in the issue.

  • Iraqi Kurdistan
    ISIS vs. the Kurds

    The fighting between ISIS and the Kurds stretches along a six-hundred-and-fifty-mile front in northeastern Iraq—a jagged line that roughly traces one border of Iraqi Kurdistan, the territory that the Kurds have been fighting for decades to establish as an independent state. With as many as thirty million people spread across the Middle East, the Kurds claim to be the world’s largest ethnic group without a country. Iraqi Kurdistan, which contains about a quarter of that population, is a landlocked region surrounded almost entirely by neighbors—Turkey, Iran, and the government in Baghdad—that oppose its bid for statehood.