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  • Agriculture
    Saudi’s Alamoudi plans $500m Ethiopia investment

    Horizon Plantations Ethiopia will train workers, improve roads and replace washing units at the Limmu and Bebeka coffee plantations, Bloomberg reported, quoting general operations director Kemal Mohammed.

  • Extremism
    Saudi court sentences 3 to death on terror charges

    Riyadh’s specialized terrorism court sentenced three Saudis to death on Monday, and handed down prison terms to 20 more on charges related to terrorism, the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.

  • Syrian Rebel Training
    Opinion: Training the Syrian Opposition: So, What’s The Plan?

    Indeed, Syrian rebels are likely more motivated to fight Assad than to counter ISIL. Such an approach would require rehabilitating the Geneva process for a Syrian political transition and synchronizing the pace of opposition military gains with political negotiations. The Syrian opposition army would need more robust capabilities, deeper capacity, sustainment plans, and new doctrine to fight on multiple fronts and ensure that its successes endure — all of which necessitate a greater coalition commitment of trainers, advisors, funding, and equipment, not to mention political will.

  • U.S.-Saudi and ISIS
    Deal With Saudis Paved Way for Syrian Airstrikes

    Wary of a repeat of Mr. Obama's earlier reversal, the Saudis and United Arab Emirates decided on a strategy aimed at making it harder for Mr. Obama to change course. "Whatever they ask for, you say 'yes,'" an adviser to the Gulf bloc said of its strategy. "The goal was not to give them any reason to slow down or back out."

  • Counter Insurgency
    Opinion: Is COIN No Longer Relevant?

    The movement away from COIN doctrine is also a reflection of the now-popular sentiment that it didn’t work in the post-9/11 period any better than it did during the Vietnam War, the same conflict from which so many complained we didn’t retain hard-learned lessons in COIN.

  • North Africa
    Egypt’s border with Libya, Sudan ripe for Islamic State expansion

    Egypt may be interested in fighting its own battles, or at least not opening up new international fronts that would stretch its armed forces when it needs them here, but the reality is that the frontline against IS is everywhere.

  • Israeli Policy
    Netanyahu: Saudi peace initiative is for a bygone era

    Obviously referring to the Saudi proposal’s call for a full Israeli withdrawal to the pre-1967 lines, including returning the Golan Heights to Syria, Netanyahu noted that this plan was made “before the takeover of Syria by al-Qaida on the Golan Heights.”

    Asked whether he thinks the initiative is now irrelevant, he replied, “What is relevant is the fact that there is a new recognition among major countries in the Middle East that Israel is not their mortal enemy, to say the least, but is a potential ally in addressing the common challenges.”

  • Arab Bank and Hamas
    Arab Bank found liable by US court in Hamas attacks

    A New York jury has found Arab Bank liable for providing material support to Hamas. As a result, the Jordan-based bank must provide compensation to victims of nearly two dozen terrorist attacks that Hamas carried out in Israel and Palestine in the early 2000s.

  • Construction
    Revealed: Saudi Arabia’s 10 biggest contractors

    Saudi Binladin Group again tops the list. The family-owned firm was started in 1931 and has been the trusted builder for the Saudi Royal family for over 60 years. It has a hand in many of the Kingdom’s biggest civils projects and is currently handling the $21 billion expansion project at the Grand Mosque in Makkah.

  • Entertainment
    Opinion: Movies – A new Window of Economic Opportunity

    The obvious motivation to tap into the economic benefits of opening cinemas is the fact that Saudis spend an estimated $1 billion annually going to theaters and watching movies in Dubai and Bahrain. That is $1 billion not spent to boost the economy in Saudi Arabia.